
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Managing Kubernetes at fleet scale introduces significant complexity, especially as organizations expand from a few clusters to hundreds or thousands across cloud, on-premises, and edge environments. While GitOps remains the dominant model for declarative management, its traditional one-to-one repository-to-cluster approach struggles to handle multi-cluster realities such as global traffic routing, shared secrets, and unified observability. AsStephane Erbrech, Principal Software Engineer at Microsoftexplains, the challenge shifts from deployment to governance—maintaining consistency, security, and compliance across a vast distributed system without manual intervention.
This need is amplified by the rise of AI workloads at the edge, where inference is increasingly decentralized. To address these challenges,Microsoft Azure Kubernetes Fleet Managerenables coordinated, staged rollouts across clusters, allowing teams to validate updates in lower-risk environments before production. Supporting this,Cilium Cluster Meshprovides seamless cross-cluster connectivity, enabling workload mobility and efficient resource use, especially for scarce GPU capacity. Together, these tools help modern platform teams manage lifecycle, networking, and orchestration at scale.
Learn more from The New Stack around managing Kubernetes at fleet scale:
KubeFleet: The Future of Multicluster Kubernetes App Management
Why Microsoft is betting on temporary identities to stop autonomous agents from going rogue
Join our community of newsletter subscribers to stay on top of the news and at the top of your game.
By The New Stack4.3
3131 ratings
Managing Kubernetes at fleet scale introduces significant complexity, especially as organizations expand from a few clusters to hundreds or thousands across cloud, on-premises, and edge environments. While GitOps remains the dominant model for declarative management, its traditional one-to-one repository-to-cluster approach struggles to handle multi-cluster realities such as global traffic routing, shared secrets, and unified observability. AsStephane Erbrech, Principal Software Engineer at Microsoftexplains, the challenge shifts from deployment to governance—maintaining consistency, security, and compliance across a vast distributed system without manual intervention.
This need is amplified by the rise of AI workloads at the edge, where inference is increasingly decentralized. To address these challenges,Microsoft Azure Kubernetes Fleet Managerenables coordinated, staged rollouts across clusters, allowing teams to validate updates in lower-risk environments before production. Supporting this,Cilium Cluster Meshprovides seamless cross-cluster connectivity, enabling workload mobility and efficient resource use, especially for scarce GPU capacity. Together, these tools help modern platform teams manage lifecycle, networking, and orchestration at scale.
Learn more from The New Stack around managing Kubernetes at fleet scale:
KubeFleet: The Future of Multicluster Kubernetes App Management
Why Microsoft is betting on temporary identities to stop autonomous agents from going rogue
Join our community of newsletter subscribers to stay on top of the news and at the top of your game.

32,108 Listeners

228,270 Listeners

16,057 Listeners

9 Listeners

3 Listeners

274 Listeners

9,646 Listeners

1,095 Listeners

624 Listeners

151 Listeners

4 Listeners

25 Listeners

10,177 Listeners

563 Listeners

5,544 Listeners

15,717 Listeners