Book Image

The Kubernetes Operator Framework Book

By : Michael Dame
1 (1)
Book Image

The Kubernetes Operator Framework Book

1 (1)
By: Michael Dame

Overview of this book

From incomplete collections of knowledge and varying design approaches to technical knowledge barriers, Kubernetes users face various challenges when developing their own operators. Knowing how to write, deploy, and pack operators makes cluster management automation much easier – and that's what this book is here to teach you. Beginning with operators and Operator Framework fundamentals, the book delves into how the different components of Operator Framework (such as the Operator SDK, Operator Lifecycle Manager, and OperatorHub.io) are used to build operators. You’ll learn how to write a basic operator, interact with a Kubernetes cluster in code, and distribute that operator to users. As you advance, you’ll be able to develop a sample operator in the Go programming language using Operator SDK tools before running it locally with Operator Lifecycle Manager, and also learn how to package an operator bundle for distribution. The book covers best practices as well as sample applications and case studies based on real-world operators to help you implement the concepts you’ve learned. By the end of this Kubernetes book, you’ll be able to build and add application-specific operational logic to a Kubernetes cluster, making it easier to automate complex applications and augment the platform.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
1
Part 1: Essentials of Operators and the Operator Framework
4
Part 2: Designing and Developing an Operator
9
Part 3: Deploying and Distributing Operators for Public Use

Summary

This chapter highlighted some additional options for functionality beyond the bare minimum that was established in Chapter 4, Developing an Operator with the Operator SDK. This list is obviously not exhaustive of every possibility for advanced features, but it is intended to showcase some of the most common additional features added to Operators. At this point, some of the patterns for feature development should start to become clear (for example, startup and initialization code usually goes in main.go, while features related to core logic can fit nicely with the controller code in nginxoperator_controller.go, or its own package).

The work done in this chapter shows some of the steps necessary in order to graduate an Operator from lower-level functionality to higher levels in the Capability Model. For example, metrics are a key aspect of a Level IV (Deep Insights) Operator and, therefore, something that is expected of the highest-function Operators available to users. In...