Documentation for version v0.5.0 is no longer actively maintained. The version you are currently viewing is a static snapshot. For up-to-date documentation, see the latest version.
NOTE: Documentation may change between releases. See the Changelog for links to previous versions of this repository and its docs.
To ensure that you are working off a specific release,
git checkout <VERSION_TAG>
where<VERSION_TAG>
is the appropriate tag for the Ark version you wish to use (e.g. “v0.3.3”). You shouldgit checkout main
only if you’re planning on building the Ark image from scratch.
While the Quickstart uses a local storage service to quickly set up Heptio Ark as a demonstration, this document details additional configurations that are required when integrating with the cloud providers below:
To integrate Heptio Ark with AWS, you should follow the instructions below to create an Ark-specific IAM user.
If you do not have the AWS CLI locally installed, follow the user guide to set it up.
Create an IAM user:
aws iam create-user --user-name heptio-ark
Attach a policy to give heptio-ark
the necessary permissions:
aws iam attach-user-policy \
--policy-arn arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/AmazonS3FullAccess \
--user-name heptio-ark
aws iam attach-user-policy \
--policy-arn arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/AmazonEC2FullAccess \
--user-name heptio-ark
Create an access key for the user:
aws iam create-access-key --user-name heptio-ark
The result should look like:
{
"AccessKey": {
"UserName": "heptio-ark",
"Status": "Active",
"CreateDate": "2017-07-31T22:24:41.576Z",
"SecretAccessKey": <AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY>,
"AccessKeyId": <AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID>
}
}
Using the output from the previous command, create an Ark-specific credentials file (credentials-ark
) in your local directory that looks like the following:
[default]
aws_access_key_id=<AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID>
aws_secret_access_key=<AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY>
In the Ark root directory, run the following to first set up namespaces, RBAC, and other scaffolding:
kubectl apply -f examples/common/00-prereqs.yaml
Create a Secret, running this command in the local directory of the credentials file you just created:
kubectl create secret generic cloud-credentials \
--namespace heptio-ark \
--from-file cloud=credentials-ark
Now that you have your IAM user credentials stored in a Secret, you need to replace some placeholder values in the template files. Specifically, you need to change the following:
In file examples/aws/00-ark-config.yaml
:
<YOUR_BUCKET>
and <YOUR_REGION>
. See the
Config definition for details.In file examples/common/10-deployment.yaml
:
spec.template.spec.containers[*].env.name
is “AWS_SHARED_CREDENTIALS_FILE”.(Optional) If you are running the Nginx example, in file examples/nginx-app/with-pv.yaml
:
<YOUR_STORAGE_CLASS_NAME>
with gp2
. This is AWS’s default StorageClass
name.To integrate Heptio Ark with GCP, you should follow the instructions below to create an Ark-specific Service Account.
If you do not have the gcloud CLI locally installed, follow the user guide to set it up.
View your current config settings:
gcloud config list
Store the project
value from the results in the environment variable $PROJECT_ID
.
Create a service account:
gcloud iam service-accounts create heptio-ark \
--display-name "Heptio Ark service account"
Then list all accounts and find the heptio-ark
account you just created:
gcloud iam service-accounts list
Set the $SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL
variable to match its email
value.
Attach policies to give heptio-ark
the necessary permissions to function (replacing placeholders appropriately):
gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding $PROJECT_ID \
--member serviceAccount:$SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL \
--role roles/compute.storageAdmin
gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding $PROJECT_ID \
--member serviceAccount:$SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL \
--role roles/storage.admin
Create a service account key, specifying an output file (credentials-ark
) in your local directory:
gcloud iam service-accounts keys create credentials-ark \
--iam-account $SERVICE_ACCOUNT_EMAIL
In the Ark root directory, run the following to first set up namespaces, RBAC, and other scaffolding:
kubectl apply -f examples/common/00-prereqs.yaml
Create a Secret, running this command in the local directory of the credentials file you just created:
kubectl create secret generic cloud-credentials \
--namespace heptio-ark \
--from-file cloud=credentials-ark
Now that you have your Google Cloud credentials stored in a Secret, you need to replace some placeholder values in the template files. Specifically, you need to change the following:
In file examples/gcp/00-ark-config.yaml
:
<YOUR_BUCKET>
and <YOUR_PROJECT>
. See the
Config definition for details.In file examples/common/10-deployment.yaml
:
spec.template.spec.containers[*].env.name
to “GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS”.(Optional) If you are running the Nginx example, in file examples/nginx-app/with-pv.yaml
:
<YOUR_STORAGE_CLASS_NAME>
with standard
. This is GCP’s default StorageClass
name.To integrate Heptio Ark with Azure, you should follow the instructions below to create an Ark-specific service principal.
If you do not have the az
Azure CLI 2.0 locally installed, follow the
user guide to set it up. Once done, run:
az login
There are seven environment variables that need to be set for Heptio Ark to work properly. The following steps detail how to acquire these, in the process of setting up the necessary RBAC.
