armada-operator
armada-operator
is a small go project to automate the
installation (and eventually management) of a fully-functional
Armada deployment
to a Kubernetes cluster using the Kubernetes
operator pattern.
Description
Armada is a multi-Kubernetes batch job scheduler. This operator aims to make
Armada easy to deploy and, well, operate in a Kubernetes cluster.
Quickstart
Want to start hacking right away?
You’ll need a Kubernetes cluster to run the operator. You can use
KIND to run a local cluster for testing, or you
can run against a remote cluster.
Note: Your controller will automatically use the current context in your
kubeconfig file (i.e. whatever cluster kubectl cluster-info
shows).
Start a Development Cluster
This section assumes you have KIND installed.
make dev-setup
This will:
- boot a kind cluster specifically for armada-operator development work
- start postgres, pulsar, and redis pods in the cluster
Then:
make dev-install-controller
Which will:
- install each CRD supported by the armada-operator on the cluster
- create a pod inside the kind cluster running the armada-operator controllers
Note: You may need to wait for some services (like Pulsar) to finish
coming up to proceed to the next step. Check the status of
the cluster with $ kubectl get -n armada pods
.
Finally:
kubectl apply -n armada -f $(REPO_ROOT)/config/samples/deploy_armada.yaml
Which will deploy samples of each CRD. Once every Armada service is deployed,
you should have a fully functional install of Aramda running.
To stop the development cluster:
make dev-teardown
This will totally destroy your development Kind cluster.
Getting Started
Running on a Cluster
- Build and push your image to the location specified by
IMG
:
make docker-build docker-push IMG=<some-registry>/armada-operator:tag
- Deploy the controller to the cluster with the image specified by
IMG
:
make deploy IMG=<some-registry>/armada-operator:tag
- Install Instances of Custom Resources:
kubectl apply -f config/samples/
Uninstall CRDs
To delete the CRDs from the cluster:
make uninstall
Undeploy controller
UnDeploy the controller to the cluster:
make undeploy
Using Helm Charts
This repo includes Helm charts for Armada Operator and Armada
Application installation, in the deployment
directory. The first
chart, armada-operator
, will install the Operator (CRDs and
controller-manager, mainly). The other two, armada-server
and
armada-executor
, will install the Armada application itself in your
cluster(s).
The armada-operator chart should be installed first on all clusters
to be used. Then, one or both of the application charts.
Why two charts for the application? Armada supports two cluster
types: server and executor. The server install includes the API
server and scheduler. The executor install includes the worker process
(executor) which manages Armada jobs for a particular cluster. They
can be installed in the same cluster, but typically we'd expect to see
one server install and one or more executor installations.
cd deployment
helm install armada-operator ./armada-operator/ -n armada
helm install armada-server ./armada-server -n armada
helm install armada-executor ./armada-executor -n armada
Contributing
Please feel free to contribute bug-reports or ideas for enhancements via
GitHub's issue system.
Code contributions are also welcome. When submitting a pull-request please
ensure it references a relevant issue as well as making sure all CI checks
pass.
Test All Changes
Please test contributions thoroughly before requesting reviews. At a minimum:
make test
make test-integration
make lint
should all succeed without error.
Add and change appropriate unit and integration tests to ensure your changes
are covered by automated tests and appear to be correct.
How it works
This project aims to follow the Kubernetes Operator pattern
It uses Controllers
which provides a reconcile function responsible for synchronizing resources untile the desired state is reached on the cluster
Test It Out
- Install the CRDs into the cluster:
make install
- Run your controller (this will run in the foreground, so switch to a new terminal if you want to leave it running):
make run
NOTE: You can also run this in one step by running: make install run
Modifying the API definitions
If you are editing the API definitions, generate the manifests such as CRs or CRDs using:
make manifests
NOTE: Run make --help
for more information on all potential make
targets
More information can be found via the Kubebuilder Documentation
License
Copyright 2023.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.