This tutorial will walk you through the process of configuring Argo Rollouts to work with Ambassador to facilitate canary releases. All files used in this guide are available in the examples directory of this repository.
- Kubernetes cluster
- Argo-Rollouts installed in the cluster
Note
If using Ambassador Edge Stack or Emissary-ingress 2.0+, you will need to install Argo-Rollouts version v1.1+, and you will need to supply --ambassador-api-version getambassador.io/v3alpha1
to your argo-rollouts
deployment.
If you don't have Ambassador in your cluster you can install it following the Edge Stack documentation.
By default, Edge Stack routes via Kubernetes services. For best performance with canaries, we recommend you use endpoint routing. Enable endpoint routing on your cluster by saving the following configuration in a file called resolver.yaml
:
apiVersion: getambassador.io/v2
kind: KubernetesEndpointResolver
metadata:
name: endpoint
Apply this configuration to your cluster: kubectl apply -f resolver.yaml
.
We'll create two Kubernetes services, named echo-stable
and echo-canary
. Save this configuration to the file echo-service.yaml
.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
labels:
app: echo
name: echo-stable
spec:
type: ClusterIP
ports:
- name: http
port: 80
protocol: TCP
targetPort: 8080
selector:
app: echo
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
labels:
app: echo
name: echo-canary
spec:
type: ClusterIP
ports:
- name: http
port: 80
protocol: TCP
targetPort: 8080
selector:
app: echo
We'll also create an Edge Stack route to the services. Save the following configuration to a file called echo-mapping.yaml
.
apiVersion: getambassador.io/v2
kind: Mapping
metadata:
name: echo
spec:
prefix: /echo
rewrite: /echo
service: echo-stable:80
resolver: endpoint
Apply both of these configurations to the Kubernetes cluster:
kubectl apply -f echo-service.yaml
kubectl apply -f echo-mapping.yaml
Create a Rollout resource and save it to a file called rollout.yaml
. Note the trafficRouting
attribute, which tells Argo to use Ambassador Edge Stack for routing.
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: Rollout
metadata:
name: echo-rollout
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
app: echo
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: echo
spec:
containers:
- image: hashicorp/http-echo
args:
- "-text=VERSION 1"
- -listen=:8080
imagePullPolicy: Always
name: echo-v1
ports:
- containerPort: 8080
strategy:
canary:
stableService: echo-stable
canaryService: echo-canary
trafficRouting:
ambassador:
mappings:
- echo
steps:
- setWeight: 30
- pause: {duration: 30s}
- setWeight: 60
- pause: {duration: 30s}
- setWeight: 100
- pause: {duration: 10}
Apply the rollout to your cluster kubectl apply -f rollout.yaml
. Note that no canary rollout will occur, as this is the first version of the service being deployed.
We'll now test that this rollout works as expected. Open a new terminal window. We'll use it to send requests to the cluster. Get the external IP address for Edge Stack:
export AMBASSADOR_LB_ENDPOINT=$(kubectl -n ambassador get svc ambassador -o "go-template={{range .status.loadBalancer.ingress}}{{or .ip .hostname}}{{end}}")
Send a request to the echo
service:
curl -Lk "https://$AMBASSADOR_LB_ENDPOINT/echo/"
You should get a response of "VERSION 1".
It's time to rollout a new version of the service. Update the echo container in the rollout.yaml
to display "VERSION 2":
apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: Rollout
metadata:
name: echo-rollout
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
app: echo
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: echo
spec:
containers:
- image: hashicorp/http-echo
args:
- "-text=VERSION 2"
- -listen=:8080
imagePullPolicy: Always
name: echo-v1
ports:
- containerPort: 8080
strategy:
canary:
stableService: echo-stable
canaryService: echo-canary
trafficRouting:
ambassador:
mappings:
- echo
steps:
- setWeight: 30
- pause: {duration: 30s}
- setWeight: 60
- pause: {duration: 30s}
- setWeight: 100
- pause: {duration: 10}
Apply the rollout to the cluster by typing kubectl apply -f rollout.yaml
. This will rollout a version 2 of the service by routing 30% of traffic to the service for 30 seconds, followed by 60% of traffic for another 30 seconds.
You can monitor the status of your rollout at the command line:
kubectl argo rollouts get rollout echo-rollout --watch
Will display an output similar to the following:
Name: echo-rollout
Namespace: default
Status: ॥ Paused
Message: CanaryPauseStep
Strategy: Canary
Step: 1/6
SetWeight: 30
ActualWeight: 30
Images: hashicorp/http-echo (canary, stable)
Replicas:
Desired: 1
Current: 2
Updated: 1
Ready: 2
Available: 2
NAME KIND STATUS AGE INFO
⟳ echo-rollout Rollout ॥ Paused 2d21h
├──# revision:3
│ └──⧉ echo-rollout-64fb847897 ReplicaSet ✔ Healthy 2s canary
│ └──□ echo-rollout-64fb847897-49sg6 Pod ✔ Running 2s ready:1/1
├──# revision:2
│ └──⧉ echo-rollout-578bfdb4b8 ReplicaSet ✔ Healthy 3h5m stable
│ └──□ echo-rollout-578bfdb4b8-86z6n Pod ✔ Running 3h5m ready:1/1
└──# revision:1
└──⧉ echo-rollout-948d9c9f9 ReplicaSet • ScaledDown 2d21h
In your other terminal window, you can verify that the canary is progressing appropriately by sending requests in a loop:
while true; do curl -k https://$AMBASSADOR_LB_ENDPOINT/echo/; sleep 0.2; done
This will display a running list of responses from the service that will gradually transition from VERSION 1 strings to VERSION 2 strings.
For more details about the Ambassador and Argo-Rollouts integration, see the Ambassador Argo documentation.