Jonathan Cardoso Machado
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How To Automate Deployments to DigitalOcean Kubernetes with CircleCI

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Introduction

Having an automated deployment process is a requirement for a scalable and resilient application, and GitOps, or Git-based DevOps, has rapidly become a popular method of organizing CI/CD with a Git repository as a “single source of truth.” Tools like CircleCI integrate with your GitHub repository, allowing you to test and deploy your code automatically every time you make a change to your repository. When this kind of CI/CD is combined with the flexibility of Kubernetes infrastructure, you can build an application that scales easily with changing demand.

In this article you will use CircleCI to deploy a sample application to a DigitalOcean Kubernetes (DOKS) cluster. After reading this tutorial, you’ll be able to apply these same techniques to deploy other CI/CD tools that are buildable as Docker images.

Prerequisites

To follow this tutorial, you’ll need to have:

For this tutorial, you will use Kubernetes version 1.13.5 and kubectl version 1.10.7.

Step 1 — Creating Your DigitalOcean Kubernetes Cluster

Note: You can skip this section if you already have a running DigitalOcean Kubernetes cluster.

In this first step, you will create the DigitalOcean Kubernetes (DOKS) cluster from which you will deploy your sample application. The kubectl commands executed from your local machine will change or retrieve information directly from the Kubernetes cluster.

Go to the Kubernetes page on your DigitalOcean account.

Click Create a Kubernetes cluster, or click the green Create button at the top right of the page and select Clusters from the dropdown menu.

The next page is where you are going to specify the details of your cluster. On Select a Kubernetes version pick version 1.13.5-do.0. If this one is not available, choose a higher one.

For Choose a datacenter region, choose the region closest to you. This tutorial will use San Francisco - 2.

You then have the option to build your Node pool(s). On Kubernetes, a node is a worker machine, which contains the services necessary to run pods. On DigitalOcean, each node is a Droplet. Your node pool will consist of a single Standard node. Select the 2GB/1vCPU configuration and change to 1 Node on the number of nodes.

You can add extra tags if you want; this can be useful if you plan to use DigitalOcean API or just to better organize your node pools.

On Choose a name, for this tutorial, use kubernetes-deployment-tutorial. This will make it easier to follow throughout while reading the next sections. Finally, click the green Create Cluster button to create your cluster.

After cluster creation, there will be a button on the UI to download a configuration file called Download Config File. This is the file you will be using to authenticate the kubectl commands you are going to run against your cluster. Download it to your kubectl machine.

The default way to use that file is to always pass the --kubeconfig flag and the path to it on all commands you run with kubectl. For example, if you downloaded the config file to Desktop, you would run the kubectl get pods command like this:

kubectl --kubeconfig ~/Desktop/kubernetes-deployment-tutorial-kubeconfig.yaml get pods

This would yield the following output:

No resources found.

This means you accessed your cluster. The No resources found. message is correct, since you don’t have any pods on your cluster.

If you are not maintaining any other Kubernetes clusters you can copy the kubeconfig file to a folder on your home directory called .kube. Create that directory in case it does not exist:

mkdir -p ~/.kube

Then copy the config file into the newly created .kube directory and rename it config:

cp current_kubernetes-deployment-tutorial-kubeconfig.yaml_file_path ~/.kube/config

The config file should now have the path ~/.kube/config. This is the file that kubectl reads by default when running any command, so there is no need to pass --kubeconfig anymore. Run the following:

kubectl get pods

You will receive the following output:

No resources found.

Now access the cluster with the following:

kubectl get nodes

You will receive the list of nodes on your cluster. The output will be similar to this:

NAME                                    STATUS    ROLES     AGE       VERSION
kubernetes-deployment-tutorial-1-7pto   Ready     <none>    1h        v1.13.5

In this tutorial you are going to use the default namespace for all kubectl commands and manifest files, which are files that define the workload and operating parameters of work in Kubernetes. Namespaces are like virtual clusters inside your single physical cluster. You can change to any other namespace you want; just make sure to always pass it using the --namespace flag to kubectl, and/or specifying it on the Kubernetes manifests metadata field. They are a great way to organize the deployments of your team and their running environments; read more about them in the official Kubernetes overview on Namespaces.

By finishing this step you are now able to run kubectl against your cluster. In the next step, you will create the local Git repository you are going to use to house your sample application.

Step 2 — Creating the Local Git Repository

You are now going to structure your sample deployment in a local Git repository. You will also create some Kubernetes manifests that will be global to all deployments you are going to do on your cluster.

