Git Generator
The Git generator contains two subtypes: the Git directory generator, and Git file generator.
Warning
Git generators are often used to make it easier for (non-admin) developers to create Applications. If the project
field in your ApplicationSet is templated, developers may be able to create Applications under Projects with excessive permissions. For ApplicationSets with a templated project
field, the source of truth must be controlled by admins - in the case of git generators, PRs must require admin approval.
Git Generator: Directories
The Git directory generator, one of two subtypes of the Git generator, generates parameters using the directory structure of a specified Git repository.
Suppose you have a Git repository with the following directory structure:
├── argo-workflows
│ ├── kustomization.yaml
│ └── namespace-install.yaml
└── prometheus-operator
├── Chart.yaml
├── README.md
├── requirements.yaml
└── values.yaml
This repository contains two directories, one for each of the workloads to deploy:
- an Argo Workflow controller kustomization YAML file
- a Prometheus Operator Helm chart
We can deploy both workloads, using this example:
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
metadata:
name: cluster-addons
namespace: argocd
spec:
goTemplate: true
goTemplateOptions: ["missingkey=error"]
generators:
- git:
repoURL: https://github.com/argoproj/argo-cd.git
revision: HEAD
directories:
- path: applicationset/examples/git-generator-directory/cluster-addons/*
template:
metadata:
name: '{{.path.basename}}'
spec:
project: "my-project"
source:
repoURL: https://github.com/argoproj/argo-cd.git
targetRevision: HEAD
path: '{{.path.path}}'
destination:
server: https://kubernetes.default.svc
namespace: '{{.path.basename}}'
syncPolicy:
syncOptions:
- CreateNamespace=true
(The full example can be found here.)
The generator parameters are:
{{.path.path}}
: The directory paths within the Git repository that match thepath
wildcard.{{index .path.segments n}}
: The directory paths within the Git repository that match thepath
wildcard, split into array elements (n
- array index){{.path.basename}}
: For any directory path within the Git repository that matches thepath
wildcard, the right-most path name is extracted (e.g./directory/directory2
would producedirectory2
).{{.path.basenameNormalized}}
: This field is the same aspath.basename
with unsupported characters replaced with-
(e.g. apath
of/directory/directory_2
, andpath.basename
ofdirectory_2
would producedirectory-2
here).
Note: The right-most path name always becomes {{.path.basename}}
. For example, for - path: /one/two/three/four
, {{.path.basename}}
is four
.
Note: If the pathParamPrefix
option is specified, all path
-related parameter names above will be prefixed with the specified value and a dot separator. E.g., if pathParamPrefix
is myRepo
, then the generated parameter name would be .myRepo.path
instead of .path
. Using this option is necessary in a Matrix generator where both child generators are Git generators (to avoid conflicts when merging the child generators’ items).
Whenever a new Helm chart/Kustomize YAML/Application/plain subdirectory is added to the Git repository, the ApplicationSet controller will detect this change and automatically deploy the resulting manifests within new Application
resources.
As with other generators, clusters must already be defined within Argo CD, in order to generate Applications for them.
Exclude directories
The Git directory generator will automatically exclude directories that begin with .
(such as .git
).
The Git directory generator also supports an exclude
option in order to exclude directories in the repository from being scanned by the ApplicationSet controller:
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
metadata:
name: cluster-addons
namespace: argocd
spec:
goTemplate: true
goTemplateOptions: ["missingkey=error"]
generators:
- git:
repoURL: https://github.com/argoproj/argo-cd.git
revision: HEAD
directories:
- path: applicationset/examples/git-generator-directory/excludes/cluster-addons/*
- path: applicationset/examples/git-generator-directory/excludes/cluster-addons/exclude-helm-guestbook
exclude: true
template:
metadata:
name: '{{.path.basename}}'
spec:
project: "my-project"
source:
repoURL: https://github.com/argoproj/argo-cd.git
targetRevision: HEAD
path: '{{.path.path}}'
destination:
server: https://kubernetes.default.svc
namespace: '{{.path.basename}}'
(The full example can be found here.)
This example excludes the exclude-helm-guestbook
directory from the list of directories scanned for this ApplicationSet
resource.
Exclude rules have higher priority than include rules
If a directory matches at least one exclude
pattern, it will be excluded. Or, said another way, exclude rules take precedence over include rules.
As a corollary, which directories are included/excluded is not affected by the order of path
s in the directories
field list (because, as above, exclude rules always take precedence over include rules).
For example, with these directories:
.
└── d
├── e
├── f
└── g
Say you want to include /d/e
, but exclude /d/f
and /d/g
. This will not work:
- path: /d/e
exclude: false
- path: /d/*
exclude: true
Why? Because the exclude /d/*
exclude rule will take precedence over the /d/e
include rule. When the /d/e
path in the Git repository is processed by the ApplicationSet controller, the controller detects that at least one exclude rule is matched, and thus that directory should not be scanned.
