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WARNING WARNING WARNING WARNING WARNING

PLEASE NOTE: This document applies to the HEAD of the source tree

If you are using a released version of Kubernetes, you should refer to the docs that go with that version.

Documentation for other releases can be found at releases.k8s.io.

Generic Configuration Object

Abstract

The ConfigMap API resource stores data used for the configuration of applications deployed on Kubernetes.

The main focus of this resource is to:

  • Provide dynamic distribution of configuration data to deployed applications.
  • Encapsulate configuration information and simplify Kubernetes deployments.
  • Create a flexible configuration model for Kubernetes.

Motivation

A Secret-like API resource is needed to store configuration data that pods can consume.

Goals of this design:

  1. Describe a ConfigMap API resource
  2. Describe the semantics of consuming ConfigMap as environment variables
  3. Describe the semantics of consuming ConfigMap as files in a volume

Use Cases

  1. As a user, I want to be able to consume configuration data as environment variables
  2. As a user, I want to be able to consume configuration data as files in a volume
  3. As a user, I want my view of configuration data in files to be eventually consistent with changes to the data

Consuming ConfigMap as Environment Variables

Many programs read their configuration from environment variables. ConfigMap should be possible to consume in environment variables. The rough series of events for consuming ConfigMap this way is:

  1. A ConfigMap object is created
  2. A pod that consumes the configuration data via environment variables is created
  3. The pod is scheduled onto a node
  4. The kubelet retrieves the ConfigMap resource(s) referenced by the pod and starts the container processes with the appropriate data in environment variables

Consuming ConfigMap in Volumes

Many programs read their configuration from configuration files. ConfigMap should be possible to consume in a volume. The rough series of events for consuming ConfigMap this way is:

  1. A ConfigMap object is created
  2. A new pod using the ConfigMap via the volume plugin is created
  3. The pod is scheduled onto a node
  4. The Kubelet creates an instance of the volume plugin and calls its Setup() method
  5. The volume plugin retrieves the ConfigMap resource(s) referenced by the pod and projects the appropriate data into the volume

Consuming ConfigMap Updates

Any long-running system has configuration that is mutated over time. Changes made to configuration data must be made visible to pods consuming data in volumes so that they can respond to those changes.

The resourceVersion of the ConfigMap object will be updated by the API server every time the object is modified. After an update, modifications will be made visible to the consumer container:

  1. A ConfigMap object is created
  2. A new pod using the ConfigMap via the volume plugin is created
  3. The pod is scheduled onto a node
  4. During the sync loop, the Kubelet creates an instance of the volume plugin and calls its Setup() method
  5. The volume plugin retrieves the ConfigMap resource(s) referenced by the pod and projects the appropriate data into the volume
  6. The ConfigMap referenced by the pod is updated
  7. During the next iteration of the syncLoop, the Kubelet creates an instance of the volume plugin and calls its Setup() method
  8. The volume plugin projects the updated data into the volume atomically

It is the consuming pod's responsibility to make use of the updated data once it is made visible.

Because environment variables cannot be updated without restarting a container, configuration data consumed in environment variables will not be updated.

Advantages

  • Easy to consume in pods; consumer-agnostic
  • Configuration data is persistent and versioned
  • Consumers of configuration data in volumes can respond to changes in the data

Proposed Design

API Resource

The ConfigMap resource will be added to the main API:

package api

// ConfigMap holds configuration data for pods to consume.
type ConfigMap struct {
	TypeMeta   `json:",inline"`
	ObjectMeta `json:"metadata,omitempty"`

  // Data contains the configuration data.  Each key must be a valid DNS_SUBDOMAIN or leading
  // dot followed by valid DNS_SUBDOMAIN.
	Data map[string]string `json:"data,omitempty"`
}

type ConfigMapList struct {
	TypeMeta `json:",inline"`
	ListMeta `json:"metadata,omitempty"`

	Items []ConfigMap `json:"items"`
}

A Registry implementation for ConfigMap will be added to pkg/registry/configmap.

