From 560f57e1bbe69c86cc5457ffe89f2500a4b8dd9b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "docs.yml" <> Date: Wed, 17 Jul 2024 15:39:09 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] docs.yml --- site/content/en/main/best-practices/_index.md | 138 +++++++++++++++++- 1 file changed, 137 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/site/content/en/main/best-practices/_index.md b/site/content/en/main/best-practices/_index.md index 6b7aa8456..ce6016a4b 100644 --- a/site/content/en/main/best-practices/_index.md +++ b/site/content/en/main/best-practices/_index.md @@ -32,7 +32,143 @@ The workflow for developing features in Pepr is: ## Debugging -Pepr can be broken down into two parts: Admission and Watches. If the focus of the debug is on a Mutation or Validation, then only pay attention to pods with labels `pepr.dev/controller: admission`, else, you can focus on `pepr.dev/controller: watch`. +- [Debugging During Module Development](https://docs.pepr.dev/main/best-practices/#debugging-during-module-development) +- [Logging](https://docs.pepr.dev/main/best-practices/#logging) +- [Internal Error Occurred](https://docs.pepr.dev/main/best-practices/#internal-error-occurred) +- [Pepr Store](https://docs.pepr.dev/main/best-practices/#pepr-store) + + +Welcome to the the debugging section! 🐛 + +Pepr is composed of `Modules` (ie, what happens when you issue `npx pepr init`), [Capabilities](https://docs.pepr.dev/main/user-guide/capabilities/) like `hello-pepr.ts`, and [Actions](https://docs.pepr.dev/main/user-guide/actions/) (ie, the blocks of code containing filters and `Mutate`, `Validate`, `Watch`, `Reconcile`, `OnSchedule`). You can have as many Capabilities as you would like in a Module. + +Pepr is a webhook-based system, meaning it is event-driven. When a resource is created, updated, or deleted, Pepr is called to perform the actions you have defined in your Capabilities. It's common for multiple webhooks to exist in a cluster, not just Pepr. When there are multiple webhooks, the order in which they are called is not guaranteed. The only guarantee is that all of the `MutatingWebhooks` will be called before all of the `ValidatingWebhooks`. After the admission webhooks are called, the `Watch` and `Reconcile` are called. The `Reconcile` and `Watch` create a watch on the resources specified in the `When` block and are watched for changes after admission. The difference between reconcile and watch is that `Reconcile` processes events in a queue to guarantee that the events are processed in order where as watch does not. + +Considering that many webhooks may be modifying the same resource, it is best practice to validate the resource after mutations are made to ensure that the resource is in a valid state if it has been changed since the last mutation. + + + +```typescript +When(a.Pod) + .IsCreated() + .InNamespace("my-app") + .WithName("database") + .Mutate(pod => { + pod.metadata.labels["pepr"] = "true"; + return pod; + }) + // another mutating webhook could removed labels + .Validate(pod => { + if (pod.metadata.labels["pepr"] !== "true") { + return pod.Approve("Label 'pepr' must be 'true'"); + } + return pod.Deny("Needs pepr label set to true") + }); +``` + +_If you think your Webhook is not being called for a given resource, check the `*WebhookConfiguration`._ + + +### Debugging During Module Development + +Pepr supports breakpoints in the VSCode editor. To use breakpoints, run `npx pepr dev` in the root of a Pepr module using a JavaScript Debug Terminal. This command starts the Pepr development server running at `localhost:3000` with the `*WebhookConfiguration` configured to send `AdmissionRequest` objects to the local address. + +This allows you to set breakpoints in `Mutate()`, `Validate()`, `Reconcile()`, `Watch()` or `OnSchedule()` and step through module code. + +Note that you will need a cluster running: + +```bash +k3d cluster create pepr-dev --k3s-arg '--debug@server:0' --wait +``` + +```typescript +When(a.Pod) + .IsCreated() + .InNamespace("my-app") + .WithName("database") + .Mutate(pod => { + // Set a breakpoint here + pod.metadata.labels["pepr"] = "true"; + return pod; + }) + .Validate(pod => { + // Set a breakpoint here + if (pod.metadata.labels["pepr"] !== "true") { + return ["Label 'pepr' must be 'true'"]; + } + }); +``` + +### Logging + +Pepr can deploy two types of controllers: Admission and Watch. The controllers deployed are dictated by the [Actions](https://docs.pepr.dev/main/user-guide/actions/) called for by a given set of Capabilities (Pepr only deploys what is necessary). Within those controllers, the default log level is `info` but that can be changed to `debug` by setting the `LOG_LEVEL` environment variable to `debug`. + +To pull logs for all controller pods: + +```bash +kubectl logs -l app -n pepr-system +``` + +#### Admission Controller + +If the focus of the debug is on a `Mutate()` or `Validate()`, the relevenat logs will be from pods with label `pepr.dev/controller: admission`. + +```bash +kubectl logs -l pepr.dev/controller=admission -n pepr-system +``` + +More refined admission logs -- which can be optionally filtered by the module UUID -- can be obtained with [`npx pepr monitor`](https://docs.pepr.dev/main/best-practices/#monitoring) + +```bash +npx pepr monitor +``` + +#### Watch Controller + +If the focus of the debug is a `Watch()`, `Reconcile()`, or `OnSchedule()`, look for logs from pods containing label `pepr.dev/controller: watcher`. + +```bash +kubectl logs -l pepr.dev/controller=watcher -n pepr-system +``` + +### Internal Error Occurred + +```bash +Error from server (InternalError): Internal error occurred: failed calling webhook "pepr.dev": failed to call webhook: Post ... +``` + +When an internal error occurs, check the deployed `*WebhookConfiguration` resources' timeout and failurePolicy configurations. If the failurePolicy is set to `Fail`, and a request cannot be processed within the timeout, that request will be rejected. If the failurePolicy is set to `Ignore`, given the same timeout conditions, the request will (perhaps surprisingly) be allowed to continue. + +If you have a validating webhook, the recommended is to set the failurePolicy to `Fail` to ensure that the request is rejected if the webhook fails. + +```yaml + failurePolicy: Fail + matchPolicy: Equivalent + timeoutSeconds: 3 +``` + +The failurePolicy and timeouts can be set in the Module's `package.json` file, under the `pepr` configuration key. If changed, the settings will be reflected in the `*WebhookConfiguration` after the next build: + +```json + "pepr": { + "uuid": "static-test", + "onError": "ignore", + "webhookTimeout": 10, + } +``` + +Read more on customization [here](https://docs.pepr.dev/main/user-guide/customization/). + + +### Pepr Store + +If you need to read all store keys, or you think the PeprStore is malfunctioning, you can check the PeprStore CR: + +```bash +kubectl get peprstore -n pepr-system -o yaml +``` + +You should run in `npx pepr dev` mode to debug the issue, see the [Debugging During Module Development](https://docs.pepr.dev/main/best-practices/#debugging-during-module-development) section for more information. ## Deployment