gitlab-org--gitlab-foss/doc/user/project/clusters/serverless/index.md

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# Serverless
> Introduced in GitLab 11.5.
> Serverless is currently in [alpha](https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/product/#alpha).
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Run serverless workloads on Kubernetes using [Knative](https://cloud.google.com/knative/).
## Overview
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Knative extends Kubernetes to provide a set of middleware components that are useful to build modern, source-centric, container-based applications. Knative brings some significant benefits out of the box through its main components:
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- [Build](https://github.com/knative/build): Source-to-container build orchestration.
- [Eventing](https://github.com/knative/eventing): Management and delivery of events.
- [Serving](https://github.com/knative/serving): Request-driven compute that can scale to zero.
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For more information on Knative, visit the [Knative docs repo](https://github.com/knative/docs).
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With GitLab serverless, you can deploy both functions-as-a-service (FaaS) and serverless applications.
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## Requirements
To run Knative on Gitlab, you will need:
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1. **Kubernetes Cluster:** An RBAC-enabled Kubernetes cluster is required to deploy Knative.
The simplest way to get started is to add a cluster using [GitLab's GKE integration](../index.md#adding-and-creating-a-new-gke-cluster-via-gitlab).
1. **Helm Tiller:** Helm is a package manager for Kubernetes and is required to install
Knative.
1. **Domain Name:** Knative will provide its own load balancer using Istio. It will provide an
external IP address for all the applications served by Knative. You will be prompted to enter a
wildcard domain where your applications will be served. Configure your DNS server to use the
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external IP address for that domain.
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1. **`gitlab-ci.yml`:** GitLab uses [Kaniko](https://github.com/GoogleContainerTools/kaniko)
to build the application and the [TriggerMesh CLI](https://github.com/triggermesh/tm) to simplify the
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deployment of knative services and functions.
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1. **`serverless.yaml`** (for [functions only](#deploying-functions)): When using serverless to deploy functions, the `serverless.yaml` file
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will contain the information for all the functions being hosted in the repository as well as a reference to the
runtime being used.
1. **`Dockerfile`** (for [applications only](#deploying-serverless-applications): Knative requires a `Dockerfile` in order to build your application. It should be included
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at the root of your project's repo and expose port `8080`.
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## Installing Knative via GitLab's Kubernetes integration
NOTE: **Note:**
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The minimum recommended cluster size to run Knative is 3-nodes, 6 vCPUs, and 22.50 GB memory. **RBAC must be enabled.**
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1. [Add a Kubernetes cluster](../index.md) and install Helm.
1. Once Helm has been successfully installed, on the Knative app section, enter the domain to be used with
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your application and click "Install".
![install-knative](img/install-knative.png)
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1. After the Knative installation has finished, you can wait for the IP address to be displayed in the
**Knative IP Address** field or retrieve the Istio Ingress IP address by running the following command:
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```bash
kubectl get svc --namespace=istio-system knative-ingressgateway -o jsonpath='{.status.loadBalancer.ingress[0].ip} '
```
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Output:
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```bash
35.161.143.124 my-machine-name:~ my-user$
```
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1. The ingress is now available at this address and will route incoming requests to the proper service based on the DNS
name in the request. To support this, a wildcard DNS A record should be created for the desired domain name. For example,
if your Knative base domain is `knative.info` then you need to create an A record with domain `*.knative.info`
pointing the ip address of the ingress.
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![dns entry](img/dns-entry.png)
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## Deploying Functions
> Introduced in GitLab 11.6.
Using functions is useful for initiating, responding, or triggering independent
events without needing to maintain a complex unified infrastructure. This allows
you to focus on a single task that can be executed/scaled automatically and independently.
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At launch, the following [runtimes](https://gitlab.com/triggermesh/runtimes) are offered:
- node.js
- kaniko
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In order to deploy functions to your Knative instance, the following files must be present:
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1. `gitlab-ci.yml`: This template allows to define the stage, environment, and
image to be used for your functions. It must be included at the root of your repository:
```yaml
stages:
- deploy
functions:
stage: deploy
environment: test
image: gcr.io/triggermesh/tm:v0.0.6
script:
- tm -n "$KUBE_NAMESPACE" set registry-auth gitlab-registry --registry "$CI_REGISTRY" --username "$CI_REGISTRY_USER" --password "$CI_JOB_TOKEN"
- tm -n "$KUBE_NAMESPACE" --registry-host "$CI_REGISTRY_IMAGE" deploy --wait
```
The `gitlab-ci.yml` template creates a `Deploy` stage with a `functions` job that invokes the `tm` CLI with the required parameters.
2. `serverless.yaml`: This file contains the metadata for your functions,
such as name, runtime, and environment. It must be included at the root of your repository. The following is a sample `echo` function which shows the required structure for the file.
NOTE: **Note:**
The file extension for the `serverless.yaml` file must be specified as `.yaml` in order to the file to be parsed properly. Specifying the extension as `.yml` will not work.