Environment Variables

The EnvVarSource will be extended with a new selector for ConfigMap:

package api

// EnvVarSource represents a source for the value of an EnvVar.
type EnvVarSource struct {
  // other fields omitted

  // Specifies a ConfigMap key
  ConfigMap *ConfigMapSelector `json:"configMap,omitempty"`
}

// ConfigMapSelector selects a key of a ConfigMap.
type ConfigMapSelector struct {
  // The name of the ConfigMap to select a key from.
  ConfigMapName string `json:"configMapName"`
  // The key of the ConfigMap to select.
  Key string `json:"key"`
}

Volume Source

A new ConfigMapVolumeSource type of volume source containing the ConfigMap object will be added to the VolumeSource struct in the API:

package api

type VolumeSource struct {
  // other fields omitted
  ConfigMap *ConfigMapVolumeSource `json:"configMap,omitempty"`
}

// Represents a volume that holds configuration data.
type ConfigMapVolumeSource struct {
  LocalObjectReference `json:",inline"`
  // A list of keys to project into the volume.
  // If unspecified, each key-value pair in the Data field of the
  // referenced ConfigMap will be projected into the volume as a file whose name
  // is the key and content is the value.
  // If specified, the listed keys will be project into the specified paths, and
  // unlisted keys will not be present.
  Items []KeyToPath `json:"items,omitempty"`
}

// Represents a mapping of a key to a relative path.
type KeyToPath struct {
  // The name of the key to select
  Key string `json:"key"`

  // The relative path name of the file to be created.
  // Must not be absolute or contain the '..' path. Must be utf-8 encoded.
  // The first item of the relative path must not start with '..'
  Path string `json:"path"`
}

Note: The update logic used in the downward API volume plug-in will be extracted and re-used in the volume plug-in for ConfigMap.

Changes to Secret

We will update the Secret volume plugin to have a similar API to the new ConfigMap volume plugin. The secret volume plugin will also begin updating secret content in the volume when secrets change.

Examples

Consuming ConfigMap as Environment Variables

apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
  name: etcd-env-config
data:
  number-of-members: 1
  initial-cluster-state: new
  initial-cluster-token: DUMMY_ETCD_INITIAL_CLUSTER_TOKEN
  discovery-token: DUMMY_ETCD_DISCOVERY_TOKEN
  discovery-url: http://etcd-discovery:2379
  etcdctl-peers: http://etcd:2379

This pod consumes the ConfigMap as environment variables:

apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
  name: config-env-example
spec:
  containers:
  - name: etcd
    image: openshift/etcd-20-centos7
    ports:
    - containerPort: 2379
      protocol: TCP
    - containerPort: 2380
      protocol: TCP
    env:
    - name: ETCD_NUM_MEMBERS
      valueFrom:
        configMap:
          configMapName: etcd-env-config
          key: number-of-members
    - name: ETCD_INITIAL_CLUSTER_STATE
      valueFrom:
        configMap:
          configMapName: etcd-env-config
          key: initial-cluster-state
    - name: ETCD_DISCOVERY_TOKEN
      valueFrom:
        configMap:
          configMapName: etcd-env-config
          key: discovery-token
    - name: ETCD_DISCOVERY_URL
      valueFrom:
        configMap:
          configMapName: etcd-env-config
          key: discovery-url
    - name: ETCDCTL_PEERS
      valueFrom:
        configMap:
          configMapName: etcd-env-config
          key: etcdctl-peers

Consuming ConfigMap as Volumes

redis-volume-config is intended to be used as a volume containing a config file:

apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
  name: redis-volume-config
data:
  redis.conf: "pidfile /var/run/redis.pid\nport6379\ntcp-backlog 511\n databases 1\ntimeout 0\n"

The following pod consumes the redis-volume-config in a volume:

apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
  name: config-volume-example
spec:
  containers:
    - name: redis
      image: kubernetes/redis
      command: "redis-server /mnt/config-map/etc/redis.conf"
      ports:
        - containerPort: 6379
      volumeMounts:
        - name: config-map-volume
          mountPath: /mnt/config-map
  volumes:
    - name: config-map-volume
      configMap:
        name: redis-volume-config
        items:
          - path: "etc/redis.conf"
            key: redis.conf

Future Improvements

In the future, we may add the ability to specify an init-container that can watch the volume contents for updates and respond to changes when they occur.

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