VOOZH about

URL: https://thenewstack.io/kubernetes-gets-back-to-scaling-with-virtual-clusters/

⇱ Kubernetes Gets Back to Scaling with Virtual Clusters - The New Stack


TNS
SUBSCRIBE
Join our community of software engineering leaders and aspirational developers. Always stay in-the-know by getting the most important news and exclusive content delivered fresh to your inbox to learn more about at-scale software development.
REQUIRED
It seems that you've previously unsubscribed from our newsletter in the past. Click the button below to open the re-subscribe form in a new tab. When you're done, simply close that tab and continue with this form to complete your subscription.
The New Stack does not sell your information or share it with unaffiliated third parties. By continuing, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
Welcome and thank you for joining The New Stack community!
Please answer a few simple questions to help us deliver the news and resources you are interested in.
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
Great to meet you!
Tell us a bit about your job so we can cover the topics you find most relevant.
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
REQUIRED
Welcome!

We’re so glad you’re here. You can expect all the best TNS content to arrive Monday through Friday to keep you on top of the news and at the top of your game.

What’s next?

Check your inbox for a confirmation email where you can adjust your preferences and even join additional groups.

Follow TNS on your favorite social media networks.

Become a TNS follower on LinkedIn.

Check out the latest featured and trending stories while you wait for your first TNS newsletter.

PREV
1 of 2
NEXT
VOXPOP
As a JavaScript developer, what non-React tools do you use most often?
Angular
0%
Astro
0%
Svelte
0%
Vue.js
0%
Other
0%
I only use React
0%
I don't use JavaScript
0%
Thanks for your opinion! Subscribe below to get the final results, published exclusively in our TNS Update newsletter:
NEW! Try Stackie AI
From clobbered drafts to real-time sync
Apr 14th 2026 10:00am, by David Moore
TypeScript 6.0 RC arrives as a bridge to a faster future
Mar 14th 2026 9:00am, by Darryl K. Taft
Mastra empowers web devs to build AI agents in TypeScript
Jan 28th 2026 11:00am, by Loraine Lawson
2024-04-25 07:01:00
Kubernetes Gets Back to Scaling with Virtual Clusters
podcast,video,
Containers / Kubernetes / Operations

Kubernetes Gets Back to Scaling with Virtual Clusters

Virtual clusters in containers are lighter, faster to spin up and more portable than the real kind, said Lukas Gentele, of Loft Labs, in this episode of The New Stack Makers.
Apr 25th, 2024 7:01am by Alex Williams
👁 Featued image for: Kubernetes Gets Back to Scaling with Virtual Clusters

PARIS — A virtual cluster — now that’s a way to imagine the next generation of virtualization.

But what is a virtual cluster? In this episode of The New Stack Makers, Loft Labs chief executive Lukas Gentele said that a virtual cluster is essentially a Kubernetes control plane that runs inside a container, which runs in another Kubernetes cluster. Loft Labs made its vcluster technology open source in 2021.

“That way, you don’t have to create 300 different control planes,” Gentele said. “Instead, you can run VMs in containers that are lighter, faster to spin and portable.”

Virtual clusters spin up in about six seconds, versus a real Kubernetes cluster. If you spin up a real K8s cluster in Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS) or Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE), it takes 30 minutes or more to start, Gentele said.

Take Istio, the service mesh for the cloud native ecosystem. Let’s say you want to set up Istio for production. It will require multiple clusters and any number of control planes. A virtual cluster, Gentele said, may take one cluster, one Istio and 300 virtual clusters that share the same Istio as the real clusters.

A vCluster Integration with Rancher

At KubeCon + CloudNativeCon in Paris, Loft Labs announced it had integrated vCluster into Rancher, the container management and edge-computing platform. It allows users to manage virtual clusters in the same way they manage real clusters

Loft Labs implemented Rancher following two years of community requests for virtual clusters. Loft Labs piloted Rancher at a company with a large Rancher footprint. The company faced problems that epitomized use cases for virtual clusters.

Internal engineers need a lot of clusters. And demand is enormous. New projects are coming out; projects are migrating to Kubernetes. In worst cases, multiple clusters are needed for the same application. There may be a staging cluster, a production cluster and a dev cluster for each application.

Let’s say a company has 500 applications. Now, you have thousands of clusters. These clusters are all separate from each other. So there have been attempts to fix the sharing matter through fleet management. However, in Gentele’s view, that is the wrong architecture.

“We believe it’s better to have a multitenant cluster instead of a single-tenant cluster so you can share things,” Gentele said.

In the early days of Kubernetes, he said, it was always about how many clusters or nodes could get packed in a cluster. Customers scaled up to 10,000 or more clusters.

Then something happened. Little three-node clusters started popping up. And that’s different from what Kubernetes creators designed it to do when they architected it to scale.

But because it’s super hard to share a cluster, and you have to set up many things to make it work, it could be more isolated. That’s why customers resort to these little single-tenant clusters instead of large multitenant clusters. 

“And we’re essentially saying, hey, let’s do what Kubernetes is designed for,” Gentele said. “Let’s create a shared large cluster and have workflow clusters as a virtualization layer on top that actually allows you to do the sharing and security.”

TRENDING STORIES
Alex Williams is founder and publisher of The New Stack. He's a longtime technology journalist who did stints at TechCrunch, SiliconAngle and what is now known as ReadWrite. Alex has been a journalist since the late 1980s, starting at the...
Read more from Alex Williams
SHARE THIS STORY
TRENDING STORIES
Amazon Web Services and Google Cloud  are sponsors of The New Stack.
SHARE THIS STORY
TRENDING STORIES
TNS DAILY NEWSLETTER Receive a free roundup of the most recent TNS articles in your inbox each day.
The New Stack does not sell your information or share it with unaffiliated third parties. By continuing, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.