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Buckets
The Bucket
API defines a Source to produce an Artifact for objects from storage
solutions like Amazon S3, Google Cloud Storage buckets, or any other solution
with a S3 compatible API such as Minio, Alibaba Cloud OSS and others.
Example
The following is an example of a Bucket. It creates a tarball (.tar.gz
)
Artifact with the fetched objects from an object storage with an S3
compatible API (e.g.
Minio):
---
apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta2
kind: Bucket
metadata:
name: minio-bucket
namespace: default
spec:
interval: 5m0s
endpoint: minio.example.com
insecure: true
secretRef:
name: minio-bucket-secret
bucketName: example
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: minio-bucket-secret
namespace: default
type: Opaque
stringData:
accesskey: <access key>
secretkey: <secret key>
In the above example:
- A Bucket named
minio-bucket
is created, indicated by the.metadata.name
field. - The source-controller checks the object storage bucket every five minutes,
indicated by the
.spec.interval
field. - It authenticates to the
minio.example.com
endpoint with the static credentials from theminio-secret
Secret data, indicated by the.spec.endpoint
and.spec.secretRef.name
fields. - A list of object keys and their
etags
in the
.spec.bucketName
bucket is compiled, while filtering the keys using default ignore rules. - The digest (algorithm defaults to SHA256) of the list is used as Artifact
revision, reported in-cluster in the
.status.artifact.revision
field. - When the current Bucket revision differs from the latest calculated revision, all objects are fetched and archived.
- The new Artifact is reported in the
.status.artifact
field.
You can run this example by saving the manifest into bucket.yaml
, and
changing the Bucket and Secret values to target a Minio instance you have
control over.
Note: For more advanced examples targeting e.g. Amazon S3 or GCP, see Provider.
Apply the resource on the cluster:
kubectl apply -f bucket.yaml
Run
kubectl get buckets
to see the Bucket:NAME ENDPOINT AGE READY STATUS minio-bucket minio.example.com 34s True stored artifact for revision 'sha256:e3b0c44298fc1c149afbf4c8996fb92427ae41e4649b934ca495991b7852b855'
Run
kubectl describe bucket minio-bucket
to see the Artifact and Conditions in the Bucket’s Status:... Status: Artifact: Digest: sha256:72aa638abb455ca5f9ef4825b949fd2de4d4be0a74895bf7ed2338622cd12686 Last Update Time: 2022-02-01T23:43:38Z Path: bucket/default/minio-bucket/e3b0c44298fc1c149afbf4c8996fb92427ae41e4649b934ca495991b7852b855.tar.gz Revision: sha256:e3b0c44298fc1c149afbf4c8996fb92427ae41e4649b934ca495991b7852b855 Size: 38099 URL: http://source-controller.source-system.svc.cluster.local./bucket/default/minio-bucket/e3b0c44298fc1c149afbf4c8996fb92427ae41e4649b934ca495991b7852b855.tar.gz Conditions: Last Transition Time: 2022-02-01T23:43:38Z Message: stored artifact for revision 'sha256:e3b0c44298fc1c149afbf4c8996fb92427ae41e4649b934ca495991b7852b855' Observed Generation: 1 Reason: Succeeded Status: True Type: Ready Last Transition Time: 2022-02-01T23:43:38Z Message: stored artifact for revision 'sha256:e3b0c44298fc1c149afbf4c8996fb92427ae41e4649b934ca495991b7852b855' Observed Generation: 1 Reason: Succeeded Status: True Type: ArtifactInStorage Observed Generation: 1 URL: http://source-controller.source-system.svc.cluster.local./bucket/default/minio-bucket/latest.tar.gz Events: Type Reason Age From Message ---- ------ ---- ---- ------- Normal NewArtifact 82s source-controller stored artifact with 16 fetched files from 'example' bucket
Writing a Bucket spec
As with all other Kubernetes config, a Bucket needs apiVersion
, kind
, and
metadata
fields. The name of a Bucket object must be a valid
DNS subdomain name.
A Bucket also needs a
.spec
section.
