Book Image

Argo CD in Practice

By : Liviu Costea, Spiros Economakis
Book Image

Argo CD in Practice

By: Liviu Costea, Spiros Economakis

Overview of this book

GitOps follows the practices of infrastructure as code (IaC), allowing developers to use their day-to-day tools and practices such as source control and pull requests to manage apps. With this book, you’ll understand how to apply GitOps bootstrap clusters in a repeatable manner, build CD pipelines for cloud-native apps running on Kubernetes, and minimize the failure of deployments. You’ll start by installing Argo CD in a cluster, setting up user access using single sign-on, performing declarative configuration changes, and enabling observability and disaster recovery. Once you have a production-ready setup of Argo CD, you’ll explore how CD pipelines can be built using the pull method, how that increases security, and how the reconciliation process occurs when multi-cluster scenarios are involved. Next, you’ll go through the common troubleshooting scenarios, from installation to day-to-day operations, and learn how performance can be improved. Later, you’ll explore the tools that can be used to parse the YAML you write for deploying apps. You can then check if it is valid for new versions of Kubernetes, verify if it has any security or compliance misconfigurations, and that it follows the best practices for cloud-native apps running on Kubernetes. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to build a real-world CD pipeline using Argo CD.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
1
Part 1: The Fundamentals of GitOps and Argo CD
4
Part 2: Argo CD as a Site Reliability Engineer
7
Part 3: Argo CD in Production

Summary

We started this chapter by installing Argo CD with Kustomize. We went with a cloud provider-managed cluster because we needed more nodes to experiment with an HA deployment. We experienced how Argo CD can update itself and how we can make configuration changes to our installation. While a production Kubernetes cluster is highly available and a cloud provider will manage it for us, there are still scenarios when disasters can happen, so we need to have a working disaster recovery strategy. We saw how we can create backups of the Argo CD state and then restore it in a new cluster.

Observability is an important topic and we discussed which metrics can be used to monitor an Argo CD installation, from the OOM container restarts to what a microservice team needs to watch out for. We finished by learning how to link the result of a synchronization to a pipeline so that everything will be automated.

In the next chapter, we are going to discover how we can bootstrap a new Kubernetes...