Now that we’ve established a viable workflow for building and running our application in Docker containers, it’s time to take our first pass at running those containers on Kubernetes!

2019-10-31: Please note that due to multiple personal factors, this blog series has been discontinued without being completed. You can visit this post for a slightly longer note about this.

Published articles in this series:

To test our application in a Kubernetes environment, we have two available routes: we can publish our Docker images to a public or private Docker registry, and then deploy those images to a “real” cluster, or we can use Minikube and build our images directly on the Minikube VM. For illustrative purposes, let’s start with the latter approach first.

As a reminder of what I wrote in the Introduction post, we will be glossing over a lot of Kubernetes/Elixir/Phoenix fundamentals in this series and trying to refer to existing documentation as often as possible. The purpose of this series is more oriented around synthesizing a working solution from disparate learnings. If you have unanswered questions, please feel free to leave a comment and I’ll try to direct you to the right learning resources.

Building Docker images for Minikube

I’m using a mildly customized Minikube configuration that more closely matches my long-term target environment, which is Google Container Engine. However, one of the powerful benefits of targeting Kubernetes as a platform is that the the content below is, for most purposes, compatible across many different cloud providers as long as you’re running a conformant cluster.

To build Docker images for Minikube specifically, we can directly re-use the Docker daemon that is installed as part of the Minikube virtual machine. This method can be very expedient, but is not compatible with a “real” cluster, so we will need another path forward later on in the series.

First, we use eval to set some environment variables that tell the local docker CLI, perhaps the one included with Docker For Mac, how to talk to the VM’s Docker daemon. You don’t need the actual Docker for Mac application running to use this technique, but you do need to have it installed. If you’re using my specific Minikube config, you’ll also want to install the Hyperkit driver as documented by the Minikube project.

After using the eval command, most if not all standard Docker CLI subcommands should work correctly, so you can use ps to inspect running containers (and get a glimpse of the inner structure of a Pod), or images to inspect locally available Docker images. You can obtain extra images with pull or build , and so on. In our case, we’re going to use build to construct our local image for our application, which will then be available to the Kubernetes scheduler for use with Pods later on.

eval $( minikube docker-env ) docker build -t kube-native:latest .

At the time of writing, we can’t use docker-compose directly with Minikube due to version incompatibilities, but we could ostensibly use docker run with some extra arguments to match the container definition from our docker-compose.yml file. However, this knowledge doesn’t transfer especially well into Kubernetes usage, and won’t integrate at all with the networking abstractions provided by Service objects, so I will leave that step as an optional exercise for the reader.

A taste of Helm

In order to successfully deploy our application, we need access to a PostgreSQL database. There are a lot of avenues available to us, including managed offerings like Amazon RDS or Google Cloud SQL. Those services are definitely where I would direct most people for production purposes. Running your own highly-available database is challenging, isn’t particularly differentiating for most businesses, and isn’t within most organization’s core competencies. Doing so within a containerized environment is still more challenging, and usually isn’t recommended.

Later on in this series, we’ll touch on the topic of “controllers” and “operators” for Kubernetes, which can distill and embody human expertise to make managing containerized software more successful. Among those available tools are a few options for managing containerized databases. We likely won’t tackle that specific example directly, but we will definitely leverage a few of the other operators.

For our purposes, all we specifically care about at the moment are that there is a database available for our use, and that our running Pods can connect to it. Since we’re not being picky about the other details, let’s go ahead and run a database on our Kubernetes cluster anyway.

We could synthesize the necessary Kubernetes YAML to do so on our own, but we’re about to do that for our in-house application in another section of this post, so let’s use the “off-the-shelf” approach made possible by the community tool Helm. The Helm user community contributes a fairly robust body of packages for use with Helm, called Charts, which are available on GitHub. Later on in the series, we’ll be authoring our own Chart for our application.