Provider
The .spec.provider
field allows for specifying a Provider to enable provider
specific configurations, for example to communicate with a non-S3 compatible
API endpoint, or to change the authentication method.
Supported options are:
If you do not specify .spec.provider
, it defaults to generic
.
Generic
When a Bucket’s spec.provider
is set to generic
, the controller will
attempt to communicate with the specified
Endpoint using the
Minio Client SDK, which can communicate
with any Amazon S3 compatible object storage (including
GCS,
Wasabi,
and many others).
The generic
Provider requires a
Secret reference to a
Secret with .data.accesskey
and .data.secretkey
values, used to
authenticate with static credentials.
The Provider allows for specifying a region the bucket is in using the
.spec.region
field, if required by the
Endpoint.
Generic example
---
apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta2
kind: Bucket
metadata:
name: generic-insecure
namespace: default
spec:
provider: generic
interval: 5m0s
bucketName: podinfo
endpoint: minio.minio.svc.cluster.local:9000
timeout: 60s
insecure: true
secretRef:
name: minio-credentials
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: minio-credentials
namespace: default
type: Opaque
data:
accesskey: <BASE64>
secretkey: <BASE64>
AWS
When a Bucket’s .spec.provider
field is set to aws
, the source-controller
will attempt to communicate with the specified
Endpoint using the
Minio Client SDK.
Without a
Secret reference, authorization using
credentials retrieved from the AWS EC2 service is attempted by default. When
a reference is specified, it expects a Secret with .data.accesskey
and
.data.secretkey
values, used to authenticate with static credentials.
The Provider allows for specifying the
Amazon AWS Region
using the
.spec.region
field.
AWS EC2 example
Note: On EKS you have to create an IAM role for the source-controller service account that grants access to the bucket.
---
apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta2
kind: Bucket
metadata:
name: aws
namespace: default
spec:
interval: 5m0s
provider: aws
bucketName: podinfo
endpoint: s3.amazonaws.com
region: us-east-1
timeout: 30s
AWS IAM role example
Replace <bucket-name>
with the specified .spec.bucketName
.
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Sid": "",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": "s3:GetObject",
"Resource": "arn:aws:s3:::<bucket-name>/*"
},
{
"Sid": "",
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": "s3:ListBucket",
"Resource": "arn:aws:s3:::<bucket-name>"
}
]
}
AWS static auth example
---
apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta2
kind: Bucket
metadata:
name: aws
namespace: default
spec:
interval: 5m0s
provider: aws
bucketName: podinfo
endpoint: s3.amazonaws.com
region: us-east-1
secretRef:
name: aws-credentials
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: aws-credentials
namespace: default
type: Opaque
data:
accesskey: <BASE64>
secretkey: <BASE64>
Azure
When a Bucket’s .spec.provider
is set to azure
, the source-controller will
attempt to communicate with the specified
Endpoint using the
Azure Blob Storage SDK for Go.
Without a Secret reference, authentication using a chain with:
- Environment credentials
- Workload Identity
- Managed Identity
with the
AZURE_CLIENT_ID
- Managed Identity with a system-assigned identity
is attempted by default. If no chain can be established, the bucket is assumed to be publicly reachable.
When a reference is specified, it expects a Secret with one of the following
sets of .data
fields:
tenantId
,clientId
andclientSecret
for authenticating a Service Principal with a secret.tenantId
,clientId
andclientCertificate
(plus optionallyclientCertificatePassword
and/orclientCertificateSendChain
) for authenticating a Service Principal with a certificate.clientId
for authenticating using a Managed Identity.accountKey
for authenticating using a Shared Key.sasKey
for authenticating using a SAS Token
For any Managed Identity and/or Azure Active Directory authentication method,
the base URL can be configured using .data.authorityHost
. If not supplied,
AzurePublicCloud
is assumed.
