governance-policy-addon-controller

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Published: Feb 27, 2024 License: Apache-2.0 Imports: 23 Imported by: 0

README

Governance Policy Addon Controller

Open Cluster Management - Governance Policy Addon Controller

Build KinD tests License

Description

The governance policy addon controller manages installations of policy addons on managed clusters by using ManifestWorks. The addons can be enabled, disabled, and configured via their ManagedClusterAddon resources. For more information on the addon framework, see the addon-framework enhancement/design. The addons managed by this controller are:

Go to the Contributing guide to learn how to get involved.

Check the Security guide if you need to report a security issue.

The governance-policy-addon-controller is part of the open-cluster-management community. For more information, visit: open-cluster-management.io.

Getting Started - Usage

Prerequisites

These instructions assume:

  • You have at least one running kubernetes cluster
  • You have already followed instructions from registration-operator and installed OCM successfully
  • At least one managed cluster has been imported and accepted
Deploying the controller

From the base of this repository, a default installation can be applied to the hub cluster with kubectl apply -k config/default. You might want to customize the namespace the controller is deployed to, or the specific image used by the controller. This can be done either by editing config/default/kustomization.yaml directly, or by using kustomize commands like kustomize edit set namespace [mynamespace] or kustomize edit set image policy-addon-image=[myimage].

Deploying and Configuring an addon

This example CR would deploy the Configuration Policy Controller to a managed cluster called my-managed-cluster:

apiVersion: addon.open-cluster-management.io/v1alpha1
kind: ManagedClusterAddOn
metadata:
  name: config-policy-controller
  namespace: my-managed-cluster
spec:
  installNamespace: open-cluster-management-agent-addon

To modify the image used by the Configuration Policy Controller on this managed cluster, you can add an annotation either by modifying and applying the YAML directly, or via a kubectl command like:

kubectl -n my-managed-cluster annotate managedclusteraddon config-policy-controller addon.open-cluster-management.io/values='{"global":{"imageOverrides":{"config_policy_controller":"quay.io/my-repo/my-configpolicy:imagetag"}}}'

Any values in the Helm chart's values.yaml can be modified with the addon.open-cluster-management.io/values annotation. However, the structure of that annotation makes it difficult to apply multiple changes - separate kubectl annotate commands will override each other, as opposed to being merged.

To address this issue, there are some separate annotations that can be applied independently:

  • addon.open-cluster-management.io/on-multicluster-hub - set to "true" on the governance-policy-framework addon when deploying it on a self-managed hub. It has no effect on other addons. Alternatively, this annotation can be set on the hub's ManagedCluster object.
  • log-level - set to an integer to adjust the logging levels on the addon. A higher number will generate more logs. Note that logs from libraries used by the addon will be 2 levels below this setting; to get a v=5 log message from a library, annotate the addon with log-level=7.
  • policy.open-cluster-management.io/sync-policies-on-multicluster-hub - set this to "true" only when the hub is imported by another hub. This is a very advanced use-case and should almost never be used. Alternatively, this annotation can be set on the hub's ManagedCluster object.

Getting Started - Development

To set up a local KinD cluster for development, you'll need to install kind. Then you can use the kind-deploy-controller make target to set everything up, including starting a kind cluster, installing the registration-operator, and importing a cluster.

Alternatively, you can run:

  • ./build/manage-clusters.sh to deploy a hub and a configurable number of managed clusters (defaults to one) using Kind
  • make kind-bootstrap-cluster, a wrapper for the ./build/manage-clusters.sh script
  • make kind-bootstrap-cluster-dev, a wrapper for the ./build/manage-clusters.sh script that stops short of deploying the controller so that the controller can be run locally.

Note: You may need to run make clean if there are existing stale kubeconfig files at the root of the repo.

Before the addons can be successfully distributed to the managed cluster, the work-agent must be started. This usually happens automatically within 5 minutes of importing the managed cluster, and can be waited for programmatically with the wait-for-work-agent make target.

To deploy basic ManagedClusterAddons to all managed clusters, you can run make kind-deploy-addons.

To delete created clusters, you can use the make kind-bootstrap-delete-clusters target, a wrapper for the ./build/manage-clusters.sh script.

Deploying changes

Two make targets are used to update the controller running in the kind clusters with any local changes. The kind-load-image target will re-build the image, and load it into the kind cluster. The kind-regenerate-controller target will update the deployment manifests with any local changes (including RBAC changes), and restart the controller on the cluster to update it.

In general, the addon-controller will revert changes made to its managed ManifestWorks, to match what is rendered by the helm charts. To more quickly test changes to deployed resources without rebuilding the controller image, the policy-addon-pause=true annotation can be added to the ManagedClusterAddOn resource. This will enable changes to the ManifestWork on the hub cluster to persist, but direct changes to resources on a managed cluster will still be reverted to match the ManifestWork.

Running Tests

The e2e tests are intended to be run against a kind cluster. After setting one up with the steps above (and waiting for the work-agent), the tests can be run with the e2e-test make target.

Documentation

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