Ecosyste.ms: Awesome

An open API service indexing awesome lists of open source software.

https://github.com/k8s-client/client

A Kubernetes client for PHP.
https://github.com/k8s-client/client

Last synced: 10 days ago
JSON representation

A Kubernetes client for PHP.

Lists

README

        

# k8s-client ![](https://github.com/k8s-client/client/workflows/Build/badge.svg) [![codecov](https://codecov.io/gh/k8s-client/client/branch/master/graph/badge.svg)](https://codecov.io/gh/k8s-client/client)

k8s-client is a Kubernetes API client for PHP.

* HTTP Client agnostic (supports any [PSR-18 compatible HTTP Client](https://packagist.org/providers/psr/http-client-implementation))
* Supports all major API operations (read, watch, list, patch, delete, exec, attach, logs, port-forward, proxy, etc)
* Supports all Kinds from the Kubernetes API (via auto-generated Kind models with annotations and type-hints).
* Pluggable websocket adapter support (For executing commands in pods, attaching, port-forwarding, etc)

The Kind models are auto-generated nightly for the last 10 versions of the Kubernetes API.

* [Installation](#installation)
* [Using a Specific Kubernetes Version](#using-a-specific-kubernetes-api-version)
* [Installing a Websocket Adapter](#installing-a-websocket-adapter)
* [Constructing the Client Automatically](#constructing-the-client-automatically)
* [Constructing the Client Manually](#constructing-the-client-manually)
* [Examples](#examples)
* [List All Pods](#list-all-pods)
* [Watch All Deployments in a Namespace](#watch-all-deployments-in-a-namespace)
* [Create a Pod](#create-a-pod)
* [Create a Deployment](#create-a-deployment)
* [Patch a Deployment](#patch-a-deployment)
* [Get Logs for a Pod](#get-logs-for-a-pod)
* [Follow Logs for a Pod](#follow-logs-for-a-pod)
* [Execute a Command in a Pod](#execute-a-command-in-a-pod-container)
* [Attach to the Running Process of a Pod](#attach-to-the-running-process-of-a-container-in-a-pod)
* [Download Files from a Pod](#download-files-from-a-pod)
* [Upload Files to a Pod](#upload-files-to-a-pod)
* [Port Forwarding from a Pod](#port-forwarding-from-a-pod)
* [Proxy HTTP Requests to a Pod](#proxy-http-requests-to-a-pod)

## Installation

Install using composer:

```shell
# Install the base client
composer require k8s/client

# Plan on using the Symfony HttpClient? Install the auto-configuration helper for it.
composer require k8s/http-symfony

# Plan on needing to use things like executing commands, port-forwarding?
# Install a websocket adapter.
composer require k8s/ws-ratchet
```

This library requires a [PSR-18 compatible HTTP Client](https://packagist.org/providers/psr/http-client-implementation), such as Guzzle or Symfony's HttpClient.
It can also be given a [PSR-16 compatible Simple Cache implementation](https://packagist.org/providers/psr/simple-cache-implementation) to help speed up the library.

### Using a Specific Kubernetes API version

Each Kubernetes version may have different resources and operations. If you require a specific version, then you can
require the version of the `k8s/api` library that you need to use. That library contains all the API specific versions
and models that are consumed by this library.

For instance, to use API version 1.18:

`composer require k8s/api:"~1.18.0"`

**Note**: The version of `k8s/api` does not exactly reflect the version of the Kubernetes API. The patch version of
Kubernetes may not be the same as the `k8s/api` patch version.

### Installing a Websocket Adapter

Certain Kuberenetes API endpoints (such as exec, to run commands in a container) require websockets to communicate. If you
need support for this, install one of these adapters:

* ReactPHP based websocket adapter (https://github.com/k8s-client/ws-ratchet):

* `composer require k8s/ws-ratchet`

* Swoole based websocket adapter (https://github.com/k8s-client/ws-swoole):

* `composer require k8s/ws-swoole`

See each library's readme for more configuration information.