Azure example
---
apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta2
kind: Bucket
metadata:
name: azure-public
namespace: default
spec:
interval: 5m0s
provider: azure
bucketName: podinfo
endpoint: https://podinfoaccount.blob.core.windows.net
timeout: 30s
Azure Service Principal Secret example
---
apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta2
kind: Bucket
metadata:
name: azure-service-principal-secret
namespace: default
spec:
interval: 5m0s
provider: azure
bucketName: <bucket-name>
endpoint: https://<account-name>.blob.core.windows.net
secretRef:
name: azure-sp-auth
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: azure-sp-auth
namespace: default
type: Opaque
data:
tenantId: <BASE64>
clientId: <BASE64>
clientSecret: <BASE64>
Azure Service Principal Certificate example
---
apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta2
kind: Bucket
metadata:
name: azure-service-principal-cert
namespace: default
spec:
interval: 5m0s
provider: azure
bucketName: <bucket-name>
endpoint: https://<account-name>.blob.core.windows.net
secretRef:
name: azure-sp-auth
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: azure-sp-auth
namespace: default
type: Opaque
data:
tenantId: <BASE64>
clientId: <BASE64>
clientCertificate: <BASE64>
# Plus optionally
clientCertificatePassword: <BASE64>
clientCertificateSendChain: <BASE64> # either "1" or "true"
Azure Managed Identity with Client ID example
---
apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta2
kind: Bucket
metadata:
name: azure-managed-identity
namespace: default
spec:
interval: 5m0s
provider: azure
bucketName: <bucket-name>
endpoint: https://<account-name>.blob.core.windows.net
secretRef:
name: azure-smi-auth
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: azure-smi-auth
namespace: default
type: Opaque
data:
clientId: <BASE64>
Azure Blob Shared Key example
---
apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta2
kind: Bucket
metadata:
name: azure-shared-key
namespace: default
spec:
interval: 5m0s
provider: azure
bucketName: <bucket-name>
endpoint: https://<account-name>.blob.core.windows.net
secretRef:
name: azure-key
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: azure-key
namespace: default
type: Opaque
data:
accountKey: <BASE64>
Workload Identity
If you have Workload Identity set up on your cluster, you need to create an Azure Identity and give it access to Azure Blob Storage.
export IDENTITY_NAME="blob-access"
az role assignment create --role "Storage Blob Data Reader" \
--assignee-object-id "$(az identity show -n $IDENTITY_NAME -o tsv --query principalId -g $RESOURCE_GROUP)" \
--scope "/subscriptions/<SUBSCRIPTION-ID>/resourceGroups/<RESOURCE_GROUP>/providers/Microsoft.Storage/storageAccounts/<account-name>/blobServices/default/containers/<container-name>"
Establish a federated identity between the Identity and the source-controller ServiceAccount.
export SERVICE_ACCOUNT_ISSUER="$(az aks show --resource-group <RESOURCE_GROUP> --name <CLUSTER-NAME> --query "oidcIssuerProfile.issuerUrl" -otsv)"
az identity federated-credential create \
--name "kubernetes-federated-credential" \
--identity-name "${IDENTITY_NAME}" \
--resource-group "${RESOURCE_GROUP}" \
--issuer "${SERVICE_ACCOUNT_ISSUER}" \
--subject "system:serviceaccount:flux-system:source-controller"
Add a patch to label and annotate the source-controller Deployment and ServiceAccount correctly so that it can match an identity binding:
apiVersion: kustomize.config.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: Kustomization
resources:
- gotk-components.yaml
- gotk-sync.yaml
patches:
- patch: |-
apiVersion: v1
kind: ServiceAccount
metadata:
name: source-controller
namespace: flux-system
annotations:
azure.workload.identity/client-id: <AZURE_CLIENT_ID>
labels:
azure.workload.identity/use: "true"
- patch: |-
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: source-controller
namespace: flux-system
labels:
azure.workload.identity/use: "true"
spec:
template:
metadata:
labels:
azure.workload.identity/use: "true"
If you have set up Workload Identity correctly and labeled the source-controller Deployment and ServiceAccount, then you don’t need to reference a Secret. For more information, please see documentation.
apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta2
kind: Bucket
metadata:
name: azure-bucket
namespace: flux-system
spec:
interval: 5m0s
provider: azure
bucketName: testsas
endpoint: https://testfluxsas.blob.core.windows.net
Deprecated: Managed Identity with AAD Pod Identity
If you are using aad pod identity, You need to create an Azure Identity and give it access to Azure Blob Storage.
