Multi Cluster Application
KubeVela is by design a full functional Continuous Delivery (CD) platform with fine grained support for hybrid/multi-cloud/multi-cluster deployment. This section will introduce how to deliver multi-cluster application with KubeVela policies and workflow.
Introduction
There are many scenarios that developers or system operators need to deploy and manage applications across multiple clusters.
- For scalability, a single Kubernetes cluster has its limit around 5K nodes or less, it is unable to handle the large scale application load.
- For stability/availability, one single application can be deployed in multiple clusters for backup, which provides more stability and availability.
- For security, application might need to be deployed in different zones/areas as government policy requires.
The following guide will introduce how to manage applications across clusters on KubeVela.
Preparation
Please make sure you have clusters in your control plane, in general, this work should be done by operator engineers. If you’re a DevOps engineer or trying KubeVela, you can refer to manage cluster docs to learn how to join clusters.
For the rest docs, we assume you have clusters with the following names:
$ vela cluster list
CLUSTER TYPE ENDPOINT ACCEPTED LABELS
local Internal - true
cluster-beijing X509Certificate <ENDPOINT_BEIJING> true
cluster-hangzhou-1 X509Certificate <ENDPOINT_HANGZHOU_1> true
cluster-hangzhou-2 X509Certificate <ENDPOINT_HANGZHOU_2> true
note
By default, the hub cluster where KubeVela locates is registered as the local
cluster. You can use it like a managed cluster in spite that you cannot detach it or modify it.
Deliver Application to Clusters
To deliver your application into multiple clusters, you simply need to configure which clusters you want to deploy through the topology
policy. For example, you can deploy an nginx webservice in hangzhou clusters by running the following commands
$ cat <<EOF | vela up -f -
apiVersion: core.oam.dev/v1beta1
kind: Application
metadata:
name: basic-topology
namespace: examples
spec:
components:
- name: nginx-basic
type: webservice
properties:
image: nginx
traits:
- type: expose
properties:
port: [80]
policies:
- name: topology-hangzhou-clusters
type: topology
properties:
clusters: ["cluster-hangzhou-1", "cluster-hangzhou-2"]
EOF
You can check the deploy result by running vela status
vela status basic-topology -n examples
expected output
About:
Name: basic-topology
Namespace: examples
Created at: 2022-04-08 14:37:54 +0800 CST
Status: workflowFinished
Workflow:
mode: DAG
finished: true
Suspend: false
Terminated: false
Steps
- id:3mvz5i8elj
name:deploy-topology-hangzhou-clusters
type:deploy
phase:succeeded
message:
Services:
- Name: nginx-basic
Cluster: cluster-hangzhou-1 Namespace: examples
Type: webservice
Healthy Ready:1/1
Traits:
✅ expose
- Name: nginx-basic
Cluster: cluster-hangzhou-2 Namespace: examples
Type: webservice
Healthy Ready:1/1
Traits:
✅ expose
Debugging Multi-cluster Application
You can debugging the above deployed nginx webservice by running the following vela CLI commands. You can play with your pods in managed clusters directly on the hub cluster, without switching KubeConfig context. If you have multiple clusters in on application, the CLI command will ask you to choose one interactively.
vela status
as shown above can give you an overview of your deployed multi-cluster application. Example usage is shown above.vela status --pod
can list the pod status of your application.vela logs
shows pod logs in managed clusters.
$ vela logs basic-topology -n examples
? You have 2 deployed resources in your app. Please choose one: Cluster: cluster-hangzhou-1 | Namespace: examples | Kind: Deployment | Name: nginx-basic
+ nginx-basic-dfb6dcf8d-km5vk › nginx-basic
nginx-basic-dfb6dcf8d-km5vk nginx-basic 2022-04-08T06:38:10.540430392Z /docker-entrypoint.sh: /docker-entrypoint.d/ is not empty, will attempt to perform configuration
nginx-basic-dfb6dcf8d-km5vk nginx-basic 2022-04-08T06:38:10.540742240Z /docker-entrypoint.sh: Looking for shell scripts in /docker-entrypoint.d/
vela exec
helps you execute commands in pods in managed clusters.
$ vela exec basic-topology -n examples -it -- ls
? You have 2 deployed resources in your app. Please choose one: Cluster: cluster-hangzhou-1 | Namespace: examples | Kind: Deployment | Name: nginx-basic
bin docker-entrypoint.d home media proc sbin tmp
boot docker-entrypoint.sh lib mnt root srv usr
dev etc lib64 opt run sys var
vela port-forward
can discover and forward ports of pods or services in managed clusters to your local endpoint.
