/r/kubernetes had this announcement up about five mins after it dropped at Kubecon. It's a huge deal. So many tutorials and products used ingress-nginx for basic ingress, so them throwing in the towel (but not really) is big news.
That said, (a) the Gateway API supercedes Ingress and provides much more functionality without much more complexity, and (b) NGINX and HAproxy have Gateway controllers.
To generally answer your question, I use HN, /r/devops and /r/kubernetes to stay current. I'm also working on a weekly blog series wherein I'll be doing an overview and quick start guide for every CNCF project in their portfolio. There's hundreds (thousands?) of projects in the collection, so it will keep me busy until I retire, probably :)
> /r/kubernetes had this announcement up about five mins after it dropped at Kubecon. It's a huge deal. So many tutorials and products used ingress-nginx for basic ingress, so them throwing in the towel (but not really) is big news.
I was one of those whose first reaction was surprise, because ingress was the most critical and hardest aspect of a kubernetes rollout to implement and get up and running on a vanilla deployment. It's what cloud providers offer out of the box as a major selling point to draw in customers.
But then I browsed through the Gateway API docs, and it is a world of difference. It turns a hard problem that requires so many tutorials and products to help anyone get something running into a trivially solvable problem. The improvements on their security model is undoubtedly better and alone clearly justifies getting rid of ingress.
Change might be inconvenient, but you need change to get rid of pain points.
That said, (a) the Gateway API supercedes Ingress and provides much more functionality without much more complexity, and (b) NGINX and HAproxy have Gateway controllers.
To generally answer your question, I use HN, /r/devops and /r/kubernetes to stay current. I'm also working on a weekly blog series wherein I'll be doing an overview and quick start guide for every CNCF project in their portfolio. There's hundreds (thousands?) of projects in the collection, so it will keep me busy until I retire, probably :)