Resource Sets
Resource sets are collections of Kubernetes resources that should be passed to kubectl
together.
Technically a resource set is simply a folder with a few YAML and/or JSON templates in it.
Table of Contents
Creating resource sets
Simply create a folder in your Kontemplate repository and place a YAML or JSON file in it. These files get interpreted as templates during Kontemplate runs and variables (as well as template logic or functions) will be interpolated.
Refer to the template documentation for information on how to write templates.
Default variables
Sometimes it is useful to specify default values for variables that should be interpolated during a run if the cluster configuration does not specify a variable explicitly.
This can be done simply by placing a default.yaml
or default.json
file in the resource set
folder and filling it with key/value pairs of the intended default variables.
Kontemplate will error during interpolation if any variables are left unspecified.
Including resource sets
Under the cluster configuration include
key resource sets are included and required variables
are specified. For example:
include: - name: some-api values: version: 1.2-SNAPSHOT
This will include a resource set from a folder called some-api
and set the specified version
variable.
Fields
The available fields when including a resource set are these:
name
The name
field contains the name of the resource set. This name can be used to refer to the resource set
when specifying explicit includes or excludes during a run.
By default it is assumed that the name
is the path to the resource set folder, but this can be overridden.
This field is required.
path
The path
field specifies an explicit path to a resource set folder in the case that it should differ from
the resource set's name
.
This field is optional.
values
The values
field specifies key/values pairs of variables that should be available during templating.
This field is optional.
args
The args
field specifies a list of arguments that should be passed to kubectl
.
This field is optional.
include
The include
field specifies additional resource sets that should be included and that should inherit the
variables of this resource set.
The fully qualified names of "nested" resource sets are set to ${PARENT_NAME}/${CHILD_NAME}
and paths are
merged in the same way.
This makes it easy to organise different resource sets as "groups" to include / exclude them collectively during runs.
This field is optional.
Multiple includes
Resource sets can be included multiple times with different configurations. In this case it is recommended
to set the path
and name
fields explicitly. For example:
include: - name: forwarder-europe path: tools/forwarder values: source: europe - name: forwarder-asia path: tools/forwarder values: source: asia
The two different configurations can be referred to by their set names, but will use the same resource templates with different configurations.
Nesting resource sets
As mentioned above for the include
field, resource sets can be nested. This lets users group resource
sets in logical ways using simple folder structures.
Assuming a folder structure like:
├── backend │ ├── auth-api │ ├── message-api │ └── order-api └── frontend ├── app-page └── login-page
With each of these folders being a resource set, they could be included in a cluster configuration like so:
include: - name: backend include: - name: auth-api - name: message-api - name: order-api - name: frontend: include: - name: app-page - name: login-page
Kontemplate could then be run with, for example, --include backend
to only include the resource sets nested
in the backend group. Specific resource sets can also be targeted, for example as --include backend/order-api
.
Variables specified in the parent resource set are inherited by the children.
Caveats
Two caveats apply that users should be aware of:
-
The parent resource set can not contain any resource templates itself.
-
Only one level of nesting is supported. Specifying
include
again on a nested resource set will be ignored.