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Use Custom Resources
- 1: Extend the Kubernetes API with CustomResourceDefinitions
- 2: Versions in CustomResourceDefinitions
1 - Extend the Kubernetes API with CustomResourceDefinitions
This page shows how to install a custom resource into the Kubernetes API by creating a CustomResourceDefinition.
Before you begin
You need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl command-line tool must be configured to communicate with your cluster. It is recommended to run this tutorial on a cluster with at least two nodes that are not acting as control plane hosts. If you do not already have a cluster, you can create one by using minikube or you can use one of these Kubernetes playgrounds:
Your Kubernetes server must be at or later than version 1.16. To check the version, enterkubectl version
.
If you are using an older version of Kubernetes that is still supported, switch to
the documentation for that version to see advice that is relevant for your cluster.
Create a CustomResourceDefinition
When you create a new CustomResourceDefinition (CRD), the Kubernetes API Server
creates a new RESTful resource path for each version you specify. The CRD can be
either namespaced or cluster-scoped, as specified in the CRD's scope
field. As
with existing built-in objects, deleting a namespace deletes all custom objects
in that namespace. CustomResourceDefinitions themselves are non-namespaced and
are available to all namespaces.
For example, if you save the following CustomResourceDefinition to resourcedefinition.yaml
:
apiVersion: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
kind: CustomResourceDefinition
metadata:
# name must match the spec fields below, and be in the form: <plural>.<group>
name: crontabs.stable.example.com
spec:
# group name to use for REST API: /apis/<group>/<version>
group: stable.example.com
# list of versions supported by this CustomResourceDefinition
versions:
- name: v1
# Each version can be enabled/disabled by Served flag.
served: true
# One and only one version must be marked as the storage version.
storage: true
schema:
openAPIV3Schema:
type: object
properties:
spec:
type: object
properties:
cronSpec:
type: string
image:
type: string
replicas:
type: integer
# either Namespaced or Cluster
scope: Namespaced
names:
# plural name to be used in the URL: /apis/<group>/<version>/<plural>
plural: crontabs
# singular name to be used as an alias on the CLI and for display
singular: crontab
# kind is normally the CamelCased singular type. Your resource manifests use this.
kind: CronTab
# shortNames allow shorter string to match your resource on the CLI
shortNames:
- ct
and create it:
kubectl apply -f resourcedefinition.yaml
Then a new namespaced RESTful API endpoint is created at:
/apis/stable.example.com/v1/namespaces/*/crontabs/...
This endpoint URL can then be used to create and manage custom objects.
The kind
of these objects will be CronTab
from the spec of the
CustomResourceDefinition object you created above.
It might take a few seconds for the endpoint to be created.
You can watch the Established
condition of your CustomResourceDefinition
to be true or watch the discovery information of the API server for your
resource to show up.
Create custom objects
After the CustomResourceDefinition object has been created, you can create
custom objects. Custom objects can contain custom fields. These fields can
contain arbitrary JSON.
In the following example, the cronSpec
and image
custom fields are set in a
custom object of kind CronTab
. The kind CronTab
comes from the spec of the
CustomResourceDefinition object you created above.
If you save the following YAML to my-crontab.yaml
:
apiVersion: "stable.example.com/v1"
kind: CronTab
metadata:
name: my-new-cron-object
spec:
cronSpec: "* * * * */5"
image: my-awesome-cron-image
and create it:
kubectl apply -f my-crontab.yaml
You can then manage your CronTab objects using kubectl. For example:
kubectl get crontab
Should print a list like this:
NAME AGE
my-new-cron-object 6s
Resource names are not case-sensitive when using kubectl, and you can use either the singular or plural forms defined in the CRD, as well as any short names.
You can also view the raw YAML data:
kubectl get ct -o yaml
You should see that it contains the custom cronSpec
and image
fields
from the YAML you used to create it:
apiVersion: v1
items:
- apiVersion: stable.example.com/v1
kind: CronTab
metadata:
annotations:
kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration: |
{"apiVersion":"stable.example.com/v1","kind":"CronTab","metadata":{"annotations":{},"name":"my-new-cron-object","namespace":"default"},"spec":{"cronSpec":"* * * * */5","image":"my-awesome-cron-image"}}
creationTimestamp: "2021-06-20T07:35:27Z"
generation: 1
name: my-new-cron-object
namespace: default
resourceVersion: "1326"
uid: 9aab1d66-628e-41bb-a422-57b8b3b1f5a9
spec:
cronSpec: '* * * * */5'
image: my-awesome-cron-image
kind: List
metadata:
resourceVersion: ""
selfLink: ""
Delete a CustomResourceDefinition
When you delete a CustomResourceDefinition, the server will uninstall the RESTful API endpoint and delete all custom objects stored in it.
kubectl delete -f resourcedefinition.yaml
kubectl get crontabs
Error from server (NotFound): Unable to list {"stable.example.com" "v1" "crontabs"}: the server could not find the requested resource (get crontabs.stable.example.com)
If you later recreate the same CustomResourceDefinition, it will start out empty.
Specifying a structural schema
CustomResources store structured data in custom fields (alongside the built-in
fields apiVersion
, kind
and metadata
, which the API server validates
implicitly). With OpenAPI v3.0 validation a schema can be
specified, which is validated during creation and updates, compare below for
details and limits of such a schema.
With apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
the definition of a structural schema is
mandatory for CustomResourceDefinitions. In the beta version of
CustomResourceDefinition, the structural schema was optional.
A structural schema is an OpenAPI v3.0 validation schema which:
- specifies a non-empty type (via
type
in OpenAPI) for the root, for each specified field of an object node (viaproperties
oradditionalProperties
in OpenAPI) and for each item in an array node (viaitems
in OpenAPI), with the exception of:- a node with
x-kubernetes-int-or-string: true
- a node with
x-kubernetes-preserve-unknown-fields: true
- a node with
- for each field in an object and each item in an array which is specified within any of
allOf
,anyOf
,oneOf
ornot
, the schema also specifies the field/item outside of those logical junctors (compare example 1 and 2). - does not set
description
,type
,default
,additionalProperties
,nullable
within anallOf
,anyOf
,oneOf
ornot
, with the exception of the two pattern forx-kubernetes-int-or-string: true
(see below). - if
metadata
is specified, then only restrictions onmetadata.name
andmetadata.generateName
are allowed.
Non-structural example 1:
allOf:
- properties:
foo:
...
conflicts with rule 2. The following would be correct:
properties:
foo:
...
allOf:
- properties:
foo:
...
Non-structural example 2:
allOf:
- items:
properties:
foo:
...
conflicts with rule 2. The following would be correct:
items:
properties:
foo:
...
allOf:
- items:
properties:
foo:
...
Non-structural example 3:
properties:
foo:
pattern: "abc"
metadata:
type: object
properties:
name:
type: string
pattern: "^a"
finalizers:
type: array
items:
type: string
pattern: "my-finalizer"
anyOf:
- properties:
bar:
type: integer
minimum: 42
required: ["bar"]
description: "foo bar object"
is not a structural schema because of the following violations:
- the type at the root is missing (rule 1).
- the type of
foo
is missing (rule 1). bar
inside ofanyOf
is not specified outside (rule 2).bar
'stype
is withinanyOf
(rule 3).- the description is set within
anyOf
(rule 3). metadata.finalizers
might not be restricted (rule 4).
