Skip to content

tkestack/tapp

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

8ad6fff · Jan 10, 2022
Jul 1, 2020
Dec 5, 2019
Jan 20, 2021
Feb 2, 2021
Feb 19, 2021
Jan 20, 2021
Nov 19, 2021
Nov 7, 2019
Nov 7, 2019
Nov 12, 2019
Nov 11, 2019
Jul 1, 2020
Dec 17, 2019
Dec 25, 2019
Dec 17, 2019
Aug 26, 2020

Repository files navigation

TAPP

TAPP is a CustomResourceDefinition(CRD) based app kind, it contains most features of kubernetes deployment and statefulset, and it is easy for users to run legacy applications on Kubernetes. Nowadays, many customers want to adopt Kubernetes, and migrate their legacy applications to Kubernetes. However they could not use Kubernetes’ workloads(e.g. deployment, statefulset) directly, and it will take a lot of effort to transform those applications to microservices. TAPP could solve these problems.

Features

  • Support unique index for each instance(same as statefulset)

  • Support operating(start/stop/upgrade) on specific instances(pods)

    It is more suitable for traditional operation and maintenance, e.g. when administor want to stop one machine, he could just stop instances on that machine, and do not affect instances on other machines.

  • Support in place update for instances

    While many stateless workloads are designed to withstand such a disruption, some are more sensitive, a Pod restart is a serious disruption, resulting in lower availability or higher cost of running.

  • Support multi versions of instances

    Instances use different images or different config.

  • Support Horizontal Pod Autoscaler(HPA) according to a lot kinds of metrics(e.g. CPU, memory, custom metrics)

  • Support rolling update, rolling back

Usage

Find more usage at tutorial.md.

Build

$ make build

Run

# assumes you have a working kubeconfig, not required if operating in-cluster
$ bin/tapp-controller --master=127.0.0.1:8080    // Assume 127.0.0.1:8080 is k8s master ip:port
or
$ bin/tapp-controller --kubeconfig=$HOME/.kube/config

# create a custom resource of type TApp
$ kubectl create -f artifacts/examples/example-tapp.yaml

# check pods created through the custom resource
$ kubectl get pods

Cleanup

You can clean up the created CustomResourceDefinition with:

$ kubectl delete crd tapps.apps.tkestack.io