You would instead need to do:
- path: /d/*
- path: /d/f
exclude: true
- path: /d/g
exclude: true
Or, a shorter way (using path.Match syntax) would be:
- path: /d/*
- path: /d/[fg]
exclude: true
Root Of Git Repo
The Git directory generator can be configured to deploy from the root of the git repository by providing '*'
as the path
.
To exclude directories, you only need to put the name/path.Match of the directory you do not want to deploy.
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
metadata:
name: cluster-addons
namespace: argocd
spec:
goTemplate: true
goTemplateOptions: ["missingkey=error"]
generators:
- git:
repoURL: https://github.com/example/example-repo.git
revision: HEAD
directories:
- path: '*'
- path: donotdeploy
exclude: true
template:
metadata:
name: '{{.path.basename}}'
spec:
project: "my-project"
source:
repoURL: https://github.com/example/example-repo.git
targetRevision: HEAD
path: '{{.path.path}}'
destination:
server: https://kubernetes.default.svc
namespace: '{{.path.basename}}'
Pass additional key-value pairs via values
field
You may pass additional, arbitrary string key-value pairs via the values
field of the git directory generator. Values added via the values
field are added as values.(field)
.
In this example, a cluster
parameter value is passed. It is interpolated from the branch
and path
variable, to then be used to determine the destination namespace.
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
metadata:
name: cluster-addons
namespace: argocd
spec:
generators:
- git:
repoURL: https://github.com/example/example-repo.git
revision: HEAD
directories:
- path: '*'
values:
cluster: '{{branch}}-{{path}}'
template:
metadata:
name: '{{path.basename}}'
spec:
project: "my-project"
source:
repoURL: https://github.com/example/example-repo.git
targetRevision: HEAD
path: '{{path}}'
destination:
server: https://kubernetes.default.svc
namespace: '{{values.cluster}}'
Note
The values.
prefix is always prepended to values provided via generators.git.values
field. Ensure you include this prefix in the parameter name within the template
when using it.
In values
we can also interpolate all fields set by the git directory generator as mentioned above.
Git Generator: Files
The Git file generator is the second subtype of the Git generator. The Git file generator generates parameters using the contents of JSON/YAML files found within a specified repository.
Suppose you have a Git repository with the following directory structure:
├── apps
│ └── guestbook
│ ├── guestbook-ui-deployment.yaml
│ ├── guestbook-ui-svc.yaml
│ └── kustomization.yaml
├── cluster-config
│ └── engineering
│ ├── dev
│ │ └── config.json
│ └── prod
│ └── config.json
└── git-generator-files.yaml
The directories are:
guestbook
contains the Kubernetes resources for a simple guestbook applicationcluster-config
contains JSON/YAML files describing the individual engineering clusters: one fordev
and one forprod
.git-generator-files.yaml
is the exampleApplicationSet
resource that deploysguestbook
to the specified clusters.
The config.json
files contain information describing the cluster (along with extra sample data):
{
"aws_account": "123456",
"asset_id": "11223344",
"cluster": {
"owner": "cluster-admin@company.com",
"name": "engineering-dev",
"address": "https://1.2.3.4"
}
}
Git commits containing changes to the config.json
files are automatically discovered by the Git generator, and the contents of those files are parsed and converted into template parameters. Here are the parameters generated for the above JSON:
aws_account: 123456
asset_id: 11223344
cluster.owner: cluster-admin@company.com
cluster.name: engineering-dev
cluster.address: https://1.2.3.4
And the generated parameters for all discovered config.json
files will be substituted into ApplicationSet template:
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
metadata:
name: guestbook
namespace: argocd
spec:
goTemplate: true
goTemplateOptions: ["missingkey=error"]
generators:
- git:
repoURL: https://github.com/argoproj/argo-cd.git
revision: HEAD
files:
- path: "applicationset/examples/git-generator-files-discovery/cluster-config/**/config.json"
template:
metadata:
name: '{{.cluster.name}}-guestbook'
spec:
project: default
source:
repoURL: https://github.com/argoproj/argo-cd.git
targetRevision: HEAD
path: "applicationset/examples/git-generator-files-discovery/apps/guestbook"
destination:
server: '{{.cluster.address}}'
namespace: guestbook
(The full example can be found here.)
Any config.json
files found under the cluster-config
directory will be parameterized based on the path
wildcard pattern specified. Within each file JSON fields are flattened into key/value pairs, with this ApplicationSet example using the cluster.address
and cluster.name
parameters in the template.
As with other generators, clusters must already be defined within Argo CD, in order to generate Applications for them.