In contrast, the following, corresponding schema is structural:
type: object
description: "foo bar object"
properties:
foo:
type: string
pattern: "abc"
bar:
type: integer
metadata:
type: object
properties:
name:
type: string
pattern: "^a"
anyOf:
- properties:
bar:
minimum: 42
required: ["bar"]
Violations of the structural schema rules are reported in the NonStructural
condition in the CustomResourceDefinition.
Field pruning
CustomResourceDefinitions store validated resource data in the cluster's persistence store, etcd. As with native Kubernetes resources such as ConfigMap, if you specify a field that the API server does not recognize, the unknown field is pruned (removed) before being persisted.
Note:CRDs converted from
apiextensions.k8s.io/v1beta1
toapiextensions.k8s.io/v1
might lack structural schemas, andspec.preserveUnknownFields
might betrue
.For legacy CustomResourceDefinition objects created as
apiextensions.k8s.io/v1beta1
withspec.preserveUnknownFields
set totrue
, the following is also true:
- Pruning is not enabled.
- You can store arbitrary data.
For compatibility with
apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
, update your custom resource definitions to:
- Use a structural OpenAPI schema.
- Set
spec.preserveUnknownFields
tofalse
.
If you save the following YAML to my-crontab.yaml
:
apiVersion: "stable.example.com/v1"
kind: CronTab
metadata:
name: my-new-cron-object
spec:
cronSpec: "* * * * */5"
image: my-awesome-cron-image
someRandomField: 42
and create it:
kubectl create --validate=false -f my-crontab.yaml -o yaml
your output is similar to:
apiVersion: stable.example.com/v1
kind: CronTab
metadata:
creationTimestamp: 2017-05-31T12:56:35Z
generation: 1
name: my-new-cron-object
namespace: default
resourceVersion: "285"
uid: 9423255b-4600-11e7-af6a-28d2447dc82b
spec:
cronSpec: '* * * * */5'
image: my-awesome-cron-image
Notice that the field someRandomField
was pruned.
This example turned off client-side validation to demonstrate the API server's behavior, by adding the --validate=false
command line option.
Because the OpenAPI validation schemas are also published
to clients, kubectl
also checks for unknown fields and rejects those objects well before they would be sent to the API server.
Controlling pruning
By default, all unspecified fields for a custom resource, across all versions, are pruned. It is possible though to opt-out of that for specifc sub-trees of fields by adding x-kubernetes-preserve-unknown-fields: true
in the structural OpenAPI v3 validation schema.
For example:
type: object
properties:
json:
x-kubernetes-preserve-unknown-fields: true
The field json
can store any JSON value, without anything being pruned.
You can also partially specify the permitted JSON; for example:
type: object
properties:
json:
x-kubernetes-preserve-unknown-fields: true
type: object
description: this is arbitrary JSON
With this, only object
type values are allowed.
Pruning is enabled again for each specified property (or additionalProperties
):
type: object
properties:
json:
x-kubernetes-preserve-unknown-fields: true
type: object
properties:
spec:
type: object
properties:
foo:
type: string
bar:
type: string
With this, the value:
json:
spec:
foo: abc
bar: def
something: x
status:
something: x
is pruned to:
json:
spec:
foo: abc
bar: def
status:
something: x
This means that the something
field in the specified spec
object is pruned, but everything outside is not.
IntOrString
Nodes in a schema with x-kubernetes-int-or-string: true
are excluded from rule 1, such that the following is structural:
type: object
properties:
foo:
x-kubernetes-int-or-string: true
Also those nodes are partially excluded from rule 3 in the sense that the following two patterns are allowed (exactly those, without variations in order to additional fields):
x-kubernetes-int-or-string: true
anyOf:
- type: integer
- type: string
...
and
x-kubernetes-int-or-string: true
allOf:
- anyOf:
- type: integer
- type: string
- ... # zero or more
...
With one of those specification, both an integer and a string validate.
In Validation Schema Publishing,
x-kubernetes-int-or-string: true
is unfolded to one of the two patterns shown above.
RawExtension
RawExtensions (as in runtime.RawExtension
defined in
k8s.io/apimachinery)
holds complete Kubernetes objects, i.e. with apiVersion
and kind
fields.
It is possible to specify those embedded objects (both completely without constraints or partially specified) by setting x-kubernetes-embedded-resource: true
. For example:
type: object
properties:
foo:
x-kubernetes-embedded-resource: true
x-kubernetes-preserve-unknown-fields: true
Here, the field foo
holds a complete object, e.g.:
foo:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
spec:
...
Because x-kubernetes-preserve-unknown-fields: true
is specified alongside, nothing is pruned. The use of x-kubernetes-preserve-unknown-fields: true
is optional though.
With x-kubernetes-embedded-resource: true
, the apiVersion
, kind
and metadata
are implicitly specified and validated.
Serving multiple versions of a CRD
See Custom resource definition versioning for more information about serving multiple versions of your CustomResourceDefinition and migrating your objects from one version to another.
Advanced topics
Finalizers
Finalizers allow controllers to implement asynchronous pre-delete hooks. Custom objects support finalizers similar to built-in objects.
You can add a finalizer to a custom object like this:
apiVersion: "stable.example.com/v1"
kind: CronTab
metadata:
finalizers:
- stable.example.com/finalizer
Identifiers of custom finalizers consist of a domain name, a forward slash and the name of the finalizer. Any controller can add a finalizer to any object's list of finalizers.
The first delete request on an object with finalizers sets a value for the
metadata.deletionTimestamp
field but does not delete it. Once this value is set,
entries in the finalizers
list can only be removed. While any finalizers remain it is also
impossible to force the deletion of an object.
When the metadata.deletionTimestamp
field is set, controllers watching the object execute any
finalizers they handle and remove the finalizer from the list after they are done. It is the
responsibility of each controller to remove its finalizer from the list.
The value of metadata.deletionGracePeriodSeconds
controls the interval between polling updates.
Once the list of finalizers is empty, meaning all finalizers have been executed, the resource is deleted by Kubernetes.
Validation
Custom resources are validated via OpenAPI v3 schemas and you can add additional validation using admission webhooks.
Additionally, the following restrictions are applied to the schema:
- These fields cannot be set:
definitions
,dependencies
,deprecated
,discriminator
,id
,patternProperties
,readOnly
,writeOnly
,xml
,$ref
.
- The field
uniqueItems
cannot be set totrue
. - The field
additionalProperties
cannot be set tofalse
. - The field
additionalProperties
is mutually exclusive withproperties
.
The default
field can be set when the Defaulting feature is enabled,
which is the case with apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
CustomResourceDefinitions.
Defaulting is in GA since 1.17 (beta since 1.16 with the CustomResourceDefaulting
feature gate
enabled, which is the case automatically for many clusters for beta features).
Refer to the structural schemas section for other restrictions and CustomResourceDefinition features.
The schema is defined in the CustomResourceDefinition. In the following example, the CustomResourceDefinition applies the following validations on the custom object:
spec.cronSpec
must be a string and must be of the form described by the regular expression.spec.replicas
must be an integer and must have a minimum value of 1 and a maximum value of 10.