Note: This tutorial has been tested on Ubuntu 18.04, and the individual commands are styled to match this OS. However, most of the commands here can be applied to other Linux distributions with little to no change needed, and commands like kubectl are platform-agnostic.

First, create a new Git repository locally that you will push to GitHub later on. Create an empty folder called do-sample-app in your home directory and cd into it:

mkdir ~/do-sample-app
cd ~/do-sample-app

Now create a new Git repository in this folder with the following command:

git init .

Inside this repository, create an empty folder called kube:

mkdir ~/do-sample-app/kube/

This will be the location where you are going to store the Kubernetes resources manifests related to the sample application that you will deploy to your cluster.

Now, create another folder called kube-general, but this time outside of the Git repository you just created. Make it inside your home directory:

mkdir ~/kube-general/

This folder is outside of your Git repository because it will be used to store manifests that are not specific to a single deployment on your cluster, but common to multiple ones. This will allow you to reuse these general manifests for different deployments.

With your folders created and the Git repository of your sample application in place, it’s time to arrange the authentication and authorization of your DOKS cluster.

Step 3 — Creating a Service Account

It’s generally not recommended to use the default admin user to authenticate from other Services into your Kubernetes cluster. If your keys on the external provider got compromised, your whole cluster would become compromised.

Instead you are going to use a single Service Account with a specific Role, which is all part of the RBAC Kubernetes authorization model.

This authorization model is based on Roles and Resources. You start by creating a Service Account, which is basically a user on your cluster, then you create a Role, in which you specify what resources it has access to on your cluster. Finally, you create a Role Binding, which is used to make the connection between the Role and the Service Account previously created, granting to the Service Account access to all resources the Role has access to.

The first Kubernetes resource you are going to create is the Service Account for your CI/CD user, which this tutorial will name cicd.

Create the file cicd-service-account.yml inside the ~/kube-general folder, and open it with your favorite text editor:

nano ~/kube-general/cicd-service-account.yml

Write the following content on it:

⁓/kube-general/cicd-service-account.yml
apiVersion: v1
kind: ServiceAccount
metadata:
  name: cicd
  namespace: default

This is a YAML file; all Kubernetes resources are represented using one. In this case you are saying this resource is from Kubernetes API version v1 (internally kubectl creates resources by calling Kubernetes HTTP APIs), and it is a ServiceAccount.

The metadata field is used to add more information about this resource. In this case, you are giving this ServiceAccount the name cicd, and creating it on the default namespace.

You can now create this Service Account on your cluster by running kubectl apply, like the following:

kubectl apply -f ~/kube-general/

You will receive output similar to the following:

serviceaccount/cicd created

To make sure your Service Account is working, try to log in to your cluster using it. To do that you first need to obtain their respective access token and store it in an environment variable. Every Service Account has an access token which Kubernetes stores as a Secret.

You can retrieve this secret using the following command:

TOKEN=$(kubectl get secret $(kubectl get secret | grep cicd-token | awk '{print $1}') -o jsonpath='{.data.token}' | base64 --decode)

Some explanation on what this command is doing:

$(kubectl get secret | grep cicd-token | awk '{print $1}')

This is used to retrieve the name of the secret related to our cicd Service Account. kubectl get secret returns the list of secrets on the default namespace, then you use grep to search for the lines related to your cicd Service Account. Then you return the name, since it is the first thing on the single line returned from the grep.

kubectl get secret preceding-command -o jsonpath='{.data.token}' | base64 --decode

This will retrieve only the secret for your Service Account token. You then access the token field using jsonpath, and pass the result to base64 --decode. This is necessary because the token is stored as a Base64 string. The token itself is a JSON Web Token.

You can now try to retrieve your pods with the cicd Service Account. Run the following command, replacing server-from-kubeconfig-file with the server URL that can be found after server: in ~/kube/config. This command will give a specific error that you will learn about later in this tutorial:

kubectl --insecure-skip-tls-verify --kubeconfig="/dev/null" --server=server-from-kubeconfig-file --token=$TOKEN get pods

--insecure-skip-tls-verify skips the step of verifying the certificate of the server, since you are just testing and do not need to verify this. --kubeconfig="/dev/null" is to make sure kubectl does not read your config file and credentials but instead uses the token provided.

