kubectl wrapper for working with kubectl kustomization configurations
npm install -g @ucd-lib/cork-kube
cork-kube --help
Commands:
To see commands run cork-kube --help
You can specify a project config file to define
- the project name
- the environments for the project, including k8s cluster information Google Cloud project information
- secrets that should be applied to the k8s cluster
- kustomize templates (services) that should be applied to the k8s cluster
Recommended. The project config file should be located at the root of your project and named .cork-kube-config
. This file should be a json object with the following root level properties:
{
"project": "my-project",
"environments": {},
"secrets" : {},
"serviceTemplates" : {},
"services" : []
}
You can then register the project with cork-kube
by running:
cork-kube project set -c /path/to/.cork-kube-config
When running cork-kube
commands, you can specify the path to the project config file with the -c
flag or if you have registered the project you can use the -p
flag with the project name. If you do not specify a config path or project name, cork-kube
will look for the file in the current working directory. When specifying a config path, if a directory is provided, cork-kube
will look for the file .cork-kube-config
in that directory.
project
: The name of the projectenvironments
: An object with the following properties:platform
: The k8s platform to use. Should begke
ordocker-desktop
cluster
: The name of the cluster to use (only used forgke
)zone
: The zone your GKE cluster resides in (only used forgke
)project
: The Google Cloud project name to usenamespace
: The Kubernetes namespace to use
secrets
: An object with the following properties where the key is the name of the environment and the value is an array of secret objects:k8sName
: The name of the secret in k8smappings
: An array of objects with the following propertiesgcsmName
: The name of the secret in Google Cloud Secret Managerk8sProperty
: The property in the k8s secret (k8sName
) that should be set to the value of the Google Cloud Secret Manager secret (gcsmName
)
serviceTemplates
: An object with the following properties where the key is the name of the service template and the value is an object. Any valid service property is allowed. These templates can be used to apply properties to multiple services.services
: Defines the available kustomize templates as 'services'. The projects services can be started, stopped or redeployed (deleted then applied) as; a whole, a single service or a group of services (defined by thegroup
property). Services should be an array of objects with the following properties:path
: The relative path from the config file to the kustomize template root directory. Note that a 'name' will be applied to the service based on the directory name of the kustomize template.group
: The name of the group this service belongs to. This is used to start, stop or redeploy a group of services in a singlecork-kube
command.edit
: Apply acork-kube apply --edit
to the service. Should be an object with the following properties:jsonpath
: The jsonpath to the property to editvalue
: The value to set the jsonpath property to
sourceMounts
: Path to source mount file(s) to apply to the service. Paths should be relative to the location of the config file.template
: The name of the service template to apply to the service. This will apply the properties of theserviceTemplate
to the service. Note that the properties of the service will override the properties of the template.environments
: An object where the key is the name of the environment and the value is an object with the same properties as the service object. These properties will only be applied to the service in the specified environment.config
: Load config variables for string template properties from a file. Currently this should be a.sh
file.file
: The path to the config file. This should be relative to the location of the config file.args
: Object of key/value pairs to set before running the config file. These will be available in the config file as environment variables. Exfile:"config.sh"
andargs={LOCAL_DEV:"true"}
, this will callLOCAL_DEV=true ./config.sh
.
ignore
: If true, the service will be ignored when runningcork-kube
commands. This is useful for services that are not ready to be deployed or are not used in the current environment (very usual when combined in theenvironments
spec).
Note on service properties. template
, group
, edit
and sourceMounts
can all be arrays. If they are arrays, the properties will be applied to the service in the order they are defined in the array.
Sometimes you may want dynamic properties in your config file. Ex, in local development you want to reploy a different image based on your branch. You can use string templates in your config file properties. String templates are defined by wrapping the variable in ${}
. The variable name should be the name of the environment variable you want to use. The environment variable should be set in the shell environment before running cork-kube
or the service can define this config
property to load the variable from a file.
The variable ${__DIRNAME}
is already defined for you. This will be replaced with the directory name of the kustomize template. The variable ${__ENV}
is defined as well. This will be replaced with environment
argument passed to the cork-kube
command.
example:
{
"project" : "my-project",
"service" : {
"my-service" : {
"environments" : {
"local-dev" : {
"edit" : {
"jsonpath": "spec.template.spec.containers[?(@.name=='server')].image",
"value": "${MY_SERVER_IMAGE_NAME}:${APP_TAG}"
}
}
}
}
}
}
This will replace ${MY_SERVER_IMAGE_NAME}
with the value of the MY_SERVER_IMAGE_NAME
environment variable and ${APP_TAG}
with the value of the APP_TAG
environment variable when running cork-kube apply
in the local-dev
environment.
You can mount source code into a container by using a source mount file. This is useful for development environments where you want to mount your source code into a container. You will specify the source mount file(s) as a flag when running cork-kube apply
.
A source mount file should have the following format:
```json
[{
"name": "Of the mount",
"containerPath": "/path/in/container",
"sourcePath": "relative/path/to/source"
}]
Properties:
name
: The name of the mount. This is used to identify the mount in the source mount file.containerPath
: The path in the container where the source should be mounted.sourcePath
: The path to the source that should be mounted in the container. This path is relative to the location of the source mount file.
Example file located at /home/jrmerz/dev/my-app-deployment/source-mounts.json
:
[
{
"name": "my-source",
"containerPath": "/app/src",
"sourcePath": "../../my-app/src"
}
]
Will add the following to the deployment or statefulset:
spec:
template:
spec:
containers:
- name: my-app
volumeMounts:
- name: my-source
mountPath: /app/src
volumes:
- name: my-source
hostPath:
path: /home/jrmerz/dev/my-app/src
You can assign a user account for a cork-kube
project
Example:
cork-kube project set -p my-project -e [email protected]
Once a user account is assign cork-kube init
will ensure you are logged in with the proper account, exiting with error if you are not.
run cork-kube project set -c [path to config file]
to register the project with cork-kube. This will allow you to run cork-kube init -p my-project local-dev
or cork-kube stop -p my-project local-dev
without specifying the path to the init file.