Helm Glossary

Tiller server-side component of the Helm suite, which runs on-cluster and interacts with the Kubernetes API on our behalf Helm CLI component of the Helm suite, which communicates with Tiller via gRPC Chart a package of templatized Kubernetes YAML which can be managed via Helm/Tiller to provide functionality to your cluster, or to your customers Repository Collection of Helm charts made available directly for use via the Helm CLI Release an instantiated/deployed copy of a Chart, which represents a collection of Kubernetes resources and can be managed in an ongoing fashion with the Helm CLI for upgrades, rollbacks, and deletion

Installing Tiller

Helm needs a server-side component named Tiller, and there’s a lot of reading to be done about how to manage this component safely and securely for production use, and the practices there will likely change drastically when Helm v3 releases in the next year or two. This example configuration does not include TLS support and uses cluster-wide administrative privileges, so it is not particularly reflective of good production practices.

For more information, see the Helm documentation around RBAC, TLS, and general security models. Angus Lees of Bitnami also wrote a really nice piece about hardening Helm.

We need a ServiceAccount for Tiller to use in its API calls, and that ServiceAccount needs to have administrative privileges on the cluster. We also don’t want to keep an unbounded amount of history around for Helm releases, so we cap that at 10 historical versions per Release.

kubectl -n kube-system create sa tiller kubectl create clusterrolebinding tiller \ --clusterrole cluster-admin \ --serviceaccount = kube-system:tiller helm init --history-max 10 \ --service-account tiller \ --skip-refresh --upgrade --wait

Installing PostgreSQL

Public repositories of Helm Charts can be managed through the helm repo subcommands, and we need to make sure that the “stable” repository, which matches the content of the helm/charts GitHub repository, are available for use.

helm repo add stable https://kubernetes-charts.storage.googleapis.com

Then, we’re going to look at what configuration options, or Values, are included with the Chart we want to use. Much like other content in the Kubernetes ecosystem, these are always rendered and authored using the YAML format. Many Charts have fairly descriptive names and even documentation comments on their Values files, but you ultimately may need to visit the Chart’s README or even peruse the source of the Chart to determine exactly what tunable variables are available and what values are acceptable to use.

helm inspect values stable/postgresql --version 0.19.0

Finally, after identifying the immediately-relevant settings from the Values data, we’re going to tweak some of those Values as part of the helm install command that is used to deploy the PostgreSQL container. The first pass uses the flags --debug and --dry-run to emit the generated YAML to STDOUT for inspection, then the command is repeated without those flags in order to actually enact the changes. A --wait flag is included in order to block the completion of the command until those new resources are fully ready. Later on we’ll see how a tool called helmfile can expedite this inspect-and-approve workflow.

helm install stable/postgresql \ --name kube-native-postgresql \ --namespace kube-native \ --set-string imageTag = 10 .5-alpine \ --set-string postgresUser = kube_native \ --set-string postgresDatabase = kube_native \ --set-string postgresPassword = kube_native \ --version 0 .19 \ --debug --dry-run helm install stable/postgresql \ --name kube-native-postgresql \ --namespace kube-native \ --set-string imageTag = 10 .5-alpine \ --set-string postgresUser = kube_native \ --set-string postgresDatabase = kube_native \ --set-string postgresPassword = kube_native \ --version 0 .19 \ --wait

You’ll notice that I’m choosing a particular, and rather outdated, version of the Chart in the commands above. That’s because in the pre-1.0 series of this chart, its functionality was based directly on the official postgres Docker image from Docker Hub. Later iterations of the chart, particularly the 1.x and 2.x series, made drastic changes to both the Values schema and to the base image, which was moved to a Bitnami-managed image.

In my recent experiences, these newer Chart versions and the Bitnami image were both somewhat brittle and proved to be fast-moving targets, while the 0.x series of the Chart and the official Hub image have proved satisfactory for several months. I opted for a lower maintenance burden for the purposes of this series.

Note that release names and namespaces both cannot contain underscores, only hyphens.

If we want to perform a quick sanity check of our new database, we can use kubectl port-forward to connect to it directly with the preconfigured credentials.

