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gcontainer

A Puppet module to manage Google Container Engine resources

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You are welcome to contribute to this module by suggesting new features, currency updates, or fixes. Every contribution is valuable to help ensure that the module remains compatible with the latest Puppet versions and continues to meet community needs. Complete the following steps:

  1. Review the module’s contribution guidelines and any licenses. Ensure that your planned contribution aligns with the author’s standards and any legal requirements.
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For questions about updating the module, contact the module’s author.

Version information

  • 0.3.0 (latest)
  • 0.2.0
  • 0.1.0
released Oct 4th 2018
This version is compatible with:
  • , , , , , ,
Tasks:
  • resize

Start using this module

  • r10k or Code Manager
  • Bolt
  • Manual installation
  • Direct download

Add this module to your Puppetfile:

mod 'google-gcontainer', '0.3.0'
Learn more about managing modules with a Puppetfile

Add this module to your Bolt project:

bolt module add google-gcontainer
Learn more about using this module with an existing project

Manually install this module globally with Puppet module tool:

puppet module install google-gcontainer --version 0.3.0

Direct download is not typically how you would use a Puppet module to manage your infrastructure, but you may want to download the module in order to inspect the code.

Download

Documentation

google/gcontainer — version 0.3.0 Oct 4th 2018

Google Container Engine Puppet Module

Puppet Forge

Table of Contents

  1. Module Description - What the module does and why it is useful
  2. Setup - The basics of getting started with Google Container Engine
  3. Usage - Configuration options and additional functionality
  4. Reference - An under-the-hood peek at what the module is doing and how
  5. Limitations - OS compatibility, etc.
  6. Development - Guide for contributing to the module

Module Description

This Puppet module manages the resource of Google Container Engine. You can manage its resources using standard Puppet DSL and the module will, under the hood, ensure the state described will be reflected in the Google Cloud Platform resources.

Setup

To install this module on your Puppet Master (or Puppet Client/Agent), use the Puppet module installer:

puppet module install google-gcontainer

Optionally you can install support to all Google Cloud Platform products at once by installing our "bundle" google-cloud module:

puppet module install google-cloud

Since this module depends on the googleauth and google-api-client gems, you will also need to install those, with

/opt/puppetlabs/puppet/bin/gem install googleauth google-api-client

If you prefer, you could also add the following to your puppet manifest:

    package { [
            'googleauth',
            'google-api-client',
        ]:
            ensure   => present,
            provider => puppet_gem,
    }

Usage

Credentials

All Google Cloud Platform modules use an unified authentication mechanism, provided by the google-gauth module. Don't worry, it is automatically installed when you install this module.

gauth_credential { 'mycred':
  path     => $cred_path, # e.g. '/home/nelsonjr/my_account.json'
  provider => serviceaccount,
  scopes   => [
    'https://www.googleapis.com/auth/cloud-platform',
  ],
}

Please refer to the google-gauth module for further requirements, i.e. required gems.

Examples

gcontainer_cluster

gcontainer_cluster { "mycluster-${cluster_id}":
  ensure             => present,
  initial_node_count => 2,
  master_auth        => {
    username => 'cluster_admin',
    password => 'my-secret-password',
  },
  node_config        => {
    machine_type => 'n1-standard-4', # we want a 4-core machine for our cluster
    disk_size_gb => 500,             # ... and a lot of disk space
  },
  zone               => 'us-central1-a',
  project            => $project, # e.g. 'my-test-project'
  credential         => 'mycred',
}

gcontainer_node_pool

# A node pool requires a container to exist. Please ensure its presence with:
# gcontainer_cluster { ..... }
gcontainer_node_pool { 'web-servers':
  ensure             => present,
  initial_node_count => 4,
  cluster            => "mycluster-${cluster_id}",
  zone               => 'us-central1-a',
  project            => $project, # e.g. 'my-test-project'
  credential         => 'mycred',
}

gcontainer_kube_config

# ~/.kube/config is used by Kubernetes client (kubectl)
gcontainer_kube_config { '/home/nelsona/.kube/config':
  ensure     => present,
  context    => "gke-mycluster-${cluster_id}",
  cluster    => "mycluster-${cluster_id}",
  zone       => 'us-central1-a',
  project    => $project, # e.g. 'my-test-project'
  credential => 'mycred',
}

