It seems like GKE now allows deleting all node pools, so you don’t pay for nodes but you still get a free Kubernetes API.
Anyone tried this?
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Replying to @ahmetb
It's all kinds of magic, can be useful if you're transitioning to a new cluster for some new feature but want to leave a backup of the old one sitting around for a bit.
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Replying to @robertjscott @ahmetb
Some companies spin the node count down to 0 overnight and on weekends for test clusters.
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Replying to @robertjscott @ahmetb
Why not just delete it and create a new cluster?
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Replying to @bgrant0607 @robertjscott
Also could be because there’s already a cluster that’s configured with secrets, iam accounts, daemonsets. I suspect not all devs declaratively deploy everything in the cluster every morning.
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Replying to @ahmetb @robertjscott
It would be useful to enumerate those things
4:57 PM - 6 Sep 2019
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