export IDENTITY_NAME="blob-access"
az role assignment create --role "Storage Blob Data Reader" \
--assignee-object-id "$(az identity show -n $IDENTITY_NAME -o tsv --query principalId -g $RESOURCE_GROUP)" \
--scope "/subscriptions/<SUBSCRIPTION-ID>/resourceGroups/$RESOURCE_GROUP/providers/Microsoft.Storage/storageAccounts/<account-name>/blobServices/default/containers/<container-name>"
export IDENTITY_CLIENT_ID="$(az identity show -n ${IDENTITY_NAME} -g ${RESOURCE_GROUP} -otsv --query clientId)"
export IDENTITY_RESOURCE_ID="$(az identity show -n ${IDENTITY_NAME} -otsv --query id)"
Create an AzureIdentity object that references the identity created above:
---
apiVersion: aadpodidentity.k8s.io/v1
kind: AzureIdentity
metadata:
name: # source-controller label will match this name
namespace: flux-system
spec:
clientID: <IDENTITY_CLIENT_ID>
resourceID: <IDENTITY_RESOURCE_ID>
type: 0 # user-managed identity
Create an AzureIdentityBinding object that binds Pods with a specific selector with the AzureIdentity created:
apiVersion: "aadpodidentity.k8s.io/v1"
kind: AzureIdentityBinding
metadata:
name: ${IDENTITY_NAME}-binding
spec:
azureIdentity: ${IDENTITY_NAME}
selector: ${IDENTITY_NAME}
Label the source-controller Deployment correctly so that it can match an identity binding:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: kustomize-controller
namespace: flux-system
spec:
template:
metadata:
labels:
aadpodidbinding: ${IDENTITY_NAME} # match the AzureIdentity name
If you have set up aad-pod-identity correctly and labeled the source-controller Deployment, then you don’t need to reference a Secret.
apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta2
kind: Bucket
metadata:
name: azure-bucket
namespace: flux-system
spec:
interval: 5m0s
provider: azure
bucketName: testsas
endpoint: https://testfluxsas.blob.core.windows.net
Azure Blob SAS Token example
---
apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta2
kind: Bucket
metadata:
name: azure-sas-token
namespace: default
spec:
interval: 5m0s
provider: azure
bucketName: <bucket-name>
endpoint: https://<account-name>.blob.core.windows.net
secretRef:
name: azure-key
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: azure-key
namespace: default
type: Opaque
data:
sasKey: <base64>
The sasKey
only contains the SAS token e.g
?sv=2020-08-0&ss=bfqt&srt=co&sp=rwdlacupitfx&se=2022-05-26T21:55:35Z&st=2022-05...
.
The leading question mark (?
) is optional. The query values from the sasKey
data field in the Secrets gets merged with the ones in the .spec.endpoint
of
the Bucket. If the same key is present in the both of them, the value in the
sasKey
takes precedence.
Note: The SAS token has an expiry date, and it must be updated before it expires to allow Flux to continue to access Azure Storage. It is allowed to use an account-level or container-level SAS token.
The minimum permissions for an account-level SAS token are:
- Allowed services:
Blob
- Allowed resource types:
Container
,Object
- Allowed permissions:
Read
,List
The minimum permissions for a container-level SAS token are:
- Allowed permissions:
Read
,List
Refer to the Azure documentation for a full overview on permissions.
GCP
When a Bucket’s .spec.provider
is set to gcp
, the source-controller will
attempt to communicate with the specified
Endpoint using the
Google Client SDK.
Without a
Secret reference, authorization using a
workload identity is attempted by default. The workload identity is obtained
using the GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS
environment variable, falling back
to the Google Application Credential file in the config directory.
When a reference is specified, it expects a Secret with a .data.serviceaccount
value with a GCP service account JSON file.
The Provider allows for specifying the
Bucket location using the
.spec.region
field.
