Category: Business, Data, Kubernetes, Infrastructure, automation

While it is projected that production projects using Kubernetes will rise 61% in the next two years, nearly all organizations (94%) run into challenges. Individual teams create their own clusters to meet specific business functions, but there is no consistent structure, policy or management practice across the enterprise. As the number of clusters and workloads grow, they are often managed and governed independently, creating cluster sprawl that prevents organizations from realizing the full value of containers and Kubernetes.

Whether you are new to Kubernetes or your organization has adopted Kubernetes in many clusters, a multi-tenancy strategy can provide significant benefits.

Applications deployed in a namespace can leverage the powerful security and resource management constructs that Kubernetes offers to build an effective multitenant platform.

Related Articles