

K8up Backup Operator
K8up is a Kubernetes backup operator based on Restic that will handle PVC and application backups on a Kubernetes or OpenShift cluster.
Just create a schedule
and a credentials
object in the namespace you’d like to backup.
It’s that easy. K8up takes care of the rest. It also provides a Prometheus endpoint for monitoring.
Documentation
The documentation is written in AsciiDoc and published with Antora to k8up.io.
It's source is available in the docs/
directory.
Contributing
K8up is written using the Operator SDK.
You'll need:
- A running Kubernetes cluster (minishift, minikube, k3s, ... you name it)
- kubectl and kustomize
- Go development environment
- Your favorite IDE (with a Go plugin)
- Docker
- make
To run the end-to-end test (e.g. make e2e-test
), you additionally need:
helm
(version 3)
jq
node
and npm
bash
(installed, doesn't have to be your default shell)
shasum
or sha1sum
base64
find
These are the most common make targets: build
, test
, docker-build
, run
, kind-run
.
Run make help
to get an overview over the relevant targets and their intentions.
Generate Kubernetes code
If you make changes to the CRD structs you'll need to run code generation.
This can be done with make:
make generate
Install CRDs
CRDs can be either installed on the cluster by running make install
or using kubectl apply -k config/crd/apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
.
Currently there's an issue using make install
related to how the CRDs are specified.
Therefore settle to the second approach for now.
Run the operator
You can run the operator in different ways:
- as a container image (see quickstart)
- using
make run
(provide your own kubeconfig)
- using
make kind-run
(uses KIND to install a cluster in docker and provides its own kubeconfig in testbin/
)
- using a configuration of your favorite IDE
Best is if you have minio installed somewhere to be able to setup the needed env values. It needs to be reachable from within your dev cluster.
Run E2E tests
K8up supports both OpenShift 3.11 clusters and newer Kubernetes clusters 1.16+.
However, to support OpenShift 3.11 a legacy CRD definition with apiextensions.k8s.io/v1beta1
is needed, while K8s 1.22+ only supports apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
.
You need node
and npm
to run the tests, as it runs with DETIK.
To run e2e tests, execute:
make e2e-test
To test compatibility of k8up with OpenShift 3.11 (or any other specific K8s version), you can run end-to-end tests like this:
make e2e-test -e CRD_SPEC_VERSION=v1beta1 -e KIND_NODE_VERSION=v1.13.12 -e KIND_KUBECTL_ARGS=--validate=false -e BACKUP_ENABLE_LEADER_ELECTION=false
To test just a specific e2e test, run:
make e2e-test -e BATS_FILES=test-00-deployment.bats
To remove the local KIND cluster and other e2e resources, run:
make e2e-clean
To cleanup all created artifacts, there's always:
make clean
Example configurations
There are a number of example configurations in config/samples
.
Apply them using kubectl apply -f config/samples/somesample.yaml