Save the CustomResourceDefinition to resourcedefinition.yaml
:
apiVersion: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
kind: CustomResourceDefinition
metadata:
name: crontabs.stable.example.com
spec:
group: stable.example.com
versions:
- name: v1
served: true
storage: true
schema:
# openAPIV3Schema is the schema for validating custom objects.
openAPIV3Schema:
type: object
properties:
spec:
type: object
properties:
cronSpec:
type: string
pattern: '^(\d+|\*)(/\d+)?(\s+(\d+|\*)(/\d+)?){4}$'
image:
type: string
replicas:
type: integer
minimum: 1
maximum: 10
scope: Namespaced
names:
plural: crontabs
singular: crontab
kind: CronTab
shortNames:
- ct
and create it:
kubectl apply -f resourcedefinition.yaml
A request to create a custom object of kind CronTab is rejected if there are invalid values in its fields. In the following example, the custom object contains fields with invalid values:
spec.cronSpec
does not match the regular expression.spec.replicas
is greater than 10.
If you save the following YAML to my-crontab.yaml
:
apiVersion: "stable.example.com/v1"
kind: CronTab
metadata:
name: my-new-cron-object
spec:
cronSpec: "* * * *"
image: my-awesome-cron-image
replicas: 15
and attempt to create it:
kubectl apply -f my-crontab.yaml
then you get an error:
The CronTab "my-new-cron-object" is invalid: []: Invalid value: map[string]interface {}{"apiVersion":"stable.example.com/v1", "kind":"CronTab", "metadata":map[string]interface {}{"name":"my-new-cron-object", "namespace":"default", "deletionTimestamp":interface {}(nil), "deletionGracePeriodSeconds":(*int64)(nil), "creationTimestamp":"2017-09-05T05:20:07Z", "uid":"e14d79e7-91f9-11e7-a598-f0761cb232d1", "clusterName":""}, "spec":map[string]interface {}{"cronSpec":"* * * *", "image":"my-awesome-cron-image", "replicas":15}}:
validation failure list:
spec.cronSpec in body should match '^(\d+|\*)(/\d+)?(\s+(\d+|\*)(/\d+)?){4}$'
spec.replicas in body should be less than or equal to 10
If the fields contain valid values, the object creation request is accepted.
Save the following YAML to my-crontab.yaml
:
apiVersion: "stable.example.com/v1"
kind: CronTab
metadata:
name: my-new-cron-object
spec:
cronSpec: "* * * * */5"
image: my-awesome-cron-image
replicas: 5
And create it:
kubectl apply -f my-crontab.yaml
crontab "my-new-cron-object" created
Defaulting
Note: To use defaulting, your CustomResourceDefinition must use API versionapiextensions.k8s.io/v1
.
Defaulting allows to specify default values in the OpenAPI v3 validation schema:
apiVersion: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
kind: CustomResourceDefinition
metadata:
name: crontabs.stable.example.com
spec:
group: stable.example.com
versions:
- name: v1
served: true
storage: true
schema:
# openAPIV3Schema is the schema for validating custom objects.
openAPIV3Schema:
type: object
properties:
spec:
type: object
properties:
cronSpec:
type: string
pattern: '^(\d+|\*)(/\d+)?(\s+(\d+|\*)(/\d+)?){4}$'
default: "5 0 * * *"
image:
type: string
replicas:
type: integer
minimum: 1
maximum: 10
default: 1
scope: Namespaced
names:
plural: crontabs
singular: crontab
kind: CronTab
shortNames:
- ct
With this both cronSpec
and replicas
are defaulted:
apiVersion: "stable.example.com/v1"
kind: CronTab
metadata:
name: my-new-cron-object
spec:
image: my-awesome-cron-image
leads to
apiVersion: "stable.example.com/v1"
kind: CronTab
metadata:
name: my-new-cron-object
spec:
cronSpec: "5 0 * * *"
image: my-awesome-cron-image
replicas: 1
Defaulting happens on the object
- in the request to the API server using the request version defaults,
- when reading from etcd using the storage version defaults,
- after mutating admission plugins with non-empty patches using the admission webhook object version defaults.
Defaults applied when reading data from etcd are not automatically written back to etcd. An update request via the API is required to persist those defaults back into etcd.
Default values must be pruned (with the exception of defaults for metadata
fields) and must validate against a provided schema.
Default values for metadata
fields of x-kubernetes-embedded-resources: true
nodes (or parts of a default value covering metadata
) are not pruned during CustomResourceDefinition creation, but through the pruning step during handling of requests.
Defaulting and Nullable
New in 1.20: null values for fields that either don't specify the nullable flag, or give it a false
value, will be pruned before defaulting happens. If a default is present, it will be applied. When nullable is true
, null values will be conserved and won't be defaulted.
For example, given the OpenAPI schema below:
type: object
properties:
spec:
type: object
properties:
foo:
type: string
nullable: false
default: "default"
bar:
type: string
nullable: true
baz:
type: string
creating an object with null values for foo
and bar
and baz
spec:
foo: null
bar: null
baz: null
leads to
spec:
foo: "default"
bar: null
with foo
pruned and defaulted because the field is non-nullable, bar
maintaining the null value due to nullable: true
, and baz
pruned because the field is non-nullable and has no default.
Publish Validation Schema in OpenAPI v2
CustomResourceDefinition OpenAPI v3 validation schemas which are structural and enable pruning are published as part of the OpenAPI v2 spec from Kubernetes API server.
The kubectl command-line tool consumes the published schema to perform client-side validation (kubectl create
and kubectl apply
), schema explanation (kubectl explain
) on custom resources. The published schema can be consumed for other purposes as well, like client generation or documentation.
The OpenAPI v3 validation schema is converted to OpenAPI v2 schema, and
show up in definitions
and paths
fields in the OpenAPI v2 spec.
The following modifications are applied during the conversion to keep backwards compatibility with kubectl in previous 1.13 version. These modifications prevent kubectl from being over-strict and rejecting valid OpenAPI schemas that it doesn't understand. The conversion won't modify the validation schema defined in CRD, and therefore won't affect validation in the API server.
- The following fields are removed as they aren't supported by OpenAPI v2 (in future versions OpenAPI v3 will be used without these restrictions)
- The fields
allOf
,anyOf
,oneOf
andnot
are removed
- The fields
- If
nullable: true
is set, we droptype
,nullable
,items
andproperties
because OpenAPI v2 is not able to express nullable. To avoid kubectl to reject good objects, this is necessary.
Additional printer columns
The kubectl tool relies on server-side output formatting. Your cluster's API server decides which
columns are shown by the kubectl get
command. You can customize these columns for a
CustomResourceDefinition. The following example adds the Spec
, Replicas
, and Age
columns.
Save the CustomResourceDefinition to resourcedefinition.yaml
:
apiVersion: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
kind: CustomResourceDefinition
metadata:
name: crontabs.stable.example.com
spec:
group: stable.example.com
scope: Namespaced
names:
plural: crontabs
singular: crontab
kind: CronTab
shortNames:
- ct
versions:
- name: v1
served: true
storage: true
schema:
openAPIV3Schema:
type: object
properties:
spec:
type: object
properties:
cronSpec:
type: string
image:
type: string
replicas:
type: integer
additionalPrinterColumns:
- name: Spec
type: string
description: The cron spec defining the interval a CronJob is run
jsonPath: .spec.cronSpec
- name: Replicas
type: integer
description: The number of jobs launched by the CronJob
jsonPath: .spec.replicas
- name: Age
type: date
jsonPath: .metadata.creationTimestamp
Create the CustomResourceDefinition:
kubectl apply -f resourcedefinition.yaml
Create an instance using the my-crontab.yaml
from the previous section.
