Singh notes that almost all of the engineers interact with the staging cluster on a daily basis, and that has created a cultural change at Crowdfire. "Developers are more aware of the cloud infrastructure now," he says. "They’ve started following cloud best practices like better health checks, structured logs to stdout [standard output], and config via files or environment variables."
With Crowdfire’s commitment to Kubernetes, Singh is looking to expand the company’s cloud-native stack. The team already uses
Prometheus for monitoring, and he says he is evaluating
Linkerd and
Envoy Proxy as a way to "get more metrics about request latencies and failures, and handle them better." Other CNCF projects, including
OpenTracing and
gRPC are also on his radar.
Singh has found that the cloud-native community is growing in India, too, particularly in Bangalore. "A lot of startups and new companies are starting to run their infrastructure on Kubernetes," he says.
And when people ask him about Crowdfire’s experience, he has this advice to offer: "Kubernetes is a great piece of technology, but it might not be right for you, especially if you have just one or two services or your app isn’t easy to run in a containerized environment," he says. "Assess your situation and the value that Kubernetes provides before going all in. If you do decide to use Kubernetes, make sure you understand the components that run under the hood and what role they play in smoothly running the cluster. Another thing to consider is if your apps are ‘Kubernetes-ready,’ meaning if they have proper health checks and handle termination signals to shut down gracefully."
And if your company fits that profile, go for it. Crowdfire clearly did—and is now reaping the benefits. "In the 15 months that we’ve been using Kubernetes, it has been amazing for us," says Singh. "It enabled us to iterate quickly, increase development speed and continuously deliver new features and bug fixes to our users, while keeping our operational costs and infrastructure management overhead under control."