The output should be similar to this:

Error from server (Forbidden): pods is forbidden: User "system:serviceaccount:default:cicd" cannot list resource "pods" in API group "" in the namespace "default"

This is an error, but it shows us that the token worked. The error you received is about your Service Account not having the neccessary authorization to list the resource secrets, but you were able to access the server itself. If your token had not worked, the error would have been the following one:

error: You must be logged in to the server (Unauthorized)

Now that the authentication was a success, the next step is to fix the authorization error for the Service Account. You will do this by creating a role with the necessary permissions and binding it to your Service Account.

Step 4 — Creating the Role and the Role Binding

Kubernetes has two ways to define roles: using a Role or a ClusterRole resource. The difference between the former and the latter is that the first one applies to a single namespace, while the other is valid for the whole cluster.

As you are using a single namespace on this tutorial, you will use a Role.

Create the file ~/kube-general/cicd-role.yml and open it with your favorite text editor:

nano ~/kube-general/cicd-role.yml

The basic idea is to grant access to do everything related to most Kubernetes resources in the default namespace. Your Role would look like this:

⁓/kube-general/cicd-role.yml
kind: Role
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
metadata:
  name: cicd
  namespace: default
rules:
  - apiGroups: ['', 'apps', 'batch', 'extensions']
    resources: ['deployments', 'services', 'replicasets', 'pods', 'jobs', 'cronjobs']
    verbs: ['*']

This YAML has some similarities with the one you created previously, but here you are saying this resource is a Role, and it’s from the Kubernetes API rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1. You are naming your role cicd, and creating it on the same namespace you created your ServiceAccount, the default one.

Then you have the rules field, which is a list of resources this role has access to. In Kubernetes resources are defined based on the API group they belong to, the resource kind itself, and what actions you can do on then, which is represented by a verb. Those verbs are similar to the HTTP ones.

In our case you are saying that your Role is allowed to do everything, *, on the following resources: deployments, services, replicasets, pods, jobs, and cronjobs. This also applies to those resources belonging to the following API groups: "" (empty string), apps, batch, and extensions. The empty string means the root API group. If you use apiVersion: v1 when creating a resource it means this resource is part of this API group.

A Role by itself does nothing; you must also create aRoleBinding, which binds a Role to something, in this case, a ServiceAccount.

Create the file ~/kube-general/cicd-role-binding.yml and open it:

nano ~/kube-general/cicd-role-binding.yml

Add the following lines to the file:

⁓/kube-general/cicd-role-binding.yml
kind: RoleBinding
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
metadata:
  name: cicd
  namespace: default
subjects:
  - kind: ServiceAccount
    name: cicd
    namespace: default
roleRef:
  kind: Role
  name: cicd
  apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io

Your RoleBinding has some specific fields that have not yet been covered in this tutorial. roleRef is the Role you want to bind to something; in this case it is the cicd role you created earlier. subjects is the list of resources you are binding your role to; in this case it’s a single ServiceAccount called cicd.

Note: If you had used a ClusterRole, you would have to create a ClusterRoleBinding instead of a RoleBinding. The file would be almost the same. The only difference would be that it would have no namespace field inside the metadata.

With those files created you will be able to use kubectl apply again. Create those new resources on your Kubernetes cluster by running the following command:

kubectl apply -f ~/kube-general/

You will receive output similar to the following:

rolebinding.rbac.authorization.k8s.io/cicd created
role.rbac.authorization.k8s.io/cicd created
serviceaccount/cicd created

Now, try the command you ran previously:

kubectl --insecure-skip-tls-verify --kubeconfig="/dev/null" --server=server-from-kubeconfig-file --token=$TOKEN get pods

Since you have no pods, this will yield the following output:

No resources found.

In this step, you gave the Service Account you are going to use on CircleCI the necessary authorization to do meaningful actions on your cluster like listing, creating, and updating resources. Now it’s time to create your sample application.

Step 5 — Creating Your Sample Application

Note: All commands and files created from now on will start from the folder ~/do-sample-app you created earlier. This is becase you are now creating files specific to the sample application that you are going to deploy to your cluster.

The Kubernetes Deployment you are going to create will use the Nginx image as a base, and your application will be a simple static HTML page. This is a great start because it allows you to test if your deployment works by serving a simple HTML directly from Nginx. As you will see later on, you can redirect all traffic coming to a local address:port to your deployment on your cluster to test if it’s working.