Invoke the server-side printing:
kubectl get crontab my-new-cron-object
Notice the NAME
, SPEC
, REPLICAS
, and AGE
columns in the output:
NAME SPEC REPLICAS AGE
my-new-cron-object * * * * * 1 7s
Note: TheNAME
column is implicit and does not need to be defined in the CustomResourceDefinition.
Priority
Each column includes a priority
field. Currently, the priority
differentiates between columns shown in standard view or wide view (using the -o wide
flag).
- Columns with priority
0
are shown in standard view. - Columns with priority greater than
0
are shown only in wide view.
Type
A column's type
field can be any of the following (compare OpenAPI v3 data types):
integer
– non-floating-point numbersnumber
– floating point numbersstring
– stringsboolean
–true
orfalse
date
– rendered differentially as time since this timestamp.
If the value inside a CustomResource does not match the type specified for the column, the value is omitted. Use CustomResource validation to ensure that the value types are correct.
Format
A column's format
field can be any of the following:
int32
int64
float
double
byte
date
date-time
password
The column's format
controls the style used when kubectl
prints the value.
Subresources
Custom resources support /status
and /scale
subresources.
The status and scale subresources can be optionally enabled by defining them in the CustomResourceDefinition.
Status subresource
When the status subresource is enabled, the /status
subresource for the custom resource is exposed.
-
The status and the spec stanzas are represented by the
.status
and.spec
JSONPaths respectively inside of a custom resource. -
PUT
requests to the/status
subresource take a custom resource object and ignore changes to anything except the status stanza. -
PUT
requests to the/status
subresource only validate the status stanza of the custom resource. -
PUT
/POST
/PATCH
requests to the custom resource ignore changes to the status stanza. -
The
.metadata.generation
value is incremented for all changes, except for changes to.metadata
or.status
. -
Only the following constructs are allowed at the root of the CRD OpenAPI validation schema:
description
example
exclusiveMaximum
exclusiveMinimum
externalDocs
format
items
maximum
maxItems
maxLength
minimum
minItems
minLength
multipleOf
pattern
properties
required
title
type
uniqueItems
Scale subresource
When the scale subresource is enabled, the /scale
subresource for the custom resource is exposed.
The autoscaling/v1.Scale
object is sent as the payload for /scale
.
To enable the scale subresource, the following fields are defined in the CustomResourceDefinition.
-
specReplicasPath
defines the JSONPath inside of a custom resource that corresponds toscale.spec.replicas
.- It is a required value.
- Only JSONPaths under
.spec
and with the dot notation are allowed. - If there is no value under the
specReplicasPath
in the custom resource, the/scale
subresource will return an error on GET.
-
statusReplicasPath
defines the JSONPath inside of a custom resource that corresponds toscale.status.replicas
.- It is a required value.
- Only JSONPaths under
.status
and with the dot notation are allowed. - If there is no value under the
statusReplicasPath
in the custom resource, the status replica value in the/scale
subresource will default to 0.
-
labelSelectorPath
defines the JSONPath inside of a custom resource that corresponds toScale.Status.Selector
.- It is an optional value.
- It must be set to work with HPA.
- Only JSONPaths under
.status
or.spec
and with the dot notation are allowed. - If there is no value under the
labelSelectorPath
in the custom resource, the status selector value in the/scale
subresource will default to the empty string. - The field pointed by this JSON path must be a string field (not a complex selector struct) which contains a serialized label selector in string form.
In the following example, both status and scale subresources are enabled.
Save the CustomResourceDefinition to resourcedefinition.yaml
:
apiVersion: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
kind: CustomResourceDefinition
metadata:
name: crontabs.stable.example.com
spec:
group: stable.example.com
versions:
- name: v1
served: true
storage: true
schema:
openAPIV3Schema:
type: object
properties:
spec:
type: object
properties:
cronSpec:
type: string
image:
type: string
replicas:
type: integer
status:
type: object
properties:
replicas:
type: integer
labelSelector:
type: string
# subresources describes the subresources for custom resources.
subresources:
# status enables the status subresource.
status: {}
# scale enables the scale subresource.
scale:
# specReplicasPath defines the JSONPath inside of a custom resource that corresponds to Scale.Spec.Replicas.
specReplicasPath: .spec.replicas
# statusReplicasPath defines the JSONPath inside of a custom resource that corresponds to Scale.Status.Replicas.
statusReplicasPath: .status.replicas
# labelSelectorPath defines the JSONPath inside of a custom resource that corresponds to Scale.Status.Selector.
labelSelectorPath: .status.labelSelector
scope: Namespaced
names:
plural: crontabs
singular: crontab
kind: CronTab
shortNames:
- ct
And create it:
kubectl apply -f resourcedefinition.yaml
After the CustomResourceDefinition object has been created, you can create custom objects.
If you save the following YAML to my-crontab.yaml
:
apiVersion: "stable.example.com/v1"
kind: CronTab
metadata:
name: my-new-cron-object
spec:
cronSpec: "* * * * */5"
image: my-awesome-cron-image
replicas: 3
and create it:
kubectl apply -f my-crontab.yaml
Then new namespaced RESTful API endpoints are created at:
/apis/stable.example.com/v1/namespaces/*/crontabs/status
and
/apis/stable.example.com/v1/namespaces/*/crontabs/scale
A custom resource can be scaled using the kubectl scale
command.
For example, the following command sets .spec.replicas
of the
custom resource created above to 5:
kubectl scale --replicas=5 crontabs/my-new-cron-object
crontabs "my-new-cron-object" scaled
kubectl get crontabs my-new-cron-object -o jsonpath='{.spec.replicas}'
5
You can use a PodDisruptionBudget to protect custom resources that have the scale subresource enabled.
Categories
Categories is a list of grouped resources the custom resource belongs to (eg. all
).
You can use kubectl get <category-name>
to list the resources belonging to the category.
The following example adds all
in the list of categories in the CustomResourceDefinition
and illustrates how to output the custom resource using kubectl get all
.
Save the following CustomResourceDefinition to resourcedefinition.yaml
:
apiVersion: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
kind: CustomResourceDefinition
metadata:
name: crontabs.stable.example.com
spec:
group: stable.example.com
versions:
- name: v1
served: true
storage: true
schema:
openAPIV3Schema:
type: object
properties:
spec:
type: object
properties:
cronSpec:
type: string
image:
type: string
replicas:
type: integer
scope: Namespaced
names:
plural: crontabs
singular: crontab
kind: CronTab
shortNames:
- ct
# categories is a list of grouped resources the custom resource belongs to.
categories:
- all
and create it:
kubectl apply -f resourcedefinition.yaml
After the CustomResourceDefinition object has been created, you can create custom objects.
Save the following YAML to my-crontab.yaml
:
apiVersion: "stable.example.com/v1"
kind: CronTab
metadata:
name: my-new-cron-object
spec:
cronSpec: "* * * * */5"
image: my-awesome-cron-image
and create it:
kubectl apply -f my-crontab.yaml
You can specify the category when using kubectl get
:
kubectl get all
and it will include the custom resources of kind CronTab
:
NAME AGE
crontabs/my-new-cron-object 3s
What's next
-
Read about custom resources.
-
Serve multiple versions of a CustomResourceDefinition.
