Cloud-Native Java Applications without a hassle
This project is not an effort from scratch. It was earlier called Fabric8 Maven Plugin. It is just refactored and rebranded version of the project targeted towards Java developers who are working on top of Kubernetes. For more information about history, please see REBRANDING.md
Eclipse JKube is a collection of plugins and libraries that are used for building container images using Docker, JIB or S2I build strategies. Eclipse JKube generates and deploys Kubernetes/OpenShift manifests at compile time too.
It brings your Java applications on to Kubernetes and OpenShift by leveraging the tasks required to make your application cloud-native.
Eclipse JKube also provides a set of tools such as watch, debug, log, etc. to improve your developer experience. This project contains various building blocks for the Kubernetes Java developer toolbox.
JKube Kit is the core engine powering our Maven plugins.
The main difference between Fabric8 Maven Plugin and JKube is the extraction and decoupling of the core components from Maven. This enables other projects and frameworks to reuse all of JKube's functionality by exposing it through a public API.
- Generator framework for automatically generating Docker images by examining project information.
- Enricher framework for creating and enhancing Kubernetes and OpenShift resources.
- Profile combining the configuration for generators and enrichers.
- Resource configuration model objects for a simplified configuration of Kubernetes and OpenShift resources.
- Image configuration model objects for modeling Docker image configuration as used in docker-maven-plugin.
Some thin adapter Maven specific modules like jkube-kit-enricher-maven and jkube-kit-generator-maven are provided as glue to get to the Maven specific build information like the project's coordinates.
Want to test drive JKube? check our getting started Katacoda course to see what JKube can do for you and your project directly from your browser.
Check out our Maven quickstarts to see how JKube fits with the Java framework of your choice.https://github.com/eclipse/jkube/tree/master/quickstarts/maven
- Clone repository and move to quickstart helloworld sample, build project and run JKube goals:
# 1. Clone repository and move to Hello World Quickstart
$ git clone [email protected]:eclipse/jkube.git && cd jkube/quickstarts/maven/hello-world
# 2. Build Project and run JKube goals
$ mvn clean install \
k8s:build `# Build Docker Image` \
k8s:resource `# Generate Kubernetes Manifests` \
k8s:apply `# Apply generated Kubernetes Manifests onto Kubernetes`
- Check created pod logs:
# Using Kubectl
$ kubectl get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
helloworld-7c4665f464-xwskj 0/1 Completed 2 27s
$ kubectl logs jkube-sample-helloworld-7c4665f464-xwskj
Hello World!
# Using JKube
$ mvn k8s:log
[INFO] k8s: [NEW] helloworld-7c4665f464-xwskj status: Running
[INFO] k8s: [NEW] Tailing log of pod: helloworld-587dfff745-2kdpq
[INFO] k8s: [NEW] Press Ctrl-C to stop tailing the log
[INFO] k8s: [NEW]
[INFO] k8s: Hello World!
[INFO] k8s: [NEW] helloworld-7c4665f464-xwskj status: Running
If you experience problems using minikube that pod's status shows 'ImagePullBackOff' and not 'Completed' you must share the minikube's docker deamon environment with your shell with:
$ eval $(minikube docker-env)
You can remove this from your shell again with:
$ eval $(minikube docker-env -u)
If you don't want to type the command for every new terminal you open, you can add the command to your .bash_profile
on mac or .zshrc
.