GCP example
---
apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta2
kind: Bucket
metadata:
name: gcp-workload-identity
namespace: default
spec:
interval: 5m0s
provider: gcp
bucketName: podinfo
endpoint: storage.googleapis.com
region: us-east-1
timeout: 30s
GCP static auth example
---
apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta2
kind: Bucket
metadata:
name: gcp-secret
namespace: default
spec:
interval: 5m0s
provider: gcp
bucketName: <bucket-name>
endpoint: storage.googleapis.com
region: <bucket-region>
secretRef:
name: gcp-service-account
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: gcp-service-account
namespace: default
type: Opaque
data:
serviceaccount: <BASE64>
Where the (base64 decoded) value of .data.serviceaccount
looks like this:
{
"type": "service_account",
"project_id": "example",
"private_key_id": "28qwgh3gdf5hj3gb5fj3gsu5yfgh34f45324568hy2",
"private_key": "-----BEGIN PRIVATE KEY-----\nHwethgy123hugghhhbdcu6356dgyjhsvgvGFDHYgcdjbvcdhbsx63c\n76tgycfehuhVGTFYfw6t7ydgyVgydheyhuggycuhejwy6t35fthyuhegvcetf\nTFUHGTygghubhxe65ygt6tgyedgy326hucyvsuhbhcvcsjhcsjhcsvgdtHFCGi\nHcye6tyyg3gfyuhchcsbhygcijdbhyyTF66tuhcevuhdcbhuhhvftcuhbh3uh7t6y\nggvftUHbh6t5rfthhuGVRtfjhbfcrd5r67yuhuvgFTYjgvtfyghbfcdrhyjhbfctfdfyhvfg\ntgvggtfyghvft6tugvTF5r66tujhgvfrtyhhgfct6y7ytfr5ctvghbhhvtghhjvcttfycf\nffxfghjbvgcgyt67ujbgvctfyhVC7uhvgcyjvhhjvyujc\ncgghgvgcfhgg765454tcfthhgftyhhvvyvvffgfryyu77reredswfthhgfcftycfdrttfhf/\n-----END PRIVATE KEY-----\n",
"client_email": "test@example.iam.gserviceaccount.com",
"client_id": "32657634678762536746",
"auth_uri": "https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/auth",
"token_uri": "https://oauth2.googleapis.com/token",
"auth_provider_x509_cert_url": "https://www.googleapis.com/oauth2/v1/certs",
"client_x509_cert_url": "https://www.googleapis.com/robot/v1/metadata/x509/test%40podinfo.iam.gserviceaccount.com"
}
Interval
.spec.interval
is a required field that specifies the interval which the
object storage bucket must be consulted at.
After successfully reconciling a Bucket object, the source-controller requeues
the object for inspection after the specified interval. The value must be in a
Go recognized duration string format,
e.g. 10m0s
to look at the object storage bucket every 10 minutes.
If the .metadata.generation
of a resource changes (due to e.g. the apply of a
change to the spec), this is handled instantly outside the interval window.
Note: The controller can be configured to apply a jitter to the interval in order to distribute the load more evenly when multiple Bucket objects are set up with the same interval. For more information, please refer to the source-controller configuration options.
Endpoint
.spec.endpoint
is a required field that specifies the HTTP/S object storage
endpoint to connect to and fetch objects from. Connecting to an (insecure)
HTTP endpoint requires enabling
.spec.insecure
.
Some endpoints require the specification of a
.spec.region
,
see
Provider for more (provider specific) examples.
Bucket name
.spec.bucketName
is a required field that specifies which object storage
bucket on the
Endpoint objects should be fetched from.
See Provider for more (provider specific) examples.
Region
.spec.region
is an optional field to specify the region a
.spec.bucketName
is located in.
See Provider for more (provider specific) examples.
Insecure
.spec.insecure
is an optional field to allow connecting to an insecure (HTTP)
endpoint, if set to true
. The default value is false
,
denying insecure (HTTP) connections.
Timeout
.spec.timeout
is an optional field to specify a timeout for object storage
fetch operations. The value must be in a
Go recognized duration string format,
e.g. 1m30s
for a timeout of one minute and thirty seconds.
The default value is 60s
.
