This document will show how to build the Multi-Cluster-App-Dispatcher
(MCAD
) Kubernetes Controller that operates on an AppWrapper
kubernetes custom resource definition. Instructions are for the main branch.
To build Multi-Cluster-App-Dispatcher
, a running Docker environment must be available. Here is a document on Getting Started with Docker. Podman image builds are also supported.
Clone this repo in your local environment:
Option 1: Clone this github project to your local machine via HTTPS
$ git clone https://github.com/project-codeflare/multi-cluster-app-dispatcher.git
Cloning into 'multi-cluster-app-dispatcher'...
Checking connectivity... done.
Checking out files: 100% (####/####), done.
$
Option 2: Clone this github project to your local machine via SSH
$ git clone [email protected]:project-codeflare/multi-cluster-app-dispatcher.git
Cloning into 'multi-cluster-app-dispatcher'...
Checking connectivity... done.
Checking out files: 100% (####/####), done.
$
To build the controller and to run the end to end tests locally you will need to have the following software installed:
Go
(version 1.18)kind
(version 0.18)kubectl
helm
- version 3.0 or latermake
On MacOS you will need to have readlink
executable installed (brew install coreutils
)
From the root directory of the repository, you may build only the executable, or you can build the image directly.
To to build the executable, execute:
#build for linux OS and for use inside docker image
multi-cluster-app-dispatcher $ make mcad-controller
...
mkdir -p _output/bin
Compiling controller
CGO_ENABLED=0 go build -o _output/bin/mcad-controller ./cmd/kar-controllers/
Ensure the executable mcad-controllers
are created in the target output directory:
multi-cluster-app-dispatcher $ ls _output/bin
mcad-controller
If you want pass additional args to the go build
, define add them to the GO_BUILD_ARGS
environment variable. This feature is useful if you want to compile the executable with the race condition detector turned on. To turn on the the race detector in your executable, execute:
make mcad-controller GO_BUILD_ARGS=-race
mkdir -p _output/bin
Compiling controller with build arguments: '-race'
go build -race -o _output/bin/mcad-controller ./cmd/kar-controllers/
If you want to run the end to end tests locally, you will need to have the docker daemon running on your workstation, and build the image using docker. Images can also be build using podman for deployment of the MCAD controller on remote clusters.
From the root directory of the repository:
# With docker daemon running
multi-cluster-app-dispatcher % make images
....
make images
"---"
"MAKE GLOBAL VARIABLES:"
" "BIN_DIR="_output/bin"
" "GIT_BRANCH="main"
" "RELEASE_VER="v1.29.57"
" "TAG="main-v1.29.57"
" "GO_BUILD_ARGS=""
"---"
# Check for invalid tag name
t=main-v1.29.57 && [ ${#t} -le 128 ] || { echo "Target name $t has 128 or more chars"; false; }
List executable directory
repo id:
branch: main
Build the docker image
docker build --quiet --no-cache --tag mcad-controller:main-v1.29.57 -f XXXXXX/multi-cluster-app-dispatcher/Dockerfile XXXXX/multi-cluster-app-dispatcher
#Using podman
make images-podman
....
# output from a main branch, MacOS build, local file names replaced with XXXXXXXXXX
"---"
"MAKE GLOBAL VARIABLES:"
" "BIN_DIR="_output/bin"
" "GIT_BRANCH="main"
" "RELEASE_VER="v1.29.57"
" "TAG="main-v1.29.57"
" "GO_BUILD_ARGS=""
"---"
# Check for invalid tag name
t=main-v1.29.57 && [ ${#t} -le 128 ] || { echo "Target name $t has 128 or more chars"; false; }
List executable directory
repo id:
branch: main
Build the docker image
podman build --quiet --no-cache --tag mcad-controller:main-v1.29.57 -f XXXXX/multi-cluster-app-dispatcher/Dockerfile XXXXX/multi-cluster-app-dispatcher
The GO_BUILD_ARGS
use is also supported by the images builds with either docker
and podman
. To turn on the race condition detector in image's executable execute: make images GO_BUILD_ARGS=-race
The following example assumes an available <repository>/mcad-controller
on Docker Hub and using image version v1.14
docker login
docker push <repository>/mcad-controller:v1.14
The same can be done with Quay
docker login quay.io
docker push <quay_repository>/mcad-controller:v1.14
Refer to deployment on how to deploy the multi-cluster-app-dispatcher
as a controller in Kubernetes.
When running e2e tests, is recommended you restrict the docker
daemon cpu and memory resources. The recommended settings are:
- CPU: 2
- Memory: 8 GB
From the root directory of the repository:
# With docker daemon running
multi-cluster-app-dispatcher % make run-e2e