Inside the repository you set up earlier, create a new Dockerfile file and open it with your text editor of choice:

nano ~/do-sample-app/Dockerfile

Write the following on it:

⁓/do-sample-app/Dockerfile
FROM nginx:1.14

COPY index.html /usr/share/nginx/html/index.html

This will tell Docker to build the application container from an nginx image.

Now create a new index.html file and open it:

nano ~/do-sample-app/index.html

Write the following HTML content:

⁓/do-sample-app/index.html
<!DOCTYPE html>
<title>DigitalOcean</title>
<body>
  Kubernetes Sample Application
</body>

This HTML will display a simple message that will let you know if your application is working.

You can test if the image is correct by building and then running it.

First, build the image with the following command, replacing dockerhub-username with your own Docker Hub username. You must specify your username here so when you push it later on to Docker Hub it will just work:

docker build ~/do-sample-app/ -t dockerhub-username/do-kubernetes-sample-app

Now run the image. Use the following command, which starts your image and forwards any local traffic on port 8080 to the port 80 inside the image, the port Nginx listens to by default:

docker run --rm -it -p 8080:80 dockerhub-username/do-kubernetes-sample-app

The command prompt will stop being interactive while the command is running. Instead you will see the Nginx access logs. If you open localhost:8080 on any browser it should show an HTML page with the content of ~/do-sample-app/index.html. In case you don’t have a browser available, you can open a new terminal window and use the following curl command to fetch the HTML from the webpage:

curl localhost:8080

You will receive the following output:

<!DOCTYPE html>
<title>DigitalOcean</title>
<body>
  Kubernetes Sample Application
</body>

Stop the container (CTRL + C on the terminal where it’s running), and submit this image to your Docker Hub account. To do this, first log in to Docker Hub:

docker login

Fill in the required information about your Docker Hub account, then push the image with the following command (don’t forget to replace the dockerhub-username with your own):

docker push dockerhub-username/do-kubernetes-sample-app

You have now pushed your sample application image to your Docker Hub account. In the next step, you will create a Deployment on your DOKS cluster from this image.

Step 6 — Creating the Kubernetes Deployment and Service

With your Docker image created and working, you will now create a manifest telling Kubernetes how to create a Deployment from it on your cluster.

Create the YAML deployment file ~/do-sample-app/kube/do-sample-deployment.yml and open it with your text editor:

nano ~/do-sample-app/kube/do-sample-deployment.yml

Write the following content on the file, making sure to replace dockerhub-username with your Docker Hub username:

⁓/do-sample-app/kube/do-sample-deployment.yml
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
  name: do-kubernetes-sample-app
  namespace: default
  labels:
    app: do-kubernetes-sample-app
spec:
  replicas: 1
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: do-kubernetes-sample-app
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: do-kubernetes-sample-app
    spec:
      containers:
        - name: do-kubernetes-sample-app
          image: dockerhub-username/do-kubernetes-sample-app:latest
          ports:
            - containerPort: 80
              name: http

Kubernetes deployments are from the API group apps, so the apiVersion of your manifest is set to apps/v1. On metadata you added a new field you have not used previously, called metadata.labels. This is useful to organize your deployments. The field spec represents the behavior specification of your deployment. A deployment is responsible for managing one or more pods; in this case it’s going to have a single replica by the spec.replicas field. That is, it’s going to create and manage a single pod.

To manage pods, your deployment must know which pods it’s responsible for. The spec.selector field is the one that gives it that information. In this case the deployment will be responsible for all pods with tags app=do-kubernetes-sample-app. The spec.template field contains the details of the Pod this deployment will create. Inside the template you also have a spec.template.metadata field. The labels inside this field must match the ones used on spec.selector. spec.template.spec is the specification of the pod itself. In this case it contains a single container, called do-kubernetes-sample-app. The image of that container is the image you built previously and pushed to Docker Hub.

This YAML file also tells Kubernetes that this container exposes the port 80, and gives this port the name http.

To access the port exposed by your Deployment, create a Service. Make a file named ~/do-sample-app/kube/do-sample-service.yml and open it with your favorite editor:

nano ~/do-sample-app/kube/do-sample-service.yml

Next, add the following lines to the file:

⁓/do-sample-app/kube/do-sample-service.yml
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
  name: do-kubernetes-sample-app
  namespace: default
  labels:
    app: do-kubernetes-sample-app
spec:
  type: ClusterIP
  ports:
    - port: 80
      targetPort: http
      name: http
  selector:
    app: do-kubernetes-sample-app

This file gives your Service the same labels used on your deployment. This is not required, but it helps to organize your applications on Kubernetes.