### Constructing the Client Automatically

The easiest way to construct the client is from a pre-defined KubeConfig:

```php
use K8s\Client\K8sFactory;

# Attempt to load the default kubeconfig file:
$k8s = (new K8sFactory())->loadFromKubeConfig();

# Attempt to load a specific kubeconfig file from a full file path:
$k8s = (new K8sFactory())->loadFromKubeConfigFile('/my/special/.kube/config');

# Load a kubeconfig from string kubeconfig data:
$k8s = (new K8sFactory())->loadFromKubeConfigData($kubeConfigData);
```

**Note**: This requires the use of an HttpClient factory helper. Install one of these packages:
* `k8s/http-symfony` (Symfony based HttpClient)
* `k8s/http-guzzle` (Guzzle based HttpClient)

### Constructing the Client Manually

Construct the client with your needed options:

```php
use K8s\Client\K8s;
use K8s\Client\Options;

# Supply the base path to the Kubernetes API endpoint:
$options = new Options('https://127.0.0.1:8443');
# To use an API token for authentication, set it in the options:
$options->setToken('some-secret-token-value-goes-here');

$k8s = new K8s($options);
```

**Note**: If you need to perform certificate based authentication, check the options for the HttpClient you are using.
Also check the configuration for the websocket adapter you are using.

## Examples

### List all Pods

```php
use K8s\Api\Model\Api\Core\v1\Pod;
use K8s\Client\K8sFactory;

$k8s = (new K8sFactory())->loadFromKubeConfig();

/** @var Pod $pod */
foreach ($k8s->listAll(Pod::class) as $pod) {
echo sprintf(
"%s\t%s\t%s",
$pod->getPodIP(),
$pod->getNamespace(),
$pod->getName()
) . PHP_EOL;
}
```

### Watch all Deployments in a Namespace

```php
use K8s\Api\Model\Api\Apps\v1\Deployment;
use K8s\Api\Model\ApiMachinery\Apis\Meta\v1\WatchEvent;
use K8s\Client\K8sFactory;

$k8s = (new K8sFactory())->loadFromKubeConfig();

$count = 0;

# This will watch all deployments in the default namespace.
# Change the namespace either in the Options above or as a parameter to the watchNamespaced method below.
$k8s->watchNamespaced(function (WatchEvent $event) use (&$count) {
$count++;

/** @var Deployment $object */
$object = $event->getObject();
echo sprintf(
"%s\t%s\t%s\t%s",
$event->getType(),
$object->getName(),
$object->getReplicas(),
implode(',', (array)$object->getLabels())
) . PHP_EOL;

# Return false if some condition is met to stop watching.
if ($count >= 5) {
return false;
}
}, Deployment::class);
```

### Create a Pod

Using model classes:

```php
use K8s\Api\Model\Api\Core\v1\Container;
use K8s\Api\Model\Api\Core\v1\Pod;
use K8s\Client\K8sFactory;

$k8s = (new K8sFactory())->loadFromKubeConfig();

# Create a pod with the name "web" using the nginx:latest image...
$pod = new Pod(
'web',
[new Container('web', 'nginx:latest')]
);

# Create will return the updated Pod object after creation in this instance...
$pod = $k8s->create($pod);

var_dump($pod);
```

Using array data:

```php
use K8s\Client\K8sFactory;

$k8s = (new K8sFactory())->loadFromKubeConfig();

# Create a pod with the name "web" using the nginx:latest image...
# Create will return the updated Pod object after creation in this instance...
$pod = $k8s->create($k8s->newKind([
'apiVersion' => 'v1',
'kind' => 'Pod',
'metadata' => [
'name' => 'web',
],
'spec' => [
'containers' => [
[
'image' => 'nginx:latest',
'name' => 'web',
],
]
],
]));

var_dump($pod);
```

### Create a Deployment

Using model classes:

```php
use K8s\Api\Model\Api\Apps\v1\Deployment;
use K8s\Api\Model\ApiMachinery\Apis\Meta\v1\LabelSelector;
use K8s\Api\Model\Api\Core\v1\Container;
use K8s\Api\Model\Api\Core\v1\PodTemplateSpec;
use K8s\Client\K8sFactory;

$k8s = (new K8sFactory())->loadFromKubeConfig();

# All deployments need a "template" that describes the Pod spec
$template = new PodTemplateSpec(
'frontend',
[new Container('frontend', 'nginx:latest')]
);

# The template must have a label that matches the label selector below
$template->setLabels(['app' => 'web']);

# Create a deployment called "frontend" with the given template.
$deployment = new Deployment(
'frontend',
new LabelSelector([], ['app' => 'web']),
$template
);

$result = $k8s->create($deployment);

# Create for a deployment will return a Status object for the creation
var_dump($result);
```

