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張 旭

Kubernetes Deployments: The Ultimate Guide - Semaphore - 1 views

  • Continuous integration gives you confidence in your code. To extend that confidence to the release process, your deployment operations need to come with a safety belt.
  • these Kubernetes objects ensure that you can progressively deploy, roll back and scale your applications without downtime.
  • A pod is just a group of containers (it can be a group of one container) that run on the same machine, and share a few things together.
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  • the containers within a pod can communicate with each other over localhost
  • From a network perspective, all the processes in these containers are local.
  • we can never create a standalone container: the closest we can do is create a pod, with a single container in it.
  • Kubernetes is a declarative system (by opposition to imperative systems).
  • All we can do, is describe what we want to have, and wait for Kubernetes to take action to reconcile what we have, with what we want to have.
  • In other words, we can say, “I would like a 40-feet long blue container with yellow doors“, and Kubernetes will find such a container for us. If it doesn’t exist, it will build it; if there is already one but it’s green with red doors, it will paint it for us; if there is already a container of the right size and color, Kubernetes will do nothing, since what we have already matches what we want.
  • The specification of a replica set looks very much like the specification of a pod, except that it carries a number, indicating how many replicas
  • What happens if we change that definition? Suddenly, there are zero pods matching the new specification.
  • the creation of new pods could happen in a more gradual manner.
  • the specification for a deployment looks very much like the one for a replica set: it features a pod specification, and a number of replicas.
  • Deployments, however, don’t create or delete pods directly.
  • When we update a deployment and adjust the number of replicas, it passes that update down to the replica set.
  • When we update the pod specification, the deployment creates a new replica set with the updated pod specification. That replica set has an initial size of zero. Then, the size of that replica set is progressively increased, while decreasing the size of the other replica set.
  • we are going to fade in (turn up the volume) on the new replica set, while we fade out (turn down the volume) on the old one.
  • During the whole process, requests are sent to pods of both the old and new replica sets, without any downtime for our users.
  • A readiness probe is a test that we add to a container specification.
  • Kubernetes supports three ways of implementing readiness probes:Running a command inside a container;Making an HTTP(S) request against a container; orOpening a TCP socket against a container.
  • When we roll out a new version, Kubernetes will wait for the new pod to mark itself as “ready” before moving on to the next one.
  • If there is no readiness probe, then the container is considered as ready, as long as it could be started.
  • MaxSurge indicates how many extra pods we are willing to run during a rolling update, while MaxUnavailable indicates how many pods we can lose during the rolling update.
  • Setting MaxUnavailable to 0 means, “do not shutdown any old pod before a new one is up and ready to serve traffic“.
  • Setting MaxSurge to 100% means, “immediately start all the new pods“, implying that we have enough spare capacity on our cluster, and that we want to go as fast as possible.
  • kubectl rollout undo deployment web
  • the replica set doesn’t look at the pods’ specifications, but only at their labels.
  • A replica set contains a selector, which is a logical expression that “selects” (just like a SELECT query in SQL) a number of pods.
  • it is absolutely possible to manually create pods with these labels, but running a different image (or with different settings), and fool our replica set.
  • Selectors are also used by services, which act as the load balancers for Kubernetes traffic, internal and external.
  • internal IP address (denoted by the name ClusterIP)
  • during a rollout, the deployment doesn’t reconfigure or inform the load balancer that pods are started and stopped. It happens automatically through the selector of the service associated to the load balancer.
  • a pod is added as a valid endpoint for a service only if all its containers pass their readiness check. In other words, a pod starts receiving traffic only once it’s actually ready for it.
  • In blue/green deployment, we want to instantly switch over all the traffic from the old version to the new, instead of doing it progressively
  • We can achieve blue/green deployment by creating multiple deployments (in the Kubernetes sense), and then switching from one to another by changing the selector of our service
  • kubectl label pods -l app=blue,version=v1.5 status=enabled
  • kubectl label pods -l app=blue,version=v1.4 status-
  •  
    "Continuous integration gives you confidence in your code. To extend that confidence to the release process, your deployment operations need to come with a safety belt."
張 旭

