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Splunk Operator for Kubernetes

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The Splunk Operator for Kubernetes (SOK) makes it easy for Splunk Administrators to deploy and operate Enterprise deployments in a Kubernetes infrastructure. Packaged as a container, it uses the operator pattern to manage Splunk-specific custom resources, following best practices to manage all the underlying Kubernetes objects for you.

This repository is used to build the Splunk Operator for Kubernetes (SOK). If you are just looking for documentation on how to deploy and use the latest release, please see the Getting Started Documentation.

Prerequisites

You must have Docker Engine installed to build the Splunk Operator.

This project uses Go modules, and requires golang 1.21.1 or later. You must export GO111MODULE=on if cloning these repositories into your $GOPATH (not recommended).

The Kubernetes Operator SDK must also be installed to build this project.

git clone -b v1.31.0 https://github.com/operator-framework/operator-sdk
cd operator-sdk
make tidy
make install

You may need to add $GOPATH/bin to your path to run the operator-sdk command line tool:

export PATH=${PATH}:${GOPATH}/bin

It is also recommended that you install the following golang tools, which are used by various make targets:

go install golang.org/x/lint/golint
go install golang.org/x/tools/cmd/cover
go install github.com/mattn/goveralls
go get -u github.com/mikefarah/yq/v3
go get -u github.com/go-delve/delve/cmd/dlv

Cloning this repository

git clone git@github.com:splunk/splunk-operator.git
cd splunk-operator

Repository overview

This repository consists of the following code used to build the splunk-operator binary:

  • main.go: Provides the main() function, where everything begins
  • apis/: Source code for the operator's custom resource definition types
  • controllers/: Used to register controllers that watch for changes to custom resources
  • pkg/splunk/enterprise/: Source code for controllers that manage Splunk Enterprise resources
  • pkg/splunk/controller/: Common code shared across Splunk controllers
  • pkg/splunk/common/: Common code used by most other splunk packages
  • pkg/splunk/client/: Simple client for Splunk Enterprise REST API
  • pkg/splunk/test/: Common code used by other packages for unit testing

main() uses controllers to register all the enterprise controllers that manage custom resources by watching for Kubernetes events. The enterprise controllers are implemented using common code provided by the controllers package. The enterprise controllers also use the REST API client provided in the pkg/splunk/client package. The types provided by apis/ and common code in the pkg/splunk/common/ package are used universally. Note that the source code for main() is generated from a template provided by the Operator SDK.

In addition to the source code, this repository includes:

  • tools: Build scripts, templates, etc. used to build the container image
  • config: Kubernetes YAML templates used to install the Splunk Operator
  • docs: Getting Started Guide and other documentation in Markdown format
  • test: Integration test framework built using Ginko. See docs for more info.

Building the operator

You can build the operator by just running make.

Other make targets include (more info below):

  • make all: builds manager executable
  • make test: Runs unit tests with Coveralls code coverage output to coverage.out
  • make scorecard: Runs operator-sdk scorecard tests using OLM installation bundle
  • make generate: runs operator-generate k8s, crds and csv commands, updating installation YAML files and OLM bundle
  • make docker-build: generates splunk-operator container image example make docker-build IMG=docker.io/splunk/splunk-operator:<tag name>
  • make docker-push: push docker image to given repository example make docker-push IMG=docker.io/splunk/splunk-operator:<tag name>
  • make clean: removes the binary build output and splunk-operator container image example make docker-push IMG=docker.io/splunk/splunk-operator:<tag name>
  • make run: runs the Splunk Operator locally, monitoring the Kubernetes cluster configured in your current kubectl context
  • make fmt: runs go fmt on all *.go source files in this project
  • make bundle-build: generates splunk-operator-bundle bundle container image for OLM example make bundle-build IMAGE_TAG_BASE=docker.io/splunk/splunk-operator VERSION=<tag name> IMG=docker.io/splunk/splunk-operator:<tag name>
  • make bundle-push: push OLM bundle docker image to given repository example make bundle-push IMAGE_TAG_BASE=docker.io/splunk/splunk-operator VERSION=<tag name> IMG=docker.io/splunk/splunk-operator:<tag name>
  • make catalog-build: generates splunk-operator-catalog catalog container image example make catalog-build IMAGE_TAG_BASE=docker.io/splunk/splunk-operator VERSION=<tag name> IMG=docker.io/splunk/splunk-operator:<tag name>
  • make catalog-push: push catalog docker image to given repository examplemake catalog-push IMAGE_TAG_BASE=docker.io/splunk/splunk-operator VERSION=<tag name> IMG=docker.io/splunk/splunk-operator:<tag name>

Deploying the Splunk Operator

make deploy command will deploy all the necessary resources to run Splunk Operator like RBAC policies, services, configmaps, deployment. Operator will be installed in splunk-operator namespace. If splunk-operator namespace does not exist, it will create the namespace. By default make deploy will install operator clusterwide. Operator will watch all the namespaces for any splunk enterprise custom resources.

make deploy IMG=docker.io/splunk/splunk-operator:<tag name>

If you want operator for specific namespace then you must pass WATCH_NAMESPACE parameter to make deploy command

make deploy IMG=docker.io/splunk/splunk-operator:<tag name> WATCH_NAMESPACE="namespace1"

If you want operator to use specific version of splunk instance, then you must pass RELATED_IMAGE_SPLUNK_ENTERPRISE parameter to make deploy command

make deploy IMG=docker.io/splunk/splunk-operator:<tag name> WATCH_NAMESPACE="namespace1" RELATED_IMAGE_SPLUNK_ENTERPRISE="splunk/splunk:edge"

Use this to run the operator as a local foreground process on your machine:

make run

This will use your current Kubernetes context from ~/.kube/config to manage resources in your current namespace.

Please see the Getting Started Documentation for more information, including instructions on how to install the operator in your cluster.

License

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