Using array data:

```php
use K8s\Client\K8sFactory;

$k8s = (new K8sFactory())->loadFromKubeConfig();

# Create a deployment with the given array data matching what you want.
$result = $k8s->create($k8s->newKind([
'apiVersion' => 'apps/v1',
'kind' => 'Deployment',
'metadata' => [
'name' => 'frontend',
'labels' => [
'app' => 'web',
]
],
'spec' => [
'selector' => [
'matchLabels' => [
'app' => 'web',
]
],
'template' => [
'metadata' => [
'labels' => [
'app' => 'web',
]
],
'spec' => [
'containers' => [
[
'image' => 'nginx:latest',
'name' => 'frontend',
],
],
],
],
],
]));

# Create for a deployment will return a Status object for the creation
var_dump($result);
```

### Proxy HTTP requests to a Pod

The proxy method sends an HTTP request to a path of a pod, service, or node. It makes no assumptions about what type of
HTTP request you want to send, so it accepts a standard PSR-7 RequestInterface and returns a ResponseInterface.

```php
use Http\Discovery\Psr17FactoryDiscovery;
use K8s\Api\Model\Api\Core\v1\Pod;
use K8s\Client\K8sFactory;

$k8s = (new K8sFactory())->loadFromKubeConfig();

# Get the pod you want to proxy to first
$pod = $k8s->read('web', Pod::class);

# Create the HTTP request you'd like to send to it
$requestFactory = Psr17FactoryDiscovery::findRequestFactory();
$request = $requestFactory->createRequest('GET', '/');

# Send the request to proxy, dump the results
# The result will be the raw PSR-7 ResultInterface class.
$result = $k8s->proxy($pod, $request);

echo (string)$result->getBody().PHP_EOL;
```

### Get Logs for a Pod

```php
use K8s\Client\K8sFactory;

$k8s = (new K8sFactory())->loadFromKubeConfig();

# Read logs from a pod called "web".
# Also append all log entries with a timestamp (ISO8601)
$log = $k8s->logs('web')
->withTimestamps()
->read();

var_dump($log);
```

### Follow Logs for a Pod

```php
use K8s\Client\K8sFactory;

$k8s = (new K8sFactory())->loadFromKubeConfig();

$count = 0;

# Follow logs from a pod called "web".
# Also append all log entries with a timestamp (ISO8601)
$k8s->logs('web')
->withTimestamps()
->follow(function (string $log) use (&$count) {
$count++;
var_dump($log);

# Return false at any point to stop following the logs.
if ($count >= 5) {
return false;
}
});
```

### Execute a command in a Pod container

```php
use K8s\Client\K8sFactory;

$k8s = (new K8sFactory())->loadFromKubeConfig();

# Print the result of "whoami".
$k8s->exec('web', '/usr/bin/whoami')
->useStdout()
->run(function (string $channel, string $data) {
echo sprintf(
'%s => %s',
$channel,
$data
) . PHP_EOL;
});
```

### Attach to the running process of a container in a Pod

```php
use K8s\Client\K8sFactory;

$k8s = (new K8sFactory())->loadFromKubeConfig();

# Attaches to the main running process of the container in the Pod
$k8s->attach('my-pod')
# You must specify at least one of useStdout(), useStderr(), useStdin()
->useStdout()
# Prints out any STDOUT from the main running process
# Can also pass it an instance of ContainerExecInterface
->run(function (string $channel, string $data) {
echo sprintf(
"%s => %s",
$channel,
$data
) . PHP_EOL;
});
```

