I have a configmap.yaml file as below :
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: abc
namespace: monitoring
labels:
app: abc
version: 0.17.0
data:
application.yml: |-
myjava:
security:
enabled: true
abc:
server:
access-log:
enabled: ${myvar}. ## this is not working
"myvar" value is available in pod as shell environment variable from secretkeyref field in deployment file.
Now I want to replace myvar shell environment variable in configmap above i.e before application.yml file is available in pod it should have replaced myvar value. which is not working i tried ${myvar} and $(myvar) and "#{ENV['myvar']}"
Is that possible in kubernetes configmap to reference with in data section pod's environment variable if yes how or should i need to write a script to replace with sed -i application.yml etc.
Is that possible in kubernetes configmap to reference with in data section pod's environment variable
That's not possible. A ConfigMap is not associated with a particular pod, so there's no way to perform the sort of variable substitution you're asking about. You would need to implement this logic inside your containers (fetch the ConfigMap, perform variable substitution yourself, then consume the data).
I have a simple Helm chart that consists of a Deployment and a ConfigMap. The ConfigMap looks like this:
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: {{ .Values.APP_NAMESPACE }}-config
data:
LOGGED_OUT_MSG: "{{ .Values.LOGGED_OUT_MSG }}"
The ConfigMap is mounted as an envfrom in the Pod template:
...
envFrom:
- configMapRef:
name: {{ .Values.APP_NAMESPACE }}-config
For one of my non-production environments I have the file override.yaml:
# override.yaml
LOGGED_OUT_MSG: "You are logged out (DEV)"
I then do a Helm upgrade like this:
$ helm upgrade -f override.yaml mychart .
What I assumed would happen was that if I make a change to override.yaml and run the above helm upgrade command that Helm would notice that the value of LOGGED_OUT_MSG has changed and do a rolling restart of my Pods. However, that does not happen. Instead, I have to manually delete the Pods so that the change comes through.
Is there a way to run helm upgrade so that changes in override.yaml trigger Helm to do a rolling restart of the Pods?
There is no way to do it by default AFAIK.
You are looking for reloader by stakater.
"Reloader can watch changes in ConfigMap and Secret and do rolling upgrades on Pods with their associated DeploymentConfigs, Deployments, Daemonsets and Statefulsets."
This will require installing the tool in your cluster and adding an annotation to your deployment.
https://github.com/stakater/Reloader
i have a sample nodejs application which uses an envVar environment variable, i have deployed this on kubernetes cluster. I am passing the env variable through config map.
once deployed and when pods is all running, if i change my config map with new value. Should deployment of my nodejs application need to be redone after this?
configmap.yaml
kind: ConfigMap
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
name: app1-config
namespace: default
data:
envVal: '12345' # initial value
apiUrl: http://a4235a7ee247011e8aa6f0213eb6eb14-1392003683.us-west-2.elb.amazonaws.com/myapp4
after updating the configmap.yaml
configmap.yaml
kind: ConfigMap
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
name: app1-config
namespace: default
data:
envVal: '56789' # changed value
apiUrl: http://a4235a7ee247011e8aa6f0213eb6eb14-1392003683.us-west-2.elb.amazonaws.com/myapp4
When you mount the keys from the ConfigMap as environment variables, you would need to restart your pod for the changes to take effect.
When you mount it as volume into you system, the files in the volume will be updated automatically. The update is not immediate, there is some TTL configured in the kubelet before it checks for changes / does the update. But it is normally quite quick. However it would still depend on your application how it loads the data from the file - whether it will be able to update its self on the fly when the files change or whether these data were loaded only once at startup.
I'm using a CI to update my kubernetes cluster whenever there's an update to an image. Whenever the image is pushed and has the latest tag it kubectl apply's the existing deployment but nothing gets updated.
this is what runs
$ kubectl apply --record --filename /tmp/deployment.yaml
My goal is when the apply is ran that a rolling deployment gets executed.
apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: api
spec:
replicas: 1
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: api
spec:
containers:
- name: api
image: us.gcr.io/joule-eed41/api:latest
imagePullPolicy: Always
ports:
- containerPort: 1337
args:
- /bin/sh
- -c
- echo running api;npm start
env:
- name: NAMESPACE
valueFrom:
configMapKeyRef:
name: config
key: NAMESPACE
As others suggested, have a specific tag.
Set new image using following command
kubectl set image deployment/deployment_name deployment_name=image_name:image_tag
In your case it would be
kubectl set image deployment/api api=us.gcr.io/joule-eed41/api:0.1
As #ksholla20 mentionedm using kubectl set image is a good option for many (most?) cases.
But if you can't change the image tag consider using:
1 ) kubectl rollout restart deployment/<name>
(reference).
2 ) kubectl patch deployment <name> -p "{\"spec\":{\"template\":{\"metadata\":{\"labels\":{\"version\":\"$CURRENT_BUILD_HASH_OR_DATE\"}}}}}}" (reference)
(*) Notice that the patch command allow you to change specific properties in the deployment (or any other object chosen) like the label selector and the pod label or other properties like the value of the NAMESPACE environment variable in your example.
