Calico Operator
This repository contains a Kubernetes operator which manages the lifecycle of a Calico or Calico Enterprise installation on Kubernetes or OpenShift. Its goal is to make installation, upgrades, and ongoing lifecycle management of Calico and Calico Enterprise as simple and reliable as possible.
This operator is built using the operator-sdk, so you should be familiar with how that works before getting started.
Getting Started Running Calico
There are many avenues to get started running Calico depending on your situation.
- Trying out Kubernetes on a single host or on your own hardware? The quick start guide will have you up and running in about fifteen minutes.
- Running a managed public cloud? Use our guides for enabling Calico network policies.
- Want to go deeper? Visit https://docs.tigera.io/ for full documentation.
Get Started Developing
Code structure
There are a few important areas to be aware of:
- Operator API definitions exist in
api/v1
- Rendering code for generating Kubernetes resources is in
pkg/render
- Control/reconcile loops for each component can be found in
pkg/controller/<component>
There is a layer that was introduced with the upgrade to operator-sdk v1.x of controllers incontroller
that currently callspkg/controller/<component>
. - Status reporting is in
pkg/controller/status
Tests:
- Tests for file
X.go
can be found inX_test.go
. - FV tests which run against a local cluster can be found in
test/*.go
.
Controller Dependency Graph
This graph shows the dependencies between controllers. Optional dependencies are in dashed lines.
Design principles
When developing in the operator, there are a few design principles to be aware of.
- API changes should be rare occurrences, and the API should contain as little as possible. Use auto-detection or automation wherever possible to reduce the API surface.
- Each "component" should receive its own CRD, namespace, controller, and status manager. e.g., compliance, networking, apiserver.
- Controllers interact with each other through the Kubernetes API. For example, by updating status on relevant objects.
Adding a new CRD
New APIs are added using the operator-sdk
tool.
operator-sdk create api --group=operator --version=v1 --kind=<Kind> --resource
When modifying or adding CRDs, you will need to run make gen-files
to update the auto-generated files. The tool
might change the scope of existing resources to "Namespaced", so make sure to set them back to their desired state.
Adding a new controller
New controllers are also added using the operator-sdk
tool.
operator-sdk create api --group=operator --version=v1 --kind=<Kind> --controller
New controllers will be created in the newer format so it should be considered if it is desirable to keep the
current format that calls to a controller in pkg/controller
or add the controller only in controllers
.
Running it locally
You can create a local k3d cluster with the Makefile:
make cluster-create
Export the kubeconfig:
export KUBECONFIG=./kubeconfig.yaml
Create the tigera-operator namespace:
kubectl create ns tigera-operator
Then, run the operator against the local cluster:
# enable-leader-election is necessary since you'll be running the operator outside of a cluster
KUBECONFIG=./kubeconfig.yaml go run ./ --enable-leader-election=false
To launch Calico, install the default custom resource:
kubectl create -f ./config/samples/operator_v1_installation.yaml
To tear down the cluster:
make cluster-destroy
Running a custom image in your existing Calico (Enterprise) cluster
These steps assume that you already have installed the operator in a Calico (Enterprise) cluster after following either
docs.projectcalico.org or docs.tigera.io. To verify, run kubectl get deployment -n tigera-operator tigera-operator
.
You should see an existing deployment.
The steps also assume that you have setup your docker such that you can push to a registry.
These are the steps:
- Make your own code changes to this repository.
- Create the binaries and a docker image.
The output will show you the docker tag that was just created. (For example:
make image
Successfully tagged tigera/operator:latest-amd64
.) - Re-tag the image and push it to a registry of your choice.
export IMAGE=myregistry.com/user/tigera/operator:my-tag docker tag tigera/operator:latest $IMAGE docker push $IMAGE
- Change your deployment to use the image.
If your image is in a private registry, you also need to add imagePullSecrets to the deployment.
kubectl set image deploy -n tigera-operator tigera-operator tigera-operator=$IMAGE
Set breakpoints in Goland IDE and run the code against your existing Calico (Enterprise) cluster
These steps assume that you already have installed the operator in a Calico (Enterprise) cluster after following either
https://docs.projectcalico.org or https://docs.tigera.io. To verify, run kubectl get deployment -n tigera-operator tigera-operator
.
You should see an existing deployment. Install kubefwd.
- Scale down the operator, so it does not interfere with your own:
kubectl scale deploy -n tigera-operator tigera-operator --replicas=0
- Run kubefwd in a separate terminal, so pods and service names are accessible from your local computer.
kubefwd svc -n calico-system -n tigera-compliance -n tigera-kibana -n tigera-manager -n tigera-dex -n tigera-elasticsearch -n tigera-prometheus -c $KUBECONFIG
- Open a code file in your editor and set a breakpoint.
- Create a debug configuration by right-clicking main.go and select
modify run configuration
.- Under Run kind, select
Package
- Under Environment, add
KUBECONFIG=/path/to/config
- In Program arguments, add
--enable-leader-election=false
- Under Run kind, select
- Save the configuration. You can now run it in debug mode.
Using Calico Enterprise
To install Calico Enterprise instead of Calico, you need to install an image pull secret, as well as modify the Installation CR.
Create the pull secret in the tigera-operator namespace:
kubectl create secret -n tigera-operator generic tigera-pull-secret \
--from-file=.dockerconfigjson=<PATH/TO/PULL/SECRET> \
--type=kubernetes.io/dockerconfigjson
Then, modify the installation CR (e.g., with kubectl edit installations
) to include the following:
spec:
variant: TigeraSecureEnterprise
imagePullSecrets:
- name: tigera-pull-secret
You can then install additional Calico Enterprise components by creating their CRs from within
the ./deploy/crds/
directory.
Running unit tests
To run all the unit tests, run:
make test
To run a specific test or set of tests, use the GINKGO_FOCUS
argument.
make test GINKGO_FOCUS="component function tests"
Making temporary changes to components the operator manages
The operator creates and manages resources and will reconcile them to be in the desired state. Due to the reconciliation it does, if a user makes direct changes to a resource the operator will revert those changes. To enable the user to make temporary changes, an annotation can be added to any resource directly managed by the operator which will cause the operator to no longer update the resource. Adding the following as an annotation to any resource will prevent the operator from making any future updates to the annotated resource:
Do not use this unless you are a developer working on the operator. If you add this annotation, you must remove it before the operator can manage the resource again.
unsupported.operator.tigera.io/ignore: "true"
Example update to calico-node DaemonSet
Notice that the annotation is added in the top level metadata (not in the spec.template.metadata). (note the below is not a valid manifest but just an example)
kind: DaemonSet
apiVersion: apps/v1
metadata:
name: calico-node
namespace: calico-system
labels:
k8s-app: calico-node
annotations:
# You should NOT use this unless you want to block the operator from doing its job managing this resource.
unsupported.operator.tigera.io/ignore: "true"
spec:
template:
metadata:
labels:
k8s-app: calico-node
annotations:
scheduler.alpha.kubernetes.io/critical-pod: ''
spec:
containers:
- name: calico-node
image: calico/node:my-special-tag