- Controlling if/when the ApplicationSet controller modifies
Application
resources- Dry run: prevent ApplicationSet from creating, modifying, or deleting all Applications
- Managed Applications modification Policies
- Policy -
create-update
: Prevent ApplicationSet controller from deleting Applications - Ignore certain changes to Applications
- Prevent an
Application
‘s child resources from being deleted, when the parent Application is deleted - Prevent an Application’s child resources from being modified
- How to modify ApplicationSet container launch parameters
- Preserving changes made to an Applications annotations and labels
- Debugging unexpected changes to Applications
Controlling if/when the ApplicationSet controller modifies Application
resources
The ApplicationSet controller supports a number of settings that limit the ability of the controller to make changes to generated Applications, for example, preventing the controller from deleting child Applications.
These settings allow you to exert control over when, and how, changes are made to your Applications, and to their corresponding cluster resources (Deployments
, Services
, etc).
Here are some of the controller settings that may be modified to alter the ApplicationSet controller’s resource-handling behaviour.
Dry run: prevent ApplicationSet from creating, modifying, or deleting all Applications
To prevent the ApplicationSet controller from creating, modifying, or deleting any Application
resources, you may enable dry-run
mode. This essentially switches the controller into a “read only” mode, where the controller Reconcile loop will run, but no resources will be modified.
To enable dry-run, add --dryrun true
to the ApplicationSet Deployment’s container launch parameters.
See ‘How to modify ApplicationSet container parameters’ below for detailed steps on how to add this parameter to the controller.
Managed Applications modification Policies
The ApplicationSet controller supports a parameter --policy
, which is specified on launch (within the controller Deployment container), and which restricts what types of modifications will be made to managed Argo CD Application
resources.
The --policy
parameter takes four values: sync
, create-only
, create-delete
, and create-update
. (sync
is the default, which is used if the --policy
parameter is not specified; the other policies are described below).
It is also possible to set this policy per ApplicationSet.
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
spec:
# (...)
syncPolicy:
applicationsSync: create-only # create-update, create-delete sync
- Policy
create-only
: Prevents ApplicationSet controller from modifying or deleting Applications. Prevents Application controller from deleting Applications according to ownerReferences. - Policy
create-update
: Prevents ApplicationSet controller from deleting Applications. Update is allowed. Prevents Application controller from deleting Applications according to ownerReferences. - Policy
create-delete
: Prevents ApplicationSet controller from modifying Applications. Delete is allowed. - Policy
sync
: Update and Delete are allowed.
If the controller parameter --policy
is set, it takes precedence on the field applicationsSync
. It is possible to allow per ApplicationSet sync policy by setting variable ARGOCD_APPLICATIONSET_CONTROLLER_ENABLE_POLICY_OVERRIDE
to argocd-cmd-params-cm applicationsetcontroller.enable.policy.override
or directly with controller parameter --enable-policy-override
(default to false
).
Controller parameter
To allow the ApplicationSet controller to create Application
resources, but prevent any further modification, such as deletion, or modification of Application fields, add this parameter in the ApplicationSet controller:
--policy create-only
At ApplicationSet level
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
spec:
# (...)
syncPolicy:
applicationsSync: create-only
Policy - create-update
: Prevent ApplicationSet controller from deleting Applications
To allow the ApplicationSet controller to create or modify Application
resources, but prevent Applications from being deleted, add the following parameter to the ApplicationSet controller Deployment
:
--policy create-update
This may be useful to users looking for additional protection against deletion of the Applications generated by the controller.
At ApplicationSet level
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
spec:
# (...)
syncPolicy:
applicationsSync: create-update
Ignore certain changes to Applications
The ApplicationSet spec includes an ignoreApplicationDifferences
field, which allows you to specify which fields of the ApplicationSet should be ignored when comparing Applications.
The field supports multiple ignore rules. Each ignore rule may specify a list of either jsonPointers
or jqPathExpressions
to ignore.
You may optionally also specify a name
to apply the ignore rule to a specific Application, or omit the name
to apply the ignore rule to all Applications.
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
spec:
ignoreApplicationDifferences:
- jsonPointers:
- /spec/source/targetRevision
- name: some-app
jqPathExpressions:
- .spec.source.helm.values
Allow temporarily toggling auto-sync
One of the most common use cases for ignoring differences is to allow temporarily toggling auto-sync for an Application.
For example, if you have an ApplicationSet that is configured to automatically sync Applications, you may want to temporarily disable auto-sync for a specific Application. You can do this by adding an ignore rule for the spec.syncPolicy.automated
field.
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
spec:
ignoreApplicationDifferences:
- jsonPointers:
- /spec/syncPolicy
Limitations of ignoreApplicationDifferences
When an ApplicationSet is reconciled, the controller will compare the ApplicationSet spec with the spec of each Application that it manages. If there are any differences, the controller will generate a patch to update the Application to match the ApplicationSet spec.
The generated patch is a MergePatch. According to the MergePatch documentation, “existing lists will be completely replaced by new lists” when there is a change to the list.
This limits the effectiveness of ignoreApplicationDifferences
when the ignored field is in a list. For example, if you have an application with multiple sources, and you want to ignore changes to the targetRevision
of one of the sources, changes in other fields or in other sources will cause the entire sources
list to be replaced, and the targetRevision
field will be reset to the value defined in the ApplicationSet.
For example, consider this ApplicationSet:
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
spec:
ignoreApplicationDifferences:
- jqPathExpressions:
- .spec.sources[] | select(.repoURL == "https://git.example.com/org/repo1").targetRevision
template:
spec:
sources:
- repoURL: https://git.example.com/org/repo1
targetRevision: main
- repoURL: https://git.example.com/org/repo2
targetRevision: main
You can freely change the targetRevision
of the repo1
source, and the ApplicationSet controller will not overwrite your change.
