Authored by StreamNative, this Pulsar Resources Operator is a controller that manages the Pulsar resources automatically using the manifest on Kubernetes. Therefore, you can manage the Pulsar resources without the help of pulsar-admin
or pulsarctl
CLI tool. It is useful for initializing basic resources when creating a new Pulsar cluster.
Currently, the Pulsar Resources Operator provides full lifecycle management for the following Pulsar resources, including creation, update, and deletion.
- Tenants
- Namespaces
- Topics
- Permissions
- Packages
- Functions
- Sinks
- Sources
- Geo-Replication
- NS-Isolation-Policy
The Pulsar Resources Operator provides a flexible approach to managing the lifecycle of Pulsar resources through the PulsarResourceLifeCyclePolicy
. This policy determines how Pulsar resources are handled when their corresponding Kubernetes custom resources are deleted. For more details on lifecycle management, please refer to the PulsarResourceLifeCyclePolicy documentation.
There are two available options for the lifecycle policy:
-
CleanUpAfterDeletion
: When set, the Pulsar resource (such as a tenant, namespace, or topic) will be deleted from the Pulsar cluster when its corresponding Kubernetes custom resource is deleted. This is the default policy. -
KeepAfterDeletion
: When set, the Pulsar resource will remain in the Pulsar cluster even after its corresponding Kubernetes custom resource is deleted.
You can specify the lifecycle policy in the custom resource definition:
apiVersion: pulsar.streamnative.io/v1beta1
kind: PulsarTenant
metadata:
name: my-tenant
spec:
pulsarResourceLifeCyclePolicy: KeepAfterDeletion
The Pulsar Resources Operator is an independent controller, it doesn’t need to be installed with the pulsar operator. You can install it when you need the feature. And it is built with the Operator SDK, which is part of the Operator framework.
You can install the Pulsar Resources Operator using the officially supported pulsar-resources-operator
Helm chart. It provides Custom Resource Definitions (CRDs) and Controllers to manage the Pulsar resources.
- Install
kubectl
(v1.16 - v1.24), compatible with your cluster (+/- 1 minor release from your cluster). - Install
Helm
(v3.0.2 or higher). - Prepare a Kubernetes cluster (v1.16 - v1.24).
- Prepare a Pulsar cluster
To install the Pulsar Resources Operator, follow these steps.
-
Add the StreamNative chart repository.
helm repo add streamnative https://charts.streamnative.io helm repo update
-
Create a Kubernetes namespace.
kubectl create namespace <k8s-namespace>
Note
You can skip this step if you specify a Kubernetes namespace via the
-- create-namespace <k8s-namespace>
option when you install the operator. -
Install the operator using the
pulsar-resources-operator
Helm chart.helm -n <k8s-namespace> install <release-name> streamnative/pulsar-resources-operator
-
Verify that the operator is installed successfully
kubectl -n <k8s-namespace> get pods
Expected outputs:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE <release-name>-pulsar-resources-operator 1/1 Running 0 2m2s
To upgrade the operator, execute the following command.
helm repo update
helm -n <k8s-namespace> upgrade <release-name> streamnative/pulsar-resources-operator
Note
Don not forget to apply the latest crd files. Because there is no support for upgrading or deleting CRDs using Helm https://helm.sh/docs/chart_best_practices/custom_resource_definitions/#some-caveats-and-explanations You can use
helm pull streamnative/pulsar-resources-operator
to download the chart and unpack it, then apply the crds
To uninstall the operator, execute the following command.
helm -n <k8s-namespace> uninstall <release-name>
This tutorial guides you through creating Pulsar resources. You can create Pulsar resources automatically by applying resource manifest files to the Kubernetes.
Before creating Pulsar resources, you must create a resource called PulsarConnection
. The PulsarConnection
covers the address of the Pulsar cluster and the authentication information. You can use this information to access a Pulsar cluster to create other resources.
In this tutorial, a Kubernetes namespace called test
is used for examples, which is the namespace that the pulsar cluster installed.
- PulsarConnection
- PulsarResourceLifeCyclePolicy
- PulsarTenant
- PulsarNamespace
- PulsarTopic
- PulsarPermission
- PulsarPackage
- PulsarFunction
- PulsarSink
- PulsarSource
- PulsarGeoReplication
- NS-Isolation-Policy
Contributions are warmly welcomed and greatly appreciated! The project follows the typical GitHub pull request model. Please read the contribution guidelines for more details.
Before starting any work, please either comment on an existing issue, or file a new one.
This library is licensed under the terms of the Apache License 2.0 and may include packages written by third parties which carry their own copyright notices and license terms.
Founded in 2019 by the original creators of Apache Pulsar, StreamNative is one of the leading contributors to the open-source Apache Pulsar project. We have helped engineering teams worldwide make the move to Pulsar with StreamNative Cloud, a fully managed service to help teams accelerate time-to-production.