Files
fn-serverless/docs/operating/kubernetes
Derek Schultz c281f96486 K8s docs update (#499)
* split fn-ui to its own service

* add fn namespace

* update path

* add namespace flag for kubectl

* simplify grabbing minikube IP and port

* typo: FUNCTIONS -> API_URL
2017-11-16 10:45:25 -07:00
..
2017-11-16 10:45:25 -07:00
2017-11-16 10:45:25 -07:00

How to run Fn on Kubernetes

Prerequisite 1: working Kubernetes cluster (v1.7+), and a locally configured kubectl.

Quickstart

Steps

  1. Deploy Fn to the Kubernetes cluster:
$ cd docs/operating/kubernetes/
$ kubectl create -f fn-service.yaml
  1. Once the Pods have started, check the service for the load balancer IP:
$ kubectl -n fn get svc --watch
NAME                                CLUSTER-IP      EXTERNAL-IP     PORT(S)                                                       AGE
fn-mysql-master                     10.96.57.185    <none>          3306/TCP                                                      10m
fn-redis-master                     10.96.127.51    <none>          6379/TCP                                                      10m
fn-service                          10.96.245.95    <pending>       8080:30768/TCP,80:31921/TCP                                   10m
kubernetes                          10.96.0.1       <none>          443/TCP                                                       15d

Note that fn-service is initially pending on allocating an external IP. The kubectl get svc --watch command will update this once an IP has been assigned.

  1. Test the cluster:

If you are using a Kubernetes setup that can expose a public load balancer, run:

$ export API_URL=$(kubectl -n fn get -o json svc fn-service | jq -r '.status.loadBalancer.ingress[0].ip'):8080

If you are using a Kubernetes setup like minikube, run

$ export API_URL=$(minikube -n fn service fn-service --url)

Now, test by creating a function via curl:

$ curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST -d '{ "app": { "name":"myapp" } }' http://$API_URL/v1/apps
{"message":"App successfully created","app":{"name":"myapp","config":null}}

$ curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST -d '{ "route": { "type": "sync", "path":"/hello-sync", "image":"fnproject/hello" } }' http://$API_URL/v1/apps/myapp/routes
{"message":"Route successfully created","route":{"app_name":"myapp","path":"/hello-sync","image":"fnproject/hello","memory":128,"headers":{},"type":"sync","format":"default","timeout":30,"idle_timeout":30,"config":{}}}

$ curl -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST -d '{ "name":"Johnny" }' http://$API_URL/r/myapp/hello-sync
Hello Johnny!

You can also use the Fn CLI:

$ export API_URL=http://192.168.99.100:30966
$ fn apps list
myapp
$ fn routes list myapp
path            image           endpoint
/hello-sync     fnproject/hello 192.168.99.100:30966/r/myapp/hello-sync