Secret reference
.spec.secretRef.name
is an optional field to specify a name reference to a
Secret in the same namespace as the Bucket, containing authentication
credentials for the object storage. For some .spec.provider
implementations
the presence of the field is required, see
Provider for more
details and examples.
Ignore
.spec.ignore
is an optional field to specify rules in
the .gitignore
pattern format. Storage
objects which keys match the defined rules are excluded while fetching.
When specified, .spec.ignore
overrides the
default exclusion
list, and may overrule the
.sourceignore
file
exclusions. See
excluding files
for more information.
Suspend
.spec.suspend
is an optional field to suspend the reconciliation of a Bucket.
When set to true
, the controller will stop reconciling the Bucket, and changes
to the resource or in the object storage bucket will not result in a new
Artifact. When the field is set to false
or removed, it will resume.
For practical information, see suspending and resuming.
Working with Buckets
Excluding files
By default, storage bucket objects which match the default exclusion rules are excluded while fetching. It is possible to overwrite and/or overrule the default exclusions using a file in the bucket and/or an in-spec set of rules.
.sourceignore
file
Excluding files is possible by adding a .sourceignore
file in the root of the
object storage bucket. The .sourceignore
file follows
the .gitignore
pattern format, and
pattern entries may overrule
default exclusions.
Ignore spec
Another option is to define the exclusions within the Bucket spec, using the
.spec.ignore
field. Specified rules override the
default exclusion list, and may overrule .sourceignore
file exclusions.
---
apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta2
kind: Bucket
metadata:
name: <bucket-name>
spec:
ignore: |
# exclude all
/*
# include deploy dir
!/deploy
# exclude file extensions from deploy dir
/deploy/**/*.md
/deploy/**/*.txt
Triggering a reconcile
To manually tell the source-controller to reconcile a Bucket outside the
specified interval window, a Bucket can be annotated with
reconcile.fluxcd.io/requestedAt: <arbitrary value>
. Annotating the resource
queues the Bucket for reconciliation if the <arbitrary-value>
differs from
the last value the controller acted on, as reported in
.status.lastHandledReconcileAt
.
Using kubectl
:
kubectl annotate --field-manager=flux-client-side-apply --overwrite bucket/<bucket-name> reconcile.fluxcd.io/requestedAt="$(date +%s)"
Using flux
:
flux reconcile source bucket <bucket-name>
Waiting for Ready
When a change is applied, it is possible to wait for the Bucket to reach a
ready state using kubectl
:
kubectl wait bucket/<bucket-name> --for=condition=ready --timeout=1m
Suspending and resuming
When you find yourself in a situation where you temporarily want to pause the
reconciliation of a Bucket, you can suspend it using the
.spec.suspend
field.
Suspend a Bucket
In your YAML declaration:
---
apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta2
kind: Bucket
metadata:
name: <bucket-name>
spec:
suspend: true
Using kubectl
:
kubectl patch bucket <bucket-name> --field-manager=flux-client-side-apply -p '{\"spec\": {\"suspend\" : true }}'
Using flux
:
flux suspend source bucket <bucket-name>
Note: When a Bucket has an Artifact and is suspended, and this Artifact later disappears from the storage due to e.g. the source-controller Pod being evicted from a Node, this will not be reflected in the Bucket’s Status until it is resumed.
Resume a Bucket
In your YAML declaration, comment out (or remove) the field:
---
apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta2
kind: Bucket
metadata:
name: <bucket-name>
spec:
# suspend: true
Note: Setting the field value to false
has the same effect as removing
it, but does not allow for “hot patching” using e.g. kubectl
while practicing
GitOps; as the manually applied patch would be overwritten by the declared
state in Git.
Using kubectl
:
kubectl patch bucket <bucket-name> --field-manager=flux-client-side-apply -p '{\"spec\" : {\"suspend\" : false }}'
Using flux
:
flux resume source bucket <bucket-name>
Debugging a Bucket
There are several ways to gather information about a Bucket for debugging purposes.
Describe the Bucket
Describing a Bucket using kubectl describe bucket <bucket-name>
displays the
latest recorded information for the resource in the Status
and Events
sections:
...
