Deployment
All Kaa services, including RCI, are distributed as Docker images. You can run these images using software containerization and orchestration tools, such as Docker, Docker Swarm, Docker Compose, Kubernetes, etc. Kubernetes is the recommended system for managing Kaa-based clusters.
Runtime dependencies
RCI has the following runtime dependencies:
- NATS for inter-service communication.
Regardless of the deployment method, always make sure that you have dependency services up and running prior to starting up RCI.
The below instructions where RCI sources its configuration data from a local file.
Environment variables
The table below summarizes the variables supported by the RCI Docker image and provides default values along with descriptions.
Variable name | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|
INSTANCE_NAME |
rci | Service instance name. |
APP_CONFIG_PATH |
/srv/rci/service-config.yml | Path to the service configuration YAML file inside container. In case of running in Kubernetes, consider using K8s Volumes for externalization. |
JMX_ENABLE |
false | Enables JMX monitoring. |
JMX_PORT |
10500 | JMX service port. |
JMX_MONITOR_USER_PASSWORD |
JMX monitor user password. Required when JMX_ENABLE=true . |
|
JAVA_OPTIONS |
-Xmx700m | Additional parameters for Java process launch. |
NATS_USERNAME |
Username for connecting to NATS message broker. | |
NATS_PASSWORD |
Password for connecting to NATS message broker. | |
KAA_LICENSE_CERT_PATH |
/run/license/license.p12 | Path to the Kaa platform license certificate file in PKCS #12 format. |
KAA_LICENSE_CERT_PASSWORD |
License certificate password. Required. |
Kubernetes
To run RCI on Kubernetes:
- Install Kubernetes.
- Set up NATS as a Kubernetes service or a standalone server.
- Prepare Kubernetes deployment descriptor.
- (Optional) Configure volumes and secrets.
- Prepare a [config map][service configuration], or a separate configuration file and save it into a file available to pods under
APP_CONFIG_PATH
. - Start up the pod:
kubectl create -f <deployment descriptor filename>
- Check that pods are running:
kubectl get pods
- Check that services are created:
kubectl get service
Deployment descriptor
Provided below is a sample deployment descriptor file that pulls the RCI version 1.0.0 Docker image from the official KaaIoT repository and runs one service replica (pod) with 1 GB RAM limit.
With this deployment descriptor, the configuration file is expected to be located at ~/rci-config/service-config.yml
of the host machine.
See spec.template.spec.volumes.hostPath
below and the default APP_CONFIG_PATH
above.
apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: rci
spec:
replicas: 1
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: rci
tier: backend
spec:
containers:
- name: rci
image: hub.kaaiot.net/kaaiot/rci/rci:1.0.0
terminationMessagePolicy: FallbackToLogsOnError
imagePullPolicy: Always
livenessProbe:
httpGet:
path: /health
port: management
initialDelaySeconds: 150
periodSeconds: 5
readinessProbe:
httpGet:
path: /health
port: management
initialDelaySeconds: 1
periodSeconds: 1
resources:
requests:
memory: 350Mi
limits:
memory: 1Gi
env:
- name: KAA_LICENSE_CERT_PASSWORD
valueFrom:
secretKeyRef:
name: license.cert.pass
key: password
ports:
- name: management
containerPort: 8080
- name: jmx
containerPort: 10500
volumeMounts:
- name: license-volume
mountPath: /run/license
- name: rci-conf-volume
mountPath: /srv/rci
imagePullSecrets:
- name: kaaid
volumes:
- name: rci-conf-volume
hostPath: ~/rci-config
defaultMode: 444
- name: license-volume
secret:
secretName: license.cert
Below are some notable parameters of the deployment descriptor:
spec.replicas
defines the number of service instance replicas.spec.template.spec.containers.image
defines the Docker image to be used, whilespec.template.spec.containers.imagePullPolicy
defines the image update policy.spec.template.spec.imagePullSecrets
specifies the image pull secret for the official KaaIoT docker registry. To define this secret, use your KaaID credentials:$ export HISTCONTROL=ignorespace # Prevent saving your credentials in the shell history $ KAAID_USER=<your KaaID username>; kubectl create secret docker-registry kaaid --docker-server=hub.kaaiot.net --docker-username=$KAAID_USER --docker-email=$KAAID_USER --docker-password=<your KaaID password>
spec.template.spec.volumes.name.license-volume
specifies the volume to contain the license certificate file. We recommend that this volume is created from a Kubernetes secret.spec.template.spec.containers.name.rci.env.name.KAA_LICENSE_CERT_PASSWORD
defines the license certificate password environment variable, which is also recommended to be set from a Kubernetes secret.spec.template.metadata.labels.app
defines the application label to map Kubernetes deployment to the service.spec.template.spec.containers.resources
defines resources available to each replica. See how Kubernetes manages compute resources for containers.spec.template.spec.containers.env
defines the environment variables that Kubernetes passes to the service replica.spec.template.spec.containers.ports
defines the exposed ports. See Connecting applications with services.
Service descriptor
To expose the deployment outside the Kubernetes network, create a service descriptor. Below is a sample service descriptor that exposes RCI’s REST API interface to the Kubernetes host network interface at port 30780.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: rci
labels:
app: rci
tier: backend
spec:
type: "LoadBalancer"
ports:
- name: rest-api
port: 80
targetPort: rest-api
nodePort: 30780
selector:
app: rci
tier: backend
The following parameters are worth noting:
spec.type
defines the service type.spec.ports.port
,spec.ports.targetPort
, andspec.ports.nodePort
parameters define the mapping between the Kubernetes service and deployment ports.spec.selector.app
maps the service to the deployment. It matchesspec.metadata.labels.app
in the deployment descriptor above.
Volumes and secrets
The above deployment descriptor mounts a host machine directory for the service to load its configuration file from. However, such simple configuration may not be convenient in multi-node deployments and you might want to create other types of volumes. Besides, if you want to pass sensible pieces of information to the service using the environment variables, such as logins and passwords for dependency services, we recommend using Kubernetes Secrets. To learn more about these subjects, refer to Kubernetes documentation:
Docker
To run RCI in Docker:
- Install Docker.
- Set up NATS as a Docker container or a standalone server.
- Prepare a configuration file and save it into a file available to the container under
APP_CONFIG_PATH
. - Run Docker container.
For example, use the following command to run the RCI version 1.0.0 image:
$ docker run \ -v <host_path_to_config_directory>:/srv/rci \ hub.kaaiot.net/kaaiot/rci/rci:1.0.0