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seaweedfs-operator.iml |
README.md
SeaweedFS Operator
This Kubernetes Operator is made to easily deploy SeaweedFS onto your Kubernetes-Cluster.
The difference to seaweedfs-csi-driver is that the infrastructure (SeaweedFS) itself runs on Kubernetes as well (Master, Filer, Volume-Servers) and can as such easily scale with it as you need. It is also by far more resilent to failures then a simple systemD service in regards to handling crashing services or accidental deletes.
By using make deploy
it will deploy a Resource of type 'Seaweed' onto your current kubectl $KUBECONFIG target (the operator itself) which by default will do nothing unless you configurate it (see examples in config/samples/).
Goals:
- Automatically deploy and manage a SeaweedFS cluster.
- Ability to be managed by other Operators.
- Compability with seaweedfs-csi-driver
- Auto rolling upgrade and restart.
- Ingress for volume server, filer and S3, to support HDFS, REST filer, S3 API and cross-cluster replication.
- Support all major cloud Kubernetes: AWS, Google, Azure.
- Scheduled backup to cloud storage: S3, Google Cloud Storage , Azure.
- Put warm data to cloud storage tier: S3, Google Cloud Storage , Azure.
- Grafana dashboard.
Installation
This operator uses kustomize
to deploy. The installation process will install one for you if you do not have one.
By default, the defaulting and validation webhooks are disabled. We strongly recommend that the webhooks be enabled.
First clone the repository:
$ git clone https://github.com/seaweedfs/seaweedfs-operator --depth=1
To deploy the operator with webhooks enabled, make sure you have installed the cert-manager
(Installation docs: https://cert-manager.io/docs/installation/) in your cluster, then follow the instructions in the config/default/kustomization.yaml
file to uncomment the components you need.
Lastly, change the value of ENABLE_WEBHOOKS
to "true"
in config/manager/manager.yaml
Afterwards fire up:
$ make install
Then run the command to deploy the operator into your cluster:
$ make deploy
Verify if it was correctly deployed with:
$ kubectl get Seaweed --all-namespaces
Which should return:
NAMESPACE NAME AGE
seaweed seaweed 1h
See the next section for example usage
Configuration Examples
- Please send us your use-cases / example configs ... this is currently empty (needs to be written)
- For now see: https://github.com/seaweedfs/seaweedfs-operator/blob/readme_adjustments/config/samples/seaweed_v1_seaweed.yaml
Maintenance and Uninstallation
- TBD
Development
Follow the instructions in https://sdk.operatorframework.io/docs/building-operators/golang/quickstart/
$ git clone https://github.com/seaweedfs/seaweedfs-operator
$ cd seaweedfs-operator
# register the CRD with the Kubernetes
$ make deploy
# build the operator image
$ make docker-build
# load the image into Kind cluster
$ kind load docker-image chrislusf/seaweedfs-operator:v0.0.1
# From another terminal in the same directory
$ kubectl apply -f config/samples/seaweed_v1_seaweed.yaml
Update the operator
# delete the existing operator
$ kubectl delete namespace seaweedfs-operator-system
# rebuild the operator image
$ make docker-build
# load the image into Kind cluster
$ kind load docker-image chrislusf/seaweedfs-operator:v0.0.1
# register the CRD with the Kubernetes
$ make deploy
develop outside of k8s
$ git clone https://github.com/seaweedfs/seaweedfs-operator
$ cd seaweedfs-operator
# register the CRD with the Kubernetes
$ make install
# run the operator locally outside the Kubernetes cluster
$ make run ENABLE_WEBHOOKS=false
# From another terminal in the same directory
$ kubectl apply -f config/samples/seaweed_v1_seaweed.yaml