# straight from the Helm chart's install notes # helm status kube-native-postgresql export POD_NAME = $( kubectl get pods --namespace kube-native -l "app=postgresql,release=kube-native-postgresql" -o jsonpath = "{.items[0].metadata.name}" ) kubectl port-forward --namespace kube-native $POD_NAME 15432 :5432 # new shell session psql postgres -U kube_native -p 15432 -h localhost \l \q

Describing our application on Kubernetes’ terms

Now that we have a viable database to work with, let’s set about actually running our application using standard Kubernetes primitives and unadorned YAML. We’ll introduce some more refined workflows and tools later in the series.

ConfigMap

First up is creating a home for our non-sensitive configuration details that are supplied via environment variables. We set the stage for the Elixir side of this 12-factor-ish configuration style back in Part 2.

These values are intentionally very similar to what we included in the docker-compose.yml ’s environment block for the application container.

Farther down in the Deployment manifest, you’ll see that each entry within data appears within the container as an environment variable with the same name and the associated value, via envFrom . As all environment variables in the Deployment manifest must be strings, we have to quote any ambiguous values that could be inferred as another value type.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 apiVersion: v1 kind: ConfigMap metadata: name: kube-native-env labels: app: kube-native data: HOSTNAME: localhost # cannot be a YAML number, thus the quotes PORT: "4000" # cannot be a YAML boolean true, thus the quotes REPLACE_OS_VARS: "true"

We instantiate this ConfigMap with kubectl apply :

kubectl apply -n kube-native -f configmap.yaml

Secret

We also already have a few pieces of sensitive information that need to be supplied as environment variables as well, and for that we’ll use a Kubernetes Secret. It’s worthwhile to remind readers that Secrets are not without flaws, and chief among them is that their YAML representation isn’t truly encrypted, merely a base64 encoding of their contents. Permissions for accessing a Secret are essentially only constrained by your cluster’s RBAC rules, and anyone with a cluster-admin Role can essentially read any Secret they like. It also takes a fair amoung of extra effort to ensure that both your etcd data and Secrets data within etcd are encrypted at rest, and some platforms intentionally don’t even allow you to interact with etcd directly.

A step up from Kubernetes Secrets, which potentially entails quite a bit more infrastructure and cognitive/technical burden, would be to use something like Vault that provides more robust secrets management. There are open-source tools available for managing a Vault cluster on top of Kubernetes, including an Operator that configures Vault to use etcd for its internal storage instead of Consul.

In the sample below, each entry within data represents an environment variable, while its value is a base64-encoded form of the raw string like we used with docker-compose.yml . In each case, it’s generally important to ensure that no wayward newlines wind up as part of the encoded value, because tools like Ecto won’t appreciate trying to parse that. As with the ConfigMap above, these correspond with keys we provided in the docker-compose.yml ’s environment section.

Among other techniques, you can encode a value for use in a Secret by using echo -n and piping it to base64 , and you can decode it by piping the encoded string to base64 -D instead. Note that these commands are very likely to be persisted into your local shell history. Anyone with access to your shell and a bit of knowledge could read them back out. Right now that doesn’t matter because they’d only be able to compromise our Minikube environment, but this is still a drawback to be aware of. Check the appendix for some references around preventing this information from entering your shell history. Several text editors, Emacs in particular, have direct support for base64 encoding and decoding strings in-line.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 apiVersion: v1 kind: Secret type: Opaque metadata: name: kube-native-env-secret labels: app: kube-native data: # echo -n "string" | base64 # ecto://kube_native:kube_native@kube-native-postgresql.kube-native.svc.cluster.local/kube_native DATABASE_URL: ZWN0bzovL2t1YmVfbmF0aXZlOmt1YmVfbmF0aXZlQGt1YmUtbmF0aXZlLXBvc3RncmVzcWwua3ViZS1uYXRpdmUuc3ZjLmNsdXN0ZXIubG9jYWwva3ViZV9uYXRpdmU= # "cookie" ERLANG_COOKIE: Y29va2ll # value from docker-compose.yml, base64-encoded SECRET_KEY_BASE: ZnpCazhPRWNJOHRoR3hseXBXUFVxZlIydzJXb3BkTjh2OHBtcHV5MkpOajJlZXJiWUZubGVjdVZNckZQR1luVw==

The first substantial change from our docker-compose.yml content is to make sure that we’re referring to the new PostgreSQL Service we provisioned via Helm above, by using its DNS hostname.

