Including external variables does not work. You must import them. This change corrects the External Variables section of the cluster-config README. Signed-off-by: Vincent Ambo <tazjin@google.com>
2.7 KiB
Cluster configuration
Every cluster (or "environment") that requires individual configuration is specified in a very simple YAML file in Kontemplate.
An example file for a hypothetical test environment could look like this:
---
context: k8s.test.mydomain.com
global:
clusterName: test-cluster
defaultReplicas: 2
import:
- test-secrets.yaml
include:
- name: gateway
path: tools/nginx
values:
tlsDomains:
- test.oslo.pub
- test.tazj.in
- path: backend
values:
env: test
include:
- name: blog
values:
url: test.tazj.in
- name: pub-service
Table of Contents
Fields
This is documentation for the individual fields in a cluster context file.
context
The context
field contains the name of the kubectl-context. You can list context names with
'kubectl config get-contexts'.
This must be set here so that Kontemplate can use the correct context when calling kubectl.
This field is required for kubectl
-wrapping commands. It can be left out if only the template
-command is used.
global
The global
field contains a key/value map of variables that should be available to all resource
sets in the cluster.
This field is optional.
import
The import
field contains the file names of additional YAML or JSON files from which global
variables should be loaded. Using this field makes it possible to keep certain configuration that
is the same for some, but not all, clusters in a common place.
This field is optional.
include
The include
field contains the actual resource sets to be included in the cluster.
Information about the structure of resource sets can be found in the resource set documentation.
This field is required.
External variables
As mentioned above, extra variables can be loaded from additional YAML or JSON files. Assuming you
have a file called test-secrets.yaml
which contains variables that should be shared between a test
and dev
cluster, you could import it in your context as such:
# test-secrets.yaml:
mySecretVar: foo-bar-12345
# test-cluster.yaml:
context: k8s.test.mydomain.com
import:
- test-secrets.yaml
# dev-cluster.yaml:
context: k8s.dev.mydomain.com
import:
- test-secrets.yaml
The variable mySecretVar
is then available as a global variable.