176 lines
9.8 KiB
Markdown
176 lines
9.8 KiB
Markdown
---
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stage: Configure
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group: Configure
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info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/product/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
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---
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# Using GitOps with a Kubernetes cluster **(FREE)**
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> - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/259669) in GitLab 13.7.
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> - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/332227) in GitLab 14.0, the `resource_inclusions` and `resource_exclusions` attributes were removed and `reconcile_timeout`, `dry_run_strategy`, `prune`, `prune_timeout`, `prune_propagation_policy`, and `inventory_policy` attributes were added.
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> - [Moved](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/346567) from GitLab Premium to GitLab Free in 15.3.
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With GitOps, you can manage containerized clusters and applications from a Git repository that:
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- Is the single source of truth of your system.
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- Is the single place where you operate your system.
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By combining GitLab, Kubernetes, and GitOps, you can have:
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- GitLab as the GitOps operator.
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- Kubernetes as the automation and convergence system.
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- GitLab CI/CD for Continuous Integration and the agent for Continuous Deployment.
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- Built-in automatic drift remediation.
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- Resource management with [server-side applies](https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/using-api/server-side-apply/) for transparent multi-actor field management.
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This diagram shows the repositories and main actors in a GitOps deployment:
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```mermaid
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sequenceDiagram
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participant D as Developer
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participant A as Application code repository
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participant M as Manifest repository
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participant K as GitLab agent
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participant C as Agent configuration repository
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loop Regularly
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K-->>C: Grab the configuration
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end
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D->>+A: Pushing code changes
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A->>M: Updating manifest
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loop Regularly
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K-->>M: Watching changes
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M-->>K: Pulling and applying changes
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end
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```
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For details, view the [architecture documentation](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/cluster-integration/gitlab-agent/-/blob/master/doc/architecture.md#high-level-architecture).
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## GitOps workflow steps
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To update a Kubernetes cluster by using GitOps, complete the following steps.
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1. Ensure you have a working Kubernetes cluster, and that the manifests or [Helm charts](gitops/helm.md) are in a GitLab project.
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1. In the same project, [register and install the GitLab agent](install/index.md).
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1. Configure the agent configuration file so that the agent monitors the project for changes to the Kubernetes manifests.
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Use the [GitOps configuration reference](#gitops-configuration-reference) for guidance.
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Any time you commit updates to your Kubernetes manifests, the agent updates the cluster.
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## GitOps configuration reference
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The following snippet shows an example of the possible keys and values for the GitOps section of an [agent configuration file](install/index.md#create-an-agent-configuration-file) (`config.yaml`).
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```yaml
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gitops:
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manifest_projects:
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- id: gitlab-org/cluster-integration/gitlab-agent
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default_namespace: my-ns
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paths:
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# Read all YAML files from this directory.
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- glob: '/team1/app1/*.yaml'
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# Read all .yaml files from team2/apps and all subdirectories.
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- glob: '/team2/apps/**/*.yaml'
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# If 'paths' is not specified or is an empty list, the configuration below is used.
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- glob: '/**/*.{yaml,yml,json}'
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reconcile_timeout: 3600s
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dry_run_strategy: none
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prune: true
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prune_timeout: 3600s
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prune_propagation_policy: foreground
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inventory_policy: must_match
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```
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| Keyword | Description |
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|--|--|
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| `manifest_projects` | Projects where your Kubernetes manifests are stored. The agent monitors the files in the repositories in these projects. When manifest files change, the agent deploys the changes to the cluster. |
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| `id` | Required. Path to a Git repository that has Kubernetes manifests in YAML or JSON format. No authentication mechanisms are currently supported. |
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| `default_namespace` | Namespace to use if not set explicitly in object manifest. Also used for inventory `ConfigMap` objects. |
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| `paths` | Repository paths to scan for manifest files. Directories with names that start with a dot `(.)` are ignored. |
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| `paths[].glob` | Required. See [doublestar](https://github.com/bmatcuk/doublestar#about) and [the match function](https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/bmatcuk/doublestar/v2#Match) for globbing rules. |
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| `reconcile_timeout` | Determines whether the applier should wait until all applied resources have been reconciled, and if so, how long to wait. Default is 3600 seconds (1 hour). |
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| `dry_run_strategy` | Determines whether changes [should be performed](https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/cli-utils/blob/d6968048dcd80b1c7b55d9e4f31fc25f71c9b490/pkg/common/common.go#L68-L89). Can be: `none`, `client`, or `server`. Default is `none`.|
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| `prune` | Determines whether pruning of previously applied objects should happen after apply. Default is `true`. |
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| `prune_timeout` | Determines whether to wait for all resources to be fully deleted after pruning, and if so, how long to wait. Default is 3600 seconds (1 hour). |
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| `prune_propagation_policy` | The deletion propagation policy that [should be used for pruning](https://github.com/kubernetes/apimachinery/blob/44113beed5d39f1b261a12ec398a356e02358307/pkg/apis/meta/v1/types.go#L456-L470). Can be: `orphan`, `background`, or `foreground`. Default is `foreground`. |
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| `inventory_policy` | Determines whether an inventory object can take over objects that belong to another inventory object or don't belong to any inventory object. This is done by determining if the apply/prune operation can go through for a resource based on comparison of the `inventory-id` value in the package and the `owning-inventory` annotation (`config.k8s.io/owning-inventory`) [in the live object](https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/cli-utils/blob/d6968048dcd80b1c7b55d9e4f31fc25f71c9b490/pkg/inventory/policy.go#L12-L66). Can be: `must_match`, `adopt_if_no_inventory`, or `adopt_all`. Default is `must_match`. |
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## GitOps annotations
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The GitLab agent for Kubernetes has annotations you can use to:
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- **Sort resources**: Apply or delete resources in a specific order.
