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Arvind Kumar GS
Arvind Kumar GS

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Running springboot app on kubernetes with private repository

Instructions to build a single node cluster on Minikube with a private repository running on http. It runs a spring boot application container. This container is built from an image pulled from the private repository. Minikube will by default run in a virtual machine. So to make the registry available to the VM in minikube you will need to configure it to use the registry. The flow diagram is as follows:
Flow diagram

Pre-requisites

  • jdk11
  • docker
  • minikube
  • kubectl

Setup

Start Docker Daemon

  • Get IP address or url of where your registry runs. IP address can be obtained from cmd ip addr

  • Replace IP in below command with the actual ip or url.

$ echo '{"insecure-registries": ["IP:5000"]}' > /etc/docker/daemon.json
  • Start docker daemon
$ sudo systemctl start docker
  • Verify insecure registry
$ docker info -f '{{json .RegistryConfig.IndexConfigs}}'

This should list as:
{"IP:5000":{"Name":"IP:5000","Mirrors":[],"Secure":false,"Official":false},"docker.io":{"Name":"docker.io","Mirrors":[],"Secure":true,"Official":true}}

Start Minikube

  • To start minikube configured to use the private registry, run below command. NOTE: Replace DRIVER with correct driver which is one of: [virtualbox, vmwarefusion, kvm2, kvm, hyperkit]
$ minikube start --vm-driver=DRIVER --insecure-registry="IP:5000"

Start private registry

  • If running on local start registry as:
$ docker run -d -p 5000:5000 --restart=always --name registry registry:2

Getting Started

Create a basic Spring Boot application:

$ curl https://start.spring.io/starter.tgz -d dependencies=webflux -d dependencies=actuator | tar -xzvf -

Add an endpoint (src/main/java/com/example/demo/Home.java):

package com.example.demo;

import org.springframework.web.bind.annotation.GetMapping;
import org.springframework.web.bind.annotation.RestController;

@RestController
public class Home {
    @GetMapping("/")
    public String home() {
        return "Hello World";
    }
}

Containerize (Dockerfile):

FROM openjdk:8-jdk-alpine as build
WORKDIR /workspace/app

COPY target/*.jar app.jar

RUN mkdir target && cd target && jar -xf ../*.jar

FROM openjdk:8-jdk-alpine
VOLUME /tmp
ARG DEPENDENCY=/workspace/app/target
COPY --from=build ${DEPENDENCY}/BOOT-INF/lib /app/lib
COPY --from=build ${DEPENDENCY}/META-INF /app/META-INF
COPY --from=build ${DEPENDENCY}/BOOT-INF/classes /app
ENTRYPOINT ["java","-cp","app:app/lib/*","com.example.demo.DemoApplication"]

Run and test...

$ ./mvnw package
$ docker build -t IP:5000/apps/demo .
$ docker run -p 8080:8080 IP:5000/apps/demo
$ curl localhost:8080
Hello World

Stash the image to our private repository:

$ docker push IP:5000/apps/demo

Deploy to Kubernetes

Create a basic manifest:

$ kubectl create deployment demo --image=IP:5000/apps/demo --dry-run -o=yaml > deployment.yaml
$ echo --- >> deployment.yaml
$ kubectl create service nodeport demo --tcp=8080:8080 --dry-run -o=yaml >> deployment.yaml

Apply it:

$ kubectl apply -f deployment.yaml

Test

Check if deployment is up

$ kubectl get deployments.app demo

Next check if service is running

$ kubectl get service demo

NOTE: Make a note of the port. For example if port is mentioned as 8080:32614, then copy 32614. This is the port on which the service is available

Consume service

Get IP

$ kubectl get endpoints kubernetes

Make a note of the IP, ignore the port number. Example - if endpoint: '192.168.39.138:8443', then IP: 192.168.39.138

Get Port

$ kubectl get service demo

Port is the second part of ':' delimiter. Example - if PORT is '8080:32614/TCP', then our port is 32614

Call springboot app, substituting IP below with ip obtained above and PORT with port obtained above

$ curl IP:PORT
Hello World

Alternatives

As a corollary, if you are running a test or doing development and don't want to push your image to a private repository or dockerhub, then you can reuse Minikube's built-in docker daemon. So you can build images inside the same docker daemon as Minikube, which speeds up local experiments.

For this, run last line from

$ minikube docker-env

You can now use Docker at the command line of your host Mac/Linux machine to communicate with the Docker daemon inside the Minikube VM:

$ docker ps

Next you need add following line to deployments.yaml after name of image @line:23

imagePullPolicy: Never

More info here

The instructions and code are available at github


References
https://github.com/dsyer/kubernetes-intro
https://www.howtoforge.com/learning-kubernetes-locally-via-minikube-on-linux-manjaro-archlinux
Image credit: https://blog.nebrass.fr/playing-with-spring-boot-on-kubernetes/

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