In addition to the flattened key/value pairs from the configuration file, the following generator parameters are provided:
{{path}}
: The path to the directory containing matching configuration file within the Git repository. Example:/clusters/clusterA
, if the config file was/clusters/clusterA/config.json
{{path[n]}}
: The path to the matching configuration file within the Git repository, split into array elements (n
- array index). Example:path[0]: clusters
,path[1]: clusterA
{{path.basename}}
: Basename of the path to the directory containing the configuration file (e.g.clusterA
, with the above example.){{path.basenameNormalized}}
: This field is the same aspath.basename
with unsupported characters replaced with-
(e.g. apath
of/directory/directory_2
, andpath.basename
ofdirectory_2
would producedirectory-2
here).{{path.filename}}
: The matched filename. e.g.,config.json
in the above example.{{path.filenameNormalized}}
: The matched filename with unsupported characters replaced with-
.
Note: The right-most directory name always becomes {{path.basename}}
. For example, from - path: /one/two/three/four/config.json
, {{path.basename}}
will be four
. The filename can always be accessed using {{path.filename}}
.
Note: If the pathParamPrefix
option is specified, all path
-related parameter names above will be prefixed with the specified value and a dot separator. E.g., if pathParamPrefix
is myRepo
, then the generated parameter name would be myRepo.path
instead of path
. Using this option is necessary in a Matrix generator where both child generators are Git generators (to avoid conflicts when merging the child generators’ items).
Note: The default behavior of the Git file generator is very greedy. Please see Git File Generator Globbing for more information.
Pass additional key-value pairs via values
field
You may pass additional, arbitrary string key-value pairs via the values
field of the git files generator. Values added via the values
field are added as values.(field)
.
In this example, a base_dir
parameter value is passed. It is interpolated from path
segments, to then be used to determine the source path.
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: ApplicationSet
metadata:
name: guestbook
namespace: argocd
spec:
generators:
- git:
repoURL: https://github.com/argoproj/argo-cd.git
revision: HEAD
files:
- path: "applicationset/examples/git-generator-files-discovery/cluster-config/**/config.json"
values:
base_dir: "{{path[0]}}/{{path[1]}}/{{path[2]}}"
template:
metadata:
name: '{{cluster.name}}-guestbook'
spec:
project: default
source:
repoURL: https://github.com/argoproj/argo-cd.git
targetRevision: HEAD
path: "{{values.base_dir}}/apps/guestbook"
destination:
server: '{{cluster.address}}'
namespace: guestbook
Note
The values.
prefix is always prepended to values provided via generators.git.values
field. Ensure you include this prefix in the parameter name within the template
when using it.
In values
we can also interpolate all fields set by the git files generator as mentioned above.
Webhook Configuration
When using a Git generator, ApplicationSet polls Git repositories every three minutes to detect changes. To eliminate this delay from polling, the ApplicationSet webhook server can be configured to receive webhook events. ApplicationSet supports Git webhook notifications from GitHub and GitLab. The following explains how to configure a Git webhook for GitHub, but the same process should be applicable to other providers.
Note
The ApplicationSet controller webhook does not use the same webhook as the API server as defined here. ApplicationSet exposes a webhook server as a service of type ClusterIP. An ApplicationSet specific Ingress resource needs to be created to expose this service to the webhook source.
1. Create the webhook in the Git provider
In your Git provider, navigate to the settings page where webhooks can be configured. The payload URL configured in the Git provider should use the /api/webhook
endpoint of your ApplicationSet instance (e.g. https://applicationset.example.com/api/webhook
). If you wish to use a shared secret, input an arbitrary value in the secret. This value will be used when configuring the webhook in the next step.
Note
When creating the webhook in GitHub, the “Content type” needs to be set to “application/json”. The default value “application/x-www-form-urlencoded” is not supported by the library used to handle the hooks
2. Configure ApplicationSet with the webhook secret (Optional)
Configuring a webhook shared secret is optional, since ApplicationSet will still refresh applications generated by Git generators, even with unauthenticated webhook events. This is safe to do since the contents of webhook payloads are considered untrusted, and will only result in a refresh of the application (a process which already occurs at three-minute intervals). If ApplicationSet is publicly accessible, then configuring a webhook secret is recommended to prevent a DDoS attack.
In the argocd-secret
kubernetes secret, include the Git provider’s webhook secret configured in step 1.
Edit the Argo CD kubernetes secret:
kubectl edit secret argocd-secret -n argocd
TIP: for ease of entering secrets, kubernetes supports inputting secrets in the stringData
field, which saves you the trouble of base64 encoding the values and copying it to the data
field. Simply copy the shared webhook secret created in step 1, to the corresponding GitHub/GitLab/BitBucket key under the stringData
field:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: argocd-secret
namespace: argocd
type: Opaque
data:
...
stringData:
# github webhook secret
webhook.github.secret: shhhh! it's a github secret
# gitlab webhook secret
webhook.gitlab.secret: shhhh! it's a gitlab secret
After saving, please restart the ApplicationSet pod for the changes to take effect.