I've run into the same problem and none of the solutions posted so far will help. The solution is easy, but not easy to see or predict. The applied yaml will generate both a deployment and a replicaset the first time it's run. Unfortunately, applying changes to the manifest likely only replaces the replicaset, while the deployment will remain unchanged. This is a problem because some changes need to happen at the deployment level, but the old deployment hangs around. To have best results, delete the deployment and ensure all previous deployments and replicasets are deleted. Then apply the updated manifest.
How do I automatically restart Kubernetes pods and pods associated with deployments when their configmap is changed/updated?
I know there's been talk about the ability to automatically restart pods when a config maps changes but to my knowledge this is not yet available in Kubernetes 1.2.
So what (I think) I'd like to do is a "rolling restart" of the deployment resource associated with the pods consuming the config map. Is it possible, and if so how, to force a rolling restart of a deployment in Kubernetes without changing anything in the actual template? Is this currently the best way to do it or is there a better option?
The current best solution to this problem (referenced deep in https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/issues/22368 linked in the sibling answer) is to use Deployments, and consider your ConfigMaps to be immutable.
When you want to change your config, create a new ConfigMap with the changes you want to make, and point your deployment at the new ConfigMap. If the new config is broken, the Deployment will refuse to scale down your working ReplicaSet. If the new config works, then your old ReplicaSet will be scaled to 0 replicas and deleted, and new pods will be started with the new config.
Not quite as quick as just editing the ConfigMap in place, but much safer.
Signalling a pod on config map update is a feature in the works (https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/issues/22368).
You can always write a custom pid1 that notices the confimap has changed and restarts your app.
You can also eg: mount the same config map in 2 containers, expose a http health check in the second container that fails if the hash of config map contents changes, and shove that as the liveness probe of the first container (because containers in a pod share the same network namespace). The kubelet will restart your first container for you when the probe fails.
Of course if you don't care about which nodes the pods are on, you can simply delete them and the replication controller will "restart" them for you.
The best way I've found to do it is run Reloader
It allows you to define configmaps or secrets to watch, when they get updated, a rolling update of your deployment is performed. Here's an example:
You have a deployment foo and a ConfigMap called foo-configmap. You want to roll the pods of the deployment every time the configmap is changed. You need to run Reloader with:
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/stakater/Reloader/master/deployments/kubernetes/reloader.yaml
Then specify this annotation in your deployment:
kind: Deployment
metadata:
annotations:
configmap.reloader.stakater.com/reload: "foo-configmap"
name: foo
...
Helm 3 doc page
Often times configmaps or secrets are injected as configuration files in containers. Depending on the application a restart may be required should those be updated with a subsequent helm upgrade, but if the deployment spec itself didn't change the application keeps running with the old configuration resulting in an inconsistent deployment.
The sha256sum function can be used together with the include function to ensure a deployments template section is updated if another spec changes:
kind: Deployment
spec:
template:
metadata:
annotations:
checksum/config: {{ include (print $.Template.BasePath "/secret.yaml") . | sha256sum }}
[...]
In my case, for some reasons, $.Template.BasePath didn't work but $.Chart.Name does:
spec:
replicas: 1
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: admin-app
annotations:
checksum/config: {{ include (print $.Chart.Name "/templates/" $.Chart.Name "-configmap.yaml") . | sha256sum }}
You can update a metadata annotation that is not relevant for your deployment. it will trigger a rolling-update
for example:
spec:
template:
metadata:
annotations:
configmap-version: 1
If k8>1.15; then doing a rollout restart worked best for me as part of CI/CD with App configuration path hooked up with a volume-mount. A reloader plugin or setting restartPolicy: Always in deployment manifest YML did not work for me. No application code changes needed, worked for both static assets as well as Microservice.
kubectl rollout restart deployment/<deploymentName> -n <namespace>
Had this problem where the Deployment was in a sub-chart and the values controlling it were in the parent chart's values file. This is what we used to trigger restart:
spec:
template:
metadata:
annotations:
checksum/config: {{ tpl (toYaml .Values) . | sha256sum }}
Obviously this will trigger restart on any value change but it works for our situation. What was originally in the child chart would only work if the config.yaml in the child chart itself changed:
checksum/config: {{ include (print $.Template.BasePath "/config.yaml") . | sha256sum }}
Consider using kustomize (or kubectl apply -k) and then leveraging it's powerful configMapGenerator feature. For example, from: https://kubectl.docs.kubernetes.io/references/kustomize/kustomization/configmapgenerator/
apiVersion: kustomize.config.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: Kustomization
# Just one example of many...
- name: my-app-config
literals:
- JAVA_HOME=/opt/java/jdk
- JAVA_TOOL_OPTIONS=-agentlib:hprof
# Explanation below...
- SECRETS_VERSION=1
Then simply reference my-app-config in your deployments. When building with kustomize, it'll automatically find and update references to my-app-config with an updated suffix, e.g. my-app-config-f7mm6mhf59.