2 - Versions in CustomResourceDefinitions
This page explains how to add versioning information to CustomResourceDefinitions, to indicate the stability level of your CustomResourceDefinitions or advance your API to a new version with conversion between API representations. It also describes how to upgrade an object from one version to another.
Before you begin
You need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl command-line tool must be configured to communicate with your cluster. It is recommended to run this tutorial on a cluster with at least two nodes that are not acting as control plane hosts. If you do not already have a cluster, you can create one by using minikube or you can use one of these Kubernetes playgrounds:
You should have a initial understanding of custom resources.
Your Kubernetes server must be at or later than version v1.16. To check the version, enterkubectl version
.
Overview
The CustomResourceDefinition API provides a workflow for introducing and upgrading to new versions of a CustomResourceDefinition.
When a CustomResourceDefinition is created, the first version is set in the
CustomResourceDefinition spec.versions
list to an appropriate stability level
and a version number. For example v1beta1
would indicate that the first
version is not yet stable. All custom resource objects will initially be stored
at this version.
Once the CustomResourceDefinition is created, clients may begin using the
v1beta1
API.
Later it might be necessary to add new version such as v1
.
Adding a new version:
- Pick a conversion strategy. Since custom resource objects need to be able to
be served at both versions, that means they will sometimes be served at a
different version than their storage version. In order for this to be
possible, the custom resource objects must sometimes be converted between the
version they are stored at and the version they are served at. If the
conversion involves schema changes and requires custom logic, a conversion
webhook should be used. If there are no schema changes, the default
None
conversion strategy may be used and only theapiVersion
field will be modified when serving different versions. - If using conversion webhooks, create and deploy the conversion webhook. See the Webhook conversion for more details.
- Update the CustomResourceDefinition to include the new version in the
spec.versions
list withserved:true
. Also, setspec.conversion
field to the selected conversion strategy. If using a conversion webhook, configurespec.conversion.webhookClientConfig
field to call the webhook.
Once the new version is added, clients may incrementally migrate to the new version. It is perfectly safe for some clients to use the old version while others use the new version.
Migrate stored objects to the new version:
- See the upgrade existing objects to a new stored version section.
It is safe for clients to use both the old and new version before, during and after upgrading the objects to a new stored version.
Removing an old version:
- Ensure all clients are fully migrated to the new version. The kube-apiserver logs can be reviewed to help identify any clients that are still accessing via the old version.
- Set
served
tofalse
for the old version in thespec.versions
list. If any clients are still unexpectedly using the old version they may begin reporting errors attempting to access the custom resource objects at the old version. If this occurs, switch back to usingserved:true
on the old version, migrate the remaining clients to the new version and repeat this step. - Ensure the upgrade of existing objects to the new stored version step has been completed.
- Verify that the
storage
is set totrue
for the new version in thespec.versions
list in the CustomResourceDefinition. - Verify that the old version is no longer listed in the CustomResourceDefinition
status.storedVersions
.
- Verify that the
- Remove the old version from the CustomResourceDefinition
spec.versions
list. - Drop conversion support for the old version in conversion webhooks.
Specify multiple versions
The CustomResourceDefinition API versions
field can be used to support multiple versions of custom resources that you
have developed. Versions can have different schemas, and conversion webhooks can convert custom resources between versions.
Webhook conversions should follow the Kubernetes API conventions wherever applicable.
Specifically, See the API change documentation for a set of useful gotchas and suggestions.
Note: Inapiextensions.k8s.io/v1beta1
, there was aversion
field instead ofversions
. Theversion
field is deprecated and optional, but if it is not empty, it must match the first item in theversions
field.
This example shows a CustomResourceDefinition with two versions. For the first example, the assumption is all versions share the same schema with no conversion between them. The comments in the YAML provide more context.
apiVersion: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
kind: CustomResourceDefinition
metadata:
# name must match the spec fields below, and be in the form: <plural>.<group>
name: crontabs.example.com
spec:
# group name to use for REST API: /apis/<group>/<version>
group: example.com
# list of versions supported by this CustomResourceDefinition
versions:
- name: v1beta1
# Each version can be enabled/disabled by Served flag.
served: true
# One and only one version must be marked as the storage version.
storage: true
# A schema is required
schema:
openAPIV3Schema:
type: object
properties:
host:
type: string
port:
type: string
- name: v1
served: true
storage: false
schema:
openAPIV3Schema:
type: object
properties:
host:
type: string
port:
type: string
# The conversion section is introduced in Kubernetes 1.13+ with a default value of
# None conversion (strategy sub-field set to None).
conversion:
# None conversion assumes the same schema for all versions and only sets the apiVersion
# field of custom resources to the proper value
strategy: None
# either Namespaced or Cluster
scope: Namespaced
names:
# plural name to be used in the URL: /apis/<group>/<version>/<plural>
plural: crontabs
# singular name to be used as an alias on the CLI and for display
singular: crontab
# kind is normally the CamelCased singular type. Your resource manifests use this.
kind: CronTab
# shortNames allow shorter string to match your resource on the CLI
shortNames:
- ct
# Deprecated in v1.16 in favor of apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
apiVersion: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: CustomResourceDefinition
metadata:
# name must match the spec fields below, and be in the form: <plural>.<group>
name: crontabs.example.com
spec:
# group name to use for REST API: /apis/<group>/<version>
group: example.com
# list of versions supported by this CustomResourceDefinition
versions:
- name: v1beta1
# Each version can be enabled/disabled by Served flag.
served: true
# One and only one version must be marked as the storage version.
storage: true
- name: v1
served: true
storage: false
validation:
openAPIV3Schema:
type: object
properties:
host:
type: string
port:
type: string
# The conversion section is introduced in Kubernetes 1.13+ with a default value of
# None conversion (strategy sub-field set to None).
conversion:
# None conversion assumes the same schema for all versions and only sets the apiVersion
# field of custom resources to the proper value
strategy: None
# either Namespaced or Cluster
scope: Namespaced
names:
# plural name to be used in the URL: /apis/<group>/<version>/<plural>
plural: crontabs
# singular name to be used as an alias on the CLI and for display
singular: crontab
# kind is normally the PascalCased singular type. Your resource manifests use this.
kind: CronTab
# shortNames allow shorter string to match your resource on the CLI
shortNames:
- ct
You can save the CustomResourceDefinition in a YAML file, then use
kubectl apply
to create it.
kubectl apply -f my-versioned-crontab.yaml
After creation, the API server starts to serve each enabled version at an HTTP
REST endpoint. In the above example, the API versions are available at
/apis/example.com/v1beta1
and /apis/example.com/v1
.
Version priority
Regardless of the order in which versions are defined in a CustomResourceDefinition, the version with the highest priority is used by kubectl as the default version to access objects. The priority is determined by parsing the name field to determine the version number, the stability (GA, Beta, or Alpha), and the sequence within that stability level.
The algorithm used for sorting the versions is designed to sort versions in the
same way that the Kubernetes project sorts Kubernetes versions. Versions start with a
v
followed by a number, an optional beta
or alpha
designation, and
optional additional numeric versioning information. Broadly, a version string might look
like v2
or v2beta1
. Versions are sorted using the following algorithm:
- Entries that follow Kubernetes version patterns are sorted before those that do not.
- For entries that follow Kubernetes version patterns, the numeric portions of the version string is sorted largest to smallest.
