Skip to main content

Google GKE

Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE) is a managed container service to run and scale Kubernetes applications in the cloud or on-premises.

Camunda 8 Self-Managed can be deployed on GKE like any Kubernetes cluster using Helm charts. However, there are a few pitfalls to avoid as described below.

GKE cluster specification​

Generally speaking, the GKE cluster specification depends on your needs and workloads. Here is a recommended start to run Camunda 8:

  • Instance type: n1-standard-4 (4 vCPUs, 15 GB Memory)
  • Number of nodes: 4
  • Volume type: Performance (SSD) persistent disks

Pitfalls to avoid​

For general deployment pitfalls, visit the deployment troubleshooting guide.

Volume performance​

To have a proper performance in Camunda 8, the persistent volumes attached to Zeebe should have around 1,000-3,000 IOPS. The Performance (SSD) persistent disks volumes deliver a consistent baseline IOPS performance but it varies based on volume size.

It's recommended to use Performance (SSD) persistent disks volume type with at least 100 GB per volume to have 3,000 IOPS.

Zeebe Ingress​

Zeebe requires an Ingress controller that supports gRPC, so if you are using GKE Ingress (ingress-gce), not ingress-nginx, you might need to do extra steps. Namely, using cloud.google.com/app-protocols annotation in Zeebe Service. For more details, visit the GKE guide using HTTP/2 for load balancing with Ingress.