It is possible to configure DevStack to install kuryr-controller and kuryr-cni on Kubernetes as pods. Details can be found on Kuryr installation as a Kubernetes network addon page, this page will explain DevStack aspects of running containerized.
To configure DevStack to install Kuryr services as containerized Kubernetes
resources, you need to switch KURYR_K8S_CONTAINERIZED_DEPLOYMENT
. Add this
line to your local.conf
:
KURYR_K8S_CONTAINERIZED_DEPLOYMENT=True
This will trigger building the kuryr-controller and kuryr-cni containers during installation, as well as will deploy those on Kubernetes cluster it installed.
Instructions on how to manually rebuild both kuryr-controller and kuryr-cni container images are presented on Kuryr installation as a Kubernetes network addon page. In case you want to test any code changes, you need to rebuild the images first.
To change kuryr.conf files that are put into containers you need to edit the associated ConfigMap. On DevStack deployment this can be done using:
$ kubectl -n kube-system edit cm kuryr-config
Then the editor will appear that will let you edit the config map. Make sure to keep correct indentation when doing changes. Also note that there are two files present in the ConfigMap: kuryr.conf and kuryr-cni.conf. First one is attached to kuryr-controller and second to kuryr-cni. Make sure to modify both when doing changes important for both services.
Once any changes are made to docker images or the configuration, it is crucial to restart pod you’ve modified.
To restart kuryr-controller and let it load new image and configuration, simply kill existing pod:
$ kubectl -n kube-system get pods
<find kuryr-controller pod you want to restart>
$ kubectl -n kube-system delete pod <pod-name>
Deployment controller will make sure to restart the pod with new configuration.
It’s important to understand that kuryr-cni is only a storage pod i.e. it is
actually idling with sleep infinity
once all the files are copied into
correct locations on Kubernetes host.
You can force it to redeploy new files by killing it. DaemonSet controller should make sure to restart it with new image and configuration files.
$ kubectl -n kube-system get pods
<find kuryr-cni pods you want to restart>
$ kubectl -n kube-system delete pod <pod-name1> <pod-name2> <...>
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