- If the strings
beta
oralpha
follow the first numeric portion, they sorted in that order, after the equivalent string without thebeta
oralpha
suffix (which is presumed to be the GA version). - If another number follows the
beta
, oralpha
, those numbers are also sorted from largest to smallest. - Strings that don't fit the above format are sorted alphabetically and the
numeric portions are not treated specially. Notice that in the example below,
foo1
is sorted abovefoo10
. This is different from the sorting of the numeric portion of entries that do follow the Kubernetes version patterns.
This might make sense if you look at the following sorted version list:
- v10
- v2
- v1
- v11beta2
- v10beta3
- v3beta1
- v12alpha1
- v11alpha2
- foo1
- foo10
For the example in Specify multiple versions, the
version sort order is v1
, followed by v1beta1
. This causes the kubectl
command to use v1
as the default version unless the provided object specifies
the version.
Version deprecation
Kubernetes v1.19 [stable]
Starting in v1.19, a CustomResourceDefinition can indicate a particular version of the resource it defines is deprecated. When API requests to a deprecated version of that resource are made, a warning message is returned in the API response as a header. The warning message for each deprecated version of the resource can be customized if desired.
A customized warning message should indicate the deprecated API group, version, and kind, and should indicate what API group, version, and kind should be used instead, if applicable.
apiVersion: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
kind: CustomResourceDefinition
name: crontabs.example.com
spec:
group: example.com
names:
plural: crontabs
singular: crontab
kind: CronTab
scope: Namespaced
versions:
- name: v1alpha1
served: true
# This indicates the v1alpha1 version of the custom resource is deprecated.
# API requests to this version receive a warning header in the server response.
deprecated: true
# This overrides the default warning returned to API clients making v1alpha1 API requests.
deprecationWarning: "example.com/v1alpha1 CronTab is deprecated; see http://example.com/v1alpha1-v1 for instructions to migrate to example.com/v1 CronTab"
schema: ...
- name: v1beta1
served: true
# This indicates the v1beta1 version of the custom resource is deprecated.
# API requests to this version receive a warning header in the server response.
# A default warning message is returned for this version.
deprecated: true
schema: ...
- name: v1
served: true
storage: true
schema: ...
# Deprecated in v1.16 in favor of apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
apiVersion: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: CustomResourceDefinition
metadata:
name: crontabs.example.com
spec:
group: example.com
names:
plural: crontabs
singular: crontab
kind: CronTab
scope: Namespaced
validation: ...
versions:
- name: v1alpha1
served: true
# This indicates the v1alpha1 version of the custom resource is deprecated.
# API requests to this version receive a warning header in the server response.
deprecated: true
# This overrides the default warning returned to API clients making v1alpha1 API requests.
deprecationWarning: "example.com/v1alpha1 CronTab is deprecated; see http://example.com/v1alpha1-v1 for instructions to migrate to example.com/v1 CronTab"
- name: v1beta1
served: true
# This indicates the v1beta1 version of the custom resource is deprecated.
# API requests to this version receive a warning header in the server response.
# A default warning message is returned for this version.
deprecated: true
- name: v1
served: true
storage: true
Webhook conversion
Kubernetes v1.16 [stable]
Note: Webhook conversion is available as beta since 1.15, and as alpha since Kubernetes 1.13. TheCustomResourceWebhookConversion
feature must be enabled, which is the case automatically for many clusters for beta features. Please refer to the feature gate documentation for more information.
The above example has a None conversion between versions which only sets the apiVersion
field
on conversion and does not change the rest of the object. The API server also supports webhook
conversions that call an external service in case a conversion is required. For example when:
- custom resource is requested in a different version than stored version.
- Watch is created in one version but the changed object is stored in another version.
- custom resource PUT request is in a different version than storage version.
To cover all of these cases and to optimize conversion by the API server, the conversion requests may contain multiple objects in order to minimize the external calls. The webhook should perform these conversions independently.
Write a conversion webhook server
Please refer to the implementation of the custom resource conversion webhook
server
that is validated in a Kubernetes e2e test. The webhook handles the
ConversionReview
requests sent by the API servers, and sends back conversion
results wrapped in ConversionResponse
. Note that the request
contains a list of custom resources that need to be converted independently without
changing the order of objects.
The example server is organized in a way to be reused for other conversions.
Most of the common code are located in the
framework file
that leaves only
one function
to be implemented for different conversions.
Note: The example conversion webhook server leaves theClientAuth
field empty, which defaults toNoClientCert
. This means that the webhook server does not authenticate the identity of the clients, supposedly API servers. If you need mutual TLS or other ways to authenticate the clients, see how to authenticate API servers.
Permissible mutations
A conversion webhook must not mutate anything inside of metadata
of the converted object
other than labels
and annotations
.
Attempted changes to name
, UID
and namespace
are rejected and fail the request
which caused the conversion. All other changes are ignored.
Deploy the conversion webhook service
Documentation for deploying the conversion webhook is the same as for the
admission webhook example service.
The assumption for next sections is that the conversion webhook server is deployed to a service
named example-conversion-webhook-server
in default
namespace and serving traffic on path /crdconvert
.
Note: When the webhook server is deployed into the Kubernetes cluster as a service, it has to be exposed via a service on port 443 (The server itself can have an arbitrary port but the service object should map it to port 443). The communication between the API server and the webhook service may fail if a different port is used for the service.
Configure CustomResourceDefinition to use conversion webhooks
The None
conversion example can be extended to use the conversion webhook by modifying conversion
section of the spec
:
apiVersion: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
kind: CustomResourceDefinition
metadata:
# name must match the spec fields below, and be in the form: <plural>.<group>
name: crontabs.example.com
spec:
# group name to use for REST API: /apis/<group>/<version>
group: example.com
# list of versions supported by this CustomResourceDefinition
versions:
- name: v1beta1
# Each version can be enabled/disabled by Served flag.
served: true
# One and only one version must be marked as the storage version.
storage: true
# Each version can define it's own schema when there is no top-level
# schema is defined.
schema:
openAPIV3Schema:
type: object
properties:
hostPort:
type: string
- name: v1
served: true
storage: false
schema:
openAPIV3Schema:
type: object
properties:
host:
type: string
port:
type: string
conversion:
# a Webhook strategy instruct API server to call an external webhook for any conversion between custom resources.
strategy: Webhook
# webhook is required when strategy is `Webhook` and it configures the webhook endpoint to be called by API server.
webhook:
# conversionReviewVersions indicates what ConversionReview versions are understood/preferred by the webhook.
# The first version in the list understood by the API server is sent to the webhook.
# The webhook must respond with a ConversionReview object in the same version it received.
conversionReviewVersions: ["v1","v1beta1"]
clientConfig:
service:
namespace: default
name: example-conversion-webhook-server
path: /crdconvert
caBundle: "Ci0tLS0tQk...<base64-encoded PEM bundle>...tLS0K"
# either Namespaced or Cluster
scope: Namespaced
names:
# plural name to be used in the URL: /apis/<group>/<version>/<plural>
plural: crontabs
# singular name to be used as an alias on the CLI and for display
singular: crontab
# kind is normally the CamelCased singular type. Your resource manifests use this.
kind: CronTab
# shortNames allow shorter string to match your resource on the CLI
shortNames:
- ct
# Deprecated in v1.16 in favor of apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
apiVersion: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: CustomResourceDefinition
metadata:
# name must match the spec fields below, and be in the form: <plural>.<group>
name: crontabs.example.com
spec:
# group name to use for REST API: /apis/<group>/<version>
group: example.com
# prunes object fields that are not specified in OpenAPI schemas below.
preserveUnknownFields: false
# list of versions supported by this CustomResourceDefinition
versions:
- name: v1beta1
# Each version can be enabled/disabled by Served flag.
served: true
# One and only one version must be marked as the storage version.
storage: true
# Each version can define it's own schema when there is no top-level
# schema is defined.
schema:
openAPIV3Schema:
type: object
properties:
hostPort:
type: string
- name: v1
served: true
storage: false
schema:
openAPIV3Schema:
type: object
properties:
host:
type: string
port:
type: string
conversion:
# a Webhook strategy instruct API server to call an external webhook for any conversion between custom resources.
strategy: Webhook
# webhookClientConfig is required when strategy is `Webhook` and it configures the webhook endpoint to be called by API server.
