This repo hosts the community.kubernetes
Ansible Collection.
The collection includes a variety of Ansible content to help automate the management of applications in Kubernetes and OpenShift clusters, as well as the provisioning and maintenance of clusters themselves.
Click on the name of a plugin or module to view that content's documentation:
- Connection Plugins:
- Filter Plugins:
- Inventory Source:
- Lookup Plugins:
- Modules:
Before using the Kuberentes collection, you need to install it with the Ansible Galaxy CLI:
ansible-galaxy collection install community.kubernetes
You can also include it in a requirements.yml
file and install it via ansible-galaxy collection install -r requirements.yml
, using the format:
---
collections:
- name: community.kubernetes
version: 0.11.0
Content in this collection requires the OpenShift Python client to interact with Kubernetes' APIs. You can install it with:
pip3 install openshift
You can either call modules by their Fully Qualified Collection Namespace (FQCN), like community.kubernetes.k8s_info
, or you can call modules by their short name if you list the community.kubernetes
collection in the playbook's collections
, like so:
---
- hosts: localhost
gather_facts: false
connection: local
collections:
- community.kubernetes
tasks:
- name: Ensure the myapp Namespace exists.
k8s:
api_version: v1
kind: Namespace
name: myapp
state: present
- name: Ensure the myapp Service exists in the myapp Namespace.
k8s:
state: present
definition:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: myapp
namespace: myapp
spec:
type: LoadBalancer
ports:
- port: 8080
targetPort: 8080
selector:
app: myapp
- name: Get a list of all Services in the myapp namespace.
k8s_info:
kind: Service
namespace: myapp
register: myapp_services
- name: Display number of Services in the myapp namespace.
debug:
var: myapp_services.resources | count
For documentation on how to use individual modules and other content included in this collection, please see the links in the 'Included content' section earlier in this README.
If you want to develop new content for this collection or improve what's already here, the easiest way to work on the collection is to clone it into one of the configured COLLECTIONS_PATHS
, and work on it there.
The tests
directory contains configuration for running sanity and integration tests using ansible-test
.
You can run the collection's test suites with the commands:
ansible-test sanity --docker -v --color
ansible-test integration --docker -v --color
There are also integration tests in the molecule
directory which are meant to be run against a local Kubernetes cluster, e.g. using KinD or Minikube. To run the tests, set up a local cluster, then run Molecule:
kind create cluster
molecule test
The current process for publishing new versions of the Kubernetes Collection is manual, and requires a user who has access to the community.kubernetes
namespace on Ansible Galaxy to publish the build artifact. See Issue #43 for progress in automating this process.
-
Ensure you're running Ansible from devel, so the
build_ignore
key ingalaxy.yml
is used. -
Run
git clean -x -d -f
in this repository's directory to clean out any extra files which should not be included. -
Ensure
CHANGELOG.md
contains all the latest changes. -
Update
galaxy.yml
and this README'srequirements.yml
example with the newversion
for the collection. -
Tag the version in Git and push to GitHub.
-
Run the following commands to build and release the new version on Galaxy:
ansible-galaxy collection build ansible-galaxy collection publish ./community-kubernetes-$VERSION_HERE.tar.gz
After the version is published, verify it exists on the Kubernetes Collection Galaxy page.
For more information about Ansible's Kubernetes integration, join the #ansible-kubernetes
channel on Freenode IRC, and browse the resources in the Kubernetes Working Group Community wiki page.
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later
See LICENCE to see the full text.