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The upcoming 1.34 release of Kubernetes may come with KYAML, a strict subset of YAML formatted specially for Kubernetes users.
“YAML is the programming language of Kubernetes,” noted Nigel Douglas, head of developer relations at Cloudsmith, a cloud native package management service, in an interview with TNS.
Yet, many users feel frustrated by a number of design quirks in YAML that cause extra work and additional debugging (even as the creator himself is working to make YAML a full-fledged programming language).
YAML is used throughout the Kubernetes ecosystem: to create a network policy, for writing a deployment manifest or for Helm deployment files.