Kubernetes Learning Part IV
Table of Contents
- Introduction
 - Kubernetes Object Management
 - K8s Workload Resources
 - Deployments
 - Creating a Deployment
 - Replica Set
 - Updating the deployment
 - Spec Selector Behavior of Replica Set
 - Conclusion
 - Bibliography
 
Introduction
- In this part-IV of the Kubernetes learning series, we will discuss the concepts of what is workload resources - deployment and replica set
 - Topics and definitions are hand picked from Kubernetes documentation for the purpose of learning.
 - - This blog is part of the Kubernetes Learning series
 
K8s Workload Resources
- In the previous blog, we discussed k8s workload concept of pods (docs ref).
 - So workload resources can be used for different types workload management and deployment
 - 
Kubernetes provides several built-in workload resources:
- 
DeploymentandReplicaSet(replacing the legacy resource ReplicationController). Deployment is a good fit for managing a stateless application workload on your cluster, where any Pod in the Deployment is interchangeable and can be replaced if needed. - 
StatefulSetlets you run one or more relatedPodsthat track state somehow. For example, if your workload records data persistently, you can run aStatefulSetthat matches each Pod with aPersistentVolume. Your code, running in thePodsfor thatStatefulSet, can replicate data to other Pods in the same StatefulSet to improve overall resilience. - 
DaemonSetdefinesPodsthat provide node-local facilities. These might be fundamental to the operation of your cluster, such as a networking helper tool, or be part of an add-on. Every time you add a node to your cluster that matches the specification in aDaemonSet, thecontrol planeschedules aPodfor thatDaemonSetonto the new node. - 
JobandCronJobdefine tasks that run to completion and then stop. Jobs represent one-off tasks, whereas CronJobs recur according to a schedule. 
 - 
 We will discuss about managing the Deployment and Replica set and the behavior when updating the deployments
Kubernetes Object Management
When we talk about creating Kubernetes manifest definition, it is important to know about 3 types of object management
kubectltool supports three kinds of object management:- 
Imperative commands :
- When using imperative commands, a user operates directly on live objects in a cluster. The user provides operations to the kubectl command as arguments or flags.
 - This is the recommended way to get started or to run a one-off task in a cluster. Because this technique operates directly on live objects, it provides no history of previous configurations.
 
 
kubectl create deployment nginx --image nginx
- 
Imperative object configuration : 
- In imperative object configuration, the kubectl command specifies the operation (create, replace, etc.), optional flags and at least one file name. The file specified must contain a full definition of the object in YAML or JSON format.
 
 
kubectl create -f nginx.yaml
Also, we can use kubectl edit , kubectl delete and kubectl replace in this method of object configuration
Refer the section Updating the deployment for usage details
- 
Declarative object configuration :
- When using declarative object configuration, a user operates on object configuration files stored locally, however the user does not define the operations to be taken on the files.
 - Create, update, and delete operations are automatically detected per-object by kubectl.
 - This enables working on directories, where different operations might be needed for different objects.
 
