SwiftkubeModel
is a zero-dependency Swift package for Kubernetes API objects.
- Model structs for all Kubernetes objects
-
Codable
support -
Hashable
resources - Closure-based builders for convenient object composition
- Type-erased wrappers for Kubernetes resources
-
UnstructuredResource
type for handling any Kubernetes resource
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Exact match of API objects in both model and the Kubernetes version.-
API objects mismatches either due to the removal of old API or the addition of new API. However, everything the- model and Kubernetes have in common will work.
To use the Kubernetes objects just import SwiftkubeModel
:
import SwiftkubeModel
let metadata = meta.v1.ObjectMatadata(name: "swiftkube")
let pod = core.v1.Pod(metadata: metadata)
All the objects are namespaced according to their API group and version, e.g. apps.v1.Deployment
or
networking.v1beta1.Ingress
. Which means, that for example rbac.v1.Role
and rbac.v1beta1.Role
are completely
different objects.
Any Kubernetes object can be constructed directly using the model structs. Here is an example for a Deployment
manifest:
let deployment = apps.v1.Deployment(
metadata: meta.v1.ObjectMeta(
name: "nginx"
),
spec: apps.v1.DeploymentSpec(
replicas: 1,
selector: meta.v1.LabelSelector(
matchLabels: ["app": "nginx"]
),
template: core.v1.PodTemplateSpec (
spec: core.v1.PodSpec(
containers: [
core.v1.Container(
image: "nginx",
name: "nginx",
)
]
)
)
)
)
Here is a ConfigMap
:
let configMap = core.v1.ConfigMap(
metadata: meta.v1.ObjectMeta(
name: "config"
),
data: [
"env": "dev",
"log_leve": "debug"
]
)
A more complete example of a Deployment
, that defines Probes
, ResourceRequirements
, Volumes
and VolumeMounts
would look something like this:
let deployment = apps.v1.Deployment(
metadata: meta.v1.ObjectMeta(
name: "opa",
namespace: "default"
),
spec: apps.v1.DeploymentSpec(
replicas: 2,
selector: meta.v1.LabelSelector(
matchLabels: ["app": "opa"]
),
template: core.v1.PodTemplateSpec (
spec: core.v1.PodSpec(
containers: [
core.v1.Container(
image: "openpolicyagent/opa",
name: "opa",
readinessProbe: core.v1.Probe(
failureThreshold: 1,
httpGet: core.v1.HTTPGetAction(
path: "/health",
port: 8080
),
initialDelaySeconds: 10,
periodSeconds: 20,
successThreshold: 2,
timeoutSeconds: 5
),
resources: core.v1.ResourceRequirements(
limits: [
"ram": "512MB"
],
requests: [
"ram": "128MB",
"cpu": "200m",
]
),
volumeMounts: [
core.v1.VolumeMount(
mountPath: "/etc/test",
name: "data"
)
]
)
],
imagePullSecrets: [
core.v1.LocalObjectReference(name: "secret-name")
],
volumes: [
core.v1.Volume(
name: "data",
persistentVolumeClaim: core.v1.PersistentVolumeClaimVolumeSource(
claimName: "pvc",
readOnly: true
)
)
]
)
)
)
)
From the above example it is clear, that a certain knowledge of all the subtypes and their API groups is required, in order to comose a complete manifest. Furthermore, Swift doesn't allow arbitrary arguments order.
For this purpose SwiftkubeModel
provides simple closure-based builder functions for convenience. All these functions
reside under the sk
namespace.
⚠️ The syntax is not yet finalized and can break many times before v1.0.0 ships. This can also be replaced with Function/Result Builders, which is currently a WIP.
⚠️ SwiftkubeModel
currently provides convenience builders only for the most common Kubernetes objects.
The above example would look like this:
let deployment = sk.deployment(name: "opa") {
$0.metadata = sk.metadata {
$0.namespace = "default"
}
$0.spec = sk.deploymentSpec {
$0.replicas = 1
$0.selector = sk.match(labels: ["app": "nginx"])
$0.template = sk.podTemplate {
$0.spec = sk.podSpec {
$0.containers = [
sk.container(name: "opa") {
$0.image = "openpolicyagent/opa"
$0.readinessProbe = sk.probe(action: .httpGet(path: "/health", port: 8080)) {
$0.failureThreshold = 1
$0.initialDelaySeconds = 10
$0.periodSeconds = 20
$0.successThreshold = 2
$0.failureThreshold = 5
}
$0.resources = sk.requirements {
$0.requests = [
"ram": "512MB"
]
$0.limits = [
"ram": "128MB",
"cpu": "200m",
]
}
$0.volumeMounts = [
sk.volumeMount(name: "data", mountPath: "/etc/test")
]
}
]
$0.imagePullSecrets = [
sk.localObjectReference(name: "secret-name")
]
$0.volumes = [
sk.volume(name: "data", from: .persistentVolumeClaim(claimName: "pvc", readOnly: true))
]
}
}
}
}
In addition to closure-based builders, SwiftkubeModel
extends the Model objects with some convenience functions,
inspired by cdk8s
- Populating a
ConfigMap
let configMap: core.v1.ConfigMap = sk.configMap(name: "test")
// populate the config map
configMap.add(data: "stuff", forKey: "foo")
configMap.add(binaryData: <binary>, forKey: "foo")
configMap.add(file: URL(fileURLWithPath: "/some/path"), forKey: "foo")
configMap.add(binaryFile: URL(fileURLWithPath: "/some/path"), forKey: "foo")
- Mount a volume in a container
let container: core.v1.Container = ...