Status:
...
Conditions:
Last Transition Time: 2022-02-02T13:26:55Z
Message: processing object: new generation 1 -> 2
Observed Generation: 2
Reason: ProgressingWithRetry
Status: True
Type: Reconciling
Last Transition Time: 2022-02-02T13:26:55Z
Message: bucket 'my-new-bucket' does not exist
Observed Generation: 2
Reason: BucketOperationFailed
Status: False
Type: Ready
Last Transition Time: 2022-02-02T13:26:55Z
Message: bucket 'my-new-bucket' does not exist
Observed Generation: 2
Reason: BucketOperationFailed
Status: True
Type: FetchFailed
Observed Generation: 1
URL: http://source-controller.source-system.svc.cluster.local./bucket/default/minio-bucket/latest.tar.gz
Events:
Type Reason Age From Message
---- ------ ---- ---- -------
Warning BucketOperationFailed 37s (x11 over 42s) source-controller bucket 'my-new-bucket' does not exist
Trace emitted Events
To view events for specific Bucket(s), kubectl events
can be used in
combination with --for
to list the Events for specific objects. For example,
running
kubectl events --for Bucket/<bucket-name>
lists
LAST SEEN TYPE REASON OBJECT MESSAGE
2m30s Normal NewArtifact bucket/<bucket-name> fetched 16 files with revision from 'my-new-bucket'
36s Normal ArtifactUpToDate bucket/<bucket-name> artifact up-to-date with remote revision: 'sha256:e3b0c44298fc1c149afbf4c8996fb92427ae41e4649b934ca495991b7852b855'
18s Warning BucketOperationFailed bucket/<bucket-name> bucket 'my-new-bucket' does not exist
Besides being reported in Events, the reconciliation errors are also logged by
the controller. The Flux CLI offer commands for filtering the logs for a
specific Bucket, e.g. flux logs --level=error --kind=Bucket --name=<bucket-name>
.
Bucket Status
Artifact
The Bucket reports the latest synchronized state from the object storage
bucket as an Artifact object in the .status.artifact
of the resource.
The Artifact file is a gzip compressed TAR archive
(<calculated revision>.tar.gz
), and can be retrieved in-cluster from the
.status.artifact.url
HTTP address.
Artifact example
---
apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta2
kind: Bucket
metadata:
name: <bucket-name>
status:
artifact:
digest: sha256:cbec34947cc2f36dee8adcdd12ee62ca6a8a36699fc6e56f6220385ad5bd421a
lastUpdateTime: "2022-01-28T10:30:30Z"
path: bucket/<namespace>/<bucket-name>/c3ab8ff13720e8ad9047dd39466b3c8974e592c2fa383d4a3960714caef0c4f2.tar.gz
revision: sha256:c3ab8ff13720e8ad9047dd39466b3c8974e592c2fa383d4a3960714caef0c4f2
size: 38099
url: http://source-controller.<namespace>.svc.cluster.local./bucket/<namespace>/<bucket-name>/c3ab8ff13720e8ad9047dd39466b3c8974e592c2fa383d4a3960714caef0c4f2.tar.gz
Default exclusions
The following files and extensions are excluded from the Artifact by default:
- Git files (
.git/, .gitignore, .gitmodules, .gitattributes
) - File extensions (
.jpg, .jpeg, .gif, .png, .wmv, .flv, .tar.gz, .zip
) - CI configs (
.github/, .circleci/, .travis.yml, .gitlab-ci.yml, appveyor.yml, .drone.yml, cloudbuild.yaml, codeship-services.yml, codeship-steps.yml
) - CLI configs (
.goreleaser.yml, .sops.yaml
) - Flux v1 config (
.flux.yaml
)
To define your own exclusion rules, see excluding files.
Conditions
A Bucket enters various states during its lifecycle, reflected as Kubernetes Conditions. It can be reconciling while fetching storage objects, it can be ready, or it can fail during reconciliation.
The Bucket API is compatible with the
kstatus specification,
and reports Reconciling
and Stalled
conditions where applicable to
provide better (timeout) support to solutions polling the Bucket to become
Ready
.
