GitHub Action
Setup K3d/K3s
Install K3d/K3s and start a local Kubernetes cluster of a specific version.
K8s is Kubernetes. K3s is a lightweight K8s distribution. K3d is a wrapper to run K3s in Docker.
K3d/K3s are especially good for development and CI purposes, as it takes only 20-30 seconds of time till the cluster is ready. For comparison, Kind takes 1.5 minutes, Minikube takes 2 minutes till ready (as of Sep'2020).
Start with the simplest way:
jobs:
some-job:
steps:
- uses: nolar/setup-k3d-k3s@v1
Change versions with the verbose way:
jobs:
some-job:
steps:
- uses: nolar/setup-k3d-k3s@v1
with:
version: v1.19 # E.g.: v1.19, v1.19.4, v1.19.4+k3s1
github-token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
Required version of Kubernetes and/or K3s -- either full or partial.
The following notations are supported:
v1.19.4+k3s1
v1.19.4
v1.19
v1
latest
Defaults to latest
.
Keep in mind that K3d dates back only to v1.16. There are no 1.15 and older versions of K8s.
When the version is partial, the latest detected one will be used, as found in K3s releases, according to the basic semantical sorting (i.e. not by time of releasing).
A name of the cluster to be created.
By default (i.e. if no value is provided), K3d/K3s define their own name.
Usually it is k3d-k3s-default
.
Note: the name should not include the k3d-
prefix, but must be used with it.
The k3d-
prefix is enforced by K3d and cannot be disabled.
Additional args to pass to K3d.
See k3d cluster create --help
for available flags.
A token for GitHub API, which is used to avoid rate limiting.
The API is used to fetch the releases from the K3s repository.
By default, or if it is empty, then the API is accessed anonymously, which implies the limit of approximately 60 requests / 1 hour / 1 worker.
Usage:
with:
github-token: ${{ secrets.GITHUB_TOKEN }}
Whether to return from the action as soon as possible, possibly providing a cluster that is only partially ready.
By default (false
), the readiness is awaited by checking for some preselected
resources to appear (e.g., for a service account named "default").
The specific K3s version that was detected and used. E.g. v1.19.4+k3s1
.
The specific K8s version that was detected and used. E.g. v1.19.4
.
With the latest version of K3s/K8s:
steps:
- uses: nolar/setup-k3d-k3s@v1
With the specific minor version of K8s, which implies the latest micro version of K8s and the latest possible version of K3s:
steps:
- uses: nolar/setup-k3d-k3s@v1
with:
version: v1.19
With the very specific version of K3s:
steps:
- uses: nolar/setup-k3d-k3s@v1
with:
version: v1.19.4+k3s1
The partial versions enable the build matrices with only the essential information in them, which in turn, makes it easier to configure GitHub branch protection checks while the actual versions of tools are upgraded:
jobs:
some-job:
strategy:
fail-fast: false
matrix:
k8s: [ v1.19, v1.18, v1.17, v1.16 ]
name: K8s ${{ matrix.k8s }}
runs-on: ubuntu-20.04
steps:
- uses: nolar/setup-k3d-k3s@v1
with:
version: ${{ matrix.k8s }}
Multiple clusters in one job are possible, as long as there is enough memory
(note: k3d-
prefix is enforced by K3d):
jobs:
some-job:
name: Multi-cluster
runs-on: ubuntu-20.04
steps:
- uses: nolar/setup-k3d-k3s@v1
with:
version: v1.16
k3d-name: 1-16
- uses: nolar/setup-k3d-k3s@v1
with:
version: v1.18
k3d-name: 1-18
- run: kubectl version --context k3d-1-16
- run: kubectl version --context k3d-1-18
Custom args can be passed to K3d (and through it, to K3s & K8s):
jobs:
some-job:
name: Custom args
runs-on: ubuntu-20.04
steps:
- uses: nolar/setup-k3d-k3s@v1
with:
k3d-args: --servers 2 --no-lb
- run: kubectl get nodes # there must be two of them
For real-life examples, see:
- https://github.com/nolar/kopf/actions (all "K3s…" jobs).