let volume: core.v1.Volume = ...
// mount a volume in a container
container.mount(volume: volume, on: "/data")
container.mount(volume: "dataVolume", on: "/data")
- Finalizers
let namespace: core.v1.Namespace = ...
// add/remove finalizers
namespace.add(finalizer: "foo")
namespace.remove(finalizer: "foo")
- Populating a
Secret
: the values are Base64-encoded automatically
let secret: core.v1.Secret = sk.secret(name: "test")
// populate the secret
configMap.add(data: "stuff", forKey: "foo")
configMap.add(file: URL(fileURLWithPath: "/some/path"), forKey: "foo")
- Server ports on a service
let service: core.v1.Service = ...
// add a service port entry
service.serve(port: 8080, targetPort: 80)
- Use secrets
let serviceAccount: core.v1.ServiceAccount = ...
// add an object reference for a secret
serviceAccount.use(imagePullSecret: "pullSecret")
serviceAccount.use(secret: "secret", namespace: "ns")
- Exposing a
Deployment
let deployment: apps.v1.Deployment = ...
// expose a deployment instance to create a service
let service = deployment.expose(on: 8080, type: .clusterIP)
Often when working with Kubernetes the concrete type of the resource is not known or not relevant, e.g. when creating resources from a YAML manifest file. Other times the type or kind of the resource must be derived at runtime given its string representation.
SwiftkubeModel
provides a type-erased resource implementation UnstructuredResource
and its corresponding
List-Type UnstructuredResourceList
in order to tackle these use-cases.
UnstruturedResource
allows objects that do not have registered KubernetesAPIResource
s to be manipulated generically.
This can be used to deal with the API objects from a plug-in or CRDs.
Here are some examples to clarify their purpose:
// Given a JSON string, e.g. at runtime, containing some Kubernetes resource
let json = """
{
"apiVersion": "stable.example.com/v1",
"kind": "CronTab",
"metadata": {
"name": "my-new-cron-object",
"namespace": "default"
},
"spec": {
"cronSpec": "* * * * */5",
"image": "my-awesome-cron-image"
}
}
"""
// We can still decode it without knowing the concrete type
let data = str.data(using: .utf8)!
let resource = try? JSONDecoder().decode(UnstructuredResource.self, from: data)
// When encoding the previous instance, it serializes the underlying resource
let encoded = try? JSONEncoder().encode(resource)
The UnstruturedResource
exposes its internal dictionary representation and also provides a dynamic subscript support:
let json = """
{
"apiVersion": "stable.example.com/v1",
"kind": "CronTab",
"metadata": {
"name": "my-new-cron-object",
"namespace": "default"
},
"spec": {
"cronSpec": "* * * * */5",
"image": "my-awesome-cron-image"
}
}
"""
let data = str.data(using: .utf8)!
let cron = try? JSONDecoder().decode(UnstructuredResource.self, from: data)
// Shortcut vars
print(cron.apiVersion)
print(cron.kind)
print(cron.metadata)
// The internal Dictionary<String: Any> representation
print(cron.properties)
// Dynamic member lookup
let spec: [String: Any]? = cron.spec
print(spec?["cronSpec"])
To use the SwiftkubeModel
in a SwiftPM project, add the following line to the dependencies in your Package.swift
file:
.package(name: "SwiftkubeModel", url: "https://github.com/swiftkube/model.git", from: "0.14.0")
then include it as a dependency in your target:
import PackageDescription
let package = Package(
// ...
dependencies: [
.package(name: "SwiftkubeModel", url: "https://github.com/swiftkube/model.git", from: "0.14.0")
],
targets: [
.target(name: "<your-target>", dependencies: [
.product(name: "SwiftkubeModel", package: "SwiftkubeModel"),
])
]
)
Then run swift build
.
Swiftkube project is licensed under version 2.0 of the Apache License. See LICENSE for more details.