Code Monkey home page Code Monkey logo

provider-kubernetes's Introduction

provider-kubernetes

provider-kubernetes is a Crossplane Provider that enables deployment and management of arbitrary Kubernetes objects on clusters typically provisioned by Crossplane:

  • A Provider resource type that only points to a credentials Secret.
  • An Object resource type that is to manage Kubernetes Objects.
  • A managed resource controller that reconciles Object typed resources and manages arbitrary Kubernetes Objects.

Install

If you would like to install provider-kubernetes without modifications, you may do so using the Crossplane CLI in a Kubernetes cluster where Crossplane is installed:

kubectl crossplane install provider crossplane/provider-kubernetes:main

You may also manually install provider-kubernetes by creating a Provider directly:

apiVersion: pkg.crossplane.io/v1
kind: Provider
metadata:
  name: provider-kubernetes
spec:
  package: "crossplane/provider-kubernetes:main"

Developing locally

Start a local development environment with Kind where crossplane is installed:

make
make local-dev

Run controller against the cluster:

make run

Since the controller is running outside the Kind cluster, you need to make api server accessible (on a separate terminal):

sudo kubectl proxy --port=8081

Testing in Local Cluster

  1. Prepare provider config for the local cluster:

  2. If provider kubernetes running in the cluster (e.g. provider installed with crossplane):

    SA=$(kubectl -n crossplane-system get sa -o name | grep provider-kubernetes | sed -e 's|serviceaccount\/|crossplane-system:|g')
    kubectl create clusterrolebinding provider-kubernetes-admin-binding --clusterrole cluster-admin --serviceaccount="${SA}"
    kubectl apply -f examples/provider/config-in-cluster.yaml
    
  3. If provider kubernetes running outside the cluster (e.g. running locally with make run)

    KUBECONFIG=$(kind get kubeconfig --name local-dev | sed -e 's|server:\s*.*$|server: http://localhost:8081|g')
    kubectl -n crossplane-system create secret generic cluster-config --from-literal=kubeconfig="${KUBECONFIG}" 
    kubectl apply -f examples/provider/config.yaml
    
  4. Now you can create Object resources with provider reference, see sample object.yaml.

    kubectl create -f examples/object/object.yaml
    

Cleanup

make local.down

provider-kubernetes's People

Contributors

gyliu513 avatar haarchri avatar hasheddan avatar morningspace avatar negz avatar turkenh avatar

Watchers

 avatar

Recommend Projects

  • React photo React

    A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.

  • Vue.js photo Vue.js

    ๐Ÿ–– Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web.

  • Typescript photo Typescript

    TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.

  • TensorFlow photo TensorFlow

    An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone

  • Django photo Django

    The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.

  • D3 photo D3

    Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. ๐Ÿ“Š๐Ÿ“ˆ๐ŸŽ‰

Recommend Topics

  • javascript

    JavaScript (JS) is a lightweight interpreted programming language with first-class functions.

  • web

    Some thing interesting about web. New door for the world.

  • server

    A server is a program made to process requests and deliver data to clients.

  • Machine learning

    Machine learning is a way of modeling and interpreting data that allows a piece of software to respond intelligently.

  • Game

    Some thing interesting about game, make everyone happy.

Recommend Org

  • Facebook photo Facebook

    We are working to build community through open source technology. NB: members must have two-factor auth.

  • Microsoft photo Microsoft

    Open source projects and samples from Microsoft.

  • Google photo Google

    Google โค๏ธ Open Source for everyone.

  • D3 photo D3

    Data-Driven Documents codes.