The service resource also has a spec field. The spec.type field is responsible for the behavior of the service. In this case it’s a ClusterIP, which means the service is exposed on a cluster-internal IP, and is only reachable from within your cluster. This is the default spec.type for services. spec.selector is the label selector criteria that should be used when picking the pods to be exposed by this service. Since your pod has the tag app: do-kubernetes-sample-app, you used it here. spec.ports are the ports exposed by the pod’s containers that you want to expose from this service. Your pod has a single container which exposes port 80, named http, so you are using it here as targetPort. The service exposes that port on port 80 too, with the same name, but you could have used a different port/name combination than the one from the container.

With your Service and Deployment manifest files created, you can now create those resources on your Kubernetes cluster using kubectl:

kubectl apply -f ~/do-sample-app/kube/

You will receive the following output:

deployment.apps/do-kubernetes-sample-app created
service/do-kubernetes-sample-app created

Test if this is working by forwarding one port on your machine to the port that the service is exposing inside your Kubernetes cluster. You can do that using kubectl port-forward:

kubectl port-forward $(kubectl get pod --selector="app=do-kubernetes-sample-app" --output jsonpath='{.items[0].metadata.name}') 8080:80

The subshell command $(kubectl get pod --selector="app=do-kubernetes-sample-app" --output jsonpath='{.items[0].metadata.name}') retrieves the name of the pod matching the tag you used. Otherwise you could have retrieved it from the list of pods by using kubectl get pods.

After you run port-forward, the shell will stop being interactive, and will instead output the requests redirected to your cluster:

Forwarding from 127.0.0.1:8080 -> 80
Forwarding from [::1]:8080 -> 80

Opening localhost:8080 on any browser should render the same page you saw when you ran the container locally, but it’s now coming from your Kubernetes cluster! As before, you can also use curl in a new terminal window to check if it’s working:

curl localhost:8080

You will receive the following output:

<!DOCTYPE html>
<title>DigitalOcean</title>
<body>
  Kubernetes Sample Application
</body>

Next, it’s time to push all the files you created to your GitHub repository. To do this you must first create a repository on GitHub called digital-ocean-kubernetes-deploy.

In order to keep this repository simple for demonstration purposes, do not initialize the new repository with a README, license, or .gitignore file when asked on the GitHub UI. You can add these files later on.

With the repository created, point your local repository to the one on GitHub. To do this, press CTRL + C to stop kubectl port-forward and get the command line back, then run the following commands to add a new remote called origin:

cd ~/do-sample-app/
git remote add origin https://github.com/your-github-account-username/digital-ocean-kubernetes-deploy.git

There should be no output from the preceding command.

Next, commit all the files you created up to now to the GitHub repository. First, add the files:

git add --all

Next, commit the files to your repository, with a commit message in quotation marks:

git commit -m "initial commit"

This will yield output similar to the following:

[master (root-commit) db321ad] initial commit
 4 files changed, 47 insertions(+)
 create mode 100644 Dockerfile
 create mode 100644 index.html
 create mode 100644 kube/do-sample-deployment.yml
 create mode 100644 kube/do-sample-service.yml

Finally, push the files to GitHub:

git push -u origin master

You will be prompted for your username and password. Once you have entered this, you will see output like this:

Counting objects: 7, done.
Delta compression using up to 8 threads.
Compressing objects: 100% (7/7), done.
Writing objects: 100% (7/7), 907 bytes | 0 bytes/s, done.
Total 7 (delta 0), reused 0 (delta 0)
To github.com:your-github-account-username/digital-ocean-kubernetes-deploy.git
 * [new branch]      master -> master
Branch master set up to track remote branch master from origin.

If you go to your GitHub repository page you will now see all the files there. With your project up on GitHub, you can now set up CircleCI as your CI/CD tool.

Step 7 — Configuring CircleCI

For this tutorial, you will use CircleCI to automate deployments of your application whenever the code is updated, so you will need to log in to CircleCI using your GitHub account and set up your repository.

First, go to their homepage https://circleci.com, and press Sign Up.

circleci-home-page

You are using GitHub, so click the green Sign Up with GitHub button.