$ vela port-forward basic-topology -n examples 8080:80
? You have 4 deployed resources in your app. Please choose one: Cluster: cluster-hangzhou-1 | Namespace: examples | Kind: Deployment | Name: nginx-basic
Forwarding from 127.0.0.1:8080 -> 80
Forwarding from [::1]:8080 -> 80
Forward successfully! Opening browser ...
Handling connection for 8080
Advanced Usage
Understanding the Multi-cluster Application
The following figure displays the architecture of a multi-cluster application. All the configurations (including Application, Policy and Workflow) lives in the hub cluster. Only the resources (like deployment or service) will be dispatched in to managed clusters.
The policies mainly takes charge of describing the destination of the resources and how they should be overridden. The real executor of the resource dispatch is the workflow. In each deploy
workflow step, it will refer to some policies, override the default configuration, and dispatch the resources.
Configure the deploy destination
The most straightforward way to configure the deploy destination is to write cluster names inside the topology
policy. Sometimes, it will be more easy to select clusters by labels, like filtering all clusters in hangzhou:
apiVersion: core.oam.dev/v1beta1
kind: Application
metadata:
name: label-selector-topology
namespace: examples
spec:
components:
- name: nginx-label-selector
type: webservice
properties:
image: nginx
policies:
- name: topology-hangzhou-clusters
type: topology
properties:
clusterLabelSelector:
region: hangzhou
If you want to deploy application components into the control plane cluster, you can use the local
cluster. Besides, you can also deploy your application components in another namespace other than the application’s original namespace.
apiVersion: core.oam.dev/v1beta1
kind: Application
metadata:
name: local-ns-topology
namespace: examples
spec:
components:
- name: nginx-local-ns
type: webservice
properties:
image: nginx
policies:
- name: topology-local
type: topology
properties:
clusters: ["local"]
namespace: examples-alternative
tip
Sometimes, for security issues, you might want to disable this behavior and retrict the resources to be deployed within the same namespace of the application. This can be done by setting --allow-cross-namespace-resource=false
in the bootstrap parameter of the KubeVela controller.
Control the deploy workflow
By default, if you declare multiple topology policies in the application, the application components will be deployed in all destinations following the order of the policies.
If you want to control the deploy process, like changing the order or adding manual approval, you can use the deploy
workflow step explicitly in the workflow to achieve that.
apiVersion: core.oam.dev/v1beta1
kind: Application
metadata:
name: deploy-workflowstep
namespace: examples
spec:
components:
- name: nginx-deploy-workflowstep
type: webservice
properties:
image: nginx
policies:
- name: topology-hangzhou-clusters
type: topology
properties:
clusterLabelSelector:
region: hangzhou
- name: topology-local
type: topology
properties:
clusters: ["local"]
namespace: examples-alternative
workflow:
steps:
- type: deploy
name: deploy-local
properties:
policies: ["topology-local"]
- type: deploy
name: deploy-hangzhou
properties:
# require manual approval before running this step
auto: false
policies: ["topology-hangzhou-clusters"]
You can also deploy application components with different topology policies concurrently, by filling these topology policies in one deploy
step.
apiVersion: core.oam.dev/v1beta1
kind: Application
metadata:
name: deploy-concurrently
namespace: examples
spec:
components:
- name: nginx-deploy-concurrently
type: webservice
properties:
image: nginx
policies:
- name: topology-hangzhou-clusters
type: topology
properties:
clusterLabelSelector:
region: hangzhou
- name: topology-local
type: topology
properties:
clusters: ["local"]
namespace: examples-alternative
workflow:
steps:
- type: deploy
name: deploy-all
properties:
policies: ["topology-local", "topology-hangzhou-clusters"]
Override default configurations in clusters
There are times that you want to make changes to the configuration in some clusters, rather than use the default configuration declared in the application’s components field. For example, using a different container image or changing the default number of replicas.
The override policy is able to help you make customizations in different clusters. You can use it together with the topology policy in the deploy
workflow step.
In the following example, the application will deploy a default nginx webservice in the local
cluster. Then it will deploy a high-available nginx webservice with the legacy image nginx:1.20
and 3 replicas in hangzhou clusters.
apiVersion: core.oam.dev/v1beta1
kind: Application
metadata:
name: deploy-with-override
namespace: examples
spec:
components:
- name: nginx-with-override
type: webservice
properties:
image: nginx
policies:
- name: topology-hangzhou-clusters
type: topology
properties:
clusterLabelSelector:
region: hangzhou
- name: topology-local
type: topology
properties:
clusters: ["local"]
namespace: examples-alternative
- name: override-nginx-legacy-image
type: override
properties:
components:
- name: nginx-with-override
properties:
image: nginx:1.20
- name: override-high-availability
type: override
properties:
components:
- type: webservice
traits:
- type: scaler
properties:
replicas: 3
workflow:
steps:
- type: deploy
name: deploy-local
properties:
policies: ["topology-local"]
- type: deploy
name: deploy-hangzhou
properties:
policies: ["topology-hangzhou-clusters", "override-nginx-legacy-image", "override-high-availability"]
note
The override policy is used to modify the basic configuration. Therefore, it is designed to be used together with topology policy. If you do not want to use topology policy, you can directly write configurations in the component part instead of using the override policy. If you misuse the override policy in the deploy workflow step without topology policy, no error will be reported but you will find nothing is deployed.
