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Version: Pasley (2.1)

Overview

Codezero is an overlay network that empowers development teams to turn Kubernetes clusters into Teamspaces. A Teamspace is a collaborative development environment where developers can locally Consume services discoverable on a Service Catalog. Services featured in the catalog operate either within the Kubernetes cluster, or on a team member's local machine. Developers can Serve local Variants of services through this catalog to other members of the team.

Teamspace

In the above diagram, A developer is developing & running Service C Variant locally. Their local Service C Variant is Consuming Service D from the Kubernetes cluster. They are using a Codezero Teamspace to Serve their local Variant to Service A in the Kubernetes cluster.

Variants running locally need not be containerized. They are simply services running on a local port but through the service catalog appear like they are deployed to the Kubernetes cluster. Developers can, therefore, use preferred local tooling like IDEs, debuggers, profilers and test tools (e.g. Postman) during the development process.

Teamspaces are language agnostic and operate at the network level. Any authorized member can define Conditions that reshape traffic across the services available in the catalog to instantly create a Logical Ephemeral Environment. While the Teamspace is long running, this temporary traffic shaped environment comprising of a mix of remote and local services can be used to rapidly build and test software before code is pushed.

You do not have to be a Kubernetes admin or a networking guru in order to develop with a Teamspace. Once setup, most developers need not have any direct knowledge of, or access to the underlying Kubernetes Clusters.

Getting Started

This documentation is geared to both Kubernetes Admins who want to create Teamspaces as well as Developers who simply want to work with Teamspaces.

We recommend you go through this documentation in the order it is presented as we build on previously defined concepts. Happy Learning!

Guides

The Guides cover setting up and administering a Teamspace. You will require a Kubernetes Cluster to create a Teamspace. The Kubernetes QuickStart has several options to get started if you do not currently have a custer. Due to inherent limitations, you cannot use a local cluster like Minikube or Kind with Codezero.

Tutorials

The Tutorials focus on using a Teamspace once setup. We have put together a Sample Kubernetes Project that comprises some of the most common Microservices Patterns you would encounter in a Kubernetes cluster. This project is used across all the Tutorials and Videos in this documentation.

The Tutorials walk you through scenarios you will encounter in just about any modern microservices application development.