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With Kubernetes emerging as the de facto standard for service orchestration, discussion is shifting from 'How does Kubernetes work?' to more specific concerns such as 'How do I achieve an optimal development workflow?' The answer lies in finding combinations of tools that work together in synergy. They should produce end to end workflows that perform effectively in the real world, while also covering a wide range of development stages—building, deploying, debugging, and so on. Goal in mind, let's dive into the tooling available in the current landscape—tools such as Helm, Draft, Skaffold, Forge, Telepresence, Garden, and Tilt. Ellen will share with you their capabilities to developer needs, then outline workflows you can use in practice right away.
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The State of Kubernetes Development Tooling
Ellen Korbes
Ellen's a developer advocate at Garden, and an avid gopher—actively involved with Go communities, and responsible for the most comprehensive Go course in Portuguese. They first got acquainted with Kubernetes while writing code for kubectl, in a SIG-CLI internship. They've spoken at conferences like OSCON, GopherCon, Velocity, and GOTO, and at countless local meet-ups. As a point of pride, Ellen has received the 'Best Hair' award.