README ¶
Keptn Service for Dynatrace Monaco
This is a Sandbox Keptn Services that enables calling the Dynatrace Monaco (Monitoring as Code) toolset for individual Keptn Events
For more information on Dynatrace Monaco, visit the git repository https://github.com/dynatrace-oss/dynatrace-monitoring-as-code
monaco-service
This implements a monaco-service for Keptn. If you want to learn more about Keptn visit us on keptn.sh
Compatibility Matrix
Please fill in your versions accordingly
Authors | Keptn Version | monaco-service Docker Image | Comment |
---|---|---|---|
@kristofre | 0.7.3 | keptnsandbox/monaco-service:0.1.0 | Initial release |
@grabnerandi | 0.7.3 | keptnsandbox/monaco-service:0.2.0 | Support for monaco folder structure |
@grabnerandi | 0.7.3 | keptnsandbox/monaco-service:0.2.1 | Fixes & Label Env Variable Support |
@grabnerandi | 0.8.0-0.8.3 | keptnsandbox/monaco-service:0.8.0 | Upgrade to support Keptn 0.8.0 |
@grabnerandi | 0.8.4 | keptnsandbox/monaco-service:0.8.4 | Upgrade to support Keptn 0.8.4 |
@grabnerandi | 0.9.x,0.10.x | keptnsandbox/monaco-service:0.9.1 | Upgrade to support Keptn 0.9.x & 0.10.x |
Installation
The monaco-service can be installed as a part of Keptn's uniform.
Deploy in your Kubernetes cluster
To deploy the current version of the monaco-service in your Keptn Kubernetes cluster, apply the deploy/service.yaml
file:
kubectl apply -f deploy/service.yaml
This should install the monaco-service
together with a Keptn distributor
into the keptn
namespace, which you can verify using
kubectl -n keptn get deployment monaco-service -o wide
kubectl -n keptn get pods -l run=monaco-service
Up- or Downgrading
Adapt and use the following command in case you want to up- or downgrade your installed version (specified by the $VERSION
placeholder):
kubectl -n keptn set image deployment/monaco-service monaco-service=keptnsandbox/monaco-service:$VERSION --record
Uninstall
To delete a deployed monaco-service, use the file deploy/*.yaml
files from this repository and delete the Kubernetes resources:
kubectl delete -f deploy/service.yaml
Usage
The goal of the monaco-service is to allow the user to trigger Dynatrace Monaco as part of their keptn-driven releases. For more information about how Dynatrace Monaco works, please check the git repository README: https://github.com/dynatrace-oss/dynatrace-monitoring-as-code
It needs the following configured:
Kubernetes secret for Dynatrace Environment
- A Kubernetes secret containing the values
DT_TENANT
andDT_API_TOKEN
is needed. TheDT_API_TOKEN
should have the permission to read and write configuration - The monaco-service looks by default for the following secrets:
dynatrace
,dynatrace-credentials
anddynatrace-credentials-$PROJECT
. If a different secret name can be configured by adding a resourcedynatrace\monaco.conf.yaml
. In this file you can specificy in the variabledtCreds
the name of a secret containing the info.
Option 1: Monaco projects folders
You can upload your monaco configuration on the service, stage or project level. If you do you have to follow the monaco folder structure starting with projects
under the dynatrace subfolder.
The folder structure should therefore be the following:
+-- dynatrace // this is where the dynatrace related config goes in general
| +-- projects // this folder name needs to be used
| +-- projectName (this can be customized)
| +-- configuration1 (check monaco documentation for the possible options)
| +- json and yaml files (check monaco documentation for the possible options)
| +-- projectN
| +-- json and yaml files
You can add these files to Keptn by using
keptn add-resource --project=PROJECTNAME --service=SERVICENAME --stage=STAGENAME --resource=auto-tag/tagging.json --resourceUri=dynatrace/projects/keptnservice/auto-tag/tagging.json
keptn add-resource --project=PROJECTNAME --service=SERVICENAME --stage=STAGENAME --resource=auto-tag/tagging.yaml --resourceUri=dynatrace/projects/keptnservice/auto-tag/tagging.yaml
stage
and service
are optional. The monaco-service will automatically download all files under the dynatrace/projects directory first on the service
level, then on stage
level and last on project
level.
