This repo hosts the community.okd
Ansible Collection.
The collection includes a variety of Ansible content to help automate the management of applications in OKD clusters, as well as the provisioning and maintenance of clusters themselves.
Click on the name of a plugin or module to view that content's documentation:
- Connection Plugins:
- Inventory Plugins:
- Modules:
Note: Some of these documentation links currently link to older module versions. For the latest module documentation, please use
ansible-doc
in the CLI.
Before using the OKD collection, you need to install it with the Ansible Galaxy CLI:
ansible-galaxy collection install community.okd
You can also include it in a requirements.yml
file and install it via ansible-galaxy collection install -r requirements.yml
, using the format:
---
collections:
- name: community.okd
version: 1.0.1
Content in this collection requires the OpenShift Python client to interact with Kubernetes' APIs. You can install it with:
pip3 install openshift
It's preferable to use content in this collection using their Fully Qualified Collection Namespace (FQCN), for example community.okd.openshift
:
---
plugin: community.okd.openshift
connections:
- namespaces:
- testing
For documentation on how to use individual plugins included in this collection, please see the links in the 'Included content' section earlier in this README.
If you want to develop new content for this collection or improve what's already here, the easiest way to work on the collection is to clone it into one of the configured COLLECTIONS_PATHS
, and work on it there.
See Contributing to community.okd.
The tests
directory contains configuration for running sanity tests using ansible-test
.
You can run the ansible-test
sanity tests with the command:
make test-sanity
The molecule
directory contains configuration for running integration tests using molecule
.
You can run the molecule
integration tests with the command:
make test-integration
These commands will create a directory called ansible_collections
which should not be committed or added to the .gitignore
(Tracking issue: ansible/ansible#68499)
This repository uses the OpenShift Prow instance for testing against live OpenShift clusters.
The configuration for the CI jobs that this repository runs can be found in the openshift/release repository
.
The Prow CI integration test job runs the command:
make test-integration-incluster
which will create a job that runs the normal make integration
target. In order to mimic the Prow CI job, you must
first build the test image using the Dockerfile in ci/Dockerfile
. Then, push the image
somewhere that it will be accessible to the cluster, and run
IMAGE_FORMAT=<your image> make test-integration-incluser
where the IMAGE_FORMAT
environment variable is the full reference to your container (ie, IMAGE_FORMAT=quay.io/example/molecule-test-runner
)
Releases are automatically built and pushed to Ansible Galaxy for any new tag. Before tagging a release, make sure to do the following:
- Update the version in the following places:
a. The
version
ingalaxy.yml
b. This README'srequirements.yml
example c. TheDOWNSTREAM_VERSION
inci/downstream.sh
d. TheVERSION
inMakefile
- Update the CHANGELOG:
1. Make sure you have
antsibull-changelog
installed. 1. Make sure there are fragments for all known changes inchangelogs/fragments
. 1. Runantsibull-changelog release
. - Commit the changes and create a PR with the changes. Wait for tests to pass, then merge it once they have.
- Tag the version in Git and push to GitHub.
After the version is published, verify it exists on the OKD Collection Galaxy page.
For more information about Ansible's Kubernetes and OpenShift integrations, join the #ansible-kubernetes
channel on Freenode IRC, and browse the resources in the Kubernetes Working Group Community wiki page.
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later
See LICENCE to see the full text.