CircleCI will redirect to an authorization page on GitHub. CircleCI needs some permissions on your account to be able to start building your projects. This allows CircleCI to obtain your email, deploy keys and permission to create hooks on your repositories, and add SSH keys to your account. If you need more information on what CircleCI is going to do with your data, check their documentation about GitHub integration.

circleci-github-authorization

After authorizing CircleCI you will be redirected to their dashboard.

circleci-project-dashboard

Next, set up your GitHub repository in CircleCI. Click on Set Up New Projects from the CircleCI Dashboard, or as a shortcut, open the following link changing your-github-username with your own GitHub username: https://circleci.com/setup-project/gh/your-github-username/digital-ocean-kubernetes-deploy.

After that press Start Building. Do not create a config file in your repository just yet, and don’t worry if the first build fails.

circleci-start-building

Next, specify some environment variables in the CircleCI settings. You can find the settings of the project by clicking on the small button with a cog icon on the top right section of the page then selecting Environment Variables, or you can go directly to the environment variables page by using the following URL (remember to fill in your username): https://circleci.com/gh/your-github-username/digital-ocean-kubernetes-deploy/edit#env-vars. Press Add Variable to create new environment variables.

First, add two environment variables called DOCKERHUB_USERNAME and DOCKERHUB_PASS which will be needed later on to push the image to Docker Hub. Set the values to your Docker Hub username and password, respectively.

Then add three more: KUBERNETES_TOKEN, KUBERNETES_SERVER, and KUBERNETES_CLUSTER_CERTIFICATE.

The value of KUBERNETES_TOKEN will be the value of the local environment variable you used earlier to authenticate on your Kubernetes cluster using your Service Account user. If you have closed the terminal, you can always run the following command to retrieve it again:

kubectl get secret $(kubectl get secret | grep cicd-token | awk '{print $1}') -o jsonpath='{.data.token}' | base64 --decode

KUBERNETES_SERVER will be the string you passed as the --server flag to kubectl when you logged in with your cicd Service Account. You can find this after server: in the ~/.kube/config file, or in the file kubernetes-deployment-tutorial-kubeconfig.yaml downloaded from the DigitalOcean dashboard when you made the initial setup of your Kubernetes cluster.

KUBERNETES_CLUSTER_CERTIFICATE should also be available on your ~/.kube/config file. It’s the certificate-authority-data field on the clusters item related to your cluster. It should be a long string; make sure to copy all of it.

Those environment variables must be defined here because most of them contain sensitive information, and it is not secure to place them directly on the CircleCI YAML config file.

With CircleCI listening for changes on your repository, and the environment variables configured, it’s time to create the configuration file.

Make a directory called .circleci inside your sample application repository:

mkdir ~/do-sample-app/.circleci/

Inside this directory, create a file named config.yml and open it with your favorite editor:

nano ~/do-sample-app/.circleci/config.yml

Add the following content to the file, making sure to replace dockerhub-username with your Docker Hub username:

⁓/do-sample-app/.circleci/config.yml
version: 2.1
jobs:
  build:
    docker:
      - image: circleci/buildpack-deps:stretch
    environment:
      IMAGE_NAME: dockerhub-username/do-kubernetes-sample-app
    working_directory: ~/app
    steps:
      - checkout
      - setup_remote_docker
      - run:
          name: Build Docker image
          command: |
            docker build -t $IMAGE_NAME:latest .
      - run:
          name: Push Docker Image
          command: |
            echo "$DOCKERHUB_PASS" | docker login -u "$DOCKERHUB_USERNAME" --password-stdin
            docker push $IMAGE_NAME:latest
workflows:
  version: 2
  build-master:
    jobs:
      - build:
          filters:
            branches:
              only: master

This sets up a Workflow with a single job, called build, that runs for every commit to the master branch. This job is using the image circleci/buildpack-deps:stretch to run its steps, which is an image from CircleCI based on the official buildpack-deps Docker image, but with some extra tools installed, like Docker binaries themselves.

The workflow has four steps:

  • checkout retrieves the code from GitHub.
  • setup_remote_docker sets up a remote, isolated environment for each build. This is required before you use any docker command inside a job step. This is necessary because as the steps are running inside a docker image, setup_remote_docker allocates another machine to run the commands there.
  • The first run step builds the image, as you did previously locally. For that you are using the environment variable you declared in environment:, IMAGE_NAME (remember to change the highlighted section with your own information).
  • The last run step pushes the image to Dockerhub, using the environment variables you configured on the project settings to authenticate.

Commit the new file to your repository and push the changes upstream:

cd ~/do-sample-app/
git add .circleci/
git commit -m "add CircleCI config"
git push

This will trigger a new build on CircleCI. The CircleCI workflow is going to correctly build and push your image to Docker Hub.