# A file named ~/.puppetlabs/etc/puppet/kubernetes is used by the
# garethr-kubernetes module.
gcontainer_kube_config { '/home/nelsona/.puppetlabs/etc/puppet/kubernetes.conf':
  ensure     => present,
  cluster    => "mycluster-${cluster_id}",
  zone       => 'us-central1-a',
  project    => $project, # e.g. 'my-test-project'
  credential => 'mycred',
}

Classes

Public classes

  • gcontainer_cluster: A Google Container Engine cluster.
  • gcontainer_node_pool: NodePool contains the name and configuration for a cluster's node pool. Node pools are a set of nodes (i.e. VM's), with a common configuration and specification, under the control of the cluster master. They may have a set of Kubernetes labels applied to them, which may be used to reference them during pod scheduling. They may also be resized up or down, to accommodate the workload.
  • gcontainer_kube_config: Generates a compatible Kuberenetes '.kube/config' file

About output only properties

Some fields are output-only. It means you cannot set them because they are provided by the Google Cloud Platform. Yet they are still useful to ensure the value the API is assigning (or has assigned in the past) is still the value you expect.

For example in a DNS the name servers are assigned by the Google Cloud DNS service. Checking these values once created is useful to make sure your upstream and/or root DNS masters are in sync. Or if you decide to use the object ID, e.g. the VM unique ID, for billing purposes. If the VM gets deleted and recreated it will have a different ID, despite the name being the same. If that detail is important to you you can verify that the ID of the object did not change by asserting it in the manifest.

Parameters

gcontainer_cluster

A Google Container Engine cluster.

Example

gcontainer_cluster { "mycluster-${cluster_id}":
  ensure             => present,
  initial_node_count => 2,
  master_auth        => {
    username => 'cluster_admin',
    password => 'my-secret-password',
  },
  node_config        => {
    machine_type => 'n1-standard-4', # we want a 4-core machine for our cluster
    disk_size_gb => 500,             # ... and a lot of disk space
  },
  zone               => 'us-central1-a',
  project            => $project, # e.g. 'my-test-project'
  credential         => 'mycred',
}

Reference

gcontainer_cluster { 'id-of-resource':
  addons_config           => {
    horizontal_pod_autoscaling => {
      disabled => boolean,
    },
    http_load_balancing        => {
      disabled => boolean,
    },
  },
  cluster_ipv4_cidr       => string,
  create_time             => time,
  current_master_version  => string,
  current_node_count      => integer,
  current_node_version    => string,
  description             => string,
  endpoint                => string,
  expire_time             => time,
  initial_cluster_version => string,
  initial_node_count      => integer,
  location                => [
    string,
    ...
  ],
  logging_service         => 'logging.googleapis.com' or 'none',
  master_auth             => {
    client_certificate     => string,
    client_key             => string,
    cluster_ca_certificate => string,
    password               => string,
    username               => string,
  },
  monitoring_service      => 'monitoring.googleapis.com' or 'none',
  name                    => string,
  network                 => string,
  node_config             => {
    disk_size_gb    => integer,
    image_type      => string,
    labels          => namevalues,
    local_ssd_count => integer,
    machine_type    => string,
    metadata        => namevalues,
    oauth_scopes    => [
      string,
      ...
    ],
    preemptible     => boolean,
    service_account => string,
    tags            => [
      string,
      ...
    ],
  },
  node_ipv4_cidr_size     => integer,
  services_ipv4_cidr      => string,
  subnetwork              => string,
  zone                    => string,
  project                 => string,
  credential              => reference to gauth_credential,
}
name

The name of this cluster. The name must be unique within this project and zone, and can be up to 40 characters. Must be Lowercase letters, numbers, and hyphens only. Must start with a letter. Must end with a number or a letter.

description

An optional description of this cluster.

initial_node_count

Required. The number of nodes to create in this cluster. You must ensure that your Compute Engine resource quota is sufficient for this number of instances. You must also have available firewall and routes quota. For requests, this field should only be used in lieu of a "nodePool" object, since this configuration (along with the "nodeConfig") will be used to create a "NodePool" object with an auto-generated name. Do not use this and a nodePool at the same time.

