Kontemplate - A simple Kubernetes templater =========================================== Kontemplate is a simple CLI tool that can take sets of Kubernetes resource files with placeholders and insert values per environment. This tool was made because in many cases all I want in terms of Kubernetes configuration is simple value interpolation per environment (i.e. Kubernetes cluster), but with the same deployment files. In my experience this is often enough and more complex solutions such as [Helm][] are not required. Check out a Kontemplate setup example and the feature list below! **Table of Contents** - [Kontemplate - A simple Kubernetes templater](#kontemplate---a-simple-kubernetes-templater) - [Features](#features) - [Example](#example) - [Installation](#installation) - [Homebrew](#homebrew) - [Arch Linux](#arch-linux) - [Building repeatably from source](#building-repeatably-from-source) - [Building from source](#building-from-source) - [Usage](#usage) - [Contributing](#contributing) ## Features * [Simple, yet powerful templates](docs/templates.md) * [Clean cluster configuration files](docs/cluster-config.md) * [Resources organised as simple resource sets](docs/resource-sets.md) * Integration with pass * Integration with kubectl ## Example Kontemplate lets you describe resources as you normally would in a simple folder structure: ``` . ├── prod-cluster.yaml └── some-api ├── deployment.yaml └── service.yaml ``` This example has all resources belonging to `some-api` (no file naming conventions enforced at all!) in the `some-api` folder and the configuration for the cluster `prod-cluster` in the corresponding file. Lets take a short look at `prod-cluster.yaml`: ```yaml --- context: k8s.prod.mydomain.com global: globalVar: lizards include: - name: some-api values: version: 1.0-0e6884d importantFeature: true apiPort: 4567 ``` Those values are then templated into the resource files of `some-api`. That's it! You can also set up more complicated folder structures for organisation, for example: ``` . ├── api │   ├── image-api │   │   └── deployment.yaml │   └── music-api │   └── deployment.yaml │   │   └── default.json ├── frontend │   ├── main-app │   │   ├── deployment.yaml │   │   └── service.yaml │   └── user-page │   ├── deployment.yaml │   └── service.yaml ├── prod-cluster.yaml └── test-cluster.yaml ``` And selectively template or apply resources with a command such as `kontemplate apply test-cluster.yaml --include api --include frontend/user-page` to only update the `api` resource sets and the `frontend/user-page` resource set. ## Installation It is recommended to install Kontemplate from the [Nix](https://nixos.org/) package set, where it is available since NixOS 17.09 as `kontemplate`. If using Nix is not an option for you, several other methods of installation are available: ### Binary releases Signed binary releases are available on the [releases page][] for Linux, OS X, FreeBSD and Windows. Releases are signed with the GPG key `DCF34CFAC1AC44B87E26333136EE34814F6D294A`. ### Building from source You can clone Kontemplate either by cloning the full TVL [depot][https://code.tvl.fyi] or by just cloning the kontemplate subtree like so: git clone https://code.tvl.fyi/depot.git:/ops/kontemplate.git The `go` tooling can be used as normal with this cloned repository. In a full clone of the depot, Nix can be used to build Kontemplate: nix-build -A ops.kontemplate ## Usage You must have `kubectl` installed to use Kontemplate effectively. ``` usage: kontemplate [] [ ...] simple Kubernetes resource templating Flags: -h, --help Show context-sensitive help (also try --help-long and --help-man). -i, --include=INCLUDE ... Resource sets to include explicitly -e, --exclude=EXCLUDE ... Resource sets to exclude explicitly Commands: help [...] Show help. template Template resource sets and print them apply [] Template resources and pass to 'kubectl apply' replace Template resources and pass to 'kubectl replace' delete Template resources and pass to 'kubectl delete' create Template resources and pass to 'kubectl create' ``` Examples: ``` # Look at output for a specific resource set and check to see if it's correct ... kontemplate template example/prod-cluster.yaml -i some-api # ... maybe do a dry-run to see what kubectl would do: kontemplate apply example/prod-cluster.yaml --dry-run # And actually apply it if you like what you see: kontemplate apply example/prod-cluster.yaml ``` Check out the feature list and the individual feature documentation above. Then you should be good to go! ## Contributing Feel free to contribute pull requests, file bugs and open issues with feature suggestions! Kontemplate is licensed under the GPLv3, a copy of the license and its terms can be found in the `LICENSE` file. Please follow the [code of conduct](CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md). [Helm]: https://helm.sh/ [releases page]: https://github.com/tazjin/kontemplate/releases