CircleCI build page with success build info

Now that you have created and tested your CircleCI workflow, you can set your DOKS cluster to retrieve the up-to-date image from Docker Hub and deploy it automatically when changes are made.

Step 8 — Updating the Deployment on the Kubernetes Cluster

Now that your application image is being built and sent to Docker Hub every time you push changes to the master branch on GitHub, it’s time to update your deployment on your Kubernetes cluster so that it retrieves the new image and uses it as a base for deployment.

To do that, first fix one issue with your deployment: it’s currently depending on an image with the latest tag. This tag does not tell us which version of the image you are using. You cannot easily lock your deployment to that tag because it’s overwritten everytime you push a new image to Docker Hub, and by using it like that you lose one of the best things about having containerized applications: Reproducibility.

You can read more about that on this article about why depending on Docker latest tag is a anti-pattern.

To correct this, you first must make some changes to your Push Docker Image build step in the ~/do-sample-app/.circleci/config.yml file. Open up the file:

nano ~/do-sample-app/.circleci/config.yml

Then add the highlighted lines to your Push Docker Image step:

⁓/do-sample-app/.circleci/config.yml
# ...
- run:
    name: Push Docker Image
    command: |
      echo "$DOCKERHUB_PASS" | docker login -u "$DOCKERHUB_USERNAME" --password-stdin
      docker tag $IMAGE_NAME:latest $IMAGE_NAME:$CIRCLE_SHA1
      docker push $IMAGE_NAME:latest
      docker push $IMAGE_NAME:$CIRCLE_SHA1

# ...

Save and exit the file.

CircleCI has some special environment variables set by default. One of them is CIRCLE_SHA1, which contains the hash of the commit it’s building. The changes you made to ~/do-sample-app/.circleci/config.yml will use this environment variable to tag your image with the commit it was built from, always tagging the most recent build with the latest tag. That way, you always have specific images available, without overwriting them when you push something new to your repository.

Next, change your deployment manifest file to point to that file. This would be simple if inside ~/do-sample-app/kube/do-sample-deployment.yml you could set your image as dockerhub-username/do-kubernetes-sample-app:$COMMIT_SHA1, but kubectl doesn’t do variable substitution inside the manifests when you use kubectl apply. To account for this, you can use envsubst. envsubst is a cli tool, part of the GNU gettext project. It allows you to pass some text to it, and if it finds any variable inside the text that has a matching environment variable, it’s replaced by the respective value. The resulting text is then returned as their output.

To use this, you will create a simple bash script which will be responsible for your deployment. Make a new folder called scripts inside ~/do-sample-app/:

mkdir ~/do-sample-app/scripts/

Inside that folder create a new bash script called ci-deploy.sh and open it with your favorite text editor:

nano ~/do-sample-app/scripts/ci-deploy.sh

Inside it write the following bash script:

⁓/do-sample-app/scripts/ci-deploy.sh
#! /bin/bash
# exit script when any command ran here returns with non-zero exit code
set -e

COMMIT_SHA1=$CIRCLE_SHA1

# We must export it so it's available for envsubst
export COMMIT_SHA1=$COMMIT_SHA1

# since the only way for envsubst to work on files is using input/output redirection,
#  it's not possible to do in-place substitution, so we need to save the output to another file
#  and overwrite the original with that one.
envsubst <./kube/do-sample-deployment.yml >./kube/do-sample-deployment.yml.out
mv ./kube/do-sample-deployment.yml.out ./kube/do-sample-deployment.yml

echo "$KUBERNETES_CLUSTER_CERTIFICATE" | base64 --decode > cert.crt

./kubectl \
  --kubeconfig=/dev/null \
  --server=$KUBERNETES_SERVER \
  --certificate-authority=cert.crt \
  --token=$KUBERNETES_TOKEN \
  apply -f ./kube/

Let’s go through this script, using the comments in the file. First, there is the following:

set -e

This line makes sure any failed command stops the execution of the bash script. That way if one command fails, the next ones are not executed.

