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Server-side reconciliation is coming
tl;dr: Server-side reconciliation will make Flux more performant, improve overall observability and going forward will allow us to add new capabilities, like being able to preview local changes to manifests without pushing to upstream.
⚠ Changes required: Due to a
Kubernetes
issue, we require
a certain set of Kubernetes releases (starting 1.16.11
- more on this below)
as a minimum. The logs, events and alerts that report Kubernetes namespaced
object changes are now using the Kind/Namespace/Name
format instead of
Kind/Name
.
We rarely do this, but this time we want to give you some advance notice
of a big upcoming feature you will be pleased about. Since Kubernetes
moved
server-side
apply
to GA, we are offering you a new reconciler based on it, and graduating
the API to v1beta2
.
What’s happening
When does this happen?
With the release of Flux 0.18, we will move to the new reconciler. It will be released in the coming weeks. Refer to this PR for more information.Do I have to use the new thing?
Yes. Flux will be more performant, less error-prone and from a maintenance perspective will be a lot easier for us. We understand that this new feature will require changes on your end, but we are certain you are going to like the new experience!Will my clusters stop working?
No, but you will need to do a little preparation to make sure Flux can still apply your configurations. See below.
Note: The pre-flight checks should be able to catch issues like meeting the minimum required Kubernetes version.
Here is what you get
- The new reconciler improves performance (CPU, memory, network, FD
usage) and reduces the number of calls to Kubernetes API by
replacing
kubectl exec
calls with a specialized applier written in Go. - We are able to validate and reconcile sources that contain both CRDs and CRs.
- Detects and reports drift between the desired state (git, s3, etc) and cluster state reliably.
- In the future: Preview of local changes to manifests without pushing
to upstream (
flux diff -k
command TBA). - Being able to wait for all applied resources to become ready without requiring users to fill in the health checks list.
- Improves the overall observability of the reconciliation process by reporting in real-time the garbage collection and health assessment actions.
This is what you need to do to prepare
Check the Kubernetes version you are running in your cluster. All the versions below fix a regression in the managed fields and field type.
Kubernetes version | Minimum required* |
---|---|
v1.16 | >= 1.16.11 |
v1.17 | >= 1.17.7 |
v1.18 | >= 1.18.4 |
v1.19 and later | >= 1.19.0 |
* Update 2021-10-11:
If you are using APIService
objects (for example
metrics-server),
you will need to update to 1.18.18
, 1.19.10
, 1.20.6
or 1.21.0
at least. See
this
post
for more information.
Namespaced objects must contain metadata.namespace, defaulting to the default namespace is no longer supported. This means you will need to chase down any namespaced resources in your configuration files that are left to default, and give them a namespace. Keep in mind that kustomizations are often used to assign a namespace, so even if a particular file doesn’t have a namespace in it, it may not represent a problem.
The logs, events and alerts that report Kubernetes namespaced object
changes are now using the Kind/Namespace/Name
format instead of
Kind/Name
e.g.:
Service/flux-demo/podinfo unchanged
Deployment/flux-demo/podinfo configured
HorizontalPodAutoscaler/flux-demo/podinfo deleted
Any automation or monitoring that relies on a particular format in the logs will need to be adapted. Ideally, you should try to handle both the old and new formats.
In terms of API changes, the kustomize.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta2
API
is backwards compatible with v1beta1
. This is done automatically by
the Kubernetes API server, and no preparation is required. You may wish
to translate your Flux Kustomization
resources, though, according to the
following table.
Additions and deprecations:
Change in the new version | What you should do |
---|---|
Version is now v1beta2 | Change the version: apiVersion: kustomize.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta2 |
.spec.validation deprecated | Server-side validation is now assumed. Remove this field from .spec. |
.spec.patchesStrategicMerge deprecated in favour of .spec.patches | Convert each entry from .spec.patchesStrategicMerge into an inline strategic merge patch, like
this example given in the Kustomize documentation, and append to .spec.patches. . Note that the value in the patch field is quoted; that is, it is the YAML or JSON of the patch, stringified. |
.spec.patchesJson6902 deprecated in favour of .spec.patches | Convert each entry from .spec.patchesJson6902 into
an inline JSON6902 patch, and append to .spec.patches . Note that the value in the patch field is quoted; that is, it is the YAML or JSON of the patch, stringified. |
.status.snapshot replaced by .status.inventory | .status is not kept in files, so you will not need to account for this. |
.spec.wait added | When true, the controller will wait for all the reconciled resources to become ready, and ignore .spec.healthChecks . There is no preparation needed for this, since it’s a new feature. |
Why we are doing this
When we started Flux v2, we set a goal to stop relying on third party binaries for core features. While we have successfully replaced the Git CLI shell execs with Go libraries (go-git, git2go) and C libraries (libgit2, libssh2), the kustomize CLI with Go libraries (kustomize/api, kustomize/kyaml), we still depend on the kubectl CLI for the three-way-merge apply feature. With Kubernetes “server-side apply” being promoted to GA, we can finally get rid of kubectl and drive the reconciliation using exclusively the controller-runtime Go client.
Please take a look at the PR introducing this change, as it talks at length about the issues which are solved by this.
Sneak-preview
Updated on 2021-10-08
The server-side reconciliation has been released in flux2 v0.18.0.
What’s next?
The biggest parts of the work have been done, here is what is still on our TODO list until the release:
- Use the SSA manager in Flux CLI to for the
flux create
commands - Use the SSA manager in Flux CLI to implement
flux build
andflux diff
commands
This is great - I want to participate in this
Please join us in the #flux channel on CNCF Slack ( get an invite here) to discuss this.
Or find out other ways of connecting (including our weekly meetings) on our Community page.
We are looking forward to having you in our community!