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update README.md
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44
README.md
44
README.md
@@ -5,14 +5,25 @@ Prerequisites
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A running Kubernetes cluster
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The kubectl command-line tool installed on your local machine
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Deployment
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To deploy the Ghost blog, run the following commands:
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kubectl apply -f namespace.yaml
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kubectl apply -f ghost-blog-deployment.yaml
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kubectl apply -f ghost-blog-service.yaml
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kubectl apply -f mysql-deployment.yaml
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kubectl apply -f mysql-service.yaml
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kubectl apply -f ingress-service.yaml
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kubectl apply -f namespace.yaml
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kubectl apply -f blog-config-map.yaml
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kubectl apply -f deployments/ghost-blog-deployment.yaml
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kubectl apply -f deployments/mysql-deployment.yaml
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kubectl apply -f deployments/nginx-proxy-deployment.yaml
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kubectl apply -f services/ghost-blog-service.yaml
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kubectl apply -f services/ingress-service.yaml
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kubectl apply -f services/mysql-service.yaml
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kubectl apply -f services/nginx-proxy-service.yaml
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kubectl apply -f volumes/nginx-pv.yaml
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kubectl apply -f volumes/nginx-pvc.yaml
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kubectl apply -f volumes/mysql-pv.yaml
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kubectl apply -f volumes/mysql-pvc.yaml
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kubectl apply -f volumes/blog-pv.yaml
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kubectl apply -f volumes/blog-pvc.yaml
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This will create the necessary resources in the cluster, including a deployment for the Ghost app, a service for connecting to the MySQL server, and an ingress service for routing traffic to the Ghost app via the nginx-proxy with https and http.
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Volumes
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@@ -21,21 +32,4 @@ This configuration is using a Persistent Volume to store the Ghost blog data, th
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ingress-service.yaml
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In this example, $(VAR_HOST) and $(SECRET_NAME) are variables that are stored in a configMap and a Secret, respectively. These variables can be managed and updated separately from the YAML files, making it easier to update and maintain your configuration.
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To use variables in your YAML files, you'll first need to create a configMap and a Secret that contains the variables you need. You can do this using the kubectl
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kubectl apply -f nginx-pv.yaml
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kubectl apply -f nginx-pvc.yaml
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kubectl apply -f mysql-pv.yaml
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kubectl apply -f mysql-pvc.yaml
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kubectl apply -f blog-pv.yaml
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kubectl apply -f blog-pvc.yaml
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kubectl apply -f ghost-blog-deployment.yaml
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kubectl apply -f mysql-deployment.yaml
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kubectl apply -f nginx-proxy-deployment.yaml
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kubectl apply -f ghost-blog-service.yaml
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kubectl apply -f ingress-service.yaml
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kubectl apply -f mysql-service.yaml
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kubectl apply -f nginx-proxy-service.yaml
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kubectl apply -f blog-config-map.yaml
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To use variables in your YAML files, you'll first need to create a configMap and a Secret that contains the variables you need. You can do this using the kubectl
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