 - Example below, processes all object configuration files in the 
configsdirectory, and creates or patches the live objects. You can firstdiffto see what changes are going to be made, and thenapply: 
kubectl diff -f configs/
kubectl apply -f configs/
Deployments
- A Deployment provides declarative updates for Pods and ReplicaSets.
 - We can describe a desired state in a Deployment, and the Deployment Controller changes the actual state to the desired state.
 - Deployments can be used to create new ReplicaSets, or to remove existing Deployments and adopt all their resources with new Deployments.
 - Example of a Deployment. It creates a ReplicaSet to bring up 3 nginx Pods:
 - Create a deployment manifest and save it as 
deployment.yml 
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
  name: nginx-deployment
  labels:
    app: nginx
spec:
  replicas: 3
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: nginx
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: nginx
    spec:
      containers:
      - name: nginx
        image: nginx:1.21-alpine
        ports:
        - containerPort: 80
        resources:
          limits:
            memory: "128Mi"
            cpu: "500m"
In this example:
A Deployment named
nginx-deploymentis created, indicated by the.metadata.namefield.The Deployment creates 3 replicated Pods, indicated by the
.spec.replicasfield.The
.spec.selectorfield defines how the Deployment finds which Pods to manage. In this case, you select a label that is defined in the Pod template (app: nginx).- 
The template field contains the following sub-fields:
- The Pods are labeled 
app: nginxusing the.metadata.labelsfield. - The Pod template's specification, or 
.template.spec field, indicates that the Pods run onenginxcontainer, which runs thenginx Docker Hub imageat version1.21-alpine. 
 - The Pods are labeled 
 Create one container and name it nginx using the
.spec.template.spec.containers[0].namefield.
Creating a Deployment
- Now let us try out different 
kubectlcommands to learn about the k8s deployment workload resource Run
minikube startto kick start the local k8s clusterUse
kubectl apply -fto execute the deployment manifest
$ kubectl apply -f deployment.yml 
deployment.apps/nginx-deployment created
- Use 
kubectl get deploymentscommand to list out the deployments manifest 
$ kubectl get deployments
NAME               READY   UP-TO-DATE   AVAILABLE   AGE
nginx-deployment   3/3     3            3           76s
- Our manifest definition has 3 replicas of nginx pods defined in it.
 - List the pods using the command 
kubectl get po 
$ kubectl get po
NAME                               READY   STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
nginx-deployment-c7768ddc9-6cxtc   1/1     Running   0          80s
nginx-deployment-c7768ddc9-g7v7c   1/1     Running   0          80s
nginx-deployment-c7768ddc9-hcj4s   1/1     Running   0          80s
- Replica Sets can be viewed using the command 
kubectl get rs 
$ kubectl get rs
NAME                         DESIRED   CURRENT   READY   AGE
nginx-deployment-c7768ddc9   3         3         3       101s
- Now let us describe the deployment we just created.
 - Use the command 
kubectl describe 
$ kubectl describe deployment nginx-deployment
Name:                   nginx-deployment
Namespace:              default
CreationTimestamp:      Thu, 01 Oct 2021 12:27:22 +0530
Labels:                 app=nginx
Annotations:            deployment.kubernetes.io/revision: 1
Selector:               app=nginx
Replicas:               3 desired | 3 updated | 3 total | 3 available | 0 unavailable
StrategyType:           RollingUpdate
MinReadySeconds:        0
RollingUpdateStrategy:  25% max unavailable, 25% max surge
Pod Template:
  Labels:  app=nginx
  Containers:
   nginx:
    Image:      nginx:1.21-alpine
    Port:       80/TCP
    Host Port:  0/TCP
    Limits:
      cpu:        500m
      memory:     128Mi
    Environment:  <none>
    Mounts:       <none>
  Volumes:        <none>
Conditions:
  Type           Status  Reason
  ----           ------  ------
  Available      True    MinimumReplicasAvailable
  Progressing    True    NewReplicaSetAvailable
OldReplicaSets:  <none>
NewReplicaSet:   nginx-deployment-c7768ddc9 (3/3 replicas created)
Events:
  Type    Reason             Age   From                   Message
  ----    ------             ----  ----                   -------
