Deployment Manager (DM) dm
makes it easy to create, describe, update and
delete Kubernetes resources using declarative configuration. A configuration is
just a YAML
file that configures Kubernetes resources or supplies parameters
to templates. Templates are just YAML files with Jinja
mark up or Python scripts.
For example, this simple configuration deploys the Guestbook example:
resources:
- name: frontend
type: github.com/kubernetes/application-dm-templates/common/replicatedservice:v1
properties:
service_port: 80
container_port: 80
external_service: true
replicas: 3
image: gcr.io/google_containers/example-guestbook-php-redis:v3
- name: redis
type: github.com/kubernetes/application-dm-templates/storage/redis:v1
properties: null
It uses two templates. The front end is a replicated service, which creates a service and replication controller with matching selectors, and the back end is a Redis cluster, which creates a Redis master and two Redis slaves.
Templates can use other templates, making it easy to create larger structures from smaller building blocks. For example, the Redis template uses the replicated service template to create the Redis master, and then again to create each Redis slave.
DM runs server side, in your Kubernetes cluster, so it can tell you what templates you've instantiated there, what resources they created, and even how the resources are organized. So, for example, you can ask questions like:
- What Redis instances are running in this cluster?
- What Redis master and slave services are part of this Redis instance?
- What pods are part of this Redis slave?
Because DM stores its state in the cluster, not on your workstation, you can ask those questions from any client at any time.
Templates live in ordinary Github repositories called template registries. See the Kubernetes Template Registry for curated Kubernetes applications using Deployment Manager templates.
For more information about configurations and templates, see the design document.
Please hang out with us in the Slack chat room and/or the Google Group for the Kubernetes configuration SIG.
Follow these 3 steps to install DM:
- Make sure your Kubernetes cluster is up and running, and that you can run
kubectl
commands against it. - Clone this repository into the src folder of your GOPATH, if you haven't already. See the Kubernetes developer documentation for information on how to setup Go and use the repository.
- Use
kubectl
to install DM into your clusterkubectl create -f install.yaml
That's it. You can now use kubectl
to see DM running in your cluster:
kubectl get pod,rc,service --namespace=dm
If you see expandybird-service, manager-service, resourcifier-service, and expandybird-rc, manager-rc and resourcifier-rc with pods that are READY, then DM is up and running!
The easiest way to interact with Deployment Manager is through the dm
tool
hitting a kubectl
proxy. To set that up:
- Build the tool by running
make
in the deployment-manager repository. - Run
kubectl proxy --port=8001 --namespace=dm &
to start a proxy that lets you interact with the Kubernetes API server through port 8001 on localhost.dm
useshttp://localhost:8001/api/v1/proxy/namespaces/dm/services/manager-service:manager
as the default service address for DM.
The DM client, dm
, can deploy configurations from the command line. It can also
pull templates from a template registry, generate configurations from them using
parameters supplied on the command line, and deploy the resulting configurations.
dm
can deploy a configuration from a file, or read one from stdin
. This
command deploys the Guestbook example using the configuration shown above from
the examples directory in this project:
dm deploy examples/guestbook/guestbook.yaml
You can now use kubectl
to see Guestbook running:
kubectl get service
Look for frontend-service. If your cluster supports external load balancing, it will have an external IP assigned to it, and you can navigate to it in your browser to see the guestbook in action.
For more information about this example, see examples/guestbook/README.md
You can also deploy a template directly, without a configuration. This command deploys a redis cluster with two slaves from the redis template in the Kubernetes Template Registry:
dm deploy storage/redis:v1
You can optionally supply values for template parameters on the command line, like this:
dm --properties workers=3 deploy storage/redis:v1
When you deploy a template directly, without a configuration, dm
generates a
configuration from the template and the supplied parameters, and then deploys the
configuration.
For more information about deploying templates from a template registry or adding types to a template registry, see the template registry documentation.
Here's a list of available dm
commands:
expand Expands the supplied configuration(s)
deploy Deploys the named template or the supplied configuration(s)
list Lists the deployments in the cluster
get Retrieves the named deployment
delete Deletes the named deployment
update Updates a deployment using the supplied configuration(s)
deployed-types Lists the types deployed in the cluster
deployed-instances Lists the instances of the named type deployed in the cluster
templates Lists the templates in a given template registry
describe Describes the named template in a given template registry
You can uninstall Deployment Manager using the same configuration:
kubectl delete -f install.yaml
This project runs Deployment Manager on Kubernetes as three replicated services. By default, install.yaml uses prebuilt images stored in Google Container Registry to install them. However, you can build your own container images and push them to your own project in the Google Container Registry:
- Set the environment variable
PROJECT
to the name of a project known to GCloud. - Run
make push
There is a more detailed design document available.
This project is still under active development, so you might run into issues. If you do, please don't be shy about letting us know, or better yet, contribute a fix or feature.
Your contributions are welcome.
We use the same workflow, License and Contributor License Agreement as the main Kubernetes repository.
DM uses the same concepts and languages as Google Cloud Deployment Manager, but creates resources in Kubernetes clusters, not in Google Cloud Platform projects.