The Hidden Egress Traps in Kubernetes
Most cloud bills spike from data transfer, not compute. Map your east-west and egress paths before they drain your margin.
A practical recipe to turn namespace labels into monthly cost statements that engineers trust.
Chargeback fails when the numbers are delayed, disputed, or easy to ignore. The fix is a lightweight, opinionated process that turns namespaces into invoices engineers actually believe.
owner, team, env, service, and cost-center are mandatory on every namespace and workload.owner fallback to catch legacy workloads.Team: CheckoutPeriod: Nov 17–23Total: $4,120 (+8% WoW)Top drivers: api-server (+$220 from higher HPA floor), payments-worker (+$180 from PV growth)Waste: 24% (requests vs usage)Action: Reduce payments-worker request to 500m CPU and 1Gi memory; PV cleanup scheduled for Nov 29.Chargeback is not a billing exercise; it is a feedback loop. Keep it fast, opinionated, and visible where engineers work every day.***
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Most cloud bills spike from data transfer, not compute. Map your east-west and egress paths before they drain your margin.
Pair latency and availability targets with spend guardrails so reliability does not blow up your cloud bill.
Before you trust ML to resize pods, fix your signals, budgets, and guardrails. Otherwise AI just automates bad guesses.
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