An intro to MicroK8s
Alex Cattle
on 27 January 2020
Tags: container orchestration , containers , kubernetes , MicroK8s , Ubuntu

MicroK8s is the smallest, fastest multi-node Kubernetes. Single-package fully conformant lightweight Kubernetes that works on 42 flavours of Linux as well as Mac and Windows using Multipass. Perfect for: Developer workstations, IoT, Edge, CI/CD.
Anyone who’s tried to work with Kubernetes knows the pain of having to deal with getting setup and running with the deployment. There are minimalist solutions in the market that reduce time-to-deployment and complexity but the light weight solutions come at the expense of critical extensibility and missing add-ons.
If you don’t want to spend time jumping through hoops to get Kubernetes up and running, MicroK8s gets you started in under 60 seconds.
“Canonical might have assembled the easiest way to provision a single node Kubernetes cluster”
Kelsey Hightower, Google.
Join our webinar to learn why developers choose to work with MicroK8s as a reliable, fast, small and upstream version of Kubernetes and how you can get started. The webinar will also feature the add-ons available including Kubeflow for AI/ML work, Grafana and Prometheus for monitoring, service mesh tools and more.
What’s the risk of unsolved vulnerabilities in Docker images?
Having a trusted source for your dependencies is critical for a secure software supply chain. How confident are you in your container security? See how Ubuntu and Canonical can help.
Newsletter signup
Related posts
Canonical Ubuntu and Ubuntu Pro now available on AWS European Sovereign Cloud
Canonical announced it is a launch partner for the AWS European Sovereign Cloud, with Ubuntu and Ubuntu Pro now available. This new independent cloud for...
Deploy your Spring Boot application to production
In this article we walk through the steps required to deploy a Spring Boot application to production using Juju and Kubernetes. The goal is to showcase the...
London called, and the world answered: creating a Summit without borders
When we announced that the Ubuntu Summit 25.10 would be a remote event, we knew we were taking a big step. We asked ourselves: how can we capture the spirit...