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Version: 1.0

Deploying wasmCloud on Kubernetes

wasmCloud is compatible with, but not dependent on, Kubernetes. We think the future of WebAssembly is bright, and we also know there are plenty of systems already running in Kubernetes. For this reason, we provide the wasmCloud operator to help users run wasmCloud hosts on a Kubernetes cluster—and thereby run WebAssembly components on Kubernetes.

For high-level discussion of our approach to Kubernetes and compatibility with common cloud native tooling, see wasmCloud on Kubernetes.

On this page, you can find documentation for operators wishing to deploy wasmCloud with Kubernetes, including details on prerequisites such as NATS and how to deploy the operator.

Getting started with the wasmCloud operator

The wasmCloud operator can be found on GitHub at https://github.com/wasmCloud/wasmcloud-operator. It uses custom resource definitions (CRDs) to define wasmCloud hosts as Kubernetes resources.

In order to follow the instructions on this page, you will need a Kubernetes cluster and appropriate access credentials as well as a Helm installation.

Deploying the operator

A wasmCloud cluster requires a few things to run:

  • A NATS cluster with Jetstream enabled
  • WADM connected to the NATS cluster in order to support applications

If you are running locally, the following steps will help you start a NATS cluster and wadm in your Kubernetes cluster, then deploy the operator.

Testing

Make sure you have a Kubernetes cluster running locally. Some good options include kind, minikube, or Docker Desktop.

Running NATS

Add the NATS Helm repo:

shell
helm repo add nats https://nats-io.github.io/k8s/helm/charts/

Install the upstream NATS Helm chart to start a cluster with the following values.yaml file:

yaml
config:
  cluster:
    enabled: true
    replicas: 3
  leafnodes:
    enabled: true
  jetstream:
    enabled: true
    fileStore:
      pvc:
        size: 10Gi
    merge:
      domain: default
shell
helm upgrade --install -f values.yaml nats-cluster nats/nats

Running wadm

You can deploy wadm to your Kubernetes cluster with the wadm Helm chart. First, clone the wadm repo from GitHub:

shell
git clone https://github.com/wasmCloud/wadm.git

In the cloned repo, find the chart at wadm/charts/wadm. In your values.yaml file, the server field for NATS should be set to:

yaml
server: 'nats-cluster.default.svc.cluster.local:4222'

Run helm install from wadm/charts/wadm in the cloned repo:

shell
helm install wadm -f values.yaml ./

Setting up Secrets

The WasmCloudHostConfig CRD describes the desired state of a set of wasmCloud hosts connected to the same lattice:

yaml
apiVersion: k8s.wasmcloud.dev/v1alpha1
kind: WasmCloudHostConfig
metadata:
  name: my-wasmcloud-cluster
spec:
  # The number of wasmCloud host pods to run
  hostReplicas: 2
  # The cluster issuers to use for each host
  issuers:
    # This needs to be the public key of a cluster seed generated by
    # `wash keys gen cluster`
    - CDK...
  # The lattice to connect the hosts to
  lattice: 83a5b52e-17cf-4080-bac8-f844099f142e
  # Additional labels to apply to the host other than the defaults set in the operator
  hostLabels:
    some-label: value
  # Which wasmCloud version to use
  version: 0.82.0
  # The name of a secret in the same namespace that provides the required secrets.
  secretName: cluster-secrets
  # Enable the following to run the wasmCloud hosts as a DaemonSet
  #daemonset: true
  # The name of the image pull secret to use with wasmCloud hosts so that they
  # can authenticate to a private registry to pull components.
  # registryCredentialsSecret: my-registry-secret

The CRD requires a Kubernetes Secret with the following keys:

yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
  name: my-wasmcloud-cluster
data:
  # You can generate this with wash:
  # `wash keys gen cluster`
  # For more on wash see https://wasmcloud.com/docs/installation
  WASMCLOUD_CLUSTER_SEED: <seed>
  # Only required if using a NATS creds file
  # nats.creds: <base64 encoded creds file>

You can apply Secrets with kubectl:

shell
kubectl apply -f your-secret-manifest.yaml
Secrets required

The operator will fail to provision the wasmCloud Deployment if any of these secrets are missing.

Image pull secrets (Optional)

You can also specify an image pull secret to use use with the wasmCloud hosts so that they can pull components from a private registry. This secret needs to be in the same namespace as the WasmCloudHostConfig CRD and must be a kubernetes.io/dockerconfigjson type secret. See the Kubernetes documentation for more information on how to provision that secret.

Once it is created, you can reference an image pull secret in the WasmCloudHostConfig CRD by setting the registryCredentialsSecret field to the name of the secret.

Start the operator

shell
kubectl kustomize build deploy/local | kubectl apply -f -

Argo CD Health Check (Optional)

Argo CD provides a way to define a custom health check that it then runs against a given resource to determine whether or not the resource is in healthy state.

For this purpose, we specifically expose a status.phase field, which exposes the underlying status information from wadm.

With the following ConfigMap, a custom health check can be added to an existing Argo CD installation for tracking the health of wadm applications.

yaml
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
  name: argocd-cm
  namespace: argocd
  labels:
    app.kubernetes.io/name: argocd-cm
    app.kubernetes.io/part-of: argocd
data:
  resource.customizations: |
    core.oam.dev/Application:
      health.lua: |
        hs = {}
        hs.status = "Progressing"
        hs.message = "Reconciling application state"
        if obj.status ~= nil and obj.status.phase ~= nil then
          if obj.status.phase == "Deployed" then
            hs.status = "Healthy"
            hs.message = "Application is ready"
          end
          if obj.status.phase == "Reconciling" then
            hs.status = "Progressing"
            hs.message = "Application has been deployed"
          end
          if obj.status.phase == "Failed" then
            hs.status = "Degraded"
            hs.message = "Application failed to deploy"
          end
          if obj.status.phase == "Undeployed" then
            hs.status = "Suspended"
            hs.message = "Application is undeployed"
          end
        end
        return hs