369 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
369 lines
14 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: The Cult of Kubernetes
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date: 2019-09-07
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series: howto
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tags:
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- kubernetes
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- digitalocean
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- githubactions
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---
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# The Cult of Kubernetes
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or: How I got my blog onto it with autodeployment via GitHub Actions.
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The world was once a simple place. Things used to make sense, or at least there
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weren't so many layers that it became difficult to tell what the hell is going
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on.
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Then complexity happened. This is a tale of how I literally recreated this meme:
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<center><blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Deployed my blog on Kubernetes <a href="https://t.co/XHXWLrmYO4">pic.twitter.com/XHXWLrmYO4</a></p>— DevOps Thought Liker (@dexhorthy) <a href="https://twitter.com/dexhorthy/status/856639005462417409?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 24, 2017</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script></center>
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This is how I deployed my blog (the one you are reading right now) to Kubernetes.
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## The Old State of the World
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Before I deployed my blog to Kubernetes, I used [Dokku][dokku], as I had been
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for years. Dokku is great. It emulates most of the Heroku "git push; don't care"
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workflow, but on your own server that you can self-manage.
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This is a blessing and a curse.
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The real advantage of managed services like Heroku is that you literally just
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_HAND OFF_ operations to Heroku's team. This is not the case with Dokku. Unless
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you pay someone a lot of money, you are going to have to manage the server
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yourself. My dokku server was unmanaged, and I run _many_ apps on it (this
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listing was taken after I started to move apps over):
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```
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=====> My Apps
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bsnk
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cinemaquestria
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fordaplot-backup
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graphviz.christine.website
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identicond
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ilo-kesi
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johaus
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maison
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olin
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printerfacts
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since
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tulpaforce.tk
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tulpanomicon
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```
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This is enough apps (plus 5 more that I've already migrated) that it really
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doesn't make sense paying for something like Heroku; nor does it really make
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sense to use the free tier either.
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So, I decided that it was time for me to properly learn how to Kubernetes, and I
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set off to create a cluster via [DigitalOcean managed Kubernetes][dok8s].
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## The Cluster
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I decided it would be a good idea to create my cluster using
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[Terraform][terraform], mostly because I wanted to learn how to use it better.
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I use Terraform at work, so I figured this would also be a way to level up my
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skills in a mostly sane environment.
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<center><blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Terraform is suffering as a service</p>— Cadey Ratio 🌐 (@theprincessxena) <a href="https://twitter.com/theprincessxena/status/1165390942679048192?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 24, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script></center>
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I have been creating and playing with a small Terraform wrapper tool called
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[dyson][dyson]. This tool is probably overly simplistic and is written in Nim.
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With the config in `~/.config/dyson/dyson.ini`, I can simplify my Terraform
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usage by moving my secrets _out of_ the Terraform code directly. I also avoid
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having my API tokens exposed in my shell to avoid accidental exposure of the
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secrets.
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Dyson is very simple to use:
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```console
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$ dyson
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Usage:
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dyson {SUBCMD} [sub-command options & parameters]
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where {SUBCMD} is one of:
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help print comprehensive or per-cmd help
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apply apply Terraform code to production
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destroy destroy resources managed by Terraform
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env dump envvars
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init init Terraform
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manifest generate a somewhat sane manifest for a kubernetes app based on the arguments.
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plan plan a future Terraform run
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slug2docker converts a heroku/dokku slug to a docker image
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dyson {-h|--help} or with no args at all prints this message.
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dyson --help-syntax gives general cligen syntax help.
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Run "dyson {help SUBCMD|SUBCMD --help}" to see help for just SUBCMD.
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Run "dyson help" to get *comprehensive* help.
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```
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So I wrote up my config:
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```
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# main.tf
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provider "digitalocean" {}
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resource "digitalocean_kubernetes_cluster" "main" {
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name = "kubermemes"
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region = "${var.region}"
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version = "${var.kubernetes_version}"
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node_pool {
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name = "worker-pool"
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size = "${var.node_size}"
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node_count = 2
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}
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}
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```
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```
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# variables.tf
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variable "region" {
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type = "string"
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default = "nyc3"
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}
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variable "kubernetes_version" {
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type = "string"
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default = "1.15.3-do.1"
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}
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variable "node_size" {
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type = "string"
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default = "s-1vcpu-2gb"
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}
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```
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and ran it:
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```console
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$ dyson plan
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<... many lines of plan output ...>
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$ dyson apply
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<... many lines of apply output ...>
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```
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Then I had a working but mostly unconfigured Kubernetes cluster.
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## Configuration
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This is where things started to go downhill. I wanted to do a few things with
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this cluster so I could consider it "ready" for me to use for deploying applications
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to.
