A python 🐍 kubernetes ☸️ ORM 🚀. Very useful when writing operators for your CRDs with Kopf.
pykorm - Python Kubernetes Object-relational mapping (ORM)
pykorm is a simple library that links your models to their kubernetes counterpart.
Each model and instance on your code is thus directly linked to your kubernetes cluster and modifications are thus reflected both ways.
Examples
Namespaced Custom Resource
Setup
First of all, you need to have Custom Resource Definitions on your cluster. This README will use the following Namespaced resource. You can apply it on your cluster withkubectl.
apiVersion: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1
kind: CustomResourceDefinition
metadata:
name: peaches.pykorm.infomaniak.com
spec:
group: pykorm.infomaniak.com
names:
kind: Peach
listKind: PeachList
plural: peaches
singular: peach
scope: Namespaced
versions:
- name: v1
served: true
storage: true
schema:
openAPIV3Schema:
type: object
properties:
spec:
type: object
properties:
variety:
type: string
required:
- variety
additionalPrinterColumns: - name: Variety type: string description: The variety of the peach jsonPath: .spec.variety
Class definition
In order to link a python class to a kubernetes CustomResourceDefinition, you need to inherit the class from pykorm'sNamespacedModel or ClusterModel
and annotate it with the kubernetes CRD information like so:
import pykorm
@pykorm.k8scustomobject('pykorm.infomaniak.com', 'v1', 'peaches') class Peach(pykorm.NamespacedModel): variety: str = pykorm.fields.Spec('variety')
Notice that a class inheriting from pykorm.NamespacedModel already has the name and namespace fields setup.
Create a CR
In order to create a kubernetes custom resource from python, you just have to instantiate the class and save it withPykorm.save():
import pykorm
pk = pykorm.Pykorm()
cake_peach = Peach(namespace='default', name='cake-peach', variety='Frost') pk.save(cake_peach) # We save the resource
as you can see, the model is instantly ensured in kubernetes: $ kubectl get peach -n default NAME VARIETY cake-peach Frost
List resources
Pykorm can also list resources from kubernetes>>> all_peaches = Peach.query.all()
>>> for peach in all_peaches:
>>> print(peach)
<Peach namespace=default, name=cake-peach, variety=Frost>
Filter by namespace
>>> Peach.query.filterby(namespace='default').filterby(variety='Frost').all()
You can even filter resources by some criterion:
>>> Peach.query.filter_by(name='cake-peach').all() [<Peach namespace=default, name=cake-peach, variety=Frost>] >>> Peach.query.filter_by(namespace='kube-system').all() []
Delete resources
You can delete a resource withpykorm too:
pk.delete(peach)
$ kubectl get peach
No resources found in default namespace.
More examples
For more examples, don't hesitate to look into theexamples/ directory
Is pykorm stable ?
pykorm is still very young and very naive. It's also missing quite a lot of features (relationships, etc.). It was originally created because a lot of boilerplate code was written each time a kubernetes custom object had to be interfaced with python code.Work on pykorm is actually on the way. Don't hesitate to contribute to the project if you have the energy for it !