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nack-large

License

NATS Controllers for Kubernetes (NACK)

JetStream Controller

The JetStream controllers allows you to manage NATS JetStream Streams and Consumers via K8S CRDs.

Getting started

First install the JetStream CRDs:

$ kubectl apply -f https://github.com/nats-io/nack/releases/latest/download/crds.yml

Now install with Helm:

helm repo add nats https://nats-io.github.io/k8s/helm/charts/
helm install nats nats/nats --set=nats.jetstream.enabled=true
helm install nack nats/nack --set jetstream.nats.url=nats://nats:4222

Creating Streams and Consumers

Let's create a a stream and a couple of consumers:

---
apiVersion: jetstream.nats.io/v1beta2
kind: Stream
metadata:
  name: mystream
spec:
  name: mystream
  subjects: ["orders.*"]
  storage: memory
  maxAge: 1h
---
apiVersion: jetstream.nats.io/v1beta2
kind: Consumer
metadata:
  name: my-push-consumer
spec:
  streamName: mystream
  durableName: my-push-consumer
  deliverSubject: my-push-consumer.orders
  deliverPolicy: last
  ackPolicy: none
  replayPolicy: instant
---
apiVersion: jetstream.nats.io/v1beta2
kind: Consumer
metadata:
  name: my-pull-consumer
spec:
  streamName: mystream
  durableName: my-pull-consumer
  deliverPolicy: all
  filterSubject: orders.received
  maxDeliver: 20
  ackPolicy: explicit
# Create a stream.
$ kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nats-io/nack/main/deploy/examples/stream.yml

# Check if it was successfully created.
$ kubectl get streams
NAME       STATE     STREAM NAME   SUBJECTS
mystream   Created   mystream      [orders.*]

# Create a push-based consumer
$ kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nats-io/nack/main/deploy/examples/consumer_push.yml

# Create a pull based consumer
$ kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nats-io/nack/main/deploy/examples/consumer_pull.yml

# Check if they were successfully created.
$ kubectl get consumers
NAME               STATE     STREAM     CONSUMER           ACK POLICY
my-pull-consumer   Created   mystream   my-pull-consumer   explicit
my-push-consumer   Created   mystream   my-push-consumer   none

# If you end up in an Errored state, run kubectl describe for more info.
#     kubectl describe streams mystream
#     kubectl describe consumers my-pull-consumer

Now we're ready to use Streams and Consumers. Let's start off with writing some data into mystream.

# Run nats-box that includes the NATS management utilities, and exec into it.
$ kubectl apply -f https://nats-io.github.io/k8s/tools/nats-box.yml
$ kubectl exec -it nats-box -- /bin/sh -l

# Publish a couple of messages from nats-box
nats-box:~$ nats context save jetstream -s nats://nats:4222
nats-box:~$ nats context select jetstream

nats-box:~$ nats pub orders.received "order 1"
nats-box:~$ nats pub orders.received "order 2"

First, we'll read the data using a pull-based consumer.

From the above my-pull-consumer Consumer CRD, we have set the filterSubject of orders.received. You can double check with the following command:

$ kubectl get consumer my-pull-consumer -o jsonpath={.spec.filterSubject}
orders.received

So that's the subject my-pull-consumer will pull messages from.

# Pull first message.
nats-box:~$ nats consumer next mystream my-pull-consumer
--- subject: orders.received / delivered: 1 / stream seq: 1 / consumer seq: 1

order 1

Acknowledged message

# Pull next message.
nats-box:~$ nats consumer next mystream my-pull-consumer
--- subject: orders.received / delivered: 1 / stream seq: 2 / consumer seq: 2

order 2

Acknowledged message

Next, let's read data using a push-based consumer.

From the above my-push-consumer Consumer CRD, we have set the deliverSubject of my-push-consumer.orders, as you can confirm with the following command:

$ kubectl get consumer my-push-consumer -o jsonpath={.spec.deliverSubject}
my-push-consumer.orders

So pushed messages will arrive on that subject. This time all messages arrive automatically.

nats-box:~$ nats sub my-push-consumer.orders
17:57:24 Subscribing on my-push-consumer.orders
[#1] Received JetStream message: consumer: mystream > my-push-consumer / subject: orders.received /
delivered: 1 / consumer seq: 1 / stream seq: 1 / ack: false
order 1

[#2] Received JetStream message: consumer: mystream > my-push-consumer / subject: orders.received /
delivered: 1 / consumer seq: 2 / stream seq: 2 / ack: false
order 2

Getting Started with Accounts

You can create an Account resource with the following CRD. The Account resource can be used to specify server and TLS information.

