It started as "OpenShift Origin" around 2014/15. Then, in August 2018, it became "OKD: The Origin Community Distribution of Kubernetes," which dropped "OpenShift" from the name. It was never officially clarified what OKD exactly means. After two years, in August 2020, "Origin" dropped, too, which brings us to today's "OKD: The Community Distribution of Kubernetes."
Unlikely - it’s not that exciting. The process looks like “prepare DNS, servers, storage for ignition, load balancer and many other things by hand, then start the installer”. So installer part is mostly the same, you just need to do lots of traditional configuration and setup beforehand. It’s a bit better on UPI with virtualization, like installing on VMware without IPI, but still. Would be cool to try it on Packet Cloud (bare metal cloud) though, now that I think about it.
I agree, after back and forth i went with a proxmox underneath as well. The hassle of bare metal and lack of adjustability was to much for me i gladly sacrifice a few gigs or ram for that
OKD does not stand for an acronym. The "The community distribution of Kubernetes" is only a tagline. The Linux Foundation's trademark guidelines prevent the use of the word "Kubernetes" in any project or product name.
If i recall correctly OKD was Origin Kubernetes Distribution for some time.
And in some places it's called OpenShift Kubernetes Distribution. Website is kind of silent on this
i realize I am kinda off topic but does anyone know a good place to watch newly released series online ?
@Terrence Barrett i use FlixZone. Just google for it =)
It started as "OpenShift Origin" around 2014/15.
Then, in August 2018, it became "OKD: The Origin Community Distribution of Kubernetes," which dropped "OpenShift" from the name.
It was never officially clarified what OKD exactly means.
After two years, in August 2020, "Origin" dropped, too, which brings us to today's "OKD: The Community Distribution of Kubernetes."
Where the number of masters and workers mentioned at the time of installation ??
In install-config.yaml file
Great video. Will you make a video about installing OKD on bare metal?
Unlikely - it’s not that exciting. The process looks like “prepare DNS, servers, storage for ignition, load balancer and many other things by hand, then start the installer”. So installer part is mostly the same, you just need to do lots of traditional configuration and setup beforehand. It’s a bit better on UPI with virtualization, like installing on VMware without IPI, but still. Would be cool to try it on Packet Cloud (bare metal cloud) though, now that I think about it.
I agree, after back and forth i went with a proxmox underneath as well. The hassle of bare metal and lack of adjustability was to much for me i gladly sacrifice a few gigs or ram for that
OKD 4 already have GAP (Grafana-AlertManager-Prometheus) as metric monitoring by default.
Can I use SysDig Agent instead?
Yes you can :-) Thing to keep in mind is that OKD is still just a Kubernetes cluster, so you can do anything that you can do in a Kubernetes cluster.
we can say that oKd is the openshift but its the open source one?
Exactly! Difference is support and Fedora CoreOS instead of RedHat CoreOS as base OS
@@mkdevme thank you very much, ur video was helpful.
And what OKD presents for Kubernetes, I didn't know exactly what is the difference.
Both are OpenSource. OKD is just the upstream of OpenShift.
@@lamyaeaissaoui3883 Kubernetes is upstream of OKD
OKD does not stand for an acronym. The "The community distribution of Kubernetes" is only a tagline. The Linux Foundation's trademark guidelines prevent the use of the word "Kubernetes" in any project or product name.
I like to contact you, personally.
hey, ping us at team@mkdev.me