As was mentioned in the Ansible Operator Proposal, not everyone is a golang developer, so the SDK needs to support other types of operators to gain adoption across a wider community of users.
Helm is one of the most widely-used tools for Kubernetes application management, and it bills itself as the "package manager for Kubernetes." Operators serve a nearly identical function, but they improve on Helm's concepts by incorporating an always-on reconciliation loop rather than relying on an imperative user-driven command line tool. By integrating Helm's templating engine and release management into an operator, the SDK will further increase the number of potential users by adding the ability to deploy Charts (e.g. from Helm's large catalog of existing Charts) as operators with very little extra effort.
The goal of the Helm Operator will be to create a fully functional framework for Helm Chart developers to create operators. It will also expose a library for golang users to use Helm in their operator if they so choose. These two goals in conjunction will allow users to select the best technology for their project or skillset.
This proposal creates a new type of operator called helm
. The new type is used to tell the tooling to act on that type of operator.
Packages will be added to the operator-sdk. These packages are designed to be usable by the end user if they choose to and should have a well documented public API. The proposed packages are:
-
/operator-sdk/pkg/helm/client
- Will contain a helper function to create a Helm client from
controller-runtime
manager.
- Will contain a helper function to create a Helm client from
-
/operator-sdk/pkg/helm/controller
- Will contain an exported
HelmOperatorReconciler
that implements thecontroller-runtime
reconcile.Reconciler
interface. - Will contain an exported
Add
function that creates a controller using theHelmOperatorReconciler
and adds watches based on a set of watch options passed to theAdd
function.
- Will contain an exported
-
/operator-sdk/pkg/helm/engine
- Will contain a Helm Engine implementation that adds owner references to generated Kubernetes resource assets, which is necessary for garbage collection of Helm chart resources.
-
/operator-sdk/pkg/helm/internal
- Will contain types and utilities used by other Helm packages in the SDK.
-
/operator-sdk/pkg/helm/release
- Will contain the
Manager
types and interfaces. AManager
is responsible for:- Implementing Helm's Tiller functions that are necessary to install, update, and uninstall releases.
- Reconciling an existing release's resources.
- A default
Manager
implementation is provided in this package but is not exported. - Package functions:
NewManager
- function that returns a new Manager for a provided helm chart.NewManagersFromEnv
- function that returns a map of GVK to Manager types based on environment variables.NewManagersFromFile
- function that returns a map of GVK to Manager types based on a provided config file.
- Will contain the
We are adding and updating existing commands to accommodate the Helm operator. Changes to the cmd
package as well as changes to the generator are needed.
New functionality will be updates to allow Helm operator developers to create a new boilerplate operator structure with everything necessary to get started developing and deploying a Helm operator with the SDK.
operator-sdk new <project-name> --type=helm --kind=<kind> --api-version=<group/version>
Flags:
--type=helm
is required to create Helm operator project.- Required: --kind - the kind for the CRD.
- Required: --api-version - the group/version for the CRD.
This will be new scaffolding for the above command under the hood. We will:
- Create a
./<project-name>
directory. - Create a
./<project-name>/helm-charts
directory. - Generate a simple default chart at
./<project-name>/helm-charts/<kind>
. - Create a new watches file at
./<project-name>/watches.yaml
. The chart and GVK will be defaulted based on input to thenew
command. - Create a
./<project-name>/deploy
with the Kubernetes resource files necessary to run the operator. - Create a
./build/Dockerfile
that uses the watches file and the helm chart. It will use the Helm operator as its base image.
The resulting structure will be:
<project-name>
| watches.yaml
|
|-- build
| | Dockerfile
|
|-- helm-charts
| |-- <kind>
| | Chart.yaml
| | ...
|
|-- deploy
| | operator.yaml
| | role_binding.yaml
| | role.yaml
| | service_account.yaml
| |
| |-- crds
| | <gvk>_crd.yaml
| | <gvk>_cr.yaml
The SDK CLI will use the presence of the helm-charts
directory to detect a helm
type project.
Add functionality will be updated to allow Helm operator developers to add new CRDs/CRs and to update the watches.yaml file for additional Helm charts. The command helps when a user wants to watch more than one CRD for their operator.
operator-sdk add crd --api-version=<group>/<version> --kind=<kind> --update-watches=<true|false>
Flags:
- Required: --kind - the kind for the CRD.
- Required: --api-version - the group/version for the CRD.
- Optional: --update-watches - whether or not to update watches.yaml file (default: false).
NOTE: operator-sdk add
subcommands api
and controller
will not be supported, since they are only valid for Go operators. Running these subcommands in a Helm operator project will result in an error.
Up functionality will be updated to allow Helm operator developers to run their operator locally, using the operator-sdk
binary's built-in helm operator implementation.
operator-sdk up local
This should use the known structure and the helm operator code to run the operator from this location. The existing code will need to be updated with a new operator type check for helm
(in addition to existing go
and ansible
types). The command works by running the operator-sdk binary, which includes the Helm operator code, as the operator process.
Build functionality will be updated to support building a docker image from the Helm operator directory structure.
operator-sdk build <image-name>
The SDK test
command currently only supports Go projects, so there will be no support for the operator-sdk test
subcommand in the initial integration of the Helm operator.
The SDK team will maintain a build job for the helm-operator
base image with the following tagging methodology:
- Builds on the master branch that pass nightly CI tests will be tagged with
:master
- Builds for tags that pass CI will be tagged with
:<tag>
. If the tag is also the greatest semantic version for the repository, the image will also be tagged with:latest
.
The go binary included in the base image will be built with GOOS=linux
and GOARCH=amd64
.
The base image repository will be quay.io/water-hole/helm-operator
.
-
There will be a large amount of overlap in the
operator-sdk
commands for the Ansible and Helm operators. We should take care to extract the reusable features of the Ansible operator commands into a shared library, usable by both Helm and Ansible commands. -
There is a moderate amount of complexity already related to how operator types are handled between the
go
andansible
types. With the addition of a third type, there may need to be a larger design proposal for operator types. For example, do we need to define anOperator
interface that each of the operator types can implement for flag verification, scaffolding, project detection, etc.?