  Normal  ScalingReplicaSet  2m8s  deployment-controller  Scaled up replica set nginx-deployment-c7768ddc9 to 3
Replica Set
- Purpose of the ReplicaSet is to maintain a stable set of replica Pods running at any given time.
 As such, it is often used to guarantee the availability of a specified number of identical Pods.
It is recommended to use replica-set within deployment definition. Because a Deployment is a higher-level concept that manages ReplicaSets and provides declarative updates to Pods along with a lot of other useful features.
Replica set has been mentioned using the
spec.replicasvalue in our deployment definitionWe will now see, what happens when we update the deployment and what is the role of
replica setwhile updating the deployments
Updating the deployment
- We will now change the 
nginximage id from1.21-alpineto1.21 - We will imperatively update the deployment definition using 
kubectl editcommand 
$ kubectl edit deployment/nginx-deployment
deployment.apps/nginx-deployment edited
- We have updated the deployment which already has running pods
 - So let us check the deployment status using 
kubectl rolloutcommand 
$ kubectl rollout status deployment/nginx-deployment
deployment "nginx-deployment" successfully rolled out
- Once the rollout is complete, we will check the status of 
podsanddeploymentusingkubectl describecommand 
$ kubectl describe deployment nginx-deployment
Name:                   nginx-deployment
Namespace:              default
CreationTimestamp:      Thu, 16 Sep 2021 12:27:22 +0530
Labels:                 app=nginx
Annotations:            deployment.kubernetes.io/revision: 2
Selector:               app=nginx
Replicas:               3 desired | 3 updated | 3 total | 3 available | 0 unavailable
StrategyType:           RollingUpdate
MinReadySeconds:        0
RollingUpdateStrategy:  25% max unavailable, 25% max surge
Pod Template:
  Labels:  app=nginx
  Containers:
   nginx:
    Image:      nginx:1.21
    Port:       80/TCP
    Host Port:  0/TCP
    Limits:
      cpu:        500m
      memory:     128Mi
    Environment:  <none>
    Mounts:       <none>
  Volumes:        <none>
Conditions:
  Type           Status  Reason
  ----           ------  ------
  Available      True    MinimumReplicasAvailable
  Progressing    True    NewReplicaSetAvailable
OldReplicaSets:  <none>
NewReplicaSet:   nginx-deployment-6f88dfb7c7 (3/3 replicas created)
Events:
  Type    Reason             Age    From                   Message
  ----    ------             ----   ----                   -------
  Normal  ScalingReplicaSet  7m45s  deployment-controller  Scaled up replica set nginx-deployment-c7768ddc9 to 3
  Normal  ScalingReplicaSet  52s    deployment-controller  Scaled up replica set nginx-deployment-6f88dfb7c7 to 1
  Normal  ScalingReplicaSet  39s    deployment-controller  Scaled down replica set nginx-deployment-c7768ddc9 to 2
  Normal  ScalingReplicaSet  39s    deployment-controller  Scaled up replica set nginx-deployment-6f88dfb7c7 to 2
  Normal  ScalingReplicaSet  38s    deployment-controller  Scaled down replica set nginx-deployment-c7768ddc9 to 1
  Normal  ScalingReplicaSet  38s    deployment-controller  Scaled up replica set nginx-deployment-6f88dfb7c7 to 3
  Normal  ScalingReplicaSet  37s    deployment-controller  Scaled down replica set nginx-deployment-c7768ddc9 to 0
- Now let us keenly observe the behavior of deployment and replicas 
describedabove,- Deployment ensures that only a certain number of Pods are down while they are being updated. By default, it ensures that at least 75% of the desired number of Pods are up (25% max unavailable).
 - Deployment also ensures that only a certain number of Pods are created above the desired number of Pods. By default, it ensures that at most 125% of the desired number of Pods are up (25% max surge).
 - Here you see that when you first created the Deployment, it created a ReplicaSet (nginx-deployment-2035384211) and scaled it up to 3 replicas directly.
 - When you updated the Deployment, it created a new ReplicaSet (nginx-deployment-1564180365) and scaled it up to 1 and then scaled down the old ReplicaSet to 2, so that at least 2 Pods were available and at most 4 Pods were created at all times.
 - It then continued scaling up and down the new and the old ReplicaSet, with the same rolling update strategy. Finally, you'll have 3 available replicas in the new ReplicaSet, and the old ReplicaSet is scaled down to 0.
 
