Black lives matter.
We stand in solidarity with the Black community.
Racism is unacceptable.
It conflicts with the core values of the Kubernetes project and our community does not tolerate it.
We stand in solidarity with the Black community.
Racism is unacceptable.
It conflicts with the core values of the Kubernetes project and our community does not tolerate it.
Editor's note: today's post is by Charlie Drage, Software Engineer at Red Hat giving an update about the Kubernetes project Kompose.
I'm pleased to announce that Kompose, a conversion tool for developers to transition Docker Compose applications to Kubernetes, has graduated from the Kubernetes Incubator to become an official part of the project.
Since our first commit on June 27, 2016, Kompose has achieved 13 releases over 851 commits, gaining 21 contributors since the inception of the project. Our work started at Skippbox (now part of Bitnami) and grew through contributions from Google and Red Hat.
The Kubernetes Incubator allowed contributors to get to know each other across companies, as well as collaborate effectively under guidance from Kubernetes contributors and maintainers. Our incubation led to the development and release of a new and useful tool for the Kubernetes ecosystem.
We’ve created a reliable, scalable Kubernetes environment from an initial Docker Compose file. We worked hard to convert as many keys as possible to their Kubernetes equivalent. Running a single command gets you up and running on Kubernetes: kompose up.
We couldn’t have done it without feedback and contributions from the community!
If you haven’t yet tried Kompose on GitHub check it out!
Kubernetes guestbook
The go-to example for Kubernetes is the famous guestbook, which we use as a base for conversion.
Here is an example from the official kompose.io site, starting with a simple Docker Compose file).
First, we’ll retrieve the file:
$ wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/kompose/master/examples/docker-compose.yaml
You can test it out by first deploying to Docker Compose:
$ docker-compose up -d
Creating network "examples\_default" with the default driver
Creating examples\_redis-slave\_1
Creating examples\_frontend\_1
Creating examples\_redis-master\_1
And when you’re ready to deploy to Kubernetes:
$ kompose up
We are going to create Kubernetes Deployments, Services and PersistentVolumeClaims for your Dockerized application.
If you need different kind of resources, use the kompose convert and kubectl create -f commands instead.
INFO Successfully created Service: redis
INFO Successfully created Service: web
INFO Successfully created Deployment: redis
INFO Successfully created Deployment: web
Your application has been deployed to Kubernetes. You can run kubectl get deployment,svc,pods,pvc for details
Check out other examples of what Kompose can do.
Converting to alternative Kubernetes controllers
Kompose can also convert to specific Kubernetes controllers with the use of flags:
$ kompose convert --help
Usage:
kompose convert [file] [flags]
Kubernetes Flags:
--daemon-set Generate a Kubernetes daemonset object
-d, --deployment Generate a Kubernetes deployment object
-c, --chart Create a Helm chart for converted objects
--replication-controller Generate a Kubernetes replication controller object
…
For example, let’s convert our guestbook example to a DaemonSet:
$ kompose convert --daemon-set
INFO Kubernetes file "frontend-service.yaml" created
INFO Kubernetes file "redis-master-service.yaml" created
INFO Kubernetes file "redis-slave-service.yaml" created
INFO Kubernetes file "frontend-daemonset.yaml" created
INFO Kubernetes file "redis-master-daemonset.yaml" created
INFO Kubernetes file "redis-slave-daemonset.yaml" created
Key Kompose 1.0 features
With our graduation, comes the release of Kompose 1.0.0, here’s what’s new:
docker-compose.yaml
file, Kompose will automatically build and push the image to the respective Docker repository for Kubernetes to consume.Bug Fixes: In every release we fix any bugs related to edge-cases when converting. This release fixes issues relating to converting volumes with ‘./’ in the target name.
What’s ahead?
As we continue development, we will strive to convert as many Docker Compose keys as possible for all future and current Docker Compose releases, converting each one to their Kubernetes equivalent. All future releases will be backwards-compatible.
--Charlie Drage, Software Engineer, Red Hat