node_config

Parameters used in creating the cluster's nodes. For requests, this field should only be used in lieu of a "nodePool" object, since this configuration (along with the "initialNodeCount") will be used to create a "NodePool" object with an auto-generated name. Do not use this and a nodePool at the same time. For responses, this field will be populated with the node configuration of the first node pool. If unspecified, the defaults are used.

node_config/machine_type

The name of a Google Compute Engine machine type (e.g. n1-standard-1). If unspecified, the default machine type is n1-standard-1.

node_config/disk_size_gb

Size of the disk attached to each node, specified in GB. The smallest allowed disk size is 10GB. If unspecified, the default disk size is 100GB.

node_config/oauth_scopes

The set of Google API scopes to be made available on all of the node VMs under the "default" service account. The following scopes are recommended, but not required, and by default are not included: https://www.googleapis.com/auth/compute is required for mounting persistent storage on your nodes. https://www.googleapis.com/auth/devstorage.read_only is required for communicating with gcr.io (the Google Container Registry). If unspecified, no scopes are added, unless Cloud Logging or Cloud Monitoring are enabled, in which case their required scopes will be added.

node_config/service_account

The Google Cloud Platform Service Account to be used by the node VMs. If no Service Account is specified, the "default" service account is used.

node_config/metadata

The metadata key/value pairs assigned to instances in the cluster. Keys must conform to the regexp [a-zA-Z0-9-_]+ and be less than 128 bytes in length. These are reflected as part of a URL in the metadata server. Additionally, to avoid ambiguity, keys must not conflict with any other metadata keys for the project or be one of the four reserved keys: "instance-template", "kube-env", "startup-script", and "user-data" Values are free-form strings, and only have meaning as interpreted by the image running in the instance. The only restriction placed on them is that each value's size must be less than or equal to 32 KB. The total size of all keys and values must be less than 512 KB. An object containing a list of "key": value pairs. Example: { "name": "wrench", "mass": "1.3kg", "count": "3" }.

node_config/image_type

The image type to use for this node. Note that for a given image type, the latest version of it will be used.

node_config/labels

The map of Kubernetes labels (key/value pairs) to be applied to each node. These will added in addition to any default label(s) that Kubernetes may apply to the node. In case of conflict in label keys, the applied set may differ depending on the Kubernetes version -- it's best to assume the behavior is undefined and conflicts should be avoided. For more information, including usage and the valid values, see: http://kubernetes.io/v1.1/docs/user-guide/labels.html An object containing a list of "key": value pairs. Example: { "name": "wrench", "mass": "1.3kg", "count": "3" }.

node_config/local_ssd_count

The number of local SSD disks to be attached to the node. The limit for this value is dependant upon the maximum number of disks available on a machine per zone. See: https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/disks/local-ssd#local_ssd_limits for more information.

node_config/tags

The list of instance tags applied to all nodes. Tags are used to identify valid sources or targets for network firewalls and are specified by the client during cluster or node pool creation. Each tag within the list must comply with RFC1035.

node_config/preemptible

Whether the nodes are created as preemptible VM instances. See: https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/instances/preemptible for more inforamtion about preemptible VM instances.

master_auth

The authentication information for accessing the master endpoint.

master_auth/username

The username to use for HTTP basic authentication to the master endpoint.

master_auth/password

The password to use for HTTP basic authentication to the master endpoint. Because the master endpoint is open to the Internet, you should create a strong password.

master_auth/cluster_ca_certificate

Output only. Base64-encoded public certificate that is the root of trust for the cluster.

master_auth/client_certificate

Output only. Base64-encoded public certificate used by clients to authenticate to the cluster endpoint.

master_auth/client_key

Output only. Base64-encoded private key used by clients to authenticate to the cluster endpoint.

logging_service

The logging service the cluster should use to write logs. Currently available options: logging.googleapis.com - the Google Cloud Logging service. none - no logs will be exported from the cluster. if left as an empty string,logging.googleapis.com will be used.

