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Kubernetes & OpenShift 3 Java Client Join the chat at https://gitter.im/fabric8io/kubernetes-client

This client provides access to the full Kubernetes & OpenShift 3 REST APIs via a fluent DSL.

CircleCI Dependency Status

  • kubernetes-client: Maven Central Javadocs
  • kubernetes-model: Maven Central Javadocs
  • openshift-client: Maven Central Javadocs

Usage

Creating a client

The easiest way to create a client is:

KubernetesClient client = new DefaultKubernetesClient();

DefaultOpenShiftClient implements both the KubernetesClient & OpenShiftClient interface so if you need the OpenShift extensions, such as Builds, etc then simply do:

OpenShiftClient osClient = new DefaultOpenShiftClient();

Configuring the client

This will use settings from different sources in the following order of priority:

  • System properties
  • Environment variables
  • Kube config file
  • Service account token & mounted CA certificate

System properties are preferred over environment variables. The following system properties & environment variables can be used for configuration:

  • kubernetes.master / KUBERNETES_MASTER
  • kubernetes.api.version / KUBERNETES_API_VERSION
  • kubernetes.oapi.version / KUBERNETES_OAPI_VERSION
  • kubernetes.trust.certificates / KUBERNETES_TRUST_CERTIFICATES
  • kubernetes.certs.ca.file / KUBERNETES_CERTS_CA_FILE
  • kubernetes.certs.ca.data / KUBERNETES_CERTS_CA_DATA
  • kubernetes.certs.client.file / KUBERNETES_CERTS_CLIENT_FILE
  • kubernetes.certs.client.data / KUBERNETES_CERTS_CLIENT_DATA
  • kubernetes.certs.client.key.file / KUBERNETES_CERTS_CLIENT_KEY_FILE
  • kubernetes.certs.client.key.data / KUBERNETES_CERTS_CLIENT_KEY_DATA
  • kubernetes.certs.client.key.algo / KUBERNETES_CERTS_CLIENT_KEY_ALGO
  • kubernetes.certs.client.key.passphrase / KUBERNETES_CERTS_CLIENT_KEY_PASSPHRASE
  • kubernetes.auth.basic.username / KUBERNETES_AUTH_BASIC_USERNAME
  • kubernetes.auth.basic.password / KUBERNETES_AUTH_BASIC_PASSWORD
  • kubernetes.auth.tryKubeConfig / KUBERNETES_AUTH_TRYKUBECONFIG
  • kubernetes.auth.tryServiceAccount / KUBERNETES_AUTH_TRYSERVICEACCOUNT
  • kubernetes.auth.token / KUBERNETES_AUTH_TOKEN
  • kubernetes.watch.reconnectInterval / KUBERNETES_WATCH_RECONNECTINTERVAL
  • kubernetes.watch.reconnectLimit / KUBERNETES_WATCH_RECONNECTLIMIT
  • kubernetes.user.agent / KUBERNETES_USER_AGENT
  • kubernetes.tls.versions / KUBERNETES_TLS_VERSIONS
  • kubernetes.truststore.file / KUBERNETES_TRUSTSTORE_FILE
  • kubernetes.truststore.passphrase / KUBERNETES_TRUSTSTORE_PASSPHRASE
  • kubernetes.keystore.file / KUBERNETES_KEYSTORE_FILE
  • kubernetes.keystore.passphrase / KUBERNETES_KEYSTORE_PASSPHRASE

Alternatively you can use the ConfigBuilder to create a config object for the Kubernetes client:

Config config = new ConfigBuilder().masterUrl("https://mymaster.com").build;
KubernetesClient client = new DefaultKubernetesClient(config);

Using the DSL is the same for all resources.

List resources:

NamespaceList myNs = client.namespaces().list();

ServiceList myServices = client.services().list();

ServiceList myNsServices = client.services().inNamespace("default").list();

Get a resource:

Namespace myns = client.namespaces().withName("myns").get();

Service myservice = client.services().inNamespace("default").withName("myservice").get();

Delete:

Namespace myns = client.namespaces().withName("myns").delete();

Service myservice = client.services().inNamespace("default").withName("myservice").delete();

Editing resources uses the inline builders from the Kubernetes Model:

Namespace myns = client.namespaces().withName("myns").edit()
                   .editMetadata()
                     .addToLabels("a", "label")
                   .endMetadata()
                   .done();

Service myservice = client.services().inNamespace("default").withName("myservice").edit()
                     .editMetadata()
                       .addToLabels("another", "label")
                     .endMetadata()
                     .done();

In the same spirit you can inline builders to create:

Namespace myns = client.namespaces().createNew()
                   .editMetadata()
                     .withName("myns")
                     .addToLabels("a", "label")
                   .endMetadata()
                   .done();

Service myservice = client.services().inNamespace("default").createNew()
                     .editMetadata()
                       .withName("myservice")
                       .addToLabels("another", "label")
                     .endMetadata()
                     .done();

Following events

Use io.fabric8.kubernetes.api.model.Event as T for Watcher:

client.events().inAnyNamespace().watch(new Watcher<Event>() {

  @Override
  public void eventReceived(Action action, Event resource) {
    System.out.println("event " + action.name() + " " + resource.toString());
  }

  @Override
  public void onClose(KubernetesClientException cause) {
    System.out.println("Watcher close due to " + cause);
  }

});

Working with extensions

The kubernetes API defines a bunch of extensions like daemonSets, jobs, ingresses and so forth which are all usable in the extensions() DSL:

e.g. to list the jobs...

jobs = client.extensions().jobs().list();

Loading resources from external sources

There are cases where you want to read a resource from an external source, rather than defining it using the clients DSL. For those cases the client allows you to load the resource from:

  • A file (Supports both java.io.File and java.lang.String)
  • A url
  • An input stream

Once the resource is loaded, you can treat it as you would, had you created it yourself.

For example lets read a pod, from a yml file and work with it:

Pod refreshed = client.load('/path/to/a/pod.yml').fromServer().get();    
Boolean deleted = client.load('/workspace/pod.yml').delete();
LogWatch handle = client.load('/workspace/pod.yml').watchLog(System.out);

Passing a reference of a resource to the client

In the same spirit you can use an object created externally (either a a reference or using its string representation.

For example:

Pod pod = someThirdPartyCodeThatCreatesAPod();
Boolean deleted = client.resource(pod).delete();

Adapting the client

The client supports plug-able adapters. An example adapter is the OpenShift Adapter which allows adapting an existing KubernetesClient instance to an OpenShiftClient one.

For example:

KubernetesClient client = new DefaultKubernetesClient();

OpenShiftClient oClient = client.adapt(OpenShiftClient.class);

The client also support the isAdaptable() method which checks if the adaptation is possible and returns true if it does.

KubernetesClient client = new DefaultKubernetesClient();
if (client.isAdaptable(OpenShiftClient.class)) {
    OpenShiftClient oClient = client.adapt(OpenShiftClient.class);
} else {
    throw new Exception("Adapting to OpenShiftClient not support. Check if adapter is present, and that env provides /oapi root path.");
}

Adapting and close

Note that when using adapt() both the adaptee and the target will share the same resources (underlying http client, thread pools etc). This means that close() is not required to be used on every single instance created via adapt. Calling close() on any of the adapt() managed instances or the original instance, will properly clean up all the resources and thus none of the instances will be usable any longer.