Posts about Dendron / Docs as Code / DevOps / Linux / AWS / PowerShell / Python / Automating All The Things. Opinions expressed are my own, not those of my employer.
Yes. Passed with a 92 I think. Everything runs together these days. I used the udemy course by kodecloud. I also setup a cluster and played with it everyday for a few months. In the end, the test wasn't bad. I think it's been made to seem more difficult than it was. The reality is that it's a test to show you have a baseline of knowledge on how to admin k8s. It's not some sort of CCIE for kubernetes.
You either know it or you don't. The docs helped, but I think using kubectl hands on was what helped the most.
Oh, and knowing vi is super helpful. It made editing yaml pretty easy. But I did have the advantage of using for nearly 20 years.
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Taking the test soon. One thing I would add is a simple bash tip. Something as simple as this could save a few seconds.
vim 13-deployment.yaml # Tweak
kubectl apply -f !$ # Deploy - using a bash expansion to place file name. Less typing, or tabbing.
Hey! Did you end up taking the exam? If so, how did it go and what things helped you the most?
Yes. Passed with a 92 I think. Everything runs together these days. I used the udemy course by kodecloud. I also setup a cluster and played with it everyday for a few months. In the end, the test wasn't bad. I think it's been made to seem more difficult than it was. The reality is that it's a test to show you have a baseline of knowledge on how to admin k8s. It's not some sort of CCIE for kubernetes.
You either know it or you don't. The docs helped, but I think using kubectl hands on was what helped the most.
Oh, and knowing vi is super helpful. It made editing yaml pretty easy. But I did have the advantage of using for nearly 20 years.