I gave a talk on Kubernetes Network Policies at KubeCon 2017 in Austin, TX last week. It was in a lecture format: I described how the feature works and how to configure network policies with some examples.
This talk was basically an extended version of this post. See Jérôme’s twitter thread for main headlines from the talk.
Although it was a short notice confirmation (a week ago before the conference), I wanted to create hand-drawn slides with the new iPad Pro I’ve been trying out.
You can find the slides on Speakerdeck and watch the recording here.
Audience Feedback
If you want to control what can communicate with your pods in your Kubernetes cluster, you need network policies. #kubecon
— Jérôme Petazzoni (@jpetazzo) December 7, 2017
Excellent presentation by @ahmetb ! pic.twitter.com/G5YCvZWLnj
@ahmetb did a great job in his K8s network policy session. One of the best sessions of the week. #kubecon
— Shannon McFarland (@eyepv6) December 7, 2017
Thanks to @ahmetb for the talk on network policy at #KubeCon! pic.twitter.com/4JHS2T6GlX
— Evan Gilman (@evan2645) December 7, 2017
Great session by @ahmetb on Kubernetes Network Policies. Great flow and examples that go through the different use cases👍🏼 pic.twitter.com/osZmh0y4As
— Nicola Kabar (@nicolakabar) December 7, 2017
Extraordinarily pretty slides!
— JBD (@rakyll) December 8, 2017
Attended @ahmetb presentation on #Kubernetes Network Policy at #KubeCon. Insightful as always: https://t.co/rb3Ax7HFT5
— Sean Sullivan (@seank8s) December 8, 2017