Skip to content

Kubernetes toolbox container for deploying to Kubernetes etc. Optimized to run in CI.

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

Enrise/KubeToolbox

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

47 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

KubeToolbox

This container makes it super easy for you to connect to kubernetes and apply the manifests you desire.

We have kube-toolboxes for:

Every kube-toolbox contains:

  • bash: the commonly used command line interface that's more advanced than sh itself
  • connect-kubernetes: Check below how this command should be used for your cloud provider
  • curl: Allows you to easily fire http requests
  • docker: The docker client and server
  • envsubst '${ENV_VAR_1} ${ENV_VAR_2}' < dev/kube/production.yml > production.yml: Replaces given environment variables in a file, into a new file
  • helm: Helm kubernetes recipes
  • jq: Tool to format json strings
  • kubectl: Kubernetes command line interface

Cloud providers

For every cloud provider we have an example of how to connect to your kubernetes cluster via a GitLab CI file.

Amazon

The kube-toolbox for Azure is available with docker tag enrise/kube-toolbox:amazon.

The following additional packages are available:

  • aws: this cli allows you to connect and interact with your AWS account.
  • connect-kubernetes "<aws_access_key_id>" "<aws_secret_access_key>" "<region>" "<cluster_name>": connects you with your Kubernetes cluster on AWS directly
deploy to amazon web services:
  stage: deploy
  image: enrise/kube-toolbox:amazon
  environment:
    name: production
    url: https://example.com
  only:
    - master
  before_script:
    - connect-kubernetes "<aws_access_key_id>" "<aws_secret_access_key>" "<region>" "<cluster_name>"
  script:
    - envsubst < kubernetes/manifest.yml > manifest.yml
    - kubectl apply -f manifest.yml
    - kubectl rollout status deployment -n "<namespace>" "<deployment-name>"

Azure

The kube-toolbox for Azure is available with docker tag enrise/kube-toolbox:azure.

The following additional packages are available:

  • az: this cli allows you to connect and interact with your Azure account.
  • connect-kubernetes "<azure_account_username>" <azure_account_password>" "<resource_group>" "<cluster_name>": connects you with your Kubernetes cluster on Azure directly
deploy to azure:
  stage: deploy
  image: enrise/kube-toolbox:azure
  environment:
    name: production
    url: https://example.com
  only:
    - master
  before_script:
    - connect-kubernetes "<azure_account_username>" <azure_account_password>" "<resource_group>" "<cluster_name>"
  script:
    - envsubst < kubernetes/manifest.yml > manifest.yml
    - kubectl apply -f manifest.yml
    - kubectl rollout status deployment -n "<namespace>" "<deployment-name>"

Digital Ocean

The kube-toolbox for Digital Ocean is available with docker tag enrise/kube-toolbox:digital-ocean.

The following additional packages are available:

  • doctl: this cli allows you to connect and interact with your Digital Ocean account.
  • connect-kubernetes "<api_personal_access_token>" "<cluster_name>": connects you with your Kubernetes cluster on Digital Ocean directly
deploy to digital ocean kubernetes:
  stage: deploy
  image: enrise/kube-toolbox:digital-ocean
  environment:
    name: production
    url: https://example.com
  only:
    - master
  before_script:
    - connect-kubernetes "<api_personal_access_token>" "<cluster_name>"
  script:
    - envsubst < kubernetes/manifest.yml > manifest.yml
    - kubectl apply -f manifest.yml
    - kubectl rollout status deployment -n "<namespace>" "<deployment-name>"

Google Cloud

The kube-toolbox for Google Cloud is available with docker tag enrise/kube-toolbox:google.

The following additional packages are available:

  • gcloud: this cli allows you to connect and interact with your Google Cloud account.
  • connect-kubernetes "<service_account_file>" <region>" "<project>" "<cluster_name>": connects you with your Kubernetes cluster on the Google Cloud directly
deploy to google cloud platform:
  stage: deploy
  image: enrise/kube-toolbox:google
  environment:
    name: production
    url: https://example.com
  only:
    - master
  before_script:
    - connect-kubernetes $SERVICE_ACCOUNT_KEY_FILE "<region>" "<project>" "<cluster_name>"
  script:
    - envsubst < kubernetes/manifest.yml > manifest.yml
    - kubectl apply -f manifest.yml
    - kubectl rollout status deployment -n "<namespace>" "<deployment-name>"

Make sure the $SERVICE_ACCOUNT_KEY_FILE is a path to the service account json file, containing all secrets to properly connect to your account. In GitLab project settings you can configure a secret variable to be served as a file directly.

If you only have the contents of the file available, create the key file manually first as follows:

  before_script:
    - echo $SERVICE_ACCOUNT_JSON_KEY > /tmp/.gcloud_private_key
    - connect-kubernetes /tmp/.gcloud_private_key "<region>" "<project>" "<cluster_name>"

Tips

Some tips that might be helpful to you

Recursive envsubst

With the following magic line, you can replace all environment variables in the *.yml files, recursively:

find . -iname \*.yml -type f -exec sh -c 'envsubst < $0 > $0.tmp && mv $0.tmp $0' {} \;

Another trick to make it more readable in your CI file:

.replace-environment-variables-recursively: &replace-environment-variables-recursively |
    find . -iname \*.yml -type f -exec sh -c 'envsubst < $0 > $0.tmp && mv $0.tmp $0' {} \;

deploy to kubernetes:
  script:
    - cd kubernetes/
    - *replace-environment-variables-recursively
    - kubectl apply -f manifest.yml
    - kubectl rollout status deployment -n "<namespace>" "<deployment-name>"

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Contributors 3

  •  
  •  
  •