vshn / provider-minio

Crossplane Provider Minio
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provider-minio

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Crossplane provider for managing resources on min.io.

Documentation: https://vshn.github.io/provider-minio/provider-minio/

Local Development

Requirements

Some other requirements (e.g. kind) will be compiled on-the-fly and put in the local cache dir .kind as needed.

Common make targets

See all targets with make help

QuickStart Demonstration

  1. Make sure you have a kind cluster running and the config exported
  2. make local-install

Kubernetes Webhook Troubleshooting

The provider comes with mutating and validation admission webhook server.

To test and troubleshoot the webhooks on the cluster, simply apply your changes with kubectl.

  1. Make sure you have all CRDs and validation webhook registrations installed.

    make install-crd
    kubectl apply -f package/webhook
  2. To debug the webhook in an IDE, we need to generate certificates:

    make webhook-debug
    # if necessary with another endpoint name, depending on your docker setup
    # if you change the webhook_service_name variable, you need to clean out the old certificates
    make webhook-debug -e webhook_service_name=$HOSTIP
  3. Start the operator in your IDE with WEBHOOK_TLS_CERT_DIR environment set to .work/webhooks.

  4. Apply the samples to test the webhooks:

    make install-samples

Run operator in debugger

Crossplane Provider Mechanics

For detailed information on how Crossplane Provider works from a development perspective check provider mechanics documentation page.

e2e testing with kuttl

Some scenarios are tested with the Kubernetes E2E testing tool Kuttl. Kuttl is basically comparing the installed manifests (usually files named ##-install*.yaml) with observed objects and compares the desired output (files named ##-assert*.yaml).

To execute tests, run make test-e2e from the root dir.

If a test fails, kuttl leaves the resources in the kind-cluster intact, so you can inspect the resources and events if necessary. Please note that Kubernetes Events from cluster-scoped resources appear in the default namespace only, but kubectl describe ... should show you the events.

Cleaning up e2e tests

make clean