Installing Knative components using Operator
Knative provides an operator as a tool to install, configure and manage Knative. The Knative operator leverages custom objects in the cluster to define and manage the installed Knative software. This guide explains how to install and uninstall Knative using Knative operator.
Before you begin
Knative installation using the Operator requires the following:
- A Kubernetes cluster v1.16 or newer, as well as a compatible kubectl. This guide assumes that you’ve already created a Kubernetes cluster. If you have only one node for your cluster, set CPUs to at least 6, Memory to at least 6.0 GB, Disk storage to at least 30 GB. If you have multiple nodes for your cluster, set CPUs to at least 2, Memory to at least 4.0 GB, Disk storage to at least 20 GB for each node.
- The Kubernetes cluster must be able to access the internet, since the Knative operator downloads images online.
- Download and install Istio.
Limitations of Knative Operator:
Knative Operator is still in Alpha phase. It has not been tested in a production environment, and should be used for development or test purposes only.
Install Knative with the Knative Operator
You can find the release information of Knative Operator on the Releases page.
Installing the Knative Operator
From releases:
Install the latest Knative operator with the following command:
kubectl apply -f https://github.com/knative/operator/releases/download/v0.16.0/operator.yaml
From source code:
You can also install Knative Operator from source using ko
.
- Install the ko build tool.
- Download the source code using the following command:
git clone https://github.com/knative/operator.git
- Install the operator in the root directory of the source using the following command:
ko apply -f config/
Verify the operator installation
Verify the installation of Knative Operator using the command:
kubectl get deployment knative-operator
If the operator is installed correctly, the deployment should show a Ready
status. Here is a sample output:
NAME READY UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE
knative-operator 1/1 1 1 19h
Track the log
Use the following command to track the log of the operator:
kubectl logs -f deploy/knative-operator
Installing the Knative Serving component
- Create and apply the Knative Serving CR:
cat <<-EOF | kubectl apply -f -
apiVersion: v1
kind: Namespace
metadata:
name: knative-serving
---
apiVersion: operator.knative.dev/v1alpha1
kind: KnativeServing
metadata:
name: knative-serving
namespace: knative-serving
EOF
- Verify the Knative Serving deployment:
kubectl get deployment -n knative-serving
If Knative Serving has been successfully deployed, all deployments of the Knative Serving will show READY
status. Here is a sample output:
NAME READY UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE
activator 1/1 1 1 18s
autoscaler 1/1 1 1 18s
autoscaler-hpa 1/1 1 1 14s
controller 1/1 1 1 18s
istio-webhook 1/1 1 1 12s
networking-istio 1/1 1 1 12s
webhook 1/1 1 1 17s
- Check the status of Knative Serving Custom Resource:
kubectl get KnativeServing knative-serving -n knative-serving
If Knative Serving is successfully installed, you should see:
NAME VERSION READY REASON
knative-serving <version number> True
Installing the Knative Eventing component
- Create and apply the Knative eventing CR:
cat <<-EOF | kubectl apply -f -
apiVersion: v1
kind: Namespace
metadata:
name: knative-eventing
---
apiVersion: operator.knative.dev/v1alpha1
kind: KnativeEventing
metadata:
name: knative-eventing
namespace: knative-eventing
EOF
- Verify the Knative Eventing deployment:
kubectl get deployment -n knative-eventing
If Knative Eventing has been successfully deployed, all deployments of the Knative Eventing will show READY
status. Here is a sample output:
NAME READY UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE
broker-controller 1/1 1 1 63s
broker-filter 1/1 1 1 62s
broker-ingress 1/1 1 1 62s
eventing-controller 1/1 1 1 67s
eventing-webhook 1/1 1 1 67s
imc-controller 1/1 1 1 59s
imc-dispatcher 1/1 1 1 59s
mt-broker-controller 1/1 1 1 62s
- Check the status of Knative Eventing Custom Resource:
kubectl get KnativeEventing knative-eventing -n knative-eventing
If Knative Eventing is successfully installed, you should see:
NAME VERSION READY REASON
knative-eventing <version number> True
Uninstall Knative
Removing the Knative Serving component
Remove the Knative Serving CR:
kubectl delete KnativeServing knative-serving -n knative-serving
Removing Knative Eventing component
Remove the Knative Eventing CR:
kubectl delete KnativeEventing knative-eventing -n knative-eventing
Knative operator prevents unsafe removal of Knative resources. Even if the Knative Serving and Knative Eventing CRs are successfully removed, all the CRDs in Knative are still kept in the cluster. All your resources relying on Knative CRDs can still work.
Removing the Knative Operator:
If you have installed Knative using the Release page, remove the operator using the following command:
kubectl delete -f https://github.com/knative/operator/releases/download/v0.16.0/operator.yaml
If you have installed Knative from source, uninstall it using the following command while in the root directory for the source:
ko delete -f config/