### Patch a Deployment

```php
use K8s\Api\Model\Api\Apps\v1\Deployment;
use K8s\Client\Patch\JsonPatch;
use K8s\Client\K8sFactory;

$k8s = (new K8sFactory())->loadFromKubeConfig();

$patch = new JsonPatch();
# Since labels are an array, this actually replaces existing labels
$patch->add('/metadata/labels', ['app' => 'web']);
# Replaces the current replica value with 2
$patch->replace('/spec/replicas', 2);

# We first need to read the deployment we want to patch.
$deployment = $k8s->read('frontend', Deployment::class);
# Now we patch the deployment using the patch object. The returned value will be the updated deployment.
$deployment = $k8s->patch($deployment, $patch);

echo sprintf(
'Replicas: %s, Labels: %s',
$deployment->getReplicas(),
implode(',', $deployment->getLabels())
) . PHP_EOL;
```

### Upload Files to a Pod

```php
use K8s\Client\K8sFactory;

$k8s = (new K8sFactory())->loadFromKubeConfig();

$k8s->uploader('my-pod')
# Add files from paths.
# The first argument is the source location, the second is the destination for it on the container.
->addFile('/path/to/local/file.txt', '/tmp/file.txt')
# Add files from string data.
# The first argument is the destination path on the container. The second is the file contents as a string.
->addFileFromString('/tmp/hi.txt', 'Oh, hi Mark.')
# This actually initiates the upload process.
->upload();
```

### Download Files from a Pod

```php
use K8s\Client\K8sFactory;

$k8s = (new K8sFactory())->loadFromKubeConfig();

$archive = $k8s->downloader('my-pod')
# Optionally choose to compress the downloaded files (gzip -- tar.gz)
->compress()
# The file(s) or directory to download. Can be an array of files, or just a single directory or file.
->from('/etc')
# If you don't specify to() it will download to a temp file.
->to(__DIR__ . '/' . 'podFiles.tar.gz')
# Initiate the download process.
->download();

# The full path to the downloaded files archive..
echo (string)$archive . PHP_EOL;
# Extract the downloaded files to a directory called "podFiles" in the current directory..
mkdir(__DIR__ . '/podFiles');
$archive->extractTo(__DIR__ . '/podFiles');
```

### Port Forwarding from a Pod

**Note**: The below example assumes a pod called `portforward-example` exists with port 80 serving HTTP (such as a base nginx image).

Create a class that reacts to port forwarding events:

```php
namespace App;

use K8s\Client\Websocket\Contract\PortChannelInterface;
use K8s\Client\Websocket\Contract\PortForwardInterface;
use K8s\Client\Websocket\PortChannels;

class PortForwarder implements PortForwardInterface
{
/**
* @var PortChannels
*/
private $portChannels;

/**
* @inheritDoc
*/
public function onInitialize(PortChannels $portChannels) : void
{
$this->portChannels = $portChannels;

# On initialize, send this HTTP request across.
# Due to "Connection: close" HTTP instruction, the websocket will close after the response is received.
# In a more realistic situation, you'd probably want to keep this open, and react in the onDataReceived method.
$data = "GET / HTTP/1.1\r\n";
$data .= "Host: 127.0.0.1\r\n";
$data .= "Connection: close\r\n";
$data .= "Accept: */*\r\n";
$data .= "\r\n";

$this->portChannels->writeToPort(80, $data);
}

/**
* @inheritDoc
*/
public function onDataReceived(string $data, PortChannelInterface $portChannel) : void
{
echo sprintf(
'Received data on port %s:',
$portChannel->getPortNumber()
) . PHP_EOL;
echo $data . PHP_EOL;
}

/**
* @inheritDoc
*/
public function onErrorReceived(string $data, PortChannelInterface $portChannel) : void
{
echo sprintf(
'Received error on port %s: %s',
$portChannel->getPortNumber(),
$data
) . PHP_EOL;
}

/**
* @inheritDoc
*/
public function onClose() : void
{
# Do something here to clean-up resources when the connection is closed...
}
}
```

Use the above class as a handler for the port forward process:

```php
use App\PortForwarder;
use K8s\Client\K8sFactory;

$k8s = (new K8sFactory())->loadFromKubeConfig();

$handler = new PortForwarder();
# Assuming a Pod with a basic HTTP port 80 exposed...
$k8s->portforward('portforward-example', 80)
->start($handler);
```