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@@ -157,7 +157,7 @@ personal blog
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<p>It has been a while since I’ve actively used Kubernetes and wanted to explore the evolution of tools such as <a href=https://helm.sh>Helm</a> and <a href=https://tekton.dev>Tekton</a>. I decided to deploy <a href=https://k3s.io>K3s</a>, since I’ve had success with deploying it on resource-contrained Raspberry Pis in the past. I thought that this time it’d be convenient to have K3s running in a LXC container on Proxmox. This would allow for easy snapshotting of the entire Kubernetes deployment. LXC containers provide an efficient way to squeeze as much out of the machine resources as possible.</p>
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<p>It has been a while since I’ve actively used Kubernetes and wanted to explore the evolution of tools such as <a href=https://helm.sh>Helm</a> and <a href=https://tekton.dev>Tekton</a>. I decided to deploy <a href=https://k3s.io>K3s</a>, since I’ve had success with deploying it on resource-contrained Raspberry Pis in the past. I thought that this time it’d be convenient to have K3s running in a LXC container on Proxmox. This would allow for easy snapshotting of the entire Kubernetes deployment. LXC containers also provide an efficient way to squeeze as much out of the machine resources as possible.</p>
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<h2 id=what-is-k3s>What is K3s?</h2>
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<p>K3s is a Kubernetes distro that advertises itself as a lightweight binary with a much smaller memory-footprint than traditional k8s. K3s is not a fork of k8s as it seeks to remain as close to upstream as it possibly can.</p>
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<h2 id=configure-proxmox>Configure Proxmox</h2>
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