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: Application
spec:
sources:
- repoURL: https://git.example.com/org/repo1
targetRevision: fix/bug-123
- repoURL: https://git.example.com/org/repo2
targetRevision: main
However, if you change the targetRevision
of the repo2
source, the ApplicationSet controller will overwrite the entire sources
field.
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: Application
spec:
sources:
- repoURL: https://git.example.com/org/repo1
targetRevision: main
- repoURL: https://git.example.com/org/repo2
targetRevision: main
Note
Future improvements to the ApplicationSet controller may eliminate this problem. For example, the ref
field might be made a merge key, allowing the ApplicationSet controller to generate and use a StrategicMergePatch instead of a MergePatch. You could then target a specific source by ref
, ignore changes to a field in that source, and changes to other sources would not cause the ignored field to be overwritten.
Prevent an Application
‘s child resources from being deleted, when the parent Application is deleted
By default, when an Application
resource is deleted by the ApplicationSet controller, all of the child resources of the Application will be deleted as well (such as, all of the Application’s Deployments
, Services
, etc).
To prevent an Application’s child resources from being deleted when the parent Application is deleted, add the preserveResourcesOnDeletion: true
field to the syncPolicy
of the ApplicationSet:
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
spec:
# (...)
syncPolicy:
preserveResourcesOnDeletion: true
More information on the specific behaviour of preserveResourcesOnDeletion
, and deletion in ApplicationSet controller and Argo CD in general, can be found on the Application Deletion page.
Prevent an Application’s child resources from being modified
Changes made to the ApplicationSet will propagate to the Applications managed by the ApplicationSet, and then Argo CD will propagate the Application changes to the underlying cluster resources (as per Argo CD Integration).
The propagation of Application changes to the cluster is managed by the automated sync settings, which are referenced in the ApplicationSet template
field:
spec.template.syncPolicy.automated
: If enabled, changes to Applications will automatically propagate to the cluster resources of the cluster.- Unset this within the ApplicationSet template to ‘pause’ updates to cluster resources managed by the
Application
resource.
- Unset this within the ApplicationSet template to ‘pause’ updates to cluster resources managed by the
spec.template.syncPolicy.automated.prune
: By default, Automated sync will not delete resources when Argo CD detects the resource is no longer defined in Git.- For extra safety, set this to false to prevent unexpected changes to the backing Git repository from affecting cluster resources.
How to modify ApplicationSet container launch parameters
There are a couple of ways to modify the ApplicationSet container parameters, so as to enable the above settings.
A) Use kubectl edit
to modify the deployment on the cluster
Edit the applicationset-controller Deployment
resource on the cluster:
kubectl edit deployment/argocd-applicationset-controller -n argocd
Locate the .spec.template.spec.containers[0].command
field, and add the required parameter(s):
spec:
# (...)
template:
# (...)
spec:
containers:
- command:
- entrypoint.sh
- argocd-applicationset-controller
# Insert new parameters here, for example:
# --policy create-only
# (...)
Save and exit the editor. Wait for a new Pod
to start containing the updated parameters.
Or, B) Edit the install.yaml
manifest for the ApplicationSet installation
Rather than directly editing the cluster resource, you may instead choose to modify the installation YAML that is used to install the ApplicationSet controller:
Applicable for applicationset versions less than 0.4.0.
# Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/argoproj/applicationset
# Checkout the version that corresponds to the one you have installed.
git checkout "(version of applicationset)"
# example: git checkout "0.1.0"
cd applicationset/manifests
# open 'install.yaml' in a text editor, make the same modifications to Deployment
# as described in the previous section.
# Apply the change to the cluster
kubectl apply -n argocd -f install.yaml
Preserving changes made to an Applications annotations and labels
Note
The same behavior can be achieved on a per-app basis using the ignoreApplicationDifferences feature described above. However, preserved fields may be configured globally, a feature that is not yet available for ignoreApplicationDifferences
.
It is common practice in Kubernetes to store state in annotations, operators will often make use of this. To allow for this, it is possible to configure a list of annotations that the ApplicationSet should preserve when reconciling.
For example, imagine that we have an Application created from an ApplicationSet, but a custom annotation and label has since been added (to the Application) that does not exist in the ApplicationSet
resource:
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: Application
metadata:
# This annotation and label exists only on this Application, and not in
# the parent ApplicationSet template:
annotations:
my-custom-annotation: some-value
labels:
my-custom-label: some-value
spec:
# (...)
To preserve this annotation and label we can use the preservedFields
property of the ApplicationSet
like so:
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
spec:
# (...)
preservedFields:
annotations: ["my-custom-annotation"]
labels: ["my-custom-label"]
The ApplicationSet controller will leave this annotation and label as-is when reconciling, even though it is not defined in the metadata of the ApplicationSet itself.
By default, the Argo CD notifications and the Argo CD refresh type annotations are also preserved.
Note
One can also set global preserved fields for the controller by passing a comma separated list of annotations and labels to ARGOCD_APPLICATIONSET_CONTROLLER_GLOBAL_PRESERVED_ANNOTATIONS
and ARGOCD_APPLICATIONSET_CONTROLLER_GLOBAL_PRESERVED_LABELS
respectively.
Debugging unexpected changes to Applications
When the ApplicationSet controller makes a change to an application, it logs the patch at the debug level. To see these logs, set the log level to debug in the argocd-cmd-params-cm
ConfigMap in the argocd
namespace:
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: argocd-cmd-params-cm
namespace: argocd
data:
applicationsetcontroller.log.level: debug