List your account:
az account list
Save the relevant response values into environment variables: id
corresponds to $AZURE_SUBSCRIPTION_ID
and tenantId
corresponds to $AZURE_TENANT_ID
.
Assuming that you already have a running Kubernetes cluster on Azure, you should have a corresponding resource group as well. List your current groups to find it:
az group list
Get your cluster’s group name
from the response, and use it to set $AZURE_RESOURCE_GROUP
. (Also note the location
–this is later used in the Azure-specific portion of the Ark Config).
Create a service principal with the “Contributor” role:
az ad sp create-for-rbac --role="Contributor" --name="heptio-ark"
From the response, save appId
into $AZURE_CLIENT_ID
and password
into $AZURE_CLIENT_SECRET
.
Login into the heptio-ark
service principal account:
az login --service-principal \
--username http://heptio-ark \
--password $AZURE_CLIENT_SECRET \
--tenant $AZURE_TENANT_ID
Specify a globally-unique storage account id and save it in $AZURE_STORAGE_ACCOUNT_ID
. Then create the storage account, specifying the optional --location
flag if you do not have defaults from az configure
:
az storage account create \
--name $AZURE_STORAGE_ACCOUNT_ID \
--resource-group $AZURE_RESOURCE_GROUP \
--sku Standard_GRS
You will encounter an error message if the storage account ID is not unique; change it accordingly.
Get the keys for your storage account:
az storage account keys list \
--account-name $AZURE_STORAGE_ACCOUNT_ID \
--resource-group $AZURE_RESOURCE_GROUP
Set $AZURE_STORAGE_KEY
to any one of the value
s returned.
In the Ark root directory, run the following to first set up namespaces, RBAC, and other scaffolding:
kubectl apply -f examples/common/00-prereqs.yaml
Now you need to create a Secret that contains all the seven environment variables you just set. The command looks like the following:
kubectl create secret generic cloud-credentials \
--namespace heptio-ark \
--from-literal AZURE_SUBSCRIPTION_ID=${AZURE_SUBSCRIPTION_ID} \
--from-literal AZURE_TENANT_ID=${AZURE_TENANT_ID} \
--from-literal AZURE_RESOURCE_GROUP=${AZURE_RESOURCE_GROUP} \
--from-literal AZURE_CLIENT_ID=${AZURE_CLIENT_ID} \
--from-literal AZURE_CLIENT_SECRET=${AZURE_CLIENT_SECRET} \
--from-literal AZURE_STORAGE_ACCOUNT_ID=${AZURE_STORAGE_ACCOUNT_ID} \
--from-literal AZURE_STORAGE_KEY=${AZURE_STORAGE_KEY}
Now that you have your Azure credentials stored in a Secret, you need to replace some placeholder values in the template files. Specifically, you need to change the following:
In file examples/azure/10-ark-config.yaml
:
<YOUR_BUCKET>
, <YOUR_LOCATION>
, and <YOUR_TIMEOUT>
. See the
Config definition for details.Make sure that you have run kubectl apply -f examples/common/00-prereqs.yaml
first (this command is incorporated in the previous setup instructions because it creates the necessary namespaces).
AWS and GCP
Start the Ark server itself, using the Config from the appropriate cloud-provider-specific directory:
kubectl apply -f examples/common/10-deployment.yaml
kubectl apply -f examples/<CLOUD-PROVIDER>/
Azure
Because Azure loads its credentials differently (from environment variables rather than a file), you need to instead run:
kubectl apply -f examples/azure/
Start the sample nginx app:
kubectl apply -f examples/nginx-app/base.yaml
Now create a backup:
ark backup create nginx-backup --selector app=nginx
Simulate a disaster:
kubectl delete namespaces nginx-example
Now restore your lost resources:
ark restore create nginx-backup
NOTE: For Azure, your Kubernetes cluster needs to be version 1.7.2+ in order to support PV snapshotting of its managed disks.
Start the sample nginx app:
kubectl apply -f examples/nginx-app/with-pv.yaml
Because Kubernetes does not automatically transfer labels from PVCs to dynamically generated PVs, you need to do so manually:
nginx_pv_name=$(kubectl get pv -o jsonpath='{.items[?(@.spec.claimRef.name=="nginx-logs")].metadata.name}')
kubectl label pv $nginx_pv_name app=nginx
Now create a backup with PV snapshotting:
ark backup create nginx-backup --selector app=nginx
Simulate a disaster:
kubectl delete namespaces nginx-example
kubectl delete pv $nginx_pv_name
Because the default reclaim policy for dynamically-provisioned PVs is “Delete”, the above commands should trigger your cloud provider to delete the disk backing the PV. The deletion process is asynchronous so this may take some time. Before continuing to the next step, check your cloud provider (via dashboard or CLI) to confirm that the disk no longer exists.
Now restore your lost resources:
ark restore create nginx-backup
To help you get started, see the documentation.