Maintainers: Heptio
Ark gives you tools to back up and restore your Kubernetes cluster resources and persistent volumes. Ark lets you:
- Take backups of your cluster and restore in case of loss.
- Copy cluster resources across cloud providers. NOTE: Cloud volume migrations are not yet supported.
- Replicate your production environment for development and testing environments.
Ark consists of:
- A server that runs on your cluster
- A command-line client that runs locally
The following example sets up the Ark server and client, then backs up and restores a sample application.
For simplicity, the example uses Minio, an S3-compatible storage service that runs locally on your cluster. See Set up Ark with your cloud provider for how to run on a cloud provider.
- Access to a Kubernetes cluster, version 1.7 or later. Version 1.7.5 or later is required to run
ark backup delete
. - A DNS server on the cluster
kubectl
installed
Clone or fork the Ark repository:
git clone [email protected]:heptio/ark.git
NOTE: Make sure to check out the appropriate version. We recommend that you check out the latest tagged version. The master branch is under active development and might not be stable.
-
Start the server and the local storage service. In the root directory of Ark, run:
kubectl apply -f examples/common/00-prereqs.yaml kubectl apply -f examples/minio/ kubectl apply -f examples/common/10-deployment.yaml
NOTE: If you get an error about Config creation, wait for a minute, then run the commands again.
-
Deploy the example nginx application:
kubectl apply -f examples/nginx-app/base.yaml
-
Check to see that both the Ark and nginx deployments are successfully created:
kubectl get deployments -l component=ark --namespace=heptio-ark kubectl get deployments --namespace=nginx-example
For this example, we recommend that you download a pre-built release.
You can also build from source.
Make sure that you install somewhere in your $PATH
.
-
Create a backup for any object that matches the
app=nginx
label selector:ark backup create nginx-backup --selector app=nginx
-
Simulate a disaster:
kubectl delete namespace nginx-example
-
To check that the nginx deployment and service are gone, run:
kubectl get deployments --namespace=nginx-example kubectl get services --namespace=nginx-example kubectl get namespace/nginx-example
You should get no results.
NOTE: You might need to wait for a few minutes for the namespace to be fully cleaned up.
-
Run:
ark restore create nginx-backup
-
Run:
ark restore get
After the restore finishes, the output looks like the following:
NAME BACKUP STATUS WARNINGS ERRORS CREATED SELECTOR nginx-backup-20170727200524 nginx-backup Completed 0 0 2017-07-27 20:05:24 +0000 UTC <none>
NOTE: The restore can take a few moments to finish. During this time, the STATUS
column reads InProgress
.
After a successful restore, the STATUS
column is Completed
, and WARNINGS
and ERRORS
are 0. All objects in the nginx-example
namespacee should be just as they were before you deleted them.
If there are errors or warnings, you can look at them in detail:
ark restore describe <RESTORE_NAME>
For more information, see the debugging information.
To remove the Kubernetes objects for this example from your cluster, run:
kubectl delete -f examples/common/
kubectl delete -f examples/minio/
kubectl delete -f examples/nginx-app/base.yaml
The documentation provides detailed information about building from source, architecture, extending Ark, and more.
If you encounter any problems that the documentation does not address, file an issue or talk to us on the Kubernetes Slack team channel #ark-dr
.
Thanks for taking the time to join our community and start contributing!
Feedback and discussion is available on the mailing list.
- Please familiarize yourself with the Code of Conduct before contributing.
- See CONTRIBUTING.md for instructions on the developer certificate of origin that we require.
- We welcome pull requests. Feel free to dig through the issues and jump in.
See the list of releases to find out about feature changes.