The command kops replace
can replace a cluster desired configuration from the config in a yaml file (see cli/kops_replace.md).
It is possible to generate that yaml file from a template, using the command kops toolbox template
(see cli/kops_toolbox_template.md).
This document details the template language used.
The file passed as --template
must be a go template. Example:
# File cluster.tmpl.yaml
apiVersion: kops/v1alpha2
kind: InstanceGroup
metadata:
labels:
kops.k8s.io/cluster: {{.clusterName}}.{{.dnsZone}}
name: nodes
spec:
image: coreos.com/CoreOS-stable-1409.6.0-hvm
kubernetesVersion: {{.kubernetesVersion}
machineType: m4.large
maxPrice: "0.5"
maxSize: 2
minSize: 15
role: Node
rootVolumeSize: 100
subnets:
- {{.awsRegion}}a
- {{.awsRegion}}b
- {{.awsRegion}}c
You can pass configuration such as an environment file by using the --values PATH
command line option. Note --values
is a slice so can be defined multiple times; the configuration is overridden by each configuration file (so order is important assuming duplicating values); a use-case for this would be a default configuration which upstream clusters can override.
The file passed as --values
must contain the variables referenced in the template. Example:
# File values.yaml
clusterName: eu1
kubernetesVersion: 1.7.1
dnsZone: k8s.example.com
awsRegion: eu-west-1
Running kops toolbox template
replaces the placeholders in the template by values and generates the file output.yaml, which can then be used to replace the desired cluster configuration with kops replace -f cluster.yaml
.
Note: when creating a cluster desired configuration template, you can
- use
kops get k8s-cluster.example.com -o yaml > cluster-desired-config.yaml
to create the cluster desired configuration file (see cli/kops_get.md). The values in this file are defined in cluster_spec.md. - replace values by placeholders in that file to create the template.
The --template
command line option can point to either a specific file or a directory with a collection of templates. An example usage would be;
$ kops toolbox template --values dev.yaml --template cluster.yaml --template instance_group_directory
The cluster.yaml (your main cluster spec for example) would be written first followed by any templates found in the instance_group_directory directory. Note the toolbox will automatically add YAML separators between the documents for you.
The toolbox template also supports the reuse or break up of code blocks into snippets directories. By passing a --snippets PATH
to a directory holding templates;
$ kops toolbox template --values dev.yaml --template cluster.yaml --template instancegroups --snippets snippets
The example below assumes you have placed the appropriate files i.e. (nodes.json, master.json etc) in to the snippets directory. Note, the namespace of the snippets are flat and always the basename() of the file path; so snippets/components/docker.options
is still referred to as 'docker.options'.
apiVersion: kops/v1alpha2
kind: Cluster
metadata:
name: {{ .environment }}.{{ .dns_zone }}
spec:
docker:
{{ include "docker" . | indent 4 }}
additionalPolicies:
master: |
{{ include "masters.json" . | indent 6 }}
node: |
{{ include "nodes.json" . | indent 6 }}
The entire set of https://github.com/Masterminds/sprig functions are available within the templates for you. Note if you want to use the 'defaults' functions switch off the verification check on the command line by --fail-on-missing=false
;
image: {{ default $image $node.image }}
machineType: {{ default $instance $node.machine_type }}
maxSize: {{ default "10" $node.max_size }}
minSize: {{ default "1" $node.min_size }}
Formatting in golang templates is a pain! At the start or at the end of a statement can be infuriating to get right, so a --format-yaml=true
(defaults to false) command line option has been added. This will first unmarshal the generated content (performing a syntax verification) and then marshal back the content removing all those nasty formatting issues, newlines etc.