Upgrades and Reconfiguration¶
The OpenStack-Helm project assumes all upgrades will be done through
Helm. This includes handling several different resource types. First,
changes to the Helm chart templates themselves are handled. Second, all
of the resources layered on top of the container image, such as
ConfigMaps
which includes both scripts and configuration files, are
updated during an upgrade. Finally, any image references will result in
rolling updates of containers, replacing them with the updating image.
As Helm stands today, several issues exist when you update images within charts that might have been used by jobs that already ran to completion or are still in flight. An example of where this behavior would be desirable is when an updated db_sync image has updated to point from one openstack release to another. In this case, the operator will likely want a db_sync job, which was already run and completed during site installation, to run again with the updated image to bring the schema inline with the Newton release.
The OpenStack-Helm project also implements annotations across all chart configmaps so that changing resources inside containers, such as configuration files, triggers a Kubernetes rolling update. This means that those resources can be updated without deleting and redeploying the service and can be treated like any other upgrade, such as a container image change.
Note: Rolling update values can conflict with values defined in each service’s PodDisruptionBudget. See here for more information.
This is accomplished with the following annotation:
...
annotations:
configmap-bin-hash: {{ tuple "configmap-bin.yaml" . | include "helm-toolkit.utils.hash" }}
configmap-etc-hash: {{ tuple "configmap-etc.yaml" . | include "helm-toolkit.utils.hash" }}
The hash
function defined in the helm-toolkit
chart ensures that
any change to any file referenced by configmap-bin.yaml or
configmap-etc.yaml results in a new hash, which will then trigger a
rolling update.
All Deployment
chart components are outfitted by default
with rolling update strategies:
# Source: keystone/templates/deployment-api.yaml
spec:
replicas: {{ .Values.pod.replicas.api }}
{{ tuple $envAll | include "helm-toolkit.snippets.kubernetes_upgrades_deployment" | indent 2 }
In values.yaml
in each chart, the same defaults are supplied in every
chart, which allows the operator to override at upgrade or deployment
time.
pod:
lifecycle:
upgrades:
deployments:
revision_history: 3
pod_replacement_strategy: RollingUpdate
rolling_update:
max_unavailable: 1
max_surge: 3