kstatus

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Published: Dec 29, 2020 License: Apache-2.0 Imports: 0 Imported by: 0

README

kstatus

kstatus provides tools for checking the status of Kubernetes resources. The primary use case is knowing when (or if) a given set of resources has been fully reconciled after an apply operation.

Concepts

This effort has several goals, some with a shorter timeline than others. Initially, we want to provide a library that makes it easier to decide when changes to a set of resources have been reconciled in a cluster. To support types that do not yet publish status information, we will initially fallback on type specific rules. The library already contains rules for many of the most common built-in types such a Deployment and StatefulSet.

For custom resource definitions (CRDs), there currently isn't much guidance on which properties should be exposed in the status object and which conditions should be used. As part of this effort we want to define a set of standard conditions that the library will understand and that we encourage developers to adopt in their CRDs. These standard conditions will be focused on providing the necessary information for understanding status of the reconcile after apply and it is not expected that these will necessarily be the only conditions exposed in a custom resource. Developers will be free to add as many conditions as they wish, but if the CRDs adopt the standard conditions defined here, this library will handle them correctly.

The status objects for built-in types don't all conform to a common behavior. Not all built-in types expose conditions, and even among the types that does, the types of conditions vary widely. Long-term, we hope to add support for the standard conditions to the built-in types as well. This would remove the need for type-specific rules for determining status.

Statuses

The status of a resource is a single value that represents the reconcile state for the resource at a single point in time.

The library currently defines the following statuses for resource:

  • InProgress: The actual state of the resource has not yet reached the desired state as specified in the resource manifest, i.e. the resource reconcile has not yet completed. Newly created resources will usually start with this status, although some resources like ConfigMaps are Current immediately.
  • Failed: The process of reconciling the actual state with the desired state has encountered and error or it has made insufficient progress.
  • Current: The actual state of the resource matches the desired state. The reconcile process is considered complete until there are changes to either the desired or the actual state.
  • Terminating: The resource is in the process of being deleted.
  • NotFound: The resource does not exist in the cluster.
  • Unknown: This is for situations when the library are unable to determine the status of a resource.
Conditions

The conditions defined in the library are designed to adhere to the "abnormal-true" polarity pattern (https://github.com/kubernetes/community/blob/master/contributors/devel/sig-architecture/api-conventions.md#typical-status-properties) , i.e. that conditions are present and with a value of true whenever something unusual happens. So the absence of any conditions means everything is normal. Normal in this situation simply means that the latest observed generation of the resource manifest by the controller have been fully reconciled with the actual state.

  • Reconciling: The controller is currently working on reconciling the latest changes.
  • Stalled: The controller has encountered an error during the reconcile process or it has made insufficient progress (timeout).

The use of the "abnormal-true" pattern has some challenges. If the controller is not running, or for some reason not able to update the resource, it will look like it is in a good state when that is not true. The solution to this issue is to adopt the pattern used by several of the built-in types where there is an observedGeneration property on the status object which is set by the controller during the reconcile loop. If the generation and the observedGeneration of a resource does not match, it means there are changes that the controller has not yet seen, and therefore not acted upon.

The Ready Condition

For resources that have not adopted the recommended conditions described above and we don't have a type-specific rule for the resource, the library will look for the Ready condition. If there is a Ready condition and it is True, the library will consider the resource to be fully reconciled. If there is a Ready condition and it is False, the library will consider the resource to be in the process of reconciling.

There are a few corner cases here:

  • If a resource doesn't set the Ready condition until it is True, the library have no way of telling whether the resource is using the Ready condition, so it will fall back to the strategy for unknown resources, which is to assume they are always reconciled.
  • If the library sees the resource before the controller has had a chance to update the conditions, it also will not realize the resource use the Ready condition.
  • There is no way to determine if a resource with the Ready condition set to False is making progress or is doomed.

Features

The library is currently separated into two packages, one that provides the basic functionality, and another that builds upon the basics to provide a higher level API.

sigs.k8s.io/kustomize/kstatus/status: Provides two basic functions. First, it provides the Compute function that takes a single resource and computes the status for this resource based on the fields in the status object for the resource. Second, it provides the Augment function that computes the appropriate standard conditions based on the status object and then amends them to the conditions in the resource. Both of these functions currently operate on Unstructured types, but this should eventually be changed to rely on the kyaml library. Both of these functions compute the status and conditions solely based on the data in the resource passed in. It does not communicate with a cluster to get the latest state of the resources.

sigs.k8s.io/kustomize/kstatus/polling: This package builds upon the status package and provides functionality for polling the cluster for the latest state for all specified resources and compute status. The polling will terminate either when status for all resources reach the desired value, or when it is cancelled by the caller.

Challenges

Status is not obvious for all resource types

For some types of resources, it is pretty clear what the different statuses mean. For others, it is far less obvious. For example, what does it mean that a PodDisruptionBudget is Current? Based on the assumptions above it probably should be whenever the controller has observed the resource and updated the status object of the PDB with information on allowed disruptions. But currently, a PDB is considered Current when the number of healthy replicas meets the threshold given in the PDB. Also, should the presence of a PDB influence when a Deployment is considered Current? This would mean that a Deployment should be considered Current whenever the number of replicas reach the threshold set by the corresponding PDB. This is not currently supported as described below.

Status for a resource depends on the status of other resources

The status package computes the status of a resource solely based on the state of that particular resource. But not all resources expose sufficient information in their status object to fully determine the reconcile status of the resource. In particular this is challenging for some built-in resources that create other resources, such as Services that create Endpoints.

The polling package address this by having a framework that allows the ResourceReader for a specific type to also look up the state of other resources and use their state in the computation.

Status is decided based on single resource

Currently the status of a resource is decided solely based on information from the state of that resource. This is an issue for resources that create other resources and that doesn't provide sufficient information within their own status object. An example is the Service resource that doesn't provide much status information but do generate Endpoint resources that could be used to determine status. Similar, the status of a Deployment could be based on its generated ReplicaSets and Pods.

Not having the generated resources also limits the amount of details that can be provided when something isn't working as expected.

Future

Depend on kyaml instead of k8s libraries

The sigs.k8s.io/kustomize/kstatus/status package currently depends on k8s libraries. This can be challenging if someone wants to vendor the library within their own project. We want to replace the dependencies on k8s libraries with kyaml for the status package. The wait package needs to talk to a k8s cluster, so this package will continue to rely on the k8s libraries.

Documentation

Overview

Package kstatus contains libraries for computing status of kubernetes resources.

status Get status and/or conditions for resources based on resources already read from a cluster, i.e. it will not fetch resources from a cluster.

polling Poll the cluster for the state of the specified resources and compute the status for each as well as the aggregate status. The polling will go on until either all resources have reached the desired status or the polling is cancelled by the caller. A common use case for this would to be poll until all resources finish reconciling after apply.

Directories

Path Synopsis
Package polling is a library for computing the status of kubernetes resources based on polling of resource state from a cluster.
Package polling is a library for computing the status of kubernetes resources based on polling of resource state from a cluster.
Package kstatus contains functionality for computing the status of Kubernetes resources.
Package kstatus contains functionality for computing the status of Kubernetes resources.

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