Helm | - 0 views

  • Templates generate manifest files, which are YAML-formatted resource descriptions that Kubernetes can understand.
  • service.yaml: A basic manifest for creating a service endpoint for your deployment
  • In Kubernetes, a ConfigMap is simply a container for storing configuration data.
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  • deployment.yaml: A basic manifest for creating a Kubernetes deployment
  • using the suffix .yaml for YAML files and .tpl for helpers.
  • It is just fine to put a plain YAML file like this in the templates/ directory.
  • helm get manifest
  • The helm get manifest command takes a release name (full-coral) and prints out all of the Kubernetes resources that were uploaded to the server. Each file begins with --- to indicate the start of a YAML document
  • Names should be unique to a release
  • The name: field is limited to 63 characters because of limitations to the DNS system.
  • release names are limited to 53 characters
  • {{ .Release.Name }}
  • A template directive is enclosed in {{ and }} blocks.
  • The values that are passed into a template can be thought of as namespaced objects, where a dot (.) separates each namespaced element.
  • The leading dot before Release indicates that we start with the top-most namespace for this scope
  • The Release object is one of the built-in objects for Helm
  • When you want to test the template rendering, but not actually install anything, you can use helm install ./mychart --debug --dry-run
  • Using --dry-run will make it easier to test your code, but it won’t ensure that Kubernetes itself will accept the templates you generate.
  • Objects are passed into a template from the template engine.
  • create new objects within your templates
  • Objects can be simple, and have just one value. Or they can contain other objects or functions.
  • Release is one of the top-level objects that you can access in your templates.
  • Release.Namespace: The namespace to be released into (if the manifest doesn’t override)
  • Values: Values passed into the template from the values.yaml file and from user-supplied files. By default, Values is empty.
  • Chart: The contents of the Chart.yaml file.
  • Files: This provides access to all non-special files in a chart.
  • Files.Get is a function for getting a file by name
  • Files.GetBytes is a function for getting the contents of a file as an array of bytes instead of as a string. This is useful for things like images.
  • Template: Contains information about the current template that is being executed
  • BasePath: The namespaced path to the templates directory of the current chart
  • The built-in values always begin with a capital letter.
  • Go’s naming convention
  • use only initial lower case letters in order to distinguish local names from those built-in.
  • If this is a subchart, the values.yaml file of a parent chart
  • Individual parameters passed with --set
  • values.yaml is the default, which can be overridden by a parent chart’s values.yaml, which can in turn be overridden by a user-supplied values file, which can in turn be overridden by --set parameters.
  • While structuring data this way is possible, the recommendation is that you keep your values trees shallow, favoring flatness.
  • If you need to delete a key from the default values, you may override the value of the key to be null, in which case Helm will remove the key from the overridden values merge.
  • Kubernetes would then fail because you can not declare more than one livenessProbe handler.
  • When injecting strings from the .Values object into the template, we ought to quote these strings.
  • quote
  • Template functions follow the syntax functionName arg1 arg2...
  • While we talk about the “Helm template language” as if it is Helm-specific, it is actually a combination of the Go template language, some extra functions, and a variety of wrappers to expose certain objects to the templates.
  • Drawing on a concept from UNIX, pipelines are a tool for chaining together a series of template commands to compactly express a series of transformations.
  • pipelines are an efficient way of getting several things done in sequence
  • The repeat function will echo the given string the given number of times
  • default DEFAULT_VALUE GIVEN_VALUE. This function allows you to specify a default value inside of the template, in case the value is omitted.
  • all static default values should live in the values.yaml, and should not be repeated using the default command
  • Operators are implemented as functions that return a boolean value.
  • To use eq, ne, lt, gt, and, or, not etcetera place the operator at the front of the statement followed by its parameters just as you would a function.
  • if and
  • if or
  • with to specify a scope
  • range, which provides a “for each”-style loop
  • block declares a special kind of fillable template area
  • A pipeline is evaluated as false if the value is: a boolean false a numeric zero an empty string a nil (empty or null) an empty collection (map, slice, tuple, dict, array)
  • incorrect YAML because of the whitespacing
  • When the template engine runs, it removes the contents inside of {{ and }}, but it leaves the remaining whitespace exactly as is.
  • {{- (with the dash and space added) indicates that whitespace should be chomped left, while -}} means whitespace to the right should be consumed.
  • Newlines are whitespace!
  • an * at the end of the line indicates a newline character that would be removed
  • Be careful with the chomping modifiers.
  • the indent function
  • Scopes can be changed. with can allow you to set the current scope (.) to a particular object.
  • Inside of the restricted scope, you will not be able to access the other objects from the parent scope.
  • range
  • The range function will “range over” (iterate through) the pizzaToppings list.
  • Just like with sets the scope of ., so does a range operator.
  • The toppings: |- line is declaring a multi-line string.
  • not a YAML list. It’s a big string.
  • the data in ConfigMaps data is composed of key/value pairs, where both the key and the value are simple strings.
  • The |- marker in YAML takes a multi-line string.
  • range can be used to iterate over collections that have a key and a value (like a map or dict).
  • In Helm templates, a variable is a named reference to another object. It follows the form $name
  • Variables are assigned with a special assignment operator: :=
  • {{- $relname := .Release.Name -}}
  • capture both the index and the value
  • the integer index (starting from zero) to $index and the value to $topping
  • For data structures that have both a key and a value, we can use range to get both
  • Variables are normally not “global”. They are scoped to the block in which they are declared.
  • one variable that is always global - $ - this variable will always point to the root context.
  • $.
  • $.
  • Helm template language is its ability to declare multiple templates and use them together.
  • A named template (sometimes called a partial or a subtemplate) is simply a template defined inside of a file, and given a name.
  • when naming templates: template names are global.
  • If you declare two templates with the same name, whichever one is loaded last will be the one used.
  • you should be careful to name your templates with chart-specific names.
  • templates in subcharts are compiled together with top-level templates
  • naming convention is to prefix each defined template with the name of the chart: {{ define "mychart.labels" }}
  • Helm has over 60 available functions.
張 旭