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I wanted to do the following:
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- setup [helm][helm] to install packages for things like DNS management and HTTP/HTTPS ingress
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- setup [automatic certificate management][certmanager] with [Let's Encrypt][letsencrypt]
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- setup HTTP/HTTPS request ingress with [nginx-ingress][nginxingress] (which uses [nginx](https://www.nginx.com/))
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- setup [automatic DNS management][autodns] because the external IP addresses of Kubernetes nodes can and will change
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After a lot of trial, error, pain, suffering and the like, I created
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[this script][setupdotsh] which I am not pasting here. Look at it if you want to
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get a streamlined overview of how to set these things up.
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Now that all of this is set up, I can deploy an [example app][exanple] with a
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manifest that looks something like [this][ingresstestdotyaml]:
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```yaml
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: Service
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metadata:
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name: hello-kubernetes-first
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annotations:
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external-dns.alpha.kubernetes.io/hostname: exanple.within.website
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external-dns.alpha.kubernetes.io/ttl: "120" #optional
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external-dns.alpha.kubernetes.io/cloudflare-proxied: "false"
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spec:
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type: ClusterIP
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ports:
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- port: 80
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targetPort: 8080
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selector:
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app: hello-kubernetes-first
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---
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apiVersion: apps/v1
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kind: Deployment
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metadata:
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name: hello-kubernetes-first
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spec:
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replicas: 1
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selector:
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matchLabels:
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app: hello-kubernetes-first
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template:
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metadata:
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labels:
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app: hello-kubernetes-first
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spec:
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containers:
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- name: hello-kubernetes
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image: paulbouwer/hello-kubernetes:1.5
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ports:
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- containerPort: 8080
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env:
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- name: MESSAGE
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value: Henlo this are an exanple deployment
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---
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apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
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kind: Ingress
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metadata:
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name: hello-kubernetes-ingress
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annotations:
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kubernetes.io/ingress.class: nginx
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certmanager.k8s.io/cluster-issuer: "letsencrypt-prod"
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spec:
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tls:
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- hosts:
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- exanple.within.website
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secretName: prod-certs
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rules:
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- host: exanple.within.website
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http:
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paths:
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- backend:
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serviceName: hello-kubernetes-first
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servicePort: 80
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```
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<center><blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Nope, I was wrong, Kubernetes is the real suffering as a service</p>— Cadey Ratio 🌐 (@theprincessxena) <a href="https://twitter.com/theprincessxena/status/1169997202971930624?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 6, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script></center>
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It was about this time when I wondered if I was making a mistake moving off of
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Dokku. Dokku really does a lot to abstract almost everything involved with nginx
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away from you, and it _really shows_.
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However, as a side effect of everything being so declarative and Kubernetes really
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not assuming anything, you have _a lot_ more freedom to do basically anything
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you want. You don't have to have specially magic names for tasks like `web` or
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`worker` like you do in Heroku/Dokku. You just have a deployment that belongs to
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an "app" that just so happens to expose a TCP port that just so happens to have
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a correlating ingress associated with it.
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Lucky for me, most of the apps I write fit into that general format, and the ones
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that don't can mostly use the same format without the ingress.
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So I [templated][deploymenttemplateyaml] that sucker as a subcommand in dyson.
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This lets me do commands like [this][exampledysonmanifestcommand]:
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```console
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$ dyson manifest \
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--name=hlang \
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--domain=h.christine.website \
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--dockerImage=docker.pkg.github.com/xe/x/h:v1.1.8 \
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--containerPort=5000 \
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--replicas=1 \
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--useProdLE=true | kubectl apply -f-
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```
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And the service gets shunted into the cloud without any extra effort on my part.
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This also automatically sets up Let's Encrypt, DNS and other things that were
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manual in my Dokku setup. This saves me time for when I want to go add services
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in the future. All I have to do is create a docker image somehow, identify what
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port should be exposed, give it a domain name and number of replicas and just
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send it on its merry way.
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## GitHub Actions
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This does however mean that deployment is no longer as simple as
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"git push; don't care". This is where [GitHub Actions][actions] come into play.
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They claimed to have the ability to run full end-to-end CI/CD on my applications.
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I have been using them for a while for [CI on my website][sitegoci] and have
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been pleased with them, so I decided to give it a try and set up continuous
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deployment with them.
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As [the commit log for the deployment manifest can tell][kubernetescddotyml],
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this took a lot of trial and error. One of the main sources of problems here
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was that GitHub Actions had recently had _a lot_ of changes made to
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configuration and usage as compared to when it was in private beta. This
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included changing the configuration schema from [HCL][hcl] to [YAML][yaml].
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Of course, all of the documentation (outside of GitHub's
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[quite excellent documentation][githubactionsdocs]) was out of date and wrong.
