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WARNING WARNING WARNING WARNING WARNING

PLEASE NOTE: This document applies to the HEAD of the source tree

If you are using a released version of Kubernetes, you should refer to the docs that go with that version.

The latest release of this document can be found [here](http://releases.k8s.io/release-1.2/docs/proposals/federated-api-servers.md).

Documentation for other releases can be found at releases.k8s.io.

Federated API Servers

Abstract

We want to divide the single monolithic API server into multiple federated servers. Anyone should be able to write their own federated API server to expose APIs they want. Cluster admins should be able to expose new APIs at runtime by bringing up new federated servers.

Motivation

  • Extensibility: We want to allow community members to write their own API servers to expose APIs they want. Cluster admins should be able to use these servers without having to require any change in the core kubernetes repository.
  • Unblock new APIs from core kubernetes team review: A lot of new API proposals are currently blocked on review from the core kubernetes team. By allowing developers to expose their APIs as a separate server and enabling the cluster admin to use it without any change to the core kubernetes reporsitory, we unblock these APIs.
  • Place for staging experimental APIs: New APIs can remain in separate federated servers until they become stable, at which point, they can be moved to the core kubernetes master, if appropriate.
  • Ensure that new APIs follow kubernetes conventions: Without the mechanism proposed here, community members might be forced to roll their own thing which may or may not follow kubernetes conventions.

Goal

  • Developers should be able to write their own API server and cluster admins should be able to add them to their cluster, exposing new APIs at runtime. All of this should not require any change to the core kubernetes API server.
  • These new APIs should be seamless extension of the core kubernetes APIs (ex: they should be operated upon via kubectl).

Non Goals

The following are related but are not the goals of this specific proposal:

  • Make it easy to write a kubernetes API server.

High Level Architecture

There will be 2 new components in the cluster:

  • A simple program to summarize discovery information from all the servers.
  • A reverse proxy to proxy client requests to individual servers.

The reverse proxy is optional. Clients can discover server URLs using the summarized discovery information and contact them directly. Simple clients, can always use the proxy. The same program can provide both discovery summarization and reverse proxy.

Constraints

  • Unique API groups across servers: Each API server (and groups of servers, in HA) should expose unique API groups.
  • Follow API conventions: APIs exposed by every API server should adhere to kubernetes API conventions.
  • Support discovery API: Each API server should support the kubernetes discovery API (list the suported groupVersions at /apis and list the supported resources at /apis/<groupVersion>/)
  • No bootstrap problem: The core kubernetes server should not depend on any other federated server to come up. Other servers can only depend on the core kubernetes server.

Implementation Details

Summarizing discovery information

We can have a very simple Go program to summarize discovery information from all servers. Cluster admins will register each federated API server (its baseURL and swagger spec path) with the proxy. The proxy will summarize the list of all group versions exposed by all registered API servers with their individual URLs at /apis.

Reverse proxy

We can use any standard reverse proxy server like nginx or extend the same Go program that summarizes discovery information to act as reverse proxy for all federated servers.

Cluster admins are also free to use any of the multiple open source API management tools (for example, there is Kong, which is written in lua and there is Tyk, which is written in Go). These API management tools provide a lot more functionality like: rate-limiting, caching, logging, transformations and authentication. In future, we can also use ingress. That will give cluster admins the flexibility to easily swap out the ingress controller by a Go reverse proxy, ngingx, haproxy or any other solution they might want.

Storage

Each API server is responsible for storing their resources. They can have their own etcd or can use kubernetes server's etcd using third party resources.

Health check

Kubernetes server's /api/v1/componentstatuses will continue to report status of master components that it depends on (scheduler and various controllers). Since clients have access to server URLs, they can use that to do health check of individual servers. In future, if a global health check is required, we can expose a health check endpoint in the proxy that will report the status of all federated api servers in the cluster.

Auth

Since the actual server which serves client's request can be opaque to the client, all API servers need to have homogeneous authentication and authorisation mechanisms. All API servers will handle authn and authz for their resources themselves. In future, we can also have the proxy do the auth and then have apiservers trust it (via client certs) to report the actual user in an X-something header.

For now, we will trust system admins to configure homogeneous auth on all servers. Future proposals will refine how auth is managed across the cluster.

kubectl

kubectl will talk to the discovery endpoint (or proxy) and use the discovery API to figure out the operations and resources supported in the cluster. Today, it uses RESTMapper to determine that. We will update kubectl code to populate RESTMapper using the discovery API so that we can add and remove resources at runtime. We will also need to make kubectl truly generic. Right now, a lot of operations (like get, describe) are hardcoded in the binary for all resources. A future proposal will provide details on moving those operations to server.

Note that it is possible for kubectl to talk to individual servers directly in which case proxy will not be required at all, but this requires a bit more logic in kubectl. We can do this in future, if desired.

Handling global policies

Now that we have resources spread across multiple API servers, we need to be careful to ensure that