You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.Dismiss alert
Copy file name to clipboardExpand all lines: docs/deployment/tutorial-kubernetes-tools.md
+8-4Lines changed: 8 additions & 4 deletions
Original file line number
Diff line number
Diff line change
@@ -14,6 +14,8 @@ ms.workload:
14
14
15
15
The Visual Studio Kubernetes Tools help streamline the development of containerized applications targeting Kubernetes. Visual Studio can automatically create the configuration-as-code files needed to support Kubernetes deployment, such as Dockerfiles and Helm charts. You can debug your code in a live Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) cluster using Azure Dev Spaces, or publish directly to an AKS cluster from inside Visual Studio.
16
16
17
+
This tutorial covers using Visual Studio to add Kubernetes support to an project and publish to AKS. If you are primarily interested in using [Azure Dev Spaces](http://aka.ms/get-azds) to debug and test your project running in AKS, you can jump to the [Azure Dev Spaces tutorial](https://docs.microsoft.com/azure/dev-spaces/get-started-netcore-visualstudio) instead.
18
+
17
19
## Prerequisites
18
20
19
21
To leverage this new functionality, you'll need:
@@ -22,9 +24,9 @@ To leverage this new functionality, you'll need:
22
24
23
25
- The [Kubernetes tools for Visual Studio](https://aka.ms/get-vsk8stools), available as a separate download.
24
26
25
-
-[Docker for Windows](https://store.docker.com/editions/community/docker-ce-desktop-windows) installed on your development workstation (that is, where you run Visual Studio), if you wish to build Docker images, debug Docker containers running locally, or publish to AKS.
27
+
-[Docker for Windows](https://store.docker.com/editions/community/docker-ce-desktop-windows) installed on your development workstation (that is, where you run Visual Studio), if you wish to build Docker images, debug Docker containers running locally, or publish to AKS. (Docker is *not* required for building and debugging Docker containers in AKS using Azure Dev Spaces.)
26
28
27
-
- If you wish to publish to AKS from Visual Studio:
29
+
- If you wish to publish to AKS from Visual Studio (*not* required for debugging in AKS using Azure Dev Spaces):
28
30
29
31
1. The [AKS publishing tools](https://aka.ms/get-vsk8spublish), available as a separate download.
30
32
@@ -74,11 +76,11 @@ The added files are:
74
76
75
77
## Publish to Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS)
76
78
77
-
With all these files in place, you can use the Visual Studio IDE to write and debug your application code, just as you always have.
79
+
With all these files in place, you can use the Visual Studio IDE to write and debug your application code, just as you always have. You can also use [Azure Dev Spaces](http://aka.ms/get-azds) to quickly run and debug your code running live in an AKS cluster. For more information, please reference the [Azure Dev Spaces tutorial](https://docs.microsoft.com/azure/dev-spaces/get-started-netcore-visualstudio)
78
80
79
81
Once you have your code running the way you want, you can publish directly from Visual Studio to an AKS cluster.
80
82
81
-
To do this, you first need to double-check that you've installed everything as described in the [Prerequisites](#prerequisities) section under the item for publishing to AKS, and run through all the command line steps given in the links. Then, set up a publish profile that publishes your container image to Azure Container Registry (ACR). Then AKS can pull your container image from ACR and deploy it into the cluster.
83
+
To do this, you first need to double-check that you've installed everything as described in the [Prerequisites](#prerequisites) section under the item for publishing to AKS, and run through all the command line steps given in the links. Then, set up a publish profile that publishes your container image to Azure Container Registry (ACR). Then AKS can pull your container image from ACR and deploy it into the cluster.
82
84
83
85
1. In **Solution Explorer**, right-click on your *project* and choose **Publish**.
84
86
@@ -115,3 +117,5 @@ Congratulations! You can now use the full power of Visual Studio for all your Ku
115
117
## Next steps
116
118
117
119
Learn more about Kubernetes development on Azure by reading the [AKS documentation](/azure/aks).
120
+
121
+
Learn more about Azure Dev Spaces by reading the [Azure Dev Spaces documentation](http://aka.ms/get-azds)
0 commit comments