If you are using a Mac as your development machine, the simplest way to get a Kubernetes cluster for local development is to use the built-in support for running a single node Kubernetes cluster that is available in Docker 18.06 and later. This will let you use Helm to deploy Apache OpenWhisk to Kubernetes on your laptop without needing any additional virtualization software installed.
Step-by-step instructions on enabling Kubernetes in Docker are available as part of the Getting started documentation from Docker.
In a nutshell, open the Docker preferences window, switch to the
Advanced
panel and make sure you have at least 4GB of Memory
allocated to Docker. Then switch to the Kubernetes panel, and check
the box to enable Kubernetes. It is recommended that you use the
kubectl
cli that is installed by Docker in /usr/local/bin
, so
please make sure it is appears in your path before any kubectl
you
might also have installed on your machine. Finally, pick the
docker-desktop
config for kubectl
by executing the command
kubectl config use-context docker-desktop
.
You will be using a NodePort ingress to access OpenWhisk. Assuming port 31001 is available to be used on your host machine, a [mycluster.yaml](../deploy/docker-macOS/mycluster.yaml] for a standard deployment of OpenWhisk would be:
whisk:
ingress:
type: NodePort
apiHostName: localhost
apiHostPort: 31001
useInternally: false
nginx:
httpsNodePort: 31001
# A single node cluster; so disable affinity
affinity:
enabled: false
toleration:
enabled: false
invoker:
options: "-Dwhisk.kubernetes.user-pod-node-affinity.enabled=false"
One nice feature of using Kubernetes in Docker, is that the
containers being run in Kubernetes are also directly
visible/accessible via the usual Docker commands. Furthermore, it is
straightforward to deploy local images by adding a stanza to your
mycluster.yaml. For example, to use a locally built controller image,
just add the stanza below to your mycluster.yaml
to override the default
behavior of pulling a stable openwhisk/controller
image from Docker Hub.
controller:
imageName: "whisk/controller"
imageTag: "latest"
Using Kubernetes in Docker for Mac is only appropriate for development and testing purposes. It is not recommended for production deployments of OpenWhisk.
TLS termination will be handled by OpenWhisk's nginx
service and
will use self-signed certificates. You will need to invoke wsk
with
the -i
command line argument to bypass certificate checking.