Option 2: A ZIP archive containing the projects
Now - this is the same as Option 1 - but - instead of having each file separate in Keptn's configuration repo you can also just zip it up and upload the zipped projects directoy to the dynatrace subfolder The folder structure should be the following:
+-- projects // this folder name needs to be used
| +-- projectName (this can be customized)
| +-- configuration1 (check monaco documentation for the possible options)
| +- json and yaml files (check monaco documentation for the possible options)
| +-- projectN
| +-- json and yaml files
Note: the archive has to be of type zip
. Using the zip
command on linux, it can be created as follows:
zip -r monaco.zip directory_name
You can add the file to Keptn by using
keptn add-resource --project=PROJECTNAME --service=SERVICENAME --stage=STAGENAME --resource=monaco.zip --resourceUri=dynatrace/monaco.zip
stage
and service
are optional. The monaco-service will automatically look for this file first on the service
level, then on stage
level and last on project
level.
Specifying which monaco projects to process
If not specified, the monaco-service looks for a monaco project with the name of the keptn project. So if your keptn project name is sockshop
, then you would need the following structure in the monaco.zip
file:
+-- projects
| +-- sockshop
| +-- auto-tag (an example)
| +- json and yaml files
If you want to overwrite that behaviour, it is possible to specify that in the dynatrace\monaco.conf.yaml
file by adding them as follows:
projects:
- monaco
- sockshop
- infrastructure
All the projects that you want to process can be added. So for the above, you would need the following structure:
+-- projects
| +-- infrastructure
| +-- synthetic-location
| +- json and yaml files
| +-- monaco
| +-- auto-tag
| +- json and yaml files
| +-- sockshop
| +-- management-zone
| +- json and yaml files
Using Keptn metadata inside monaco files
The monaco-service automatically maps the following Keptn information as environment variables:
- Keptn project name as env var
KEPTN_PROJECT
- Keptn stage name as env var
KEPTN_STAGE
- Keptn service name as env var
KEPTN_SERVICE
They can then be used inside monaco files as follows: {{ Env.KEPTN_PROJECT }}
For an example, please check tagging.json
Development
This is an open source project, so I welcome any contributions to make it even better!
Where to start
If you don't care about the details, your first entrypoint is eventhandlers.go. Within this file you can add implementation for pre-defined Keptn Cloud events.
To better understand Keptn CloudEvents, please look at the Keptn Spec.
If you want to get more insights, please look into main.go, deploy/service.yaml, consult the Keptn docs as well as existing Keptn Core and Keptn Contrib services.
Build yourself
- Build the binary:
go build -ldflags '-linkmode=external' -v -o monaco-service
- Run tests:
go test -race -v ./...
- Build the docker image:
docker build . -t keptnsandbox/monaco-service:dev
(Note: Ensure that you use the correct DockerHub account/organization) - Run the docker image locally:
docker run --rm -it -p 8080:8080 keptnsandbox/monaco-service:dev
- Push the docker image to DockerHub:
docker push keptnsandbox/monaco-service:dev
(Note: Ensure that you use the correct DockerHub account/organization) - Deploy the service using
kubectl
:kubectl apply -f deploy/
- Delete/undeploy the service using
kubectl
:kubectl delete -f deploy/
- Watch the deployment using
kubectl
:kubectl -n keptn get deployment monaco-service -o wide
- Get logs using
kubectl
:kubectl -n keptn logs deployment/monaco-service -f
- Watch the deployed pods using
kubectl
:kubectl -n keptn get pods -l run=monaco-service
- Deploy the service using Skaffold:
skaffold run --default-repo=your-docker-registry --tail
(Note: Replaceyour-docker-registry
with your DockerHub username; also make sure to adapt the image name in skaffold.yaml)
Testing Cloud Events
We have dummy cloud-events in the form of RFC 2616 requests in the test-events/ directory. These can be easily executed using third party plugins such as the Huachao Mao REST Client in VS Code.
License
Please find more information in the LICENSE file.
Documentation ¶
There is no documentation for this package.