monitoring_service

The monitoring service the cluster should use to write metrics. Currently available options: monitoring.googleapis.com - the Google Cloud Monitoring service. none - no metrics will be exported from the cluster. if left as an empty string, monitoring.googleapis.com will be used.

network

The name of the Google Compute Engine network to which the cluster is connected. If left unspecified, the default network will be used. To ensure it exists and it is operations, configure the network using 'gcompute_network' resource.

cluster_ipv4_cidr

The IP address range of the container pods in this cluster, in CIDR notation (e.g. 10.96.0.0/14). Leave blank to have one automatically chosen or specify a /14 block in 10.0.0.0/8.

addons_config

Configurations for the various addons available to run in the cluster.

addons_config/http_load_balancing

Configuration for the HTTP (L7) load balancing controller addon, which makes it easy to set up HTTP load balancers for services in a cluster.

addons_config/http_load_balancing/disabled

Whether the HTTP Load Balancing controller is enabled in the cluster. When enabled, it runs a small pod in the cluster that manages the load balancers.

addons_config/horizontal_pod_autoscaling

Configuration for the horizontal pod autoscaling feature, which increases or decreases the number of replica pods a replication controller has based on the resource usage of the existing pods.

addons_config/horizontal_pod_autoscaling/disabled

Whether the Horizontal Pod Autoscaling feature is enabled in the cluster. When enabled, it ensures that a Heapster pod is running in the cluster, which is also used by the Cloud Monitoring service.

subnetwork

The name of the Google Compute Engine subnetwork to which the cluster is connected.

location

The list of Google Compute Engine locations in which the cluster's nodes should be located.

zone

Required. The zone where the cluster is deployed

Output-only properties
  • endpoint: Output only. The IP address of this cluster's master endpoint. The endpoint can be accessed from the internet at https://username:password@endpoint/ See the masterAuth property of this resource for username and password information.

  • initial_cluster_version: Output only. The software version of the master endpoint and kubelets used in the cluster when it was first created. The version can be upgraded over time.

  • current_master_version: Output only. The current software version of the master endpoint.

  • current_node_version: Output only. The current version of the node software components. If they are currently at multiple versions because they're in the process of being upgraded, this reflects the minimum version of all nodes.

  • create_time: Output only. The time the cluster was created, in RFC3339 text format.

  • node_ipv4_cidr_size: Output only. The size of the address space on each node for hosting containers. This is provisioned from within the container_ipv4_cidr range.

  • services_ipv4_cidr: Output only. The IP address range of the Kubernetes services in this cluster, in CIDR notation (e.g. 1.2.3.4/29). Service addresses are typically put in the last /16 from the container CIDR.

  • current_node_count: Output only. The number of nodes currently in the cluster.

  • expire_time: Output only. The time the cluster will be automatically deleted in RFC3339 text format.

gcontainer_node_pool

NodePool contains the name and configuration for a cluster's node pool. Node pools are a set of nodes (i.e. VM's), with a common configuration and specification, under the control of the cluster master. They may have a set of Kubernetes labels applied to them, which may be used to reference them during pod scheduling. They may also be resized up or down, to accommodate the workload.

Example

# A node pool requires a container to exist. Please ensure its presence with:
# gcontainer_cluster { ..... }
gcontainer_node_pool { 'web-servers':
  ensure             => present,
  initial_node_count => 4,
  cluster            => "mycluster-${cluster_id}",
  zone               => 'us-central1-a',
  project            => $project, # e.g. 'my-test-project'
  credential         => 'mycred',
}

Reference

gcontainer_node_pool { 'id-of-resource':
  autoscaling        => {
    enabled        => boolean,
    max_node_count => integer,
    min_node_count => integer,
  },
  cluster            => reference to gcontainer_cluster,
  config             => {
    disk_size_gb    => integer,
    image_type      => string,
    labels          => namevalues,
    local_ssd_count => integer,
    machine_type    => string,
    metadata        => namevalues,
    oauth_scopes    => [
      string,
      ...
    ],
    preemptible     => boolean,
    service_account => string,
    tags            => [
      string,
      ...
    ],
  },
  initial_node_count => integer,
  management         => {
    auto_repair     => boolean,
    auto_upgrade    => boolean,
    upgrade_options => {
      auto_upgrade_start_time => time,
      description             => string,
    },
  },
  name               => string,
  version            => string,
  zone               => string,
  project            => string,
  credential         => reference to gauth_credential,
}
name