Reconciling Bucket
The source-controller marks a Bucket as reconciling when one of the following is true:
- There is no current Artifact for the Bucket, or the reported Artifact is determined to have disappeared from the storage.
- The generation of the Bucket is newer than the Observed Generation.
- The newly calculated Artifact revision differs from the current Artifact.
When the Bucket is “reconciling”, the Ready
Condition status becomes
Unknown
when the controller detects drift, and the controller adds a Condition
with the following attributes to the Bucket’s .status.conditions
:
type: Reconciling
status: "True"
reason: Progressing
|reason: ProgressingWithRetry
If the reconciling state is due to a new revision, an additional Condition is added with the following attributes:
type: ArtifactOutdated
status: "True"
reason: NewRevision
Both Conditions have a
“negative polarity”,
and are only present on the Bucket while their status value is "True"
.
Ready Bucket
The source-controller marks a Bucket as ready when it has the following characteristics:
- The Bucket reports an Artifact.
- The reported Artifact exists in the controller’s Artifact storage.
- The Bucket was able to communicate with the Bucket’s object storage endpoint using the current spec.
- The revision of the reported Artifact is up-to-date with the latest calculated revision of the object storage bucket.
When the Bucket is “ready”, the controller sets a Condition with the following
attributes in the Bucket’s .status.conditions
:
type: Ready
status: "True"
reason: Succeeded
This Ready
Condition will retain a status value of "True"
until the Bucket
is marked as
reconciling, or e.g. a
transient error occurs due to a temporary network issue.
When the Bucket Artifact is archived in the controller’s Artifact
storage, the controller sets a Condition with the following attributes in the
Bucket’s .status.conditions
:
type: ArtifactInStorage
status: "True"
reason: Succeeded
This ArtifactInStorage
Condition will retain a status value of "True"
until
the Artifact in the storage no longer exists.
Failed Bucket
The source-controller may get stuck trying to produce an Artifact for a Bucket without completing. This can occur due to some of the following factors:
- The object storage Endpoint is temporarily unavailable.
- The specified object storage bucket does not exist.
- The Secret reference contains a reference to a non-existing Secret.
- The credentials in the referenced Secret are invalid.
- The Bucket spec contains a generic misconfiguration.
- A storage related failure when storing the artifact.
When this happens, the controller sets the Ready
Condition status to False
,
and adds a Condition with the following attributes to the Bucket’s
.status.conditions
:
type: FetchFailed
|type: StorageOperationFailed
status: "True"
reason: AuthenticationFailed
|reason: BucketOperationFailed
This condition has a
“negative polarity”,
and is only present on the Bucket while the status value is "True"
.
There may be more arbitrary values for the reason
field to provide accurate
reason for a condition.
While the Bucket has this Condition, the controller will continue to attempt to produce an Artifact for the resource with an exponential backoff, until it succeeds and the Bucket is marked as ready.
Note that a Bucket can be
reconciling while failing at
the same time, for example due to a newly introduced configuration issue in the
Bucket spec. When a reconciliation fails, the Reconciling
Condition reason
would be ProgressingWithRetry
. When the reconciliation is performed again
after the failure, the reason is updated to Progressing
.
Observed Ignore
The source-controller reports an observed ignore in the Bucket’s
.status.observedIgnore
. The observed ignore is the latest .spec.ignore
value
which resulted in a
ready state, or stalled due to error
it can not recover from without human intervention. The value is the same as the
ignore in spec. It indicates the ignore rules used in building the
current artifact in storage.
Example:
status:
...
observedIgnore: |
hpa.yaml
build
...
Observed Generation
The source-controller reports an
observed generation
in the Bucket’s .status.observedGeneration
. The observed generation is the
latest .metadata.generation
which resulted in either a
ready state,
or stalled due to error it can not recover from without human
intervention.
Last Handled Reconcile At
The source-controller reports the last reconcile.fluxcd.io/requestedAt
annotation value it acted on in the .status.lastHandledReconcileAt
field.
For practical information about this field, see triggering a reconcile.