webhookClientConfig:
service:
namespace: default
name: example-conversion-webhook-server
path: /crdconvert
caBundle: "Ci0tLS0tQk...<base64-encoded PEM bundle>...tLS0K"
# either Namespaced or Cluster
scope: Namespaced
names:
# plural name to be used in the URL: /apis/<group>/<version>/<plural>
plural: crontabs
# singular name to be used as an alias on the CLI and for display
singular: crontab
# kind is normally the CamelCased singular type. Your resource manifests use this.
kind: CronTab
# shortNames allow shorter string to match your resource on the CLI
shortNames:
- ct
You can save the CustomResourceDefinition in a YAML file, then use
kubectl apply
to apply it.
kubectl apply -f my-versioned-crontab-with-conversion.yaml
Make sure the conversion service is up and running before applying new changes.
Contacting the webhook
Once the API server has determined a request should be sent to a conversion webhook,
it needs to know how to contact the webhook. This is specified in the webhookClientConfig
stanza of the webhook configuration.
Conversion webhooks can either be called via a URL or a service reference, and can optionally include a custom CA bundle to use to verify the TLS connection.
URL
url
gives the location of the webhook, in standard URL form
(scheme://host:port/path
).
The host
should not refer to a service running in the cluster; use
a service reference by specifying the service
field instead.
The host might be resolved via external DNS in some apiservers
(i.e., kube-apiserver
cannot resolve in-cluster DNS as that would
be a layering violation). host
may also be an IP address.
Please note that using localhost
or 127.0.0.1
as a host
is
risky unless you take great care to run this webhook on all hosts
which run an apiserver which might need to make calls to this
webhook. Such installations are likely to be non-portable or not readily run in a new cluster.
The scheme must be "https"; the URL must begin with "https://".
Attempting to use a user or basic auth (for example "user:password@") is not allowed. Fragments ("#...") and query parameters ("?...") are also not allowed.
Here is an example of a conversion webhook configured to call a URL (and expects the TLS certificate to be verified using system trust roots, so does not specify a caBundle):
apiVersion: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
kind: CustomResourceDefinition
...
spec:
...
conversion:
strategy: Webhook
webhook:
clientConfig:
url: "https://my-webhook.example.com:9443/my-webhook-path"
...
# Deprecated in v1.16 in favor of apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
apiVersion: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: CustomResourceDefinition
...
spec:
...
conversion:
strategy: Webhook
webhookClientConfig:
url: "https://my-webhook.example.com:9443/my-webhook-path"
...
Service Reference
The service
stanza inside webhookClientConfig
is a reference to the service for a conversion webhook.
If the webhook is running within the cluster, then you should use service
instead of url
.
The service namespace and name are required. The port is optional and defaults to 443.
The path is optional and defaults to "/".
Here is an example of a webhook that is configured to call a service on port "1234"
at the subpath "/my-path", and to verify the TLS connection against the ServerName
my-service-name.my-service-namespace.svc
using a custom CA bundle.
apiVersion: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
kind: CustomResourceDefinition
...
spec:
...
conversion:
strategy: Webhook
webhook:
clientConfig:
service:
namespace: my-service-namespace
name: my-service-name
path: /my-path
port: 1234
caBundle: "Ci0tLS0tQk...<base64-encoded PEM bundle>...tLS0K"
...
# Deprecated in v1.16 in favor of apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
apiVersion: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: CustomResourceDefinition
...
spec:
...
conversion:
strategy: Webhook
webhookClientConfig:
service:
namespace: my-service-namespace
name: my-service-name
path: /my-path
port: 1234
caBundle: "Ci0tLS0tQk...<base64-encoded PEM bundle>...tLS0K"
...
Webhook request and response
Request
Webhooks are sent a POST request, with Content-Type: application/json
,
with a ConversionReview
API object in the apiextensions.k8s.io
API group
serialized to JSON as the body.
Webhooks can specify what versions of ConversionReview
objects they accept
with the conversionReviewVersions
field in their CustomResourceDefinition:
apiVersion: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
kind: CustomResourceDefinition
...
spec:
...
conversion:
strategy: Webhook
webhook:
conversionReviewVersions: ["v1", "v1beta1"]
...
conversionReviewVersions
is a required field when creating
apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
custom resource definitions.
Webhooks are required to support at least one ConversionReview
version understood by the current and previous API server.
# Deprecated in v1.16 in favor of apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
apiVersion: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: CustomResourceDefinition
...
spec:
...
conversion:
strategy: Webhook
conversionReviewVersions: ["v1", "v1beta1"]
...
If no conversionReviewVersions
are specified, the default when creating
apiextensions.k8s.io/v1beta1
custom resource definitions is v1beta1
.
API servers send the first ConversionReview
version in the conversionReviewVersions
list they support.
If none of the versions in the list are supported by the API server, the custom resource definition will not be allowed to be created.
If an API server encounters a conversion webhook configuration that was previously created and does not support any of the ConversionReview
versions the API server knows how to send, attempts to call to the webhook will fail.
This example shows the data contained in an ConversionReview
object
for a request to convert CronTab
objects to example.com/v1
:
{
"apiVersion": "apiextensions.k8s.io/v1",
"kind": "ConversionReview",
"request": {
# Random uid uniquely identifying this conversion call
"uid": "705ab4f5-6393-11e8-b7cc-42010a800002",
# The API group and version the objects should be converted to
"desiredAPIVersion": "example.com/v1",
# The list of objects to convert.
# May contain one or more objects, in one or more versions.
"objects": [
{
"kind": "CronTab",
"apiVersion": "example.com/v1beta1",
"metadata": {
"creationTimestamp": "2019-09-04T14:03:02Z",
"name": "local-crontab",
"namespace": "default",
"resourceVersion": "143",
"uid": "3415a7fc-162b-4300-b5da-fd6083580d66"
},
"hostPort": "localhost:1234"
},
{
"kind": "CronTab",
"apiVersion": "example.com/v1beta1",
"metadata": {
"creationTimestamp": "2019-09-03T13:02:01Z",
"name": "remote-crontab",
"resourceVersion": "12893",
"uid": "359a83ec-b575-460d-b553-d859cedde8a0"
},
"hostPort": "example.com:2345"
}
]