The name of the node pool.

config

The node configuration of the pool.

config/machine_type

The name of a Google Compute Engine machine type (e.g. n1-standard-1). If unspecified, the default machine type is n1-standard-1.

config/disk_size_gb

Size of the disk attached to each node, specified in GB. The smallest allowed disk size is 10GB. If unspecified, the default disk size is 100GB.

config/oauth_scopes

The set of Google API scopes to be made available on all of the node VMs under the "default" service account. The following scopes are recommended, but not required, and by default are not included: https://www.googleapis.com/auth/compute is required for mounting persistent storage on your nodes. https://www.googleapis.com/auth/devstorage.read_only is required for communicating with gcr.io (the Google Container Registry). If unspecified, no scopes are added, unless Cloud Logging or Cloud Monitoring are enabled, in which case their required scopes will be added.

config/service_account

The Google Cloud Platform Service Account to be used by the node VMs. If no Service Account is specified, the "default" service account is used.

config/metadata

The metadata key/value pairs assigned to instances in the cluster. Keys must conform to the regexp [a-zA-Z0-9-_]+ and be less than 128 bytes in length. These are reflected as part of a URL in the metadata server. Additionally, to avoid ambiguity, keys must not conflict with any other metadata keys for the project or be one of the four reserved keys: "instance-template", "kube-env", "startup-script", and "user-data" Values are free-form strings, and only have meaning as interpreted by the image running in the instance. The only restriction placed on them is that each value's size must be less than or equal to 32 KB. The total size of all keys and values must be less than 512 KB. An object containing a list of "key": value pairs. Example: { "name": "wrench", "mass": "1.3kg", "count": "3" }.

config/image_type

The image type to use for this node. Note that for a given image type, the latest version of it will be used.

config/labels

The map of Kubernetes labels (key/value pairs) to be applied to each node. These will added in addition to any default label(s) that Kubernetes may apply to the node. In case of conflict in label keys, the applied set may differ depending on the Kubernetes version -- it's best to assume the behavior is undefined and conflicts should be avoided. For more information, including usage and the valid values, see: http://kubernetes.io/v1.1/docs/user-guide/labels.html An object containing a list of "key": value pairs. Example: { "name": "wrench", "mass": "1.3kg", "count": "3" }.

config/local_ssd_count

The number of local SSD disks to be attached to the node. The limit for this value is dependant upon the maximum number of disks available on a machine per zone. See: https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/disks/local-ssd#local_ssd_limits for more information.

config/tags

The list of instance tags applied to all nodes. Tags are used to identify valid sources or targets for network firewalls and are specified by the client during cluster or node pool creation. Each tag within the list must comply with RFC1035.

config/preemptible

Whether the nodes are created as preemptible VM instances. See: https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/instances/preemptible for more inforamtion about preemptible VM instances.

initial_node_count

Required. The initial node count for the pool. You must ensure that your Compute Engine resource quota is sufficient for this number of instances. You must also have available firewall and routes quota.

autoscaling

Autoscaler configuration for this NodePool. Autoscaler is enabled only if a valid configuration is present.

autoscaling/enabled

Is autoscaling enabled for this node pool.

autoscaling/min_node_count

Minimum number of nodes in the NodePool. Must be >= 1 and <= maxNodeCount.

autoscaling/max_node_count

Maximum number of nodes in the NodePool. Must be >= minNodeCount. There has to enough quota to scale up the cluster.

management

Management configuration for this NodePool.

management/auto_upgrade

A flag that specifies whether node auto-upgrade is enabled for the node pool. If enabled, node auto-upgrade helps keep the nodes in your node pool up to date with the latest release version of Kubernetes.

management/auto_repair

A flag that specifies whether the node auto-repair is enabled for the node pool. If enabled, the nodes in this node pool will be monitored and, if they fail health checks too many times, an automatic repair action will be triggered.

