Deprecated
Use of
Federation v1
is strongly discouraged.Federation V1
never achieved GA status and is no longer under active development. Documentation is for historical purposes only.For more information, see the intended replacement, Kubernetes Federation v2.
This page shows how to enforce policy-based placement decisions over Federated resources using an external policy engine.
You need to have a running Kubernetes cluster (which is referenced as host cluster). Please see one of the getting started guides for installation instructions for your platform.
The Federation control plane can be deployed using kubefed init
.
After deploying the Federation control plane, you must configure an Admission Controller in the Federation API server that enforces placement decisions received from the external policy engine.
kubectl create -f scheduling-policy-admission.yaml
Shown below is an example ConfigMap for the Admission Controller:
federation/scheduling-policy-admission.yaml
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The ConfigMap contains three files:
config.yml
specifies the location of the SchedulingPolicy
Admission
Controller config file.scheduling-policy-config.yml
specifies the location of the kubeconfig file
required to contact the external policy engine. This file can also include a
retryBackoff
value that controls the initial retry backoff delay in
milliseconds.opa-kubeconfig
is a standard kubeconfig containing the URL and credentials
needed to contact the external policy engine.Edit the Federation API server deployment to enable the SchedulingPolicy
Admission Controller.
kubectl -n federation-system edit deployment federation-apiserver
Update the Federation API server command line arguments to enable the Admission
Controller and mount the ConfigMap into the container. If there’s an existing
--enable-admission-plugins
flag, append ,SchedulingPolicy
instead of adding
another line.
--enable-admission-plugins=SchedulingPolicy
--admission-control-config-file=/etc/kubernetes/admission/config.yml
Add the following volume to the Federation API server pod:
- name: admission-config
configMap:
name: admission
Add the following volume mount the Federation API server apiserver
container:
volumeMounts:
- name: admission-config
mountPath: /etc/kubernetes/admission
The Open Policy Agent (OPA) is an open source, general-purpose policy engine that you can use to enforce policy-based placement decisions in the Federation control plane.
Create a Service in the host cluster to contact the external policy engine:
kubectl create -f policy-engine-service.yaml
Shown below is an example Service for OPA.
federation/policy-engine-service.yaml
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Create a Deployment in the host cluster with the Federation control plane:
kubectl create -f policy-engine-deployment.yaml
Shown below is an example Deployment for OPA.
federation/policy-engine-deployment.yaml
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The external policy engine will discover placement policies created in the
kube-federation-scheduling-policy
namespace in the Federation API server.
Create the namespace if it does not already exist:
kubectl --context=federation create namespace kube-federation-scheduling-policy
Configure a sample policy to test the external policy engine:
policy.rego docs/tasks/federation
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Shown below is the command to create the sample policy:
kubectl --context=federation -n kube-federation-scheduling-policy create configmap scheduling-policy --from-file=policy.rego
This sample policy illustrates a few key ideas:
requires-pci
annotation) to
avoid duplicating logic in manifests.Annotate one of the clusters to indicate that it is PCI certified.
kubectl --context=federation annotate clusters cluster-name-1 pci-certified=true
Deploy a Federated ReplicaSet to test the placement policy.
federation/replicaset-example-policy.yaml
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Shown below is the command to deploy a ReplicaSet that does match the policy.
kubectl --context=federation create -f replicaset-example-policy.yaml
Inspect the ReplicaSet to confirm the appropriate annotations have been applied:
kubectl --context=federation get rs nginx-pci -o jsonpath='{.metadata.annotations}'
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