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#VMware has ended active development of this project, this repository will no longer be updated

Kubernetes CustomResourceDefinition Migration Tool

Build Status

Overview

This tool migrates Kubernetes CustomResourceDefinition (CRD) instances from an "old" API group to a "new" one.

Getting Started

  1. Go to the latest release and download the tarball for your platform.

  2. Extract the tarball locally. For example:

    tar -xzf crd-migration-tool-v1.0.0-linux-amd64.tar.gz
  3. Move the crd-migrator binary to somewhere within your $PATH. For example:

    mv crd-migrator /usr/local/bin

Usage

Requirements

  • The same CRDs exist in both API groups
  • The CRDs in the new API group do not have spec.subresources.status (more details on this below)
  • Your user has RBAC permissions to get customresourcedefinitions.apiextensions.k8s.io
  • Your user has RBAC permissions to get instances of all the CRDs in the old API group
  • Your user has RBAC permissions to get and create instances of all the CRDs in the new API group
  • If you are using namespace remapping, the target namespace(s) already exist

Example Scenario

You have an API group called my.example.com with CRDs foos and bars. You want to "rename" my.example.com to someapp.io.

Because you can't rename objects in Kubernetes, including customresourcedefinitions, we instead essentially have to "copy and paste" each CRD instance from the old API group to the new one. We do this by retrieving each instance of a CRD, changing its apiVersion from the old API group to the new one, then creating the new instance under the new API group.

Given the following custom resource Foo and Bar instances:

apiVersion: my.example.com/v1
kind: Foo
metadata:
  namespace: my-example
  name: foo1
  labels:
    my.example.com/color: blue
    some.other.label: abcd
    sub.my.example.com/shape: circle
  annotations:
    my.example.com/color: blue
    some.other.label: abcd
    sub.my.example.com/shape: circle
spec:
  someSpecHere: {}
status:
  someStatusHere: {}
---
apiVersion: my.example.com/v1
kind: Foo
metadata:
  namespace: another-namespace
  name: foo2
  labels:
    my.example.com/color: blue
    some.other.label: abcd
    sub.my.example.com/shape: circle
  annotations:
    my.example.com/color: blue
    some.other.label: abcd
    sub.my.example.com/shape: circle
spec:
  someSpecHere: {}
status:
  someStatusHere: {}
---
apiVersion: my.example.com/v1
kind: Bar
metadata:
  namespace: my-example
  name: bar1
  labels:
    my.example.com/color: blue
    some.other.label: abcd
    sub.my.example.com/shape: circle
  annotations:
    my.example.com/color: blue
    some.other.label: abcd
    sub.my.example.com/shape: circle
spec:
  someSpecHere: {}
status:
  someStatusHere: {}

When you run the tool:

crd-migrator --from my.example.com/v1                         \
             --to someapp.io/v1                               \
             --namespace-mappings my-example:someapp          \
             --annotation-mappings my-example.com:someapp.io  \
             --label-mappings my-example.com:someapp.io
INFO[0000] Starting resource migration                   resource=foos
INFO[0000] Checking if item already exists in new API group  id=someapp/foo1 original-namespace=my-example resource=foos
INFO[0000] Creating item                                 id=someapp/foo1 original-namespace=my-example resource=foos
INFO[0000] Checking if item already exists in new API group  id=another-namespace/foo2 resource=foos
INFO[0000] Creating item                                 id=another-namespace/foo2 resource=foos
INFO[0000] Completed resource migration                  resource=foos
INFO[0000] Starting resource migration                   resource=bars
INFO[0000] Checking if item already exists in new API group  id=someapp/bar1 original-namespace=my-example resource=bars
INFO[0000] Creating item                                 id=someapp/bar1 original-namespace=my-example resource=bars
INFO[0000] Completed resource migration                  resource=bars

The result looks like this:

apiVersion: someapp.io/v1
kind: Foo
metadata:
  namespace: someapp
  name: foo1
  labels:
    someapp.io/color: blue
    some.other.label: abcd
    sub.someapp.io/shape: circle
  annotations:
    someapp.io/color: blue
    some.other.label: abcd
    sub.someapp.io/shape: circle
spec:
  someSpecHere: {}
status:
  someStatusHere: {}
---
apiVersion: someapp.io/v1
kind: Foo
metadata:
  namespace: another-namespace
  name: foo2
  labels:
    someapp.io/color: blue
    some.other.label: abcd
    sub.someapp.io/shape: circle
  annotations:
    someapp.io/color: blue
    some.other.label: abcd
    sub.someapp.io/shape: circle
spec:
  someSpecHere: {}
status:
  someStatusHere: {}
---
apiVersion: someapp.io/v1
kind: Bar
metadata:
  namespace: someapp
  name: bar1
  labels:
    someapp.io/color: blue
    some.other.label: abcd
    sub.someapp.io/shape: circle
  annotations:
    someapp.io/color: blue
    some.other.label: abcd
    sub.someapp.io/shape: circle
spec:
  someSpecHere: {}
status:
  someStatusHere: {}

The following changes are worth noting:

  • The apiVersion was changed from my.example.com/v1 to someapp.io/v1
  • All Foo and Bar instances in the my-example namespace were created in the someapp namespace
  • All label and annotation keys that referenced my.example.com were updated to someapp.io

CRDs & the status subresource

Non-CRD API types in Kubernetes typically have a distinction between status and non-status sections. When you create one of these (such as a Pod or Secret), Kubernetes usually discards any status details and instead sets these based on whatever logic is appropriate for that type (it's important to note that this behavior varies by type). Similarly, when updating an item, updates to status are discarded and the current status is preserved. If you want to modify the status, you need to use a special /status subresource (and when you use this, any changes outside of status are ignored). Typically system controllers are allowed to update status data, but normal users are not.

Kubernetes optionally supports these same status and non-status distinctions and separations for CRD instances. This is currently controlled by the CustomResourceSubresources feature gate, which is alpha and disabled by default in Kubernetes v1.10 and is beta and enabled by default in Kubernetes v1.11 and newer.

When the CustomResourceSubresources feature is enabled, this doesn't mean that all CRD instances adopt the status/non-status behaviors. Instead, each CRD must opt in to gain this functionality.

HOWEVER: you must remove the spec.subresources.status entry from your CRDs before you can migrate your CRD instances to the new API group. This will allow the tool to migrate each item's status data. Otherwise, it would be lost, and that could lead to undesirable behavior (depending on the CRD type and any logic associated with it).

You can temporarily remove spec.subresources.status from each CRD in the new API group, run the migration tool, and finally restore spec.subresources.status when you have finished migrating.

Data in the old API group

This tool does not delete any data in the old API group. If you want to do that, you can use kubectl, such as:

kubectl delete foos.my.example.com --namespace my-example --all

Unfortunately, this must be done per-namespace. If there is a need, we can consider adding support to this tool to delete items across all namespaces from the old API group.

Building From Source

Prerequisites

  • Go installed

Instructions

  1. Clone this repository to your computer

  2. Change your working directory to the root directory of the project

  3. Build the binary:

    go build ./cmd/crd-migrator

You now have an executable binary, crd-migrator, in your working directory.

crd-migration-tool's People

Contributors

ncdc avatar skriss avatar carlisia avatar dstefka avatar

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