 
Spec Selector Behavior of Replica Set
- Each time when a new Deployment is observed by the Deployment controller, a ReplicaSet is created to bring up the desired Pods.
 - Once the Deployment is updated, the existing ReplicaSet that controls Pods whose labels match 
.spec.selectorbut whose template does not match.spec.templateare scaled down. - Eventually, the new 
ReplicaSetis scaled to.spec.replicasand all oldReplicaSetsis scaled to0. 
$ kubectl get rs
NAME                          DESIRED   CURRENT   READY   AGE
nginx-deployment-6f88dfb7c7   3         3         3       69s
nginx-deployment-c7768ddc9    0         0         0       8m2s
$ kubectl get pods
NAME                                READY   STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
nginx-deployment-6f88dfb7c7-25z2c   1/1     Running   0          106s
nginx-deployment-6f88dfb7c7-m7hst   1/1     Running   0          119s
nginx-deployment-6f88dfb7c7-zrbc2   1/1     Running   0          105s
$ kubectl describe pod nginx-deployment-6f88dfb7c7-25z2c
Name:         nginx-deployment-6f88dfb7c7-25z2c
Namespace:    default
Priority:     0
Node:         minikube/192.168.49.2
Start Time:   Thu, 16 Sep 2021 12:34:28 +0530
Labels:       app=nginx
              pod-template-hash=6f88dfb7c7
Annotations:  <none>
Status:       Running
IP:           172.17.0.5
IPs:
  IP:           172.17.0.5
Controlled By:  ReplicaSet/nginx-deployment-6f88dfb7c7
Containers:
  nginx:
    Container ID:   docker://9fd85eb81263d16bc73752a1275c35d6cdc0eb3074734d0820bd327eb39b30b2
    Image:          nginx:1.21
    Image ID:       docker-pullable://nginx@sha256:853b221d3341add7aaadf5f81dd088ea943ab9c918766e295321294b035f3f3e
    Port:           80/TCP
    Host Port:      0/TCP
    State:          Running
      Started:      Thu, 16 Sep 2021 12:34:29 +0530
    Ready:          True
    Restart Count:  0
    Limits:
      cpu:     500m
      memory:  128Mi
    Requests:
      cpu:        500m
      memory:     128Mi
    Environment:  <none>
    Mounts:
      /var/run/secrets/kubernetes.io/serviceaccount from kube-api-access-4b8m4 (ro)
Conditions:
  Type              Status
  Initialized       True 
  Ready             True 
  ContainersReady   True 
  PodScheduled      True 
Volumes:
  kube-api-access-4b8m4:
    Type:                    Projected (a volume that contains injected data from multiple sources)
    TokenExpirationSeconds:  3607
    ConfigMapName:           kube-root-ca.crt
    ConfigMapOptional:       <nil>
    DownwardAPI:             true
QoS Class:                   Guaranteed
Node-Selectors:              <none>
Tolerations:                 node.kubernetes.io/not-ready:NoExecute op=Exists for 300s
                             node.kubernetes.io/unreachable:NoExecute op=Exists for 300s
Events:
  Type    Reason     Age    From               Message
  ----    ------     ----   ----               -------
  Normal  Scheduled  2m18s  default-scheduler  Successfully assigned default/nginx-deployment-6f88dfb7c7-25z2c to minikube
  Normal  Pulled     2m18s  kubelet            Container image "nginx:1.21" already present on machine
  Normal  Created    2m18s  kubelet            Created container nginx
  Normal  Started    2m18s  kubelet            Started container nginx
Conclusion
- In this blog we have seen the concepts of workload resources deployment and replica set and their behavior
 - This article was previously published on my dev community personal profile, re-publishing for the benefit of a wider audience.
 - Hope this article is helpful to people getting started with kubernetes concepts.
 
Thanks for reading!
Bibliography
workloads
Deployment
ReplicaSet
Heads up for Next Blog
In the next blog, we will deep-dive into other Workload resources and how to create and manage them.
              
    
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