radix-operator
The radix-operator is the central piece of the Radix platform which fully manages the Radix platform natively on Kubernetes. It manages three custom resource definitions:
- RR - Application registrations
- RA - Application definition/configuration
- RD - Application deployment
- RJ - Application build/deploy jobs
The radix-operator
and radix-pipeline
are built using Github actions, then the radix-operator
is deployed to cluster through a Helm release using the Flux Operator whenever a new image is pushed to the container registry for the corresponding branch.
There are secrets defined for the actions to be able to push to radixdev, radixprod and radixus. These are the corresponding credentials for radix-cr-cicd-dev and radix-cr-cicd-prod service accounts.
Development Process
The operator is developed using trunk-based development. The two main components here are radix-operator
and radix-pipeline
. There is a different setup for each cluster:
master
branch should be used for deployment to dev
clusters. When a pull request is approved and merged to master
, Github actions build will create a radix-operator:master-latest
image and push it to ACR. Flux then installs it into the cluster.
release
branch should be used for deployment to playground
and prod
clusters. When a pull request is approved and merged to master
, and tested ok in dev
cluster, we should immediately merge master
into release
and deploy those changes to playground
and prod
clusters, unless there are breaking changes which needs to be coordinated with release of our other components. When the master
branch is merged to the release
branch, Github actions build will create a radix-operator:release-latest
image and push it to ACR. Flux then installs it into the clusters.
The radix-pipeline
never gets deployed to cluster, but rather is invoked by the radix-api
, and the environment mentioned below is the Radix environment of radix-api
(different environments for radix-api
therefore use different images of radix-pipeline
). Both environments are relevant for both dev
/playground
as well as prod
. The process for deploying radix-pipeline
is this:
master
branch should be used for creating the image used in the qa
environment of any cluster. When a pull request is approved and merged to master
, Github actions build will create a will create a radix-pipeline:master-latest
image available in ACR of the subscription
release
branch should be used for image used in the prod
environment of any cluster. When a pull request is approved and merged to master
, and tested ok in qa
environment of any cluster, we should immediately merge master
into release
and build image used in the prod
environment of any cluster, unless there are breaking changes which needs to be coordinated with release of our other components. When the master
branch is merged to the release
branch, Github actions build will create a radix-pipeline:release-latest
image available in ACR of the subscription.
Dependencies management
As of 2019-10-28, radix-operator uses go modules. See Using go modules for more information and guidelines.
Procedure to release to cluster
The radix-operator and code is referred to from radix-api through go modules. We follow the semantic version as recommended by go. To publish a new version of radix-operator:
go mod tidy
make test
git tag v1.0.0
git push origin v1.0.0
Its then possible to reference radix-operator from radix-api through adding github.com/equinor/radix-operator v1.0.0
to the go.mod file.
Radix-pipeline
We need to build from both master
(used by QA environment) and release
(used by Prod environment) in both dev
and prod
subscriptions. We should not merge to release
branch before QA has passed. Merging to master
or release
branch will trigger Github actions build that handles this procedure. The radix-pipeline make use of:
Radix-operator
For development/staging we need to deploy from master
branch while for production we need to deploy from release
branch. We should not merge to release
branch before QA has passed. Merging to master
or release
branch will trigger Github actions build that handles this procedure.
Operator helm chart
For changes to the chart the same procedure applies as for changes to the code. For development/staging we need to deploy from master
branch while for production we need to deploy from release
branch. We should not merge to release
branch before QA has passed. We should never release Helm chart to playground
or prod
cluster, as this is now completely handled by Flux operator. If we want to test chart changes we need to disable Flux operator in the development cluster and use the following proceedure to release the chart into the cluster:
1. Go to development cluster
2. git checkout <branch>
3. make helm-up ENVIRONMENT=dev (will release latest version of helm chart in ACR to cluster)
Updating RadixApplication CRD
The client-go
SDK requires strongly typed objects when dealing with CRDs so when you add a new type to the spec, you need to update pkg/apis/radix/v1/types.go
typically.
In order for these objects to work with the SDK, they need to implement certain functions and this is where you run the code-generator
tool from Kubernetes.
Make sure you have downloaded latest version of code-generator by doing a go get github.com/kubernetes/code-generator
Next command will auto-generate some code and implement certain interfaces.
make code-gen
This will generate pkg/apis/radix/v1/zz_generated.deepcopy.go
and pkg/client
directory.
This file/directory should NOT be edited.
If you wish more in-depth information, read this
Security Principle
The radix-operator reacts on events to the custom resource types defined by the platform, the RadixRegistration, the RadixApplication and the RadixDeployment. It cannot be controlled directly by any platform user. It's main purpose is to create the core resources when the custom resources appears, which will live inside application and environment namespaces for the application. Access to a namespace is configured as RBAC manifests when the namespace is created, which main purpose is to isolate the platform user applications from one another. For more information on this see this. Another is to define the NetworkPolicy, to ensure no pod can access another pod, outside of its namespace.
Automated build and deployment
Pull request checking
The radix-operator makes use of GitHub Actions for build checking in every pull request to the master
branch. Refer to the configuration file of the workflow for more details.
Build and deploy
The radix-operator utilizes Github actions build for automated build and push to container registries (ACR) when a branch is merged to master
or release
branch. Refer to the configuration file for more details