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I tried following a tutorial by [DigitalOcean themselves][dotutorialkube] on
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how to do this exact thing I wanted to do, but it referenced the old HCL syntax
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for GitHub Actions and did not work. To make things worse, examples
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[in the marketplace READMEs][marketplacereadmeexample] simply DID NOT WORK because
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they were written for the old GitHub Actions syntax.
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This was frustrating to say the least.
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After trying to make them work anyways with a combination of the "Use Latest
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Version" button in the marketplace, prayer and gratuitous use of the `with.args`
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field in steps I gave up and decided to manually download the tools I needed
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from their upstream providers and execute them by hand.
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This is how I ended up with [this monstrosity][monster]:
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```yaml
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- name: Configure/Deploy/Verify Kubernetes
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run: |
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curl -L https://github.com/digitalocean/doctl/releases/download/v1.30.0/doctl-1.30.0-linux-amd64.tar.gz | tar xz
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./doctl auth init -t $DIGITALOCEAN_ACCESS_TOKEN
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./doctl kubernetes cluster kubeconfig show kubermemes > .kubeconfig
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curl -LO https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/`curl -s https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/stable.txt`/bin/linux/amd64/kubectl
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chmod +x kubectl
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./kubectl --kubeconfig .kubeconfig apply -n apps -f deploy.yml
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sleep 2
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./kubectl --kubeconfig .kubeconfig rollout -n apps status deployment/christinewebsite
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env:
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DIGITALOCEAN_ACCESS_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN }}
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```
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~~I am almost _certain_ that I am doing it wrong here, I don't know how robust this
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is and I'm very sure that this can and should be done another way; but this is
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the only thing I could get working (for some definition of "working").~~
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EDIT: it got fixed, see below
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<center><blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="hu" dir="ltr">kubernetes is a cult</p>— Andrew Kelley (@andy_kelley) <a href="https://twitter.com/andy_kelley/status/1169999209438859264?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">September 6, 2019</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script></center>
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---
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Now when I git push things to the master branch of my blog repo, it will
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automatically get deployed to my Kubernetes cluster.
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~~If you work at DigitalOcean and are reading this post. Please get someone to
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update [this tutorial][dotutorialkube] and the README of [this repo][marketplacereadmeexample].
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The examples listed _DO NOT WORK_ for me because I was not in the private beta
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of GitHub Actions. It would also be nice if you had better documentation on how
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to use [your premade action][doctlgithubaction] for usecases like mine. I just
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wanted to download the kubernetes configuration file and run apply against a yaml
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file.~~
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EDIT: The above complaint has been fixed! See [here](https://github.com/Xe/site/commit/a9329bfbeffc4a290876a56795c23286c537ca94)
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for the simpler way of doing things.
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Thanks for reading, I hope this was entertaining. Be well.
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[dokku]: http://dokku.viewdocs.io/dokku/
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[dok8s]: https://www.digitalocean.com/products/kubernetes/
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[terraform]: https://www.terraform.io
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[dyson]: https://github.com/Xe/within-terraform/tree/master/dyson
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[helm]: https://helm.sh
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[certmanager]: https://docs.cert-manager.io/en/latest/
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[letsencrypt]: https://letsencrypt.org
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[nginxingress]: https://kubernetes.github.io/ingress-nginx/
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[autodns]: https://github.com/kubernetes-incubator/external-dns
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[setupdotsh]: https://github.com/Xe/within-terraform/blob/master/do/setup.sh
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[exanple]: https://exanple.within.website
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[ingresstestdotyaml]: https://github.com/Xe/within-terraform/blob/master/do/ingress_test.yaml
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[deploymenttemplateyaml]: https://github.com/Xe/within-terraform/blob/master/dyson/src/dysonPkg/deployment_with_ingress.yaml
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[exampledysonmanifestcommand]: https://github.com/Xe/within-terraform/blob/master/kube_manifests/h.sh
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[actions]: https://github.com/features/actions
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[sitegoci]: https://github.com/Xe/site/blob/master/.github/workflows/go.yml
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[githubactionsdocs]: https://help.github.com/en/articles/about-github-actions
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[kubernetescddotyml]: https://github.com/Xe/site/commits/master/.github/workflows/kubernetes-cd.yml
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[hcl]: https://github.com/hashicorp/hcl
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[yaml]: https://yaml.org
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[marketplacereadmeexample]: https://github.com/marketplace/actions/github-action-for-digitalocean-doctl
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[monster]: https://github.com/Xe/site/blob/master/.github/workflows/kubernetes-cd.yml#L53-L65
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[dotutorialkube]: https://blog.digitalocean.com/how-to-deploy-to-digitalocean-kubernetes-with-github-actions/
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[doctlgithubaction]: https://github.com/digitalocean/action-doctl
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