COMMIT_SHA1=$CIRCLE_SHA1
export COMMIT_SHA1=$COMMIT_SHA1

These lines export the CircleCI $CIRCLE_SHA1 environment variable with a new name. If you had just declared the variable without exporting it using export, it would not be visible for the envsubst command.

envsubst <./kube/do-sample-deployment.yml >./kube/do-sample-deployment.yml.out
mv ./kube/do-sample-deployment.yml.out ./kube/do-sample-deployment.yml

envsubst cannot do in-place substitution. That is, it cannot read the content of a file, replace the variables with their respective values, and write the output back to the same file. Therefore, you will redirect the output to another file and then overwrite the original file with the new one.

echo "$KUBERNETES_CLUSTER_CERTIFICATE" | base64 --decode > cert.crt

The environment variable $KUBERNETES_CLUSTER_CERTIFICATE you created earlier on CircleCI’s project settings is in reality a Base64 encoded string. To use it with kubectl you must decode its contents and save it to a file. In this case you are saving it to a file named cert.crt inside the current working directory.

./kubectl \
  --kubeconfig=/dev/null \
  --server=$KUBERNETES_SERVER \
  --certificate-authority=cert.crt \
  --token=$KUBERNETES_TOKEN \
  apply -f ./kube/

Finally, you are running kubectl. The command has similar arguments to the one you ran when you were testing your Service Account. You are calling apply -f ./kube/, since on CircleCI the current working directory is the root folder of your project. ./kube/ here is your ~/do-sample-app/kube folder.

Save the file and make sure it’s executable:

chmod +x ~/do-sample-app/scripts/ci-deploy.sh

Now, edit ~/do-sample-app/kube/do-sample-deployment.yml:

nano ~/do-sample-app/kube/do-sample-deployment.yml

Change the tag of the container image value to look like the following one:

⁓/do-sample-app/kube/do-sample-deployment.yml
# ...
containers:
  - name: do-kubernetes-sample-app
    image: dockerhub-username/do-kubernetes-sample-app:$COMMIT_SHA1
    ports:
      - containerPort: 80
        name: http

Save and close the file. You must now add some new steps to your CI configuration file to update the deployment on Kubernetes.

Open ~/do-sample-app/.circleci/config.yml on your favorite text editor:

nano ~/do-sample-app/.circleci/config.yml

Write the following new steps, right below the Push Docker Image one you had before:

⁓/do-sample-app/.circleci/config.yml
# ...
- run:
    name: Install envsubst
    command: |
      sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get -y install gettext-base
- run:
    name: Install kubectl
    command: |
      curl -LO https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/$(curl -s https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/stable.txt)/bin/linux/amd64/kubectl
      chmod u+x ./kubectl
- run:
    name: Deploy Code
    command: ./scripts/ci-deploy.sh

The first two steps are installing some dependencies, first envsubst, and then kubectl. The Deploy Code step is responsible for running our deploy script.

To make sure the changes are really going to be reflected on your Kubernetes deployment, edit your index.html. Change the HTML to something else, like:

⁓/do-sample-app/index.html
<!DOCTYPE html>
<title>DigitalOcean</title>
<body>
  Automatic Deployment is Working!
</body>

Once you have saved the above change, commit all the modified files to the repository, and push the changes upstream:

cd ~/do-sample-app/
git add --all
git commit -m "add deploy script and add new steps to circleci config"
git push

You will see the new build running on CircleCI, and successfully deploying the changes to your Kubernetes cluster.

Wait for the build to finish, then run the same command you ran previously:

kubectl port-forward $(kubectl get pod --selector="app=do-kubernetes-sample-app" --output jsonpath='{.items[0].metadata.name}') 8080:80

Make sure everything is working by opening your browser on the URL localhost:8080 or by making a curl request to it. It should show the updated HTML:

curl localhost:8080

You will receive the following output:

<!DOCTYPE html>
<title>DigitalOcean</title>
<body>
  Automatic Deployment is Working!
</body>

Congratulations, you have set up automated deployment with CircleCI!

Conclusion This was a basic tutorial on how to do deployments to DigitalOcean Kubernetes using CircleCI. From here, you can improve your pipeline in many ways. The first thing you can do is create a single build job for multiple deployments, each one deploying to different Kubernetes clusters or different namespaces. This can be extremely useful when you have different Git branches for development/staging/production environments, ensuring that the deployments are always separated.

You could also build your own image to be used on CircleCI, instead of using buildpack-deps. This image could be based on it, but could already have kubectl and envsubst dependencies installed.

If you would like to learn more about CI/CD on Kubernetes, check out the tutorials for our CI/CD on Kubernetes Webinar Series, or for more information about apps on Kubernetes, see Modernizing Applications for Kubernetes.



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