}
}
{
# Deprecated in v1.16 in favor of apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
"apiVersion": "apiextensions.k8s.io/v1beta1",
"kind": "ConversionReview",
"request": {
# Random uid uniquely identifying this conversion call
"uid": "705ab4f5-6393-11e8-b7cc-42010a800002",
# The API group and version the objects should be converted to
"desiredAPIVersion": "example.com/v1",
# The list of objects to convert.
# May contain one or more objects, in one or more versions.
"objects": [
{
"kind": "CronTab",
"apiVersion": "example.com/v1beta1",
"metadata": {
"creationTimestamp": "2019-09-04T14:03:02Z",
"name": "local-crontab",
"namespace": "default",
"resourceVersion": "143",
"uid": "3415a7fc-162b-4300-b5da-fd6083580d66"
},
"hostPort": "localhost:1234"
},
{
"kind": "CronTab",
"apiVersion": "example.com/v1beta1",
"metadata": {
"creationTimestamp": "2019-09-03T13:02:01Z",
"name": "remote-crontab",
"resourceVersion": "12893",
"uid": "359a83ec-b575-460d-b553-d859cedde8a0"
},
"hostPort": "example.com:2345"
}
]
}
}
Response
Webhooks respond with a 200 HTTP status code, Content-Type: application/json
,
and a body containing a ConversionReview
object (in the same version they were sent),
with the response
stanza populated, serialized to JSON.
If conversion succeeds, a webhook should return a response
stanza containing the following fields:
uid
, copied from therequest.uid
sent to the webhookresult
, set to{"status":"Success"}
convertedObjects
, containing all of the objects fromrequest.objects
, converted torequest.desiredVersion
Example of a minimal successful response from a webhook:
{
"apiVersion": "apiextensions.k8s.io/v1",
"kind": "ConversionReview",
"response": {
# must match <request.uid>
"uid": "705ab4f5-6393-11e8-b7cc-42010a800002",
"result": {
"status": "Success"
},
# Objects must match the order of request.objects, and have apiVersion set to <request.desiredAPIVersion>.
# kind, metadata.uid, metadata.name, and metadata.namespace fields must not be changed by the webhook.
# metadata.labels and metadata.annotations fields may be changed by the webhook.
# All other changes to metadata fields by the webhook are ignored.
"convertedObjects": [
{
"kind": "CronTab",
"apiVersion": "example.com/v1",
"metadata": {
"creationTimestamp": "2019-09-04T14:03:02Z",
"name": "local-crontab",
"namespace": "default",
"resourceVersion": "143",
"uid": "3415a7fc-162b-4300-b5da-fd6083580d66"
},
"host": "localhost",
"port": "1234"
},
{
"kind": "CronTab",
"apiVersion": "example.com/v1",
"metadata": {
"creationTimestamp": "2019-09-03T13:02:01Z",
"name": "remote-crontab",
"resourceVersion": "12893",
"uid": "359a83ec-b575-460d-b553-d859cedde8a0"
},
"host": "example.com",
"port": "2345"
}
]
}
}
{
# Deprecated in v1.16 in favor of apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
"apiVersion": "apiextensions.k8s.io/v1beta1",
"kind": "ConversionReview",
"response": {
# must match <request.uid>
"uid": "705ab4f5-6393-11e8-b7cc-42010a800002",
"result": {
"status": "Failed"
},
# Objects must match the order of request.objects, and have apiVersion set to <request.desiredAPIVersion>.
# kind, metadata.uid, metadata.name, and metadata.namespace fields must not be changed by the webhook.
# metadata.labels and metadata.annotations fields may be changed by the webhook.
# All other changes to metadata fields by the webhook are ignored.
"convertedObjects": [
{
"kind": "CronTab",
"apiVersion": "example.com/v1",
"metadata": {
"creationTimestamp": "2019-09-04T14:03:02Z",
"name": "local-crontab",
"namespace": "default",
"resourceVersion": "143",
"uid": "3415a7fc-162b-4300-b5da-fd6083580d66"
},
"host": "localhost",
"port": "1234"
},
{
"kind": "CronTab",
"apiVersion": "example.com/v1",
"metadata": {
"creationTimestamp": "2019-09-03T13:02:01Z",
"name": "remote-crontab",
"resourceVersion": "12893",
"uid": "359a83ec-b575-460d-b553-d859cedde8a0"
},
"host": "example.com",
"port": "2345"
}
]
}
}
If conversion fails, a webhook should return a response
stanza containing the following fields:
uid
, copied from therequest.uid
sent to the webhookresult
, set to{"status":"Failed"}
Warning: Failing conversion can disrupt read and write access to the custom resources, including the ability to update or delete the resources. Conversion failures should be avoided whenever possible, and should not be used to enforce validation constraints (use validation schemas or webhook admission instead).
Example of a response from a webhook indicating a conversion request failed, with an optional message:
{
"apiVersion": "apiextensions.k8s.io/v1",
"kind": "ConversionReview",
"response": {
"uid": "<value from request.uid>",
"result": {
"status": "Failed",
"message": "hostPort could not be parsed into a separate host and port"
}
}
}
{
# Deprecated in v1.16 in favor of apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
"apiVersion": "apiextensions.k8s.io/v1beta1",
"kind": "ConversionReview",
"response": {
"uid": "<value from request.uid>",
"result": {
"status": "Failed",
"message": "hostPort could not be parsed into a separate host and port"
}
}
}
Writing, reading, and updating versioned CustomResourceDefinition objects
When an object is written, it is persisted at the version designated as the storage version at the time of the write. If the storage version changes, existing objects are never converted automatically. However, newly-created or updated objects are written at the new storage version. It is possible for an object to have been written at a version that is no longer served.
When you read an object, you specify the version as part of the path. If you
specify a version that is different from the object's persisted version,
Kubernetes returns the object to you at the version you requested, but the
persisted object is neither changed on disk, nor converted in any way
(other than changing the apiVersion
string) while serving the request.
You can request an object at any version that is currently served.
If you update an existing object, it is rewritten at the version that is currently the storage version. This is the only way that objects can change from one version to another.
To illustrate this, consider the following hypothetical series of events:
- The storage version is
v1beta1
. You create an object. It is persisted in storage at versionv1beta1
- You add version
v1
to your CustomResourceDefinition and designate it as the storage version. - You read your object at version
v1beta1
, then you read the object again at versionv1
. Both returned objects are identical except for the apiVersion field. - You create a new object. It is persisted in storage at version
v1
. You now have two objects, one of which is atv1beta1
, and the other of which is atv1
. - You update the first object. It is now persisted at version
v1
since that is the current storage version.
Previous storage versions
The API server records each version which has ever been marked as the storage
version in the status field storedVersions
. Objects may have been persisted
at any version that has ever been designated as a storage version. No objects
can exist in storage at a version that has never been a storage version.
Upgrade existing objects to a new stored version
When deprecating versions and dropping support, select a storage upgrade procedure.
Option 1: Use the Storage Version Migrator
- Run the storage Version migrator
- Remove the old version from the CustomResourceDefinition
status.storedVersions
field.
Option 2: Manually upgrade the existing objects to a new stored version
The following is an example procedure to upgrade from v1beta1
to v1
.
- Set
v1
as the storage in the CustomResourceDefinition file and apply it using kubectl. ThestoredVersions
is nowv1beta1, v1
. - Write an upgrade procedure to list all existing objects and write them with
the same content. This forces the backend to write objects in the current
storage version, which is
v1
. - Remove
v1beta1
from the CustomResourceDefinitionstatus.storedVersions
field.