79 lines
3.3 KiB
Markdown
79 lines
3.3 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Don't write controllers like charlie don't does: Avoiding common kubernetes controller mistakes
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weight: 3
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tags:
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- kubecon
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- operator
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---
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<!-- {{% button href="https://youtu.be/rkteV6Mzjfs" style="warning" icon="video" %}}Watch talk on YouTube{{% /button %}} -->
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<!-- {{% button href="https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1nEK0CVC_yQgIDqwsdh-PRihB6dc9RyT-" style="tip" icon="person-chalkboard" %}}Slides{{% /button %}} -->
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## Common mistake
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### Not using a simple client but directly talk to the api server
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- Problem: A
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- Problem: Updates send in the whole object -> Noop updates waste apiserver resources
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- Fix: Use a cache client
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- Problem: Caching validation
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### Don't use custom caching
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- Problem: Good Luck dealing with concurrency
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- Hard: Controllers mus maintain a per kind cache
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- Problem: Eventual consistency makes everything more complicated
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- Fix: Use a framework
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### Predecates only apply to the current
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- If you have a predecate in the for (predecate) only appy to this call, not to other watchers
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- Also check if you shold be reconciling your low-level object or reconciling the higher level ones that ref to them is better
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## Tools
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### KRT
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> Still under development
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- Operatorions in collections (kubernetes objects with state tracking)
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- Fetch function that handels transformation
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### StateDB
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- In-memory database for go with watch channels
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- You can setup a table that stores all objects of a kind (provided by the client)
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- Triggers hooks when changes happen in the database that you can react to
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### Controller-Runtime
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> The kubebuilder one
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- Includes a chached client
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- Works on the reconciler pattern -> Makes triggers simpe
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## Tips
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- Limit the number of api server updates
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- Check for dif yourself and don't send updates if there is nothing new
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- Use patch instead of update just with changed fields -> Especially for `.status`
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- Use a framework that handles watching, coalescing and caching (krt, statedb, controller-runtime)
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- Use predecates if you're using controller-runtime, this helps you filter out no-op events by checking them against the cache and filters
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## Q&A
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- Do you know where your reconciliations are coming from:
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- Counts: Yes the frameworks provide metrics and you can implement your own
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- But controller runtime abstracts the patch source so you have to compare before and after state yourself - but you should not do that
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- What about state sharing across multiple threads?
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- Controller runtime handels each reconcile as idempotent, so you can just multithread
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- But handling consistency can still be hard because you have to design all of your operations as idempotent by rebuilding the state each time
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- What are your thoughts on controllers that do stuff in the real world (especially b/c it takes longer and there are no natie observers)
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- Do something like the krt project by keeping the state seperatly
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- What if someone changes things at the cloud provider
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- A question of philosophy -> Usually just treat the operator at the source of throuth
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- How do you test your operators?
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- Depends on your output (kubernetes objects make stuf simple)
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- For cilium: Simple b/c it's just creating kubernetes projects
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- With oputside interaction: In-memory state representation or mocking
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- For complex controllers split the operator into: Ingestion, data model and transformation |