drone-kubernetes/README.md

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# Kubernetes plugin for drone.io [![Docker Repository on Quay](https://quay.io/repository/honestbee/drone-kubernetes/status "Docker Repository on Quay")](https://quay.io/repository/honestbee/drone-kubernetes)
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This plugin allows to update a Kubernetes deployment.
## Usage
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This pipeline will update the `my-deployment` deployment with the image tagged `DRONE_COMMIT_SHA:0:8`
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```yaml
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pipeline:
deploy:
image: quay.io/honestbee/drone-kubernetes
deployment: my-deployment
repo: myorg/myrepo
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container: my-container
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tag:
- mytag
- latest
```
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Deploying containers across several deployments, eg in a scheduler-worker setup. Make sure your container `name` in your manifest is the same for each pod.
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```yaml
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pipeline:
deploy:
image: quay.io/honestbee/drone-kubernetes
deployment: [server-deploy, worker-deploy]
repo: myorg/myrepo
container: my-container
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tag:
- mytag
- latest
```
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Deploying multiple containers within the same deployment.
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```yaml
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pipeline:
deploy:
image: quay.io/honestbee/drone-kubernetes
deployment: my-deployment
repo: myorg/myrepo
container: [container1, container2]
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tag:
- mytag
- latest
```
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**NOTE**: Combining multi container deployments across multiple deployments is not recommended
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This more complex example demonstrates how to deploy to several environments based on the branch, in a `app` namespace
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```yaml
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pipeline:
deploy-staging:
image: quay.io/honestbee/drone-kubernetes
kubernetes_server: ${KUBERNETES_SERVER_STAGING}
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kubernetes_cert: ${KUBERNETES_CERT_STAGING}
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kubernetes_token: ${KUBERNETES_TOKEN_STAGING}
deployment: my-deployment
repo: myorg/myrepo
container: my-container
namespace: app
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tag:
- mytag
- latest
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when:
branch: [ staging ]
deploy-prod:
image: quay.io/honestbee/drone-kubernetes
kubernetes_server: ${KUBERNETES_SERVER_PROD}
kubernetes_token: ${KUBERNETES_TOKEN_PROD}
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# notice: no tls verification will be done, warning will is printed
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deployment: my-deployment
repo: myorg/myrepo
container: my-container
namespace: app
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tag:
- mytag
- latest
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when:
branch: [ master ]
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```
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**_Version 1.0_ example for using a .tags file**
Use .tags file option: USE_TAGS_FILE<br/>
The default is FALSE unless the value of USE_TAGS_FILE is one of: y,Y,t,T,true,TRUE,yes,YES<br/>
The .tags file was used by the docker plugin when we created out container<br/>
A .tags file is a comma separated list of tags: 1.0.1,1.0,1,latest (see docker plugin docs)<br/>
We will use the first tag in the list, so create your file accordingly
```yaml
- name: kubernetes-deploy
image: quay.io/honestbee/drone-kubernetes
settings:
kubernetes_server:
from_secret: KUBERNETES_SERVER
kubernetes_token:
from_secret: KUBERNETES_TOKEN
deployment: my-deployment
repo: myorg/myrepo
container: my-container
namespace: app
use_tags_file: true
```
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## Required secrets
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```bash
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drone secret add --image=honestbee/drone-kubernetes \
your-user/your-repo KUBERNETES_SERVER https://mykubernetesapiserver
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drone secret add --image=honestbee/drone-kubernetes \
your-user/your-repo KUBERNETES_CERT <base64 encoded CA.crt>
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drone secret add --image=honestbee/drone-kubernetes \
your-user/your-repo KUBERNETES_TOKEN eyJhbGciOiJSUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJpc3MiOiJrdWJ...
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```
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When using TLS Verification, ensure Server Certificate used by kubernetes API server
is signed for SERVER url ( could be a reason for failures if using aliases of kubernetes cluster )
## How to get token
1. After deployment inspect you pod for name of (k8s) secret with **token** and **ca.crt**
```bash
kubectl describe po/[ your pod name ] | grep SecretName | grep token
```
(When you use **default service account**)
2. Get data from you (k8s) secret
```bash
kubectl get secret [ your default secret name ] -o yaml | egrep 'ca.crt:|token:'
```
3. Copy-paste contents of ca.crt into your drone's **KUBERNETES_CERT** secret
4. Decode base64 encoded token
```bash
echo [ your k8s base64 encoded token ] | base64 -d && echo''
```
5. Copy-paste decoded token into your drone's **KUBERNETES_TOKEN** secret
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### RBAC
When using a version of kubernetes with RBAC (role-based access control)
enabled, you will not be able to use the default service account, since it does
not have access to update deployments. Instead, you will need to create a
custom service account with the appropriate permissions (`Role` and `RoleBinding`, or `ClusterRole` and `ClusterRoleBinding` if you need access across namespaces using the same service account).
As an example (for the `web` namespace):
```yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: ServiceAccount
metadata:
name: drone-deploy
namespace: web
---
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: Role
metadata:
name: drone-deploy
namespace: web
rules:
- apiGroups: ["extensions"]
resources: ["deployments"]
verbs: ["get","list","patch","update"]
---
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: RoleBinding
metadata:
name: drone-deploy
namespace: web
subjects:
- kind: ServiceAccount
name: drone-deploy
namespace: web
roleRef:
kind: Role
name: drone-deploy
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
```
Once the service account is created, you can extract the `ca.cert` and `token`
parameters as mentioned for the default service account above:
```
kubectl -n web get secrets
# Substitute XXXXX below with the correct one from the above command
kubectl -n web get secret/drone-deploy-token-XXXXX -o yaml | egrep 'ca.crt:|token:'
```
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## To do
Replace the current kubectl bash script with a go implementation.
### Special thanks
Inspired by [drone-helm](https://github.com/ipedrazas/drone-helm).