---
apiVersion: jetstream.nats.io/v1beta2
kind: Account
metadata:
  name: a
spec:
  name: a
  servers:
  - nats://nats:4222
  tls:
    secret:
      name: nack-a-tls
    ca: "ca.crt"
    cert: "tls.crt"
    key: "tls.key"

You can then link an Account to a Stream so that the Stream uses the Account information for its creation.

---
apiVersion: jetstream.nats.io/v1beta2
kind: Stream
metadata:
  name: foo
spec:
  name: foo
  subjects: ["foo", "foo.>"]
  storage: file
  replicas: 1
  account: a # <-- Create stream using account A information

The following is an example of how to get Accounts working with a custom NATS Server URL and TLS certificates.

# Install cert-manager
kubectl apply -f https://github.com/jetstack/cert-manager/releases/download/v1.6.0/cert-manager.yaml

# Install TLS certs
cd examples/secure
# Install certificate issuer
kubectl apply -f issuer.yaml
# Install account A cert
kubectl apply -f nack-a-client-tls.yaml
# Install server cert
kubectl apply -f server-tls.yaml
# Install nats-box cert
kubectl apply -f client-tls.yaml

# Install NATS cluster
helm install -f nats-helm.yaml nats nats/nats
# Verify pods are healthy
kubectl get pods

# Install nats-box to run nats cli later
kubectl apply -f nats-client-box.yaml

# Install JetStream Controller from nack
helm install --set jetstream.enabled=true jetstream-controller nats/nack
# Install CRDs
kubectl apply -f ../../deploy/crds.yml
# Verify pods are healthy
kubectl get pods

# Create account A resource
kubectl apply -f nack/nats-account-a.yaml

# Create stream using account A
kubectl apply -f nack/nats-stream-foo-a.yaml
# Create consumer using account A
kubectl apply -f nack/nats-consumer-bar-a.yaml

After Accounts, Streams, and Consumers are created, let's log into the nats-box container to run the management CLI.

# Get container shell
kubectl exec -it nats-client-box-abc-123 -- sh
# Change to TLS directory
cd /etc/nats-certs/clients/nack-a-tls

There should now be some Streams available, verify with nats command.

# List streams
nats --tlscert tls.crt --tlskey tls.key --tlsca ca.crt -s tls://nats.default.svc.cluster.local stream ls

You can now publish messages on a Stream.

# Push message
nats --tlscert tls.crt --tlskey tls.key --tlsca ca.crt -s tls://nats.default.svc.cluster.local pub foo hi

And pull messages from a Consumer.

# Pull message
nats --tlscert tls.crt --tlskey tls.key --tlsca ca.crt -s tls://nats.default.svc.cluster.local consumer next foo bar

Local Development

# First, build the jetstream controller.
make jetstream-controller

# Next, run the controller like this
./jetstream-controller -kubeconfig ~/.kube/config -s nats://localhost:4222

# Pro tip: jetstream-controller uses klog just like kubectl or kube-apiserver.
# This means you can change the verbosity of logs with the -v flag.
#
# For example, this prints raw HTTP requests and responses.
#     ./jetstream-controller -v=10

# You'll probably want to start a local Jetstream-enabled NATS server, unless
# you use a public one.
nats-server -DV -js

Build Docker image

make jetstream-controller-docker ver=1.2.3

NATS Server Config Reloader

This is a sidecar that you can use to automatically reload your NATS Server configuration file.

Installing with Helm

For more information see the Chart repo.

helm repo add nats https://nats-io.github.io/k8s/helm/charts/
helm install my-nats nats/nats

Configuring

reloader:
  enabled: true
  image: natsio/nats-server-config-reloader:0.6.0
  pullPolicy: IfNotPresent

Local Development

# First, build the config reloader.
make nats-server-config-reloader

# Next, run the reloader like this
./nats-server-config-reloader

Build Docker image

make nats-server-config-reloader-docker ver=1.2.3

NATS Boot Config

Installing with Helm

For more information see the Chart repo.

helm repo add nats https://nats-io.github.io/k8s/helm/charts/
helm install my-nats nats/nats

Configuring

bootconfig:
  image: natsio/nats-boot-config:0.5.2
  pullPolicy: IfNotPresent

Local Development

# First, build the project.
make nats-boot-config

# Next, run the project like this
./nats-boot-config

Build Docker image

make nats-boot-config-docker ver=1.2.3