The Azure Container Service Engine (acs-engine
) generates ARM (Azure Resource Manager) templates for Docker enabled clusters on Microsoft Azure with your choice of DCOS, Kubernetes, or Swarm orchestrators. The input to acs-engine is a cluster definition file which describes the desired cluster, including orchestrator, features, and agents. The structure of the input files is very similar to the public API for Azure Container Service.
Binary downloads for the latest version of acs-engine for are available here. Download acs-engine
for your operating system. Extract the binary and copy it to your $PATH
.
If would prefer to build acs-engine
from source or are you are interested in contributing to acs-engine
see building from source below.
acs-engine
reads a JSON cluster definition and generates a number of files that may be submitted to Azure Resource Manager (ARM). The generated files include:
- apimodel.json: is an expanded version of the cluster definition provided to the generate command. All default or computed values will be expanded during the generate phase.
- azuredeploy.json: represents a complete description of all Azure resources required to fulfill the cluster definition from
apimodel.json
. - azuredeploy.parameters.json: the parameters file holds a series of custom variables which are used in various locations throughout
azuredeploy.json
. - certificate and access config files: orchestrators like Kubernetes require certificates and additional configuration files (e.g. Kubernetes apiserver certificates and kubeconfig).
ACS Engine consumes a cluster definition which outlines the desired shape, size, and configuration of Kubernetes. There are a number of features that can be enabled through the cluster definition.
See ACS Engine The Long Way for an example on generating templates by hand.
Generated templates can be deployed using the Azure CLI 2.0 or Powershell.
Azure CLI 2.0 is the latest CLI maintained and supported by Microsoft. For installation instructions see the Azure CLI GitHub repository for the latest release.
$ az login
$ az account set --subscription "<SUBSCRIPTION NAME OR ID>"
$ az group create \
--name "<RESOURCE_GROUP_NAME>" \
--location "<LOCATION>"
$ az group deployment create \
--name "<DEPLOYMENT NAME>" \
--resource-group "<RESOURCE_GROUP_NAME>" \
--template-file "./_output/<INSTANCE>/azuredeploy.json" \
--parameters "./_output/<INSTANCE>/azuredeploy.parameters.json"
Add-AzureRmAccount
Select-AzureRmSubscription -SubscriptionID <SUBSCRIPTION_ID>
New-AzureRmResourceGroup `
-Name <RESOURCE_GROUP_NAME> `
-Location <LOCATION>
New-AzureRmResourceGroupDeployment `
-Name <DEPLOYMENT_NAME> `
-ResourceGroupName <RESOURCE_GROUP_NAME> `
-TemplateFile _output\<INSTANCE>\azuredeploy.json `
-TemplateParameterFile _output\<INSTANCE>\azuredeploy.parameters.json
The easiest way to start hacking on acs-engine
is to use a Docker-based environment. If you already have Docker installed then you can get started with a few commands.
- Windows (PowerShell):
.\scripts\devenv.ps1
- Linux/OSX (bash):
./scripts/devenv.sh
This script mounts the acs-engine
source directory as a volume into the Docker container, which means you can edit your source code in your favorite editor on your machine, while still being able to compile and test inside of the Docker container. This environment mirrors the environment used in the acs-engine continuous integration (CI) system.
When the script devenv.ps1
or devenv.sh
completes, you will be left at a command prompt.
Run the following commands to pull the latest dependencies and build the acs-engine
tool.
# install and download build dependencies
make bootstrap
# build the `acs-engine` binary
make build
The build process leaves the compiled acs-engine
binary in the bin
directory. Make sure everything completed successfully bu running bin/acs-engine
without any arguments:
# ./bin/acs-engine
ACS-Engine deploys and manages Kubernetes, Swarm Mode, and DC/OS clusters in Azure
Usage:
acs-engine [command]
Available Commands:
deploy deploy an Azure Resource Manager template
generate Generate an Azure Resource Manager template
help Help about any command
version Print the version of ACS-Engine
Flags:
--debug enable verbose debug logs
-h, --help help for acs-engine
Use "acs-engine [command] --help" for more information about a command.
Here's a quick demo video showing the dev/build/test cycle with this setup.
Building ACS Engine from source has a few requirements for each of the platforms. Download and install the pre-reqs for your platform, Windows, Linux, or Mac:
- Go version 1.8 installation instructions
- Git Version Control installation instructions
Setup steps:
- Setup your go workspace. This guide assumes you are using
c:\gopath
as your Go workspace: - Type Windows key-R to open the run prompt
- Type
rundll32 sysdm.cpl,EditEnvironmentVariables
to open the system variables - Add
c:\go\bin
andc:\gopath\bin
to your PATH variables - Click "new" and add new environment variable named
GOPATH
and set the value toc:\gopath
Build acs-engine:
- Type Windows key-R to open the run prompt
- Type
cmd
to open a command prompt - Type
mkdir %GOPATH%
to create your gopath - Type
cd %GOPATH%
- Type
go get -d github.com/Azure/acs-engine
to download acs-engine from GitHub - Type
go get all
to get the supporting components - Type
go get -u github.com/jteeuwen/go-bindata/...
- Type
cd %GOPATH%\src\github.com\Azure\acs-engine\pkg\acsengine
- Type
go generate
- Type
cd %GOPATH%\src\github.com\Azure\acs-engine\pkg\i18n
- Type
go generate
- Type
cd %GOPATH%\src\github.com\Azure\acs-engine
- Type
go build
to build the project - Type
go install
to install the project - Run
acs-engine.exe
to see the command line parameters
Setup steps:
- Open a command prompt to setup your gopath:
mkdir $HOME/go
- edit
$HOME/.bash_profile
and add the following lines to setup your go path
export GOPATH=$HOME/go
export PATH=$PATH:/usr/local/go/bin:$GOPATH/bin
source $HOME/.bash_profile
Build acs-engine:
- Type
go get github.com/Azure/acs-engine
to get the acs-engine Github project - Type
cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/Azure/acs-engine
to change to the source directory - Type
make bootstrap
to install supporting components - Type
make build
to build the project - Type
./bin/acs-engine
to see the command line parameters