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- **Use apply-time mutation**: Dynamically substitute fields from one resource configuration to another.
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The agent has [default sorting](https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/cli-utils/blob/d7d63f4b62897f584ca9e02b6faf4d2f327a9b09/pkg/ordering/sort.go#L74),
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but with annotations, you can fine-tune the order and apply time-value injection.
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To provide the GitOps functionality, the GitLab agent for Kubernetes uses the [`cli-utils` library](https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/cli-utils/),
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a Kubernetes SIG project. You can read more about the available annotations in the [`cli-utils` documentation](https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/cli-utils/blob/master/README.md#apply-sort-ordering).
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- [Learn more about apply sort ordering](https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/cli-utils#apply-sort-ordering).
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- [Learn more about apply-time mutation](https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/cli-utils#apply-time-mutation).
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## Automatic drift remediation
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Drift happens when the current configuration of an infrastructure resource differs from its desired configuration.
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Typically, this is caused by manually editing resources directly rather than via the used infrastructure-as-code
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mechanism. Minimizing the risk of drift helps to ensure configuration consistency and successful operations.
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In GitLab, the agent for Kubernetes regularly compares the desired state from the `git` repository with
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the actual state from the Kubernetes cluster. Deviations from the `git` state are fixed at every check. These checks
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happen automatically every 5 minutes. They are not configurable.
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The agent uses [server-side applies](https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/using-api/server-side-apply/).
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As a result, every field in a resource can have different managers. Only fields managed by `git`
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are checked for drift. This facilitates the use of in-cluster controllers to modify resources like
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[Horizontal Pod Autoscalers](https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/run-application/horizontal-pod-autoscale/).
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## Related topics
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- [Deploying Helm charts with the GitOps workflow](gitops/helm.md)
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- [GitOps working examples for training and demos](https://gitlab.com/groups/guided-explorations/gl-k8s-agent/gitops/-/wikis/home)
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- [Self-paced classroom workshop](https://gitlab-for-eks.awsworkshop.io) (Uses AWS EKS, but you can use for other Kubernetes clusters)
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- [Managing Kubernetes secrets in a GitOps workflow](gitops/secrets_management.md)
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- [Application and manifest repository example](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-examples/ops/gitops-demo/hello-world-service-gitops)
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## Troubleshooting
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### Avoiding conflicts when you have multiple projects
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The agent watches each glob pattern set under a project's `paths` section independently, and makes updates to the cluster concurrently.
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If changes are found at multiple paths, when the agent attempts to update the cluster,
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a conflict can occur.
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To prevent this from happening, consider storing a logical group of manifests in a single place and reference them only once to avoid overlapping globs.
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For example, both of these globs match `*.yaml` files in the root directory
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and could cause conflicts:
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```yaml
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gitops:
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manifest_projects:
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- id: project1
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paths:
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- glob: '/**/*.yaml'
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- glob: '/*.yaml'
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```
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Instead, specify a single glob that matches all `*.yaml` files recursively:
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```yaml
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gitops:
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manifest_projects:
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- id: project1
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paths:
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- glob: '/**/*.yaml'
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```
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### Use multiple agents or projects
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If you store your Kubernetes manifests in separate GitLab projects,
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update your agent configuration file with the location of these projects.
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WARNING:
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The project with the agent's
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configuration file can be private or public. Other projects with Kubernetes manifests must be public. Support for private manifest projects is tracked
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in [this issue](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/283885).
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