This is a created article in which the information may have evolved or changed.
If you're using GitHub now, are you feeling any different from the first two days? Just yesterday, GitHub has quietly completed (possibly partial) user traffic to the production environment kubernetes cluster switch. Yes, well, if you're lucky enough, maybe it's one of them.
This is not a simple "another kubernetes in Production" case. As the world's largest code-hosting and programming social network, the GitHub site, valued at over $2 billion, sits on tens of millions of users and hundreds of millions of code warehouses, becoming the light and soil that the global software developers rely on every day. GitHub's bet on kubernetes on such a scale is undoubtedly a great boost to Kubernetes's ecology.
SRE Aaron, who works at GitHub, gave his friend on Twitter yesterday, and Kelsey, the current chief evangelist for Google, sent a tweet revealing the news, as Kubernetes's committer and followers, Kelsey immediately replied, " This is a big deal ".
Tweets posted by ^aaron ^
^kelsey's tweet reply ^
Think of the thousands of Docker containers on the other side of the ocean to send me a code file like this, scared me to quickly refresh the GitHub page 10 times. Fortunately, the code is still in, but also can rest assured that the coding.
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Since there is no official data to indicate the scope of the switch, and to read Aaron's tweets carefully, we speculate that this release is for a subset of grayscale users, including Kelsey. But since it's already a beta, it's usually not a small percentage of the grayscale range, so good luck.