The default domain suffix on every Kubernetes cluster is svc.cluster.local , so referring to any Service via DNS takes the following form:

service-name.namespace.svc.cluster.local

For our PostgreSQL service, that gives us:

kube-native-postgresql.kube-native.svc.cluster.local

You can verify that you have the right Service name with:

kubectl get svc -n kube-native

Among the output of the above is the service’s ClusterIP, which should directly match how the DNS name resolves inside your container, unless you’ve customized a Pod’s dnsConfig or dnsPolicy via its spec .

Once again, we install this Secret with kubectl apply :

kubectl apply -n kube-native -f secret.yaml

There are also several variations of kubectl create secret that would allow you to supply raw values and it will base64-encode them for you, but this is less conducive to iterative updates. I find that approach the most helpful when dealing with pre-existing TLS certificates and keys, as we’ll see later in the series.

Deployment

Now that the necessary configuration data has been written, we need to define the actual behavior of the running container. This is noticeably more verbose than a comparable docker-compose.yml service, but every piece has its purpose, and much of it represents functionality that Docker Compose does not provide.

The complete file:

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 apiVersion: apps/v1beta2 kind: Deployment metadata: name: kube-native labels: app: kube-native spec: replicas: 1 revisionHistoryLimit: 10 selector: matchLabels: app: kube-native strategy: rollingUpdate: maxSurge: 10 % maxUnavailable: 0 type: RollingUpdate template: metadata: labels: app: kube-native spec: containers: - name: kube-native image: kube-native:latest imagePullPolicy: Never # Always, IfNotPresent, Never env: - name: POD_IP valueFrom: fieldRef: fieldPath: status.podIP envFrom: - configMapRef: name: kube-native-env - secretRef: name: kube-native-env-secret ports: - name: http containerPort: 4000 protocol: TCP livenessProbe: exec: command: - /app/bin/kube_native_umbrella - ping initialDelaySeconds: 5 periodSeconds: 30 timeoutSeconds: 5 readinessProbe: httpGet: path: / port: http initialDelaySeconds: 5 resources: limits: cpu: 1000m memory: 256Mi requests: cpu: 250m memory: 128Mi

We’ll work our way through the highlights of this content, little by little. Much of the prose description will describe fields using a dot-separated notation, such as spec.template.metadata , which matches the syntax you can use with the incredibly handy kubectl explain command to see more detail about that portion of the manifest schema.

Please forgive the lack of proper indentation on each smaller snippet - I don’t appear to have enough control with Hugo to force indentation without introducing extra content that wasn’t really there in the complete example.

This first section of the spec describes “meta” behavior around the Deployment and how it manages its underlying ReplicaSets. Specifically, it caps the historical limit to 10 unique iterations, and asserts that rolling updates must be performed in an additive way. Rather than taking down old Pods and replacing them with new ones, in that order, it instead will launch new Pods running any updated image or behavior, wait for them to validate as healthy, and then remove an equivalent number of old Pods. As written, it allows up to 10% of your stable target capacity to be duplicated with newer Pods during the upgrade process, and when a successful deploy is complete, you should be back at your target number of replicas.

For spec.selector , make sure that you have just enough labels to uniquely identify your workload compared to any of its siblings from the same Kubernetes namespace, without being too precise. In particular, omit any labels that you might change with each iterative deployment of your application, such as a version number. If you include such details, you are running the risk of creating “orphaned” ReplicaSets that don’t get properly reaped or managed by the Deployment object.

