Templates are only useful when they preserve judgment instead of replacing it. This page turns cluster topology into a reusable review and delivery scaffold for kubernetes and cloud native work.
When to use this template
Templates are only useful when they preserve judgment instead of replacing it. This page turns cluster topology into a reusable review and delivery scaffold for kubernetes and cloud native work.
Use it when the team needs a repeatable packet for design review, migration planning, or governance sign-off around cluster topology.
Template skeleton
Start with context, then constraints, then the design choice, then risk treatment, then operational ownership. This order matters because it forces the team to explain why the decision exists before they argue about implementation detail.
Review prompts to keep with the template
Ask who owns the decision, what assumptions might drift, what evidence should be attached, and what the incident or audit path looks like if the design fails. Use Kubernetes Capacity Calculator and EKS Node Sizing Calculator and Kubernetes YAML Visualizer early to force the inputs into something explicit.
Handoff guidance
The template should leave behind something implementers can use without reopening the original design debate. Then carry the result into flow-iq, scalability-analyzer, security-posture inside Architecto so the team can review the same decision in diagram, documentation, and governance workflows.
Related workflow moves
The point of this templates and checklists page is not just to rank for cluster topology checklist for kubernetes and cloud native. It is to hand the reader a practical path into the next artifact: a free tool, a comparison page, or a deeper Architecto module that keeps the same decision context alive.



