Getting started with Operator SDK for Ansible-based Operators
The Operator SDK includes options for generating an Operator project that leverages existing Ansible playbooks and modules to deploy Kubernetes resources as a unified application, without having to write any Go code.
To demonstrate the basics of setting up and running an Ansible-based Operator using tools and libraries provided by the Operator SDK, Operator developers can build an example Ansible-based Operator for Memcached, a distributed key-value store, and deploy it to a cluster.
Prerequisites
Ansible version v2.9.0+
Ansible Runner version v1.1.0+
Ansible Runner HTTP Event Emitter plug-in version v1.0.0+
OpenShift Python client version v0.11.2+
Logged into an OKD 4.8 cluster with
oc
with an account that hascluster-admin
permissionsTo allow the cluster pull the image, the repository where you push your image must be set as public, or you must configure an image pull secret
Creating and deploying Ansible-based Operators
You can build and deploy a simple Ansible-based Operator for Memcached by using the Operator SDK.
Procedure
Create a project.
Create your project directory:
$ mkdir memcached-operator
Change into the project directory:
$ cd memcached-operator
Run the
operator-sdk init
command with theansible
plug-in to initialize the project:$ operator-sdk init \
--plugins=ansible \
--domain=example.com
Create an API.
Create a simple Memcached API:
$ operator-sdk create api \
--group cache \
--version v1 \
--kind Memcached \
--generate-role (1)
1 Generates an Ansible role for the API. Build and push the Operator image.
Use the default
Makefile
targets to build and push your Operator. SetIMG
with a pull spec for your image that uses a registry you can push to:$ make docker-build docker-push IMG=<registry>/<user>/<image_name>:<tag>
Run the Operator.
Install the CRD:
$ make install
Deploy the project to the cluster. Set
IMG
to the image that you pushed:$ make deploy IMG=<registry>/<user>/<image_name>:<tag>
Create a sample custom resource (CR).
Create a sample CR:
$ oc apply -f config/samples/cache_v1_memcached.yaml \
-n memcached-operator-system
Watch for the CR to reconcile the Operator:
$ oc logs deployment.apps/memcached-operator-controller-manager \
-c manager \
-n memcached-operator-system
Example output
...
I0205 17:48:45.881666 7 leaderelection.go:253] successfully acquired lease memcached-operator-system/memcached-operator
{"level":"info","ts":1612547325.8819902,"logger":"controller-runtime.manager.controller.memcached-controller","msg":"Starting EventSource","source":"kind source: cache.example.com/v1, Kind=Memcached"}
{"level":"info","ts":1612547325.98242,"logger":"controller-runtime.manager.controller.memcached-controller","msg":"Starting Controller"}
{"level":"info","ts":1612547325.9824686,"logger":"controller-runtime.manager.controller.memcached-controller","msg":"Starting workers","worker count":4}
{"level":"info","ts":1612547348.8311093,"logger":"runner","msg":"Ansible-runner exited successfully","job":"4037200794235010051","name":"memcached-sample","namespace":"memcached-operator-system"}
Clean up.
Run the following command to clean up the resources that have been created as part of this procedure:
$ make undeploy
Next steps
- See Operator SDK tutorial for Ansible-based Operators for a more in-depth walkthrough on building an Ansible-based Operator.