This guide explains how to use ReplicaSets in the Federation control plane.
ReplicaSets in the federation control plane (referred to as “federated ReplicaSets” in this guide) are very similar to the traditional Kubernetes ReplicaSets, and provide the same functionality. Creating them in the federation control plane ensures that the desired number of replicas exist across the registered clusters.
The API for Federated ReplicaSet is 100% compatible with the API for traditional Kubernetes ReplicaSet. You can create a ReplicaSet by sending a request to the federation apiserver.
You can do that using kubectl by running:
kubectl --context=federation-cluster create -f myrs.yaml
The ‘–context=federation-cluster’ flag tells kubectl to submit the request to the Federation apiserver instead of sending it to a Kubernetes cluster.
Once a federated ReplicaSet is created, the federation control plane will create a ReplicaSet in all underlying Kubernetes clusters. You can verify this by checking each of the underlying clusters, for example:
kubectl --context=gce-asia-east1a get rs myrs
The above assumes that you have a context named ‘gce-asia-east1a’ configured in your client for your cluster in that zone.
The ReplicaSets in the underlying clusters will match the federation ReplicaSet except in the number of replicas. The federation control plane will ensure that the sum of the replicas in each cluster match the desired number of replicas in the federation ReplicaSet.
By default, replicas are spread equally in all the underlying clusters. For ex:
if you have 3 registered clusters and you create a federated ReplicaSet with
spec.replicas = 9
, then each ReplicaSet in the 3 clusters will have
spec.replicas=3
.
To modify the number of replicas in each cluster, you can specify
FederatedReplicaSetPreference
as an annotation with key federation.kubernetes.io/replica-set-preferences
on the federated ReplicaSet.
You can update a federated ReplicaSet as you would update a Kubernetes ReplicaSet; however, for a federated ReplicaSet, you must send the request to the federation apiserver instead of sending it to a specific Kubernetes cluster. The Federation control plane ensures that whenever the federated ReplicaSet is updated, it updates the corresponding ReplicaSet in all underlying clusters to match it. If your update includes a change in number of replicas, the federation control plane will change the number of replicas in underlying clusters to ensure that their sum remains equal to the number of desired replicas in federated ReplicaSet.
You can delete a federated ReplicaSet as you would delete a Kubernetes ReplicaSet; however, for a federated ReplicaSet, you must send the request to the federation apiserver instead of sending it to a specific Kubernetes cluster.
For example, you can do that using kubectl by running:
kubectl --context=federation-cluster delete rs myrs
Note that at this point, deleting a federated ReplicaSet will not delete the corresponding ReplicaSets from underlying clusters. You must delete the underlying ReplicaSets manually. We intend to fix this in the future.
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