The override policy has many advanced capabilities, such as adding new component or selecting components to use. The following example will first deploy an nginx webservice with nginx:1.20
image to local cluster. Then two nginx webservices with nginx
and nginx:stable
images will be deployed to hangzhou clusters respectively.
apiVersion: core.oam.dev/v1beta1
kind: Application
metadata:
name: advance-override
namespace: examples
spec:
components:
- name: nginx-advance-override-legacy
type: webservice
properties:
image: nginx:1.20
- name: nginx-advance-override-latest
type: webservice
properties:
image: nginx
policies:
- name: topology-hangzhou-clusters
type: topology
properties:
clusterLabelSelector:
region: hangzhou
- name: topology-local
type: topology
properties:
clusters: ["local"]
namespace: examples-alternative
- name: override-nginx-legacy
type: override
properties:
selector: ["nginx-advance-override-legacy"]
- name: override-nginx-latest
type: override
properties:
selector: ["nginx-advance-override-latest", "nginx-advance-override-stable"]
components:
- name: nginx-advance-override-stable
type: webservice
properties:
image: nginx:stable
workflow:
steps:
- type: deploy
name: deploy-local
properties:
policies: ["topology-local", "override-nginx-legacy"]
- type: deploy
name: deploy-hangzhou
properties:
policies: ["topology-hangzhou-clusters", "override-nginx-latest"]
Use policies and workflow outside the application
Sometimes, you may want to use the same policy across multiple applications or reuse previous workflow to deploy different resources. To reduce the repeated code, you can leverage the external policies and workflow and refer to them in your applications.
caution
You can only refer to Policy and Workflow within your application’s namespace.
apiVersion: core.oam.dev/v1alpha1
kind: Policy
metadata:
name: topology-hangzhou-clusters
namespace: examples
type: topology
properties:
clusterLabelSelector:
region: hangzhou
---
apiVersion: core.oam.dev/v1alpha1
kind: Policy
metadata:
name: override-high-availability-webservice
namespace: examples
type: override
properties:
components:
- type: webservice
traits:
- type: scaler
properties:
replicas: 3
---
apiVersion: core.oam.dev/v1alpha1
kind: Workflow
metadata:
name: make-release-in-hangzhou
namespace: examples
steps:
- type: deploy
name: deploy-hangzhou
properties:
auto: false
policies: ["override-high-availability-webservice", "topology-hangzhou-clusters"]
apiVersion: core.oam.dev/v1beta1
kind: Application
metadata:
name: external-policies-and-workflow
namespace: examples
spec:
components:
- name: nginx-external-policies-and-workflow
type: webservice
properties:
image: nginx
workflow:
ref: make-release-in-hangzhou
note
The internal policies will be loaded first. External policies will only be used when there is no corresponding policy inside the application.
In the following example, we can reuse topology-hangzhou-clusters
policy and make-release-in-hangzhou
workflow but modify the override-high-availability-webservice
policy by injecting the same-named policy inside the new application.
apiVersion: core.oam.dev/v1beta1
kind: Application
metadata:
name: nginx-stable-ultra
namespace: examples
spec:
components:
- name: nginx-stable-ultra
type: webservice
properties:
image: nginx:stable
policies:
- name: override-high-availability-webservice
type: override
properties:
components:
- type: webservice
traits:
- type: scaler
properties:
replicas: 5
workflow:
ref: make-release-in-hangzhou
Backward Compatibility
KubeVela Application v1.3 uses different policies and workflow steps to configure and managing multi-cluster applications.
The outdated env-binding
policy and deploy2env
workflow step in old versions are kept now and might be deprecated in the future.
The new policies and workflow steps can cover all the use-cases in old versions so it is possible to upgrade all your applications while maintaining the same capabilities. Upgrade tools are not available now but will come out before deprecation happens.
If you already have applications running in production environment and do not want to change them, KubeVela v1.3 is also compatible for it. It is NOT necessary to migrate old multi-cluster applications to new ones.
Conclusion
In this section, we introduced how KubeVela delivering micro services in multiple clusters, the whole process can be easily modeled as a declarative deployment plan.
No more add-hoc scripts or glue code, KubeVela will get the application delivery workflow done with full automation and determinism. Most importantly, KubeVela expects you keep using the CI solutions you are already familiar with and KubeVela is fully complementary to them as the CD control plane.