This guide walks through an example of building a simple memcached-operator powered by Ansible using tools and libraries provided by the Operator SDK.
- git
- docker version 17.03+.
- kubectl version v1.9.0+.
- ansible version v2.6.0+
- ansible-runner version v1.1.0+
- ansible-runner-http version v1.0.0+
- dep version v0.5.0+. (Optional if you aren't installing from source)
- go version v1.12+. (Optional if you aren't installing from source)
- Access to a Kubernetes v.1.9.0+ cluster.
Note: This guide uses minikube version v0.25.0+ as the local Kubernetes cluster and quay.io for the public registry.
Follow the steps in the installation guide to learn how to install the Operator SDK CLI tool.
Use the CLI to create a new Ansible-based memcached-operator project:
$ operator-sdk new memcached-operator --api-version=cache.example.com/v1alpha1 --kind=Memcached --type=ansible
$ cd memcached-operatorThis creates the memcached-operator project specifically for watching the
Memcached resource with APIVersion cache.example.com/v1apha1 and Kind
Memcached.
To learn more about the project directory structure, see project layout doc.
Read the operator scope documentation on how to run your operator as namespace-scoped vs cluster-scoped.
The Watches file contains a list of mappings from custom resources, identified
by it's Group, Version, and Kind, to an Ansible Role or Playbook. The Operator
expects this mapping file in a predefined location: /opt/ansible/watches.yaml
- group: The group of the Custom Resource that you will be watching.
- version: The version of the Custom Resource that you will be watching.
- kind: The kind of the Custom Resource that you will be watching.
- role (default): This is the path to the role that you have added to the
container. For example if your roles directory is at
/opt/ansible/roles/and your role is namedbusybox, this value will be/opt/ansible/roles/busybox. This field is mutually exclusive with the "playbook" field. - playbook: This is the path to the playbook that you have added to the container. This playbook is expected to be simply a way to call roles. This field is mutually exclusive with the "role" field.
- reconcilePeriod (optional): The reconciliation interval, how often the role/playbook is run, for a given CR.
- manageStatus (optional): When true (default), the operator will manage the status of the CR generically. Set to false, the status of the CR is managed elsewhere, by the specified role/playbook or in a separate controller.
An example Watches file:
---
# Simple example mapping Foo to the Foo role
- version: v1alpha1
group: foo.example.com
kind: Foo
role: /opt/ansible/roles/Foo
# Simple example mapping Bar to a playbook
- version: v1alpha1
group: bar.example.com
kind: Bar
playbook: /opt/ansible/playbook.yml
# More complex example for our Baz kind
# Here we will disable requeuing and be managing the CR status in the playbook
- version: v1alpha1
group: baz.example.com
kind: Baz
playbook: /opt/ansible/baz.yml
reconcilePeriod: 0
manageStatus: falseFor this example the memcached-operator will execute the following
reconciliation logic for each Memcached Custom Resource (CR):
- Create a memcached Deployment if it doesn't exist
- Ensure that the Deployment size is the same as specified by the
MemcachedCR
By default, the memcached-operator watches Memcached resource events as shown
in watches.yaml and executes Ansible Role Memcached:
---
- version: v1alpha1
group: cache.example.com
kind: MemcachedRole
Specifying a role option in watches.yaml will configure the operator to use
this specified path when launching ansible-runner with an Ansible Role. By
default, the new command will fill in an absolute path to where your role
should go.
---
- version: v1alpha1
group: cache.example.com
kind: Memcached
role: /opt/ansible/roles/memcachedPlaybook
Specifying a playbook option in watches.yaml will configure the operator to
use this specified path when launching ansible-runner with an Ansible
Playbook
---
- version: v1alpha1
group: cache.example.com
kind: Memcached
playbook: /opt/ansible/playbook.yamlThe first thing to do is to modify the generated Ansible role under
roles/memcached. This Ansible Role controls the logic that is executed when a
resource is modified.