Helm | Template Functions and Pipelines - 0 views

  • When injecting strings from the .Values object into the template, we ought to quote these strings.
  • Helm has over 60 available functions. Some of them are defined by the Go template language itself. Most of the others are part of the Sprig template library
  • the "Helm template language" as if it is Helm-specific, it is actually a combination of the Go template language, some extra functions, and a variety of wrappers to expose certain objects to the templates.
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  • Drawing on a concept from UNIX, pipelines are a tool for chaining together a series of template commands to compactly express a series of transformations.
  • the default function: default DEFAULT_VALUE GIVEN_VALUE
  • all static default values should live in the values.yaml, and should not be repeated using the default command (otherwise they would be redundant).
  • the default command is perfect for computed values, which can not be declared inside values.yaml.
  • When lookup returns an object, it will return a dictionary.
  • The synopsis of the lookup function is lookup apiVersion, kind, namespace, name -> resource or resource list
  • When no object is found, an empty value is returned. This can be used to check for the existence of an object.
  • The lookup function uses Helm's existing Kubernetes connection configuration to query Kubernetes.
  • Helm is not supposed to contact the Kubernetes API Server during a helm template or a helm install|update|delete|rollback --dry-run, so the lookup function will return an empty list (i.e. dict) in such a case.
  • the operators (eq, ne, lt, gt, and, or and so on) are all implemented as functions. In pipelines, operations can be grouped with parentheses ((, and )).
  •  
    "When injecting strings from the .Values object into the template, we ought to quote these strings. "
張 旭

The for_each Meta-Argument - Configuration Language | Terraform | HashiCorp Developer - 0 views

  • A given resource or module block cannot use both count and for_each
  • The for_each meta-argument accepts a map or a set of strings, and creates an instance for each item in that map or set
  • each.key — The map key (or set member) corresponding to this instance.
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  • each.value — The map value corresponding to this instance. (If a set was provided, this is the same as each.key.)
  • for_each keys cannot be the result (or rely on the result of) of impure functions, including uuid, bcrypt, or timestamp, as their evaluation is deferred during the main evaluation step.
  • The value used in for_each is used to identify the resource instance and will always be disclosed in UI output, which is why sensitive values are not allowed.
  • if you would like to call keys(local.map), where local.map is an object with sensitive values (but non-sensitive keys), you can create a value to pass to for_each with toset([for k,v in local.map : k]).
  • for_each can't refer to any resource attributes that aren't known until after a configuration is applied (such as a unique ID generated by the remote API when an object is created).
  • he for_each argument does not implicitly convert lists or tuples to sets.
  • Transform a multi-level nested structure into a flat list by using nested for expressions with the flatten function.
  • Instances are identified by a map key (or set member) from the value provided to for_each
  • Within nested provisioner or connection blocks, the special self object refers to the current resource instance, not the resource block as a whole.
  • Conversion from list to set discards the ordering of the items in the list and removes any duplicate elements.
張 旭

What ChatOps Solutions Should You Use Today? | PäksTech - 0 views

shared by 張 旭 on 16 Feb 22 - No Cached
  • The big elephant in the room is of course Hubot, which now hasn’t seen new commits in over three years.
  • Botkit bots are written in JavaScript and they run on Node.js
  • Errbot is a chatbot written in Python, it comes with a ton of features, and it is extendable with custom plugins.
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  • by default they react to !commands in your chatroom. Commands can also trigger on regular expression matches, with or without a bot prefix.
  • Errbot also supports Markdown responses with Jinja2 templating.
  • Errbot supports webhooks; It has a small web server that can translate endpoints to your custom plugins.
  • It’s recommended that you configure this behind a web server such as nginx or Apache.
  • It works with the If This Then That (IFTTT) principle, meaning that you define a set of rules that the system then uses to take action.
  • Lita is a chat bot written in Ruby. Like the other bots I’ve mentioned, it is also open source and supports different chat platforms via plugins.
  • Gort is a newer entrant to the ChatOps space. As the name suggests it has been written in Go, and it is still under active development.
  • can persist information in databases, supports advanced parsers, and is extendable with custom skills.
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