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| 🔗 Stories, Tutorials & Articles |
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| New Conversion from cgroup v1 CPU Shares to v2 CPU Weight |
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A new quadratic formula now maps cgroup v1 CPU shares to cgroup v2 CPU weight. Why? Because the old linear approach messed with CPU fairness; especially at low share values. This fix nails prioritization where it counts.
It lands at the OCI runtime layer, live in runc v1.3.2 and crun v1.23, so containers finally get CPU weights that reflect reality, not rounding errors.
Big picture: Kubernetes and cgroup v2 never quite agreed on CPU math. This update closes that gap, giving schedulers sharper control and workloads cleaner isolation. |
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| Cluster API v1.12: Introducing In-place Updates and Chained Upgrades |
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Cluster API v1.12.0 adds in-place updates and chained upgrades, so machines can swap parts without going down, and clusters can jump versions without drama.
KubeadmControlPlane and MachineDeployments now choose between full rollouts or surgical patching, depending on what changed. The goal: keep clusters stable, upgrades smooth.
Bigger picture: Cluster API is edging closer to what real workload orchestration should feel like, a smart balance between solid-state infra and lifecycle agility. |
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| Ingress NGINX: Statement from the Steering and Security Response Committees |
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Kubernetes is cutting off Ingress NGINX in March 2026. No more updates. No bug fixes. No security patches. Done.
Roughly half of cloud-native setups still rely on it, but it's been understaffed for years. If you're one of them, it's time to move.
There’s no plug-and-play replacement, but the ecosystem’s betting on Gateway API. It’s more modern. More flexible. Built for today’s traffic-routing problems. |
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| Run a Private Personal AI with Clawdbot + DMR |
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| Clawdbot just plugged into Docker Model Runner (DMR). That means you can now run your own OpenAI-compatible assistant, locally, on your hardware. No cloud. No per-token fees. No data leaking into the void. |
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| Experimenting with Gateway API using kind |
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A new guide shows how to run Gateway API locally with kind and cloud-provider-kind. It spins up a one-node Kubernetes cluster in Docker - complete with LoadBalancer Services and a Gateway API controller. Cloud vibes, zero cloud bill.
Fire it up to deploy demo apps, test routing, or poke around with CRD experiments. No production stress attached. |
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