harbor/docs/kubernetes_deployment.md
2017-01-20 15:24:17 +08:00

5.5 KiB

Integration with Kubernetes

This Document decribes how to deploy Harbor on Kubernetes.

Prerequisite

  • You need to download docker images of Harbor.
    • Download the offline installer of Harbor from the release page.
    • Uncompress the offline installer and get the images tgz file harbor.*.tgz.
    • Load the images into docker:
      docker load -i harbor.*.tgz 
      
  • You should have domain knowledge about Kubernetes (Replication Controller, Service, Persistent Volume, Persistent Volume Claim, Config Map).

Configuration

We provide a python script make/kubernetes/prepare to generate Kubernetes ConfigMap files. The script is written in python, so you need a version of python in your deployment environment. Also the script need openssl to generate private key and certification, make sure you have a workable openssl.

There are some args of the python script:

  • -f: Default Value is ../harbor.cfg. You can specify other config file of Harbor.
  • -k: Path to https private key. This arg can overwrite the value of ssl_cert_key in harbor.cfg.
  • -c: Path to https certification. This arg can overwrite the value of ssl_cert in harbor.cfg.
  • -s: Path to secret key. Must be 16 characters. If you don't set it, the script will generate it automatically.

Basic Configuration

These Basic Configuration must be set. Otherwise you can't deploy Harbor on Kubernetes.

  • make/harbor.cfg: Basic config of Harbor. Please refer to harbor.cfg.

  • make/kubernetes/**/*.rc.yaml: Specify configs of containers.
    You need to specify the path to your images in all *.rc.yaml. example:

    containers:
        - name: nginx-app
          # it's very importent that you need modify the path of image.
          image: harbor/nginx
    
  • make/kubernetes/pv/*.pvc.yaml: Persistent Volume Claim.
    You can set capacity of storage in these files. example:

    resources:
      requests:
        # you can set another value to adapt to your needs
        storage: 100Gi
    
  • make/kubernetes/pv/*.pv.yaml: Persistent Volume. Be bound with *.pvc.yaml.
    PVs and PVCs are one to one correspondence. If you changed capacity of PVC, you need to set capacity of PV together. example:

    capacity:
      # same value with PVC
      storage: 100Gi
    

    In PV, you should set another way to store data rather than hostPath:

    # it's default value, you should use others like nfs.
    hostPath:
      path: /data/registry
    

    For more infomation about store ways, Please check Kubernetes Document

Then you can generate ConfigMap files by :

python make/kubernetes/prepare

These files will be generated:

  • make/kubernetes/jobservice/jobservice.cm.yaml
  • make/kubernetes/mysql/mysql.cm.yaml
  • make/kubernetes/nginx/nginx.cm.yaml
  • make/kubernetes/registry/registry.cm.yaml
  • make/kubernetes/ui/ui.cm.yaml

Advanced Configuration

If Basic Configuration was not covering your requirements, you can read this section for more details.

./prepare has a specify format of placeholder:

  • {{key}}: It means we should replace the placeholder with the value in config.cfg which name is key.
  • {{num key}}: It's used for multiple lines text. It will add num spaces to the leading of every line in text.

You can find all configs of Harbor in make/kubernetes/templates/. There are specifications of these files:

  • jobservice.cm.yaml: ENV and web config of jobservice

  • mysql.cm.yaml: Root passowrd of MySQL

  • nginx.cm.yaml: Https certification and nginx config. If you are fimiliar with nginx, you can modify it.

  • registry.cm.yaml: Token service certification and registry config Registry use filesystem to store data of images. You can find it like:

    storage:
        filesystem:
          rootdirectory: /storage
    

    If you want use another storage backend, please see Docker Doc

  • ui.cm.yaml: Token service private key, ENV and web config of ui

ui and jobservice are powered by beego. If you are fimiliar with beego, you can modify configs in jobservice.cm.yaml and ui.cm.yaml.

Running

When you finished your configuring and generated ConfigMap files, you can run Harbor on kubernetes with these commands:

# create pv & pvc
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/pv/log.pv.yaml
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/pv/registry.pv.yaml
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/pv/storage.pv.yaml
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/pv/log.pvc.yaml
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/pv/registry.pvc.yaml
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/pv/storage.pvc.yaml

# create config map
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/jobservice/jobservice.cm.yaml
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/mysql/mysql.cm.yaml
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/nginx/nginx.cm.yaml
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/registry/registry.cm.yaml
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/ui/ui.cm.yaml

# create service
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/jobservice/jobservice.svc.yaml
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/mysql/mysql.svc.yaml
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/nginx/nginx.svc.yaml
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/registry/registry.svc.yaml
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/ui/ui.svc.yaml

# create k8s rc
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/registry/registry.rc.yaml
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/mysql/mysql.rc.yaml
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/jobservice/jobservice.rc.yaml
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/ui/ui.rc.yaml
kubectl apply -f make/kubernetes/nginx/nginx.rc.yaml