Orleans is a framework that provides a straight-forward approach to building distributed high-scale computing applications, without the need to learn and apply complex concurrency or other scaling patterns.
Kubernetes (a.k.a. Kube or just K8s) is an open-source system for automating deployment, scaling, and management of containerized applications. In other words, it is one of the most popular container orchestrators out there.
Orleans.Clustering.Kubernetes is a package that use Kubernetes as a backend for Cluster Membership, making it easy to run Orleans clusters on top of Kubernetes.
If you want to quickly test it, clone this repo and go to the Samples Directory for instructions on how to run a sample cluster.
Kubernetes has multiple ways to extend its API and one of those ways allow you to easily add custom data structures to it so it can be consumed later on by applications. Those objects are called Custom Resources (CRD). The objects created based on CRDs are backed by the internal etcd instance part of every Kubernetes deployment.
Two CRDs are created by this provider in order to store the Cluster Membership objects to comply with Orleans Extended Cluster Membership Protocol. ClusterVersion
and Silo
. Examples on how to install each CRD can be found under the samples folder.
Those objects can be created at startup of the first silo in the cluster or, manually created by regular .yaml
files. The package includes the two files with the required specs for each one. They must be deployed into the cluster before any Orleans application is deployed with this provider.
This provider uses only Kubernetes API Server to create/read those objects. By default, it uses the In Cluster
API endpoint which is available on each pod
.
From the security perspective, the provider uses whatever serviceaccount
configured for the Kubernetes Deployment object by reading the API credentials from the pod
itself.
Installation is performed via NuGet
From Package Manager:
PS> Install-Package Orleans.Clustering.Kubernetes
.Net CLI:
# dotnet add package Orleans.Clustering.Kubernetes
Paket:
# paket add Orleans.Clustering.Kubernetes
A functional Kubernetes cluster is required for this provider to work. If you don't have one yet, there are multiple (and mostly complicated) ways to deploy Kubernetes for production use and it is out of scope of this provider as there are many articles around the web on how to do it. However, if you are playing with Docker and Kubernetes for the first time or you want to build a development box, Scott Hanselman has a nice article showing how to easily setup Docker for Windows with Kubernetes on your machine. Although it shows Windows 10, it can be easily adopted to Mac OSX as well.
You need to apply both .yaml
files from the package before starting the silo. It must be done once per Kubernetes cluster.
Note: You can also deploy the CRDs from the files on the
Definitions
directory on this repo.
Tell Orleans runtime that we are going to use Kubernetes as our Cluster Membership Provider:
var silo = new SiloBuilder()
...
.UseKubeMembership()
...
.Build();
Now that our silo is up and running, the Orleans client needs to connect to the Kubernetes to look for Orleans Gateways.
var client = new ClientBuilder()
...
.UseKubeGatewayListProvider() // Optionally use the configure delegate to specify the namespace where you cluster is running.
...
.Build();
The provider will discover the cluster based on the kubernetes namespace the silo pod is running. In the case of the client, if a configure delegate with the Namespace
property set to a non-null value is specified, it will ignore the current running pod namespace and will try to use that namespace instead.
Great! Now enjoy your Orleans application running within a Kubernetes cluster without needing an external membership provider!
This provider behaves like any regular application being hosted on Kubernetes. That means it doesn't care about the underlying kubernetes security model. In this particular provider however, it expects the pod to have access to the API server. Usually this access is granted to the service account being used by the POD (for more on that check Kubernetes docs for service accounts) by enabling RBAC or whatever other authorization plugin your cluster is using.
Regardless of the authorization plugin being used, ensure the following:
- The service account on the Silo pod has access to the Kubernetes API server to read and write objects (essentially
GET
,LIST
,PUT
,DELETE
,POST
permissions); - The service account on the Client pod must be able to access the Kubernetes API server to read objects (
GET
andLIST
permissions).
PRs and feedback are very welcome! This repo follows the same contributions guideline as Orleans does and github issues will have help-wanted
topics as they are coming.