Defining the spec for an Ansible Operator can be done entirely in Ansible. The
Ansible Operator will simply pass all key value pairs listed in the Custom
Resource spec field along to Ansible as
variables.
The names of all variables in the spec field are converted to snake_case
by the operator before running ansible. For example, serviceAccount in
the spec becomes service_account in ansible.
It is recommended that you perform some type validation in Ansible on the
variables to ensure that your application is receiving expected input.
First, set a default in case the user doesn't set the spec field by modifying
roles/memcached/defaults/main.yml:
size: 1Now that we have the spec defined, we can define what Ansible is actually
executed on resource changes. Since this is an Ansible Role, the default
behavior will be to execute the tasks in roles/memcached/tasks/main.yml. We
want Ansible to create a deployment if it does not exist which runs the
memcached:1.4.36-alpine image. Ansible 2.5+ supports the k8s Ansible
Module which we
will leverage to control the deployment definition.
Modify roles/memcached/tasks/main.yml to look like the following:
---
- name: start memcached
k8s:
definition:
kind: Deployment
apiVersion: apps/v1
metadata:
name: '{{ meta.name }}-memcached'
namespace: '{{ meta.namespace }}'
spec:
replicas: "{{size}}"
selector:
matchLabels:
app: memcached
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: memcached
spec:
containers:
- name: memcached
command:
- memcached
- -m=64
- -o
- modern
- -v
image: "docker.io/memcached:1.4.36-alpine"
ports:
- containerPort: 11211
It is important to note that we used the size variable to control how many
replicas of the Memcached deployment we want. We set the default to 1, but
any user can create a Custom Resource that overwrites the default.
Before running the operator, Kubernetes needs to know about the new custom resource definition the operator will be watching.
Deploy the CRD:
$ kubectl create -f deploy/crds/cache_v1alpha1_memcached_crd.yamlOnce this is done, there are two ways to run the operator:
- As a pod inside a Kubernetes cluster
- As a go program outside the cluster using
operator-sdk
Running as a pod inside a Kubernetes cluster is preferred for production use.
Build the memcached-operator image and push it to a registry:
$ operator-sdk build quay.io/example/memcached-operator:v0.0.1
$ docker push quay.io/example/memcached-operator:v0.0.1
Kubernetes deployment manifests are generated in deploy/operator.yaml. The
deployment image in this file needs to be modified from the placeholder
REPLACE_IMAGE to the previous built image. To do this run:
$ sed -i 's|{{ REPLACE_IMAGE }}|quay.io/example/memcached-operator:v0.0.1|g' deploy/operator.yaml
The imagePullPolicy also requires an update. To do this run:
$ sed -i 's|{{ pull_policy\|default('\''Always'\'') }}|Always|g' deploy/operator.yaml
If you created your operator using --cluster-scoped=true, update the service account namespace in the generated ClusterRoleBinding to match where you are deploying your operator.
$ export OPERATOR_NAMESPACE=$(kubectl config view --minify -o jsonpath='{.contexts[0].context.namespace}')
$ sed -i "s|REPLACE_NAMESPACE|$OPERATOR_NAMESPACE|g" deploy/role_binding.yaml
Note If you are performing these steps on OSX, use the following commands instead:
$ sed -i "" 's|{{ REPLACE_IMAGE }}|quay.io/example/memcached-operator:v0.0.1|g' deploy/operator.yaml
$ sed -i "" "s|REPLACE_NAMESPACE|$OPERATOR_NAMESPACE|g" deploy/role_binding.yaml
$ sed -i "" 's|{{ pull_policy\|default('\''Always'\'') }}|Always|g' deploy/operator.yaml
Deploy the memcached-operator:
$ kubectl create -f deploy/service_account.yaml
$ kubectl create -f deploy/role.yaml
$ kubectl create -f deploy/role_binding.yaml
$ kubectl create -f deploy/operator.yamlVerify that the memcached-operator is up and running:
$ kubectl get deployment
NAME DESIRED CURRENT UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE
memcached-operator 1 1 1 1 1mThis method is preferred during the development cycle to speed up deployment and testing.
