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See how to use Crossplane to provision AWS and Azure resources directly from Kubernetes — no state files, no HCL, just YAML and reconciliation loops. We'll cover: → What Crossplane is and how it turns Kubernetes into a universal control plane → How to install Crossplane on a minikube cluster using Helm → Setting up AWS and Azure providers with credentials → Deploying real cloud resources (S3 bucket + Azure Resource Group) using YAML → Key Crossplane concepts: Providers, Managed Resources, Composite Resources, and Claims → Why visibility matters at scale and how Lens Kubernetes IDE helps you manage Crossplane resources → Using the Lens MCP Server to query your infrastructure with natural language Crossplane brings infrastructure as code into the Kubernetes ecosystem — no state files, no HCL, just familiar YAML and the reconciliation loop you already know. Resources: → Blog: https://lenshq.io/blog/crossplane-kubernetes-tutorial → Repository: https://github.com/lensapp/blog-examples/tree/main/crossplane ----------------------------------------------------------------- Learn Kubernetes with Lens K8S IDE – the powerful Kubernetes IDE for developers and DevOps engineers. RESOURCES: - Download Lens: https://lenshq.io/download - Documentation: https://docs.k8slens.dev/ - Community: https://forums.k8slens.dev/ CONNECT WITH US: - Website: https://lenshq.io/ - Twitter: https://x.com/k8slens - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/k8slens/ - GitHub: https://github.com/lensapp/