management/upgrade_options

Specifies the Auto Upgrade knobs for the node pool.

management/upgrade_options/auto_upgrade_start_time

Output only. This field is set when upgrades are about to commence with the approximate start time for the upgrades, in RFC3339 text format.

management/upgrade_options/description

Output only. This field is set when upgrades are about to commence with the description of the upgrade.

cluster

Required. The cluster this node pool belongs to.

zone

Required. The zone where the node pool is deployed

Output-only properties
  • version: Output only. The version of the Kubernetes of this node.

gcontainer_kube_config

Generates a compatible Kuberenetes '.kube/config' file

Example

# ~/.kube/config is used by Kubernetes client (kubectl)
gcontainer_kube_config { '/home/nelsona/.kube/config':
  ensure     => present,
  context    => "gke-mycluster-${cluster_id}",
  cluster    => "mycluster-${cluster_id}",
  zone       => 'us-central1-a',
  project    => $project, # e.g. 'my-test-project'
  credential => 'mycred',
}

# A file named ~/.puppetlabs/etc/puppet/kubernetes is used by the
# garethr-kubernetes module.
gcontainer_kube_config { '/home/nelsona/.puppetlabs/etc/puppet/kubernetes.conf':
  ensure     => present,
  cluster    => "mycluster-${cluster_id}",
  zone       => 'us-central1-a',
  project    => $project, # e.g. 'my-test-project'
  credential => 'mycred',
}

Reference

gcontainer_kube_config { 'id-of-resource':
  cluster    => reference to gcontainer_cluster,
  context    => string,
  name       => string,
  zone       => string,
  project    => string,
  credential => reference to gauth_credential,
}
name

Required. The config file kubectl settings will be written to.

cluster

Required. A reference to Cluster resource

zone

Required. The zone where the container is deployed

context

Required. The name of the context. Defaults to cluster name.

Bolt Tasks

tasks/resize.rb

Resizes a cluster container node pool

This task takes inputs as JSON from standard input.

Arguments
  • name: The name of the node pool to resize

  • cluster: The name of the cluster that hosts the node pool

  • size: The new size of the container (in nodes)

  • zone: The zone that hosts the container

  • project: the project name where the cluster is hosted

  • credential: Path to a service account credentials file

Limitations

This module has been tested on:

  • RedHat 6, 7
  • CentOS 6, 7
  • Debian 7, 8
  • Ubuntu 12.04, 14.04, 16.04, 16.10
  • SLES 11-sp4, 12-sp2
  • openSUSE 13
  • Windows Server 2008 R2, 2012 R2, 2012 R2 Core, 2016 R2, 2016 R2 Core

Testing on other platforms has been minimal and cannot be guaranteed.

Development

Automatically Generated Files

Some files in this package are automatically generated by Magic Modules.

We use a code compiler to produce this module in order to avoid repetitive tasks and improve code quality. This means all Google Cloud Platform Puppet modules use the same underlying authentication, logic, test generation, style checks, etc.

Learn more about the way to change autogenerated files by reading the CONTRIBUTING.md file.

Contributing

Contributions to this library are always welcome and highly encouraged.

See CONTRIBUTING.md for more information on how to get started.

Running tests

This project contains tests for rspec, rspec-puppet and rubocop to verify functionality. For detailed information on using these tools, please see their respective documentation.

Testing quickstart: Ruby > 2.0.0

gem install bundler
bundle install
bundle exec rspec
bundle exec rubocop

Debugging Tests

In case you need to debug tests in this module you can set the following variables to increase verbose output:

Variable Side Effect
PUPPET_HTTP_VERBOSE=1 Prints network access information by Puppet provier.
PUPPET_HTTP_DEBUG=1 Prints the payload of network calls being made.
GOOGLE_HTTP_VERBOSE=1 Prints debug related to the network calls being made.
GOOGLE_HTTP_DEBUG=1 Prints the payload of network calls being made.

During test runs (using rspec) you can also set:

Variable Side Effect
RSPEC_DEBUG=1 Prints debug related to the tests being run.
RSPEC_HTTP_VERBOSE=1 Prints network expectations and access.