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```yaml
service: my-functions
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description: "Deploying functions from GitLab using Knative"
provider:
name: triggermesh
registry-secret: gitlab-registry
environment:
FOO: BAR
functions:
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echo:
handler: echo
runtime: https://gitlab.com/triggermesh/runtimes/raw/master/nodejs.yaml
description: "echo function using node.js runtime"
buildargs:
- DIRECTORY=echo
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environment:
FUNCTION: echo
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```
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The `serverless.yaml` file contains three sections with distinct parameters:
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### `service`
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| Parameter | Description |
|-----------|-------------|
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| `service` | Name for the Knative service which will serve the function. |
| `description` | A short description of the `service`. |
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### `provider`
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| Parameter | Description |
|-----------|-------------|
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| `name` | Indicates which provider is used to execute the `serverless.yaml` file. In this case, the TriggerMesh `tm` CLI. |
| `registry-secret` | Indicates which registry will be used to store docker images. The sample function is using the GitLab Registry (`gitlab-registry`). A different registry host may be specified using `registry` key in the `provider` object. If changing the default, update the permission on the `gitlab-ci.yml` file. |
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| `environment` | Includes the environment variables to be passed as part of function execution for **all** functions in the file, where `FOO` is the variable name and `BAR` are he variable contents. You may replace this with you own variables. |
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### `functions`
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In the `serverless.yaml` example above, the function name is `echo` and the subsequent lines contain the function attributes.
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| Parameter | Description |
|-----------|-------------|
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| `handler` | The function's file name. In the example above, both the function name and the handler are the same. |
| `runtime` | The runtime to be used to execute the function. |
| `description` | A short description of the function. |
| `buildargs` | Pointer to the function file in the repo. In the sample the function is located in the `echo` directory. |
| `environment` | Sets an environment variable for the specific function only. |
After the `gitlab-ci.yml` template has been added and the `serverless.yaml` file has been
created, each function must be defined as a single file in your repository. Committing a
function to your project will result in a
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CI pipeline being executed which will deploy each function as a Knative service.
Once the deploy stage has finished, additional details for the function will
appear under **Operations > Serverless**.
![serverless page](img/serverless-page.png)
This page contains all functions available for the project, the URL for
accessing the function, and if available, the function's runtime information.
The details are derived from the Knative installation inside each of the project's
Kubernetes cluster.
The function details can be retrieved directly from Knative on the cluster:
```bash
kubectl -n "$KUBE_NAMESPACE" get services.serving.knative.dev
```
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The sample function can now be triggered from any HTTP client using a simple `POST` call.
![function exection](img/function-execution.png)
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Currently, the Serverless page presents all functions available in all clusters registered for the project with Knative installed.
## Deploying Serverless applications
> Introduced in GitLab 11.5.
NOTE: **Note:**
You can reference the sample [Knative Ruby App](https://gitlab.com/knative-examples/knative-ruby-app) to get started.
Add the following `.gitlab-ci.yml` to the root of your repository
(you may skip this step if using the sample [Knative Ruby App](https://gitlab.com/knative-examples/knative-ruby-app) mentioned above):
```yaml
stages:
- build
- deploy
build:
stage: build
image:
name: gcr.io/kaniko-project/executor:debug
entrypoint: [""]
only:
- master
script:
- echo "{\"auths\":{\"$CI_REGISTRY\":{\"username\":\"$CI_REGISTRY_USER\",\"password\":\"$CI_REGISTRY_PASSWORD\"}}}" > /kaniko/.docker/config.json
- /kaniko/executor --context $CI_PROJECT_DIR --dockerfile $CI_PROJECT_DIR/Dockerfile --destination $CI_REGISTRY_IMAGE
deploy:
stage: deploy
image: gcr.io/triggermesh/tm@sha256:e3ee74db94d215bd297738d93577481f3e4db38013326c90d57f873df7ab41d5
only:
- master
environment: production
script:
- echo "$CI_REGISTRY_IMAGE"
- tm -n "$KUBE_NAMESPACE" --config "$KUBECONFIG" deploy service "$CI_PROJECT_NAME" --from-image "$CI_REGISTRY_IMAGE" --wait
```
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## Deploy the application with Knative
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With all the pieces in place, the next time a CI pipeline runs, the Knative application will be deployed. Navigate to
**CI/CD > Pipelines** and click the most recent pipeline.
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## Obtain the URL for the Knative deployment
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Use the CI/CD deployment job output to obtain the deployment URL. Once all the stages of the pipeline finish, click the **deploy** stage.
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![deploy stage](img/deploy-stage.png)
The output will look like this:
```bash
Running with gitlab-runner 11.5.0~beta.844.g96d88322 (96d88322)
on docker-auto-scale 72989761
Using Docker executor with image gcr.io/triggermesh/tm@sha256:e3ee74db94d215bd297738d93577481f3e4db38013326c90d57f873df7ab41d5 ...
Pulling docker image gcr.io/triggermesh/tm@sha256:e3ee74db94d215bd297738d93577481f3e4db38013326c90d57f873df7ab41d5 ...
Using docker image sha256:6b3f6590a9b30bd7aafb9573f047d930c70066e43955b4beb18a1eee175f6de1 for gcr.io/triggermesh/tm@sha256:e3ee74db94d215bd297738d93577481f3e4db38013326c90d57f873df7ab41d5 ...
Running on runner-72989761-project-4342902-concurrent-0 via runner-72989761-stg-srm-1541795796-27929c96...
Cloning repository...
Cloning into '/builds/danielgruesso/knative'...
Checking out 8671ad20 as master...
Skipping Git submodules setup
$ echo "$CI_REGISTRY_IMAGE"
registry.staging.gitlab.com/danielgruesso/knative
$ tm -n "$KUBE_NAMESPACE" --config "$KUBECONFIG" deploy service "$CI_PROJECT_NAME" --from-image "$CI_REGISTRY_IMAGE" --wait
Deployment started. Run "tm -n knative-4342902 describe service knative" to see the details
Waiting for ready state.......
Service domain: knative.knative-4342902.knative.info
Job succeeded
```
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The second to last line, labeled **Service domain** contains the URL for the deployment. Copy and paste the domain into your
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browser to see the app live.
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![knative app](img/knative-app.png)