How to configure a Kubernetes Multi-Pod Deployment

Pagids answer has most of the basics. You should create 4 Deployments for your scenario. Each deployment will create a ReplicaSet that schedules and supervises the collection of PODs for the Deployment.

Each Deployment will most likely also require a Service in front of it for access. I usually create a single yaml file that has a Deployment and the corresponding Service in it. Here is an example for an nginx.yaml that I use:

apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
  annotations:
    service.alpha.kubernetes.io/tolerate-unready-endpoints: "true"
  name: nginx
  labels:
    app: nginx
spec:
  type: NodePort
  ports:
  - port: 80
    name: nginx
    targetPort: 80
    nodePort: 32756
  selector:
    app: nginx
---
apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
  name: nginxdeployment
spec:
  replicas: 3
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: nginx
    spec:
      containers:
      - name: nginxcontainer
        image: nginx:latest
        imagePullPolicy: Always
        ports:
        - containerPort: 80

Here some additional information for clarification:

  • A POD is not a scalable unit. A Deployment that schedules PODs is.
  • A Deployment is meant to represent a single group of PODs fulfilling a single purpose together.
  • You can have many Deployments work together in the virtual network of the cluster.
  • For accessing a Deployment that may consist of many PODs running on different nodes you have to create a Service.
  • Deployments are meant to contain stateless services. If you need to store a state you need to create StatefulSet instead (e.g. for a database service).

You can use the Kubernetes API reference for the Deployment and you'll find that the spec->template field is of type PodTemplateSpec along with the related comment (Template describes the pods that will be created.) it answers you questions. A longer description can of course be found in the Deployment user guide.

To answer your questions...

1) The Pods are managed by the Deployment and defining them separately doesn't make sense as they are created on demand by the Deployment. Keep in mind that there might be more replicas of the same pod type.

2) For each of the applications in your list, you'd have to define one Deployment - which also makes sense when it comes to difference replica counts and application rollouts.

3) you haven't asked that but it's related - along with separate Deployments each of your applications will also need a dedicated Service so the others can access it.