Note: Ensure that Ansible Runner and Ansible Runner HTTP Plugin is installed or else you will see unexpected errors from Ansible Runner when a Custom Resource is created.
It is also important that the role path referenced in watches.yaml exists
on your machine. Since we are normally used to using a container where the Role
is put on disk for us, we need to manually copy our role to the configured
Ansible Roles path (e.g /etc/ansible/roles.
Run the operator locally with the default Kubernetes config file present at
$HOME/.kube/config:
$ operator-sdk up local
INFO[0000] Go Version: go1.10
INFO[0000] Go OS/Arch: darwin/amd64
INFO[0000] operator-sdk Version: 0.0.5+gitRun the operator locally with a provided Kubernetes config file:
$ operator-sdk up local --kubeconfig=config
INFO[0000] Go Version: go1.10
INFO[0000] Go OS/Arch: darwin/amd64
INFO[0000] operator-sdk Version: 0.0.5+gitModify deploy/crds/cache_v1alpha1_memcached_cr.yaml as shown and create a Memcached custom resource:
$ cat deploy/crds/cache_v1alpha1_memcached_cr.yaml
apiVersion: "cache.example.com/v1alpha1"
kind: "Memcached"
metadata:
name: "example-memcached"
spec:
size: 3
$ kubectl apply -f deploy/crds/cache_v1alpha1_memcached_cr.yamlEnsure that the memcached-operator creates the deployment for the CR:
$ kubectl get deployment
NAME DESIRED CURRENT UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE
memcached-operator 1 1 1 1 2m
example-memcached 3 3 3 3 1mCheck the pods to confirm 3 replicas were created:
$ kubectl get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
example-memcached-6fd7c98d8-7dqdr 1/1 Running 0 1m
example-memcached-6fd7c98d8-g5k7v 1/1 Running 0 1m
example-memcached-6fd7c98d8-m7vn7 1/1 Running 0 1m
memcached-operator-7cc7cfdf86-vvjqk 2/2 Running 0 2mThe memcached-operator deployment creates a Pod with two containers, operator and ansible.
The ansible container exists only to expose the standard Ansible stdout logs that most Ansible
users will be familiar with. In order to see the logs from a particular container, you can run
kubectl logs deployment/memcached-operator -c ansible
kubectl logs deployment/memcached-operator -c operatorThe ansible logs contain all of the information about the Ansible run and will make it much easier to debug issues within your Ansible tasks,
whereas the operator logs will contain much more detailed information about the Ansible Operator's internals and interface with Kubernetes.
Occasionally while developing additional debug in the Operator logs is nice to have. To enable Ansible debug output, ie -vvvv.
Add the following to the operator.yaml manifest.
env:
...
- name: ANSIBLE_VERBOSITY
value: "4"Change the spec.size field in the memcached CR from 3 to 4 and apply the
change:
$ cat deploy/crds/cache_v1alpha1_memcached_cr.yaml
apiVersion: "cache.example.com/v1alpha1"
kind: "Memcached"
metadata:
name: "example-memcached"
spec:
size: 4
$ kubectl apply -f deploy/crds/cache_v1alpha1_memcached_cr.yamlConfirm that the operator changes the deployment size:
$ kubectl get deployment
NAME DESIRED CURRENT UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE
example-memcached 4 4 4 4 5mClean up the resources:
$ kubectl delete -f deploy/crds/cache_v1alpha1_memcached_cr.yaml
$ kubectl delete -f deploy/operator.yaml
$ kubectl delete -f deploy/role_binding.yaml
$ kubectl delete -f deploy/role.yaml
$ kubectl delete -f deploy/service_account.yaml
$ kubectl delete -f deploy/crds/cache_v1alpha1_memcached_crd.yaml