Dev Services for Kubernetes
Dev Services for Kubernetes automatically starts a Kubernetes API server in dev mode and when running tests. So you don’t have to start a Kubernetes cluster manually. The application is configured automatically.
Enabling / Disabling Dev Services for Kubernetes
Dev Services for Kubernetes is automatically enabled unless:
-
quarkus.kubernetes-client.devservices.enabled
is set tofalse
-
the
api-server-url
is configured -
a valid Kube config file is found and
quarkus.kubernetes-client.devservices.override-kubeconfig
is not set totrue
-
you include the
quarkus-test-kubernetes-client
dependency
Dev Services for Kubernetes relies on Docker to start the API server. If your environment does not support Docker, you will need to start the Kubernetes cluster manually, or connect to an already running Kubernetes cluster. You can configure the Kubernetes cluster access using either a Kube config file or the various properties available in the KubernetesClientBuildConfig class.
Shared cluster
Most of the time you need to share the cluster between applications. Dev Services for Kubernetes implements a service discovery mechanism for your multiple Quarkus applications running in dev mode to share a single cluster.
Dev Services for Kubernetes starts the container with the
quarkus-dev-service-kubernetes label which is used to identify the
container.
|
If you need multiple (shared) clusters, you can configure the
quarkus.kubernetes-client.devservices.service-name
configuration property
and indicate the cluster name. It looks for a container with the name
defined, or starts a new one if none can be found. The default service name
is kubernetes
.
Sharing is enabled by default in dev mode, but disabled in test mode. You
can disable the sharing with
quarkus.kubernetes-client.devservices.shared=false
.
Configuring the cluster
Dev Services for Kubernetes provides three different flavors of Kubernetes
cluster. Each flavor supports different Kubernetes API versions. You can
configure the flavor and version using the
quarkus.kubernetes-client.devservices.flavor
and
quarkus.kubernetes-client.devservices.api-version
properties:
quarkus.kubernetes-client.devservices.flavor=api-only # k3s or kind
quarkus.kubernetes-client.devservices.api-version=1.22
api-only
only starts a Kubernetes API Server. If you need a fully-featured
Kubernetes cluster that can spin up Pods, you can use k3s
or kind
. Note
that they both requires to run in Docker privileged mode.
If api-version
is not set, the latest version for the given flavor will be
used. Otherwise, the version must match a
version
supported by the given flavor.