Bonus, updating secrets: I also use this technique for forcing a reload of secrets (since they're affected in the same way). While I personally manage my secrets completely separately (using Mozilla sops), you can bundle a config map alongside your secrets, so for example in your deployment:
# ...
spec:
template:
spec:
containers:
- name: my-app
image: my-app:tag
envFrom:
# For any NON-secret environment variables. Name is automatically updated by Kustomize
- configMapRef:
name: my-app-config
# Defined separately OUTSIDE of Kustomize. Just modify SECRETS_VERSION=[number] in the my-app-config ConfigMap
# to trigger an update in both the config as well as the secrets (since the pod will get restarted).
- secretRef:
name: my-app-secrets
Then, just add a variable like SECRETS_VERSION into your ConfigMap like I did above. Then, each time you change my-app-secrets, just increment the value of SECRETS_VERSION, which serves no other purpose except to trigger a change in the kustomize'd ConfigMap name, which should also result in a restart of your pod. So then it becomes:
I also banged my head around this problem for some time and wished to solve this in an elegant but quick way.
Here are my 20 cents:
The answer using labels as mentioned here won't work if you are updating labels. But would work if you always add labels. More details here.
The answer mentioned here is the most elegant way to do this quickly according to me but had the problem of handling deletes. I am adding on to this answer:
Solution
I am doing this in one of the Kubernetes Operator where only a single task is performed in one reconcilation loop.
Compute the hash of the config map data. Say it comes as v2.
Create ConfigMap cm-v2 having labels: version: v2 and product: prime if it does not exist and RETURN. If it exists GO BELOW.
Find all the Deployments which have the label product: prime but do not have version: v2, If such deployments are found, DELETE them and RETURN. ELSE GO BELOW.
Delete all ConfigMap which has the label product: prime but does not have version: v2 ELSE GO BELOW.
Create Deployment deployment-v2 with labels product: prime and version: v2 and having config map attached as cm-v2 and RETURN, ELSE Do nothing.
That's it! It looks long, but this could be the fastest implementation and is in principle with treating infrastructure as Cattle (immutability).
Also, the above solution works when your Kubernetes Deployment has Recreate update strategy. Logic may require little tweaks for other scenarios.
How do I automatically restart Kubernetes pods and pods associated
with deployments when their configmap is changed/updated?
If you are using configmap as Environment you have to use the external option.
Reloader
Kube watcher
Configurator
Kubernetes auto-reload the config map if it's mounted as volume (If subpath there it won't work with that).
When a ConfigMap currently consumed in a volume is updated, projected
keys are eventually updated as well. The kubelet checks whether the
mounted ConfigMap is fresh on every periodic sync. However, the
kubelet uses its local cache for getting the current value of the
ConfigMap. The type of the cache is configurable using the
ConfigMapAndSecretChangeDetectionStrategy field in the
KubeletConfiguration struct. A ConfigMap can be either propagated by
watch (default), ttl-based, or by redirecting all requests directly to
the API server. As a result, the total delay from the moment when the
ConfigMap is updated to the moment when new keys are projected to the
Pod can be as long as the kubelet sync period + cache propagation
delay, where the cache propagation delay depends on the chosen cache
type (it equals to watch propagation delay, ttl of cache, or zero
correspondingly).
Official document : https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/configmap/#mounted-configmaps-are-updated-automatically
ConfigMaps consumed as environment variables are not updated automatically and require a pod restart.
Simple example Configmap
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: config
namespace: default
data:
foo: bar
POD config
spec:
containers:
- name: configmaptestapp
image: <Image>
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /config
name: configmap-data-volume
ports:
- containerPort: 8080
volumes:
- name: configmap-data-volume
configMap:
name: config
Example : https://medium.com/#harsh.manvar111/update-configmap-without-restarting-pod-56801dce3388
Adding the immutable property to the config map totally avoids the problem. Using config hashing helps in a seamless rolling update but it does not help in a rollback. You can take a look at this open-source project - 'Configurator' - https://github.com/gopaddle-io/configurator.git .'Configurator' works by the following using the custom resources :
Configurator ties the deployment lifecycle with the configMap. When
the config map is updated, a new version is created for that
configMap. All the deployments that were attached to the configMap
get a rolling update with the latest configMap version tied to it.
When you roll back the deployment to an older version, it bounces to
configMap version it had before doing the rolling update.
This way you can maintain versions to the config map and facilitate rolling and rollback to your deployment along with the config map.
Another way is to stick it into the command section of the Deployment:
...
command: [ "echo", "
option = value\n
other_option = value\n
" ]
...
Alternatively, to make it more ConfigMap-like, use an additional Deployment that will just host that config in the command section and execute kubectl create on it while adding an unique 'version' to its name (like calculating a hash of the content) and modifying all the deployments that use that config:
...
command: [ "/usr/sbin/kubectl-apply-config.sh", "
option = value\n
other_option = value\n
" ]
...
I'll probably post kubectl-apply-config.sh if it ends up working.
(don't do that; it looks too bad)