So… you're living the dream, right? You have your workload running in Kubernetes, you have Splunk in your SRE/Monitoring/Observability Tech Stack. And the best thing: you are a happy Harness user. Naturally, you decide to run your Harness Delegate as a K8s StatefulSet.
In this brief tutorial, we’ll take advantage of Splunk HEC to integrate with Harness.
This tutorial is an advanced continuation of my article about the Vault Agent integration and Harness. I received some feedback from expert customers and I decided to create another tutorial focusing on Kubernetes Delegates and our new capability to support Vault Agent as the integration method for the Harness Secrets Manager.
The answer is always Python. In this tutorial, we learn how to interact with the Harness API using none other than Python.
Harness has a lot of customers with very different Artifact sources. One of the most famous is to use an S3 Bucket as the home for all kinds of artifacts.
Today, I want to share what I did with a customer to make his GitHub repo become an automated HTTP Helm Chart repo. This is a very good choice, since there’s a GitHub Action that we can use to keep the repo index updated automatically. Buckle up!
Harness is about to release a new option to integrate with Vault to serve it as a Secrets Manager. Here's a tutorial!
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