7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 spec: replicas: 1 revisionHistoryLimit: 10 selector: matchLabels: app: kube-native strategy: rollingUpdate: maxSurge: 10 % maxUnavailable: 0 type: RollingUpdate

The spec.template.metadata.labels should be either an exact match or superset of the spec.selector.matchLabels above. It’s fine to include additional labels as well. Some sorts of information belong in annotations instead. One useful heuristic is the following question: Do I need to query and filter my Pods by this property? If the answer is yes, the information probably belongs in a label, if no, it probably belongs in an annotation.

Note that just about any property within the spec.template that gets changed will trigger a rollout of new Pods, so be mindful of what information you include. Volatile details like a CI/CD build number may cause unnecessary churn of your running Pods when their configuration has not changed in other, more semantically meaningful ways.

spec.template.spec.containers.image and .imagePullPolicy are how we dictate which image should be running within the Pod. I’ve included a traditionally-reviled practice in this snippet, which is using the latest tag on my Docker image. There are almost no circumstances where you actually want to use this latest tag for serious work, however expedient it may be. A more sustainable approach is to tag your images semantically - perhaps with version numbers for your project, a time or date stamp, a git SHA, or even some combination of the proceeding identifiers. This lets you reason very specifically about what iteration of your application is currently running or meant to be running, without using information that you can only obtain after building the image, such as its built-in SHA256 digest.

Because we’re using a Minikube-based environment in this phase, I’ve also set the imagePullPolicy to a value of Never , because there’s nowhere for the VM to obtain this image if it’s not already built locally. In a live cluster with a remote Docker image registry, we’d generally use one of IfNotPresent , if we’re treating image tags as immutable, or Always , if we treat some or all image tags as mutable.

18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 template: metadata: labels: app: kube-native spec: containers: - name: kube-native image: kube-native:latest imagePullPolicy: Never # Always, IfNotPresent, Never

Within spec.template.spec.containers.env we’re using the Downward API to expose the Pod’s own IP address as an environment variable, which will be consumed by our Distillery-managed configuration to set the BEAM node name.

We’re also using .envFrom to source environment variables directly from our ConfigMap and Secret above.

27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 env: - name: POD_IP valueFrom: fieldRef: fieldPath: status.podIP envFrom: - configMapRef: name: kube-native-env - secretRef: name: kube-native-env-secret

In order to actually serve traffic from our Pod, we need to expose our HTTP listener port 4000 to the private network. We give each port a name so that we can refer to it later in the Service declaration, without needing to remember to update both places if and when a port number changes. Port names have to be viable for use with DNS notation, so there are some restrictions on what non-alphanumeric characters can be included.

Notice that we’re not making any mention of any of the ports that are necessary for Distributed Erlang, EPMD, etc. This is intentional! We’ll see later in the series that clustering and distribution don’t need those ports to be formally exposed, because we have a fully routable private network space to communicate within. This is somewhat unique compared to other platforms, such as Amazon ECS.

If you have sudden doubts about the security posture of this private networking model, you’ll want to brush up on the NetworkPolicy resource type, which requires a supported CNI driver for enforcement. Many Kubernetes providers support this out of the box or with opt-in configuration. At the time of writing, GKE uses Calico and an opt-in flag at cluster creation time, which can also be enabled for existing clusters.

37 38 39 40 ports: - name: http containerPort: 4000 protocol: TCP

One of the ways that Kubernetes can help us manage our application’s availability is by continually performing regular health-checking tasks on our behalf, and responding appropriately to indications of bad container health.

The YAML below describes two classes of Probes. Failures of a readiness probe will remove the Pod for consideration by Service network traffic, while a sufficient number of failures of a liveness probe will cause Kubernetes to restart the container. A good heuristic to follow is that readiness probes should fail in circumstances that are possible to self-heal from without restarting your application, while a liveness probe should represent a very real failure that can’t be resolved with patience or internal behavior.

Note also that these automatic restarts from liveness probes will contribue to CrashLoopBackOff conditions, and a poorly-tuned or misconfigured probe may inadvertantly cause more availability problems than they solve.

Our readinessProbe currently issues a GET request directly to the root URL of our Phoenix application. This is a somewhat useful litmus test, but be wary if the query footprint or other performance characteristics of that root URL start to grow - these probes are tunable but by default those requests happen every 10 seconds, per-Pod. If the homepage gets to be too heavy, it’s common to create a specific Plug endpoint just for health-checking purposes, but ideally that endpoint should perform a quick round-trip to the database to ensure correct credentials.

The livenessProbe uses a facility built into the Distillery-provided CLI to ping our BEAM process and wait for a response. If the BEAM is in a truly bad state this will fail as intended, but under heavy workloads it potentially can exceed the default timeout of 1 second to come back.

41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 livenessProbe: exec: command: - /app/bin/kube_native_umbrella - ping initialDelaySeconds: 5 periodSeconds: 30 timeoutSeconds: 5 readinessProbe: httpGet: path: / port: http initialDelaySeconds: 5

Finally, we can help maintain the quality-of-service within the overall cluster by describing the resources that need to be allocated on a per-Pod basis. The cluster’s scheduler uses this information to determine which Pods, how many Pods, and so on that each available Node can execute without becoming overloaded. If you provide matching values for both limits and requests , your pod is treated as having a guaranteed quality of service, while any mismatch between the two allows for “bursting” behavior but a less stringent QOS. Take a look at the Kubernetes documentation for more details.

These specific numbers are both arbitrary and generous for the content of the example application. The units are expressed in “millicores” for CPU, where 1000 represents one full second of one full CPU core, and mebibytes/gibibytes/etc. for memory. Ideally, you should perform empirical measurements against an un-constrained version of your application in a live cluster with meaningful traffic to determine more appropriate values for your use-case.

Later in the series we’ll discuss how to do this with a tool called Prometheus, which is very popular to use in conjunction with Kubernetes. It would also be a fairly reasonable starting point to base these figures on your observed metrics from Erlang’s Observer, provided you’re running on a similar OS with the right MIX_ENV and representative samples of traffic. It’s even possible to perform Pod-level autoscaling based on these metrics, which is a very exciting opportunity and can be much more meaningful than pure CPU/Memory utilization figures.

In practical terms it’s not really possible to exceed the supplied CPU limits due to how they’re applied via cgroups , but you may find the application becomes “starved” or unable to sustain the expected throughput. Your main options there are to allocate more CPU and/or memory per-Pod, or perhaps more readily available, to just run more Pod replicas to distribute the traffic evenly across a larger pool of application Pods. If you’d like to see the specifics of how CPU shares are enforced, take a look at the Docker documentation.

Memory is a slightly more nuanced constraint that is documented on Docker’s site, where Kubernetes is applying the --memory flag for you based on the Pod’s resource allocation. One thing to note if the limit and request differ is that your Pod can attempt and sometimes even succeed at allocating more memory than the request value, and will be allowed to continue using it for as long as it does not exceed the limit , and for as long as there aren’t low-memory conditions on the Node’s host OS.

54 55 56 57 58 59 60 resources: limits: cpu: 1000m memory: 256Mi requests: cpu: 250m memory: 128Mi

We can start a running Pod on our cluster using kubectl , and tweak its replica count on the fly without using kubectl edit or kubectl apply again later, including scaling the Deployment to 0 replicas if that’s an appropriate move.

kubectl apply -n kube-native -f deployment.yaml kubectl scale deployment -n kube-native kube-native --replicas = 3

Service

Now that we have running containers, we want to distribute incoming traffic across the ready replicas equally. For that we’ll create a Service, which targets a similar selector as the Deployment used, and exposes a Service port that forwards traffic to the Pod port. The exposed port on the service does not have to match the Pod’s port in number, but every Service port must target an existing port name or number on the Pod.

In Minikube, we must use ClusterIP or NodePort services as it doesn’t have any facilities for managing an external LoadBalancer. ClusterIP would only allow traffic from other Pods, so we’ll go with NodePort, which will expose a high-numbered port on the Minikube VM itself for external traffic.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: name: kube-native labels: app: kube-native spec: type: NodePort # LoadBalancer, NodePort, ClusterIP ports: - port: 80 targetPort: http protocol: TCP name: http selector: app: kube-native

Our trusty kubectl apply comes to our rescue again:

kubectl apply -n kube-native -f service.yaml

Running Migrations

With our application running, we still need to perform our database migrations. There are two techniques that are readily available to us for this purpose, with different trade-offs.

You’ll recall that we created our ReleaseTasks module and the associated Distillery custom commands in Part 2, so now we need to trigger that behavior in a Kubernetes Pod context instead.

Running migrations/seeds via kubectl exec

The first and simplest technique is to simply connect to a running application Pod via kubectl exec , and trigger our migrations via the Distillery-provided CLI:

kubectl get pods -o wide -n kube-native kubectl exec -it $pod_name sh bin/kube_native_umbrella migrate bin/kube_native_umbrella seed

This isn’t super sustainable and can be quite error-prone, and if our application fails to boot successfully without its migrations, we’d be unable to use this approach without resolving that first, which may be a chicken-and-egg problem. The next section introduces a more complex but more satisfactory approach.

Running migrations/seeds via Jobs

A preferable method to perform our migrations is to create a Job object that executes the same Docker image as our deployment, but uses its migrate or seed subcommand and doesn’t expose any ports. A sample appears below, with highlights on the meaningfully different lines. In most ways, this directly resembles the Deployment template above, adjusted for the schema for a Job object and omitting the ports list and probes. All we care about here is whether our command eventually exits 0.

Note that the Job name should be unique per-namespace, or else you’ll need to delete and recreate the resource to run another round of migrations, which is tedious if not actually problematic. We’ll see a convenient way to automate this as part of the next post in the series, covering Helm.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 apiVersion: batch/v1 kind: Job metadata: name: kube-native-migration -0 labels: app: kube-native spec: template: metadata: labels: app: kube-native spec: restartPolicy: OnFailure containers: - name: kube-native image: kube-native:latest imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent args: [ "migrate" ] env: - name: POD_IP valueFrom: fieldRef: fieldPath: status.podIP envFrom: - configMapRef: name: kube-native-env - secretRef: name: kube-native-env-secret resources: limits: cpu: 1000m memory: 256Mi requests: cpu: 250m memory: 128Mi

Once last time, we create the Job resource with kubectl apply :

kubectl apply -n kube-native -f job.yaml

Browsing the live application

With our migrations applied and the Service has ready Endpoints, you can visit the application in your browser with a single command, or just echo the appropriate URL in your shell for later reference:

minikube service -n kube-native kube-native minikube service -n kube-native kube-native --url

Code Checkpoint

The work presented in this post is reflected in git tag part-3-end available here. You can compare these changes to the previous post here.

Acknowledgements

Thanks to early readers Eric Oestrich, Dan Lindeman, and Justin Nauman for their feedback. Any remaining flaws are my own.

Appendix

Software/Tool Versions

Software Version Distillery 2.0.12 Docker 18.06.1-ce Ecto 3.0.1 Elixir 1.7.4 Erlang 21.1.1 Helm 2.11.0 Minikube 0.30.0 Phoenix 1.4.0 PostgreSQL 10.5

Preferred Minikube config

minikube config set bootstrapper kubeadm minikube config set kubernetes-version v1.11.2 minikube config set cpus 4 minikube config set memory 8192 minikube config set vm-driver hyperkit minikube config set v 4 minikube config set WantReportErrorPrompt false

Preventing Shell History

One technique to avoid this is to prefix the command with a space, which instructs appropriately-configured shells to omit the following command from persisted history.

Bash users should take a look at the documentation around history facilities, paying close attention to environment variables such as HISTFILE , HISTIGNORE and HISTCONTROL .

ZSH users similarly can look at their own documentation, such as the variable HIST_IGNORE_SPACE .

Fish users like myself can be smug about this behavior being built in.