Cloudsy news

Cloudsy Launches Kubernetes Flex — Flexibility and Stability Without the Operational Headache

Cloudsy introduces Kubernetes Flex, a managed service that automates Kubernetes cluster creation and operations, giving teams control where they want it while Cloudsy handles infrastructure, security, and scaling.

Cloudsy is proud to announce the launch of Kubernetes Flex, a platform service designed to simplify Kubernetes cluster management. By combining user control with hands-off infrastructure operations, Kubernetes Flex lets engineering teams deploy and scale workloads without the burden of day-to-day cluster maintenance.

Key features of Kubernetes Flex:
  • Flexible cluster sizing: Run clusters with 3 master nodes and 1–10 worker nodes, with worker nodes configurable from 2 vCPU / 2 GB RAM to 4 vCPU / 16 GB RAM.
  • High-performance storage options: Choose between two disk types — “Super” (up to 40k IOPS, 320 Mb/s) or “Standard” (up to 20k IOPS, 160 Mb/s) — for working nodes.
  • Built-in high availability: External IP, network load balancer, and three control-plane nodes ensure reliability and scalability.
  • Managed networking: A network load balancer handles API access and workload distribution, and users can customize its rules via the Cloudsy console.

How it works:
  • Users remain in control of their cluster: you decide how many worker nodes, how much CPU or memory, and when to scale.
  • Cloudsy takes care of the infrastructure, security, and automation — greatly reducing the operational burden.
  • The service is ideal for teams that want to deploy production applications on Kubernetes without managing every detail themselves.

Kubernetes Flex is perfect for businesses that need a ready-to-go, production-grade Kubernetes environment. Whether you're running microservices, containerized workloads, or distributed applications, Kubernetes Flex provides a reliable foundation with minimal setup. It’s also well-suited for teams who prefer to manage their own deployment strategies but don’t want to handle the underlying infrastructure.