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Opinionated scripts for managing application deployment lifecycle in Kubernetes

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Kubernetes Scripts

Opinionated scripts for managing application development and deployment lifecycle using Kubernetes.

How to Install

npm install -g k8s-scripts

Then in your top-level project directory:

k8s-example-config

Config file

k8s-scripts all function based on a simple bash config file in the root of your project directory named 'k8s-scripts.config'.

# Dockerfile to build
DOCKERFILE='Dockerfile'

# Docker tag that will be created
DOCKERTAG='quay.io/exampleorg/example-app'

# Cluster Namespace to work in
NAMESPACE='default'

# List of files ending in '.configmap.yml' in the kube directory
CONFIGMAPS=()

# List of files ending in '.secret.yml' in the kube directory
SECRETS=('example-app')

# List of files ending in '.service.yml' in the kube directory
SERVICES=('example-app')

# List of files ending in '.deployment.yml' in the kube directory
DEPLOYMENTS=('example-app')

# List of files ending in '.job.yml' in the kube directory (Not supported yet)
JOBS=()

Generating a config

There is a k8s-example-config script that will output an example config for you.

k8s-example-config Outputs an example config to k8s-scripts.config

k8s-example-config -o k8s-scripts.prod.config Outputs an example config to the filename specified by -o flag.

Supporting multiple environments

All scripts take an -f configfile option that allows you to specify which configuration file to use.

We recommend having the default, k8s-scripts.config, setup for your minikube environment, then specify <env>.conf for each of your environments.

deploy directory

Your kubernetes API object files should all be stored in the /deploy top level directory using consistent naming:

  • Deployments end in deployment.yml
  • Secrets end in secret.yml
  • ConfigMaps end in configmap.yml
  • Services end in service.yml
  • Jobs end in job.yml

Commands

docker-build

Does a build of the current directory `docker build --rm=false -t $DOCKERTAG -f ${BASEDIR}/$DOCKERFILE ${BASEDIR}``

docker-pull

Pulls from the registry the most recent build of the image. Useful for CI/CD layer caching

docker-push

Pushes the recently build image to the registry

k8s-deploy

Generates $CI_SHA1 suffixs for each of the files defined in your k8s-scripts config and uses kubectl create if the objects don't exist, kubectl apply if they do.

Leverages kubernetes annotations with --record when creating objects.

Verifies your deployment was successful within a specified timeout.

k8s-delete

Nukes everything defined in your k8s-scripts config file.

minikube-build

Switches to the minikube kubectl context, builds a Docker image form your current directory within the minikube Docker environment.

minikube-deploy

Switches the minikube kubectl context, then runs k8s-deploy

minikube-delete

Switches to the minikube kubectl context and deletes all of the objects associated with the k8s-scripts.config

minikube-services

Switches to the minikube kubectl context and prints out the accessible ip:port of any services defined in the config file that are accessible from your local machine

minikube-services-all

Switches to the minikube kubectl context and prints all the accessible ip:port of all services that are accessible from your local machine

ensure-kubectl

Makes sure kubectl is installed and available for use. Customize the version by specifying the KUBECTL_VERSION envrionmental variable. Default: v1.3.6.

Assumptions

  • In your Deployment file, specify imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent

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