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K3s/k8s may help with that, but it's going to be a learning curve. I personally moved onto k8s for a similar reason, but it was a learning curve



It's a learning curve, but it is consistent, reliable, and standardized.

Kubernetes has become an interface, independent of implementation.

It's much like how POSIX is a standard and there are many implementations.

And yes, POSIX has a learning curve too, but I'd rather learn that than anything proprietary, or non standard/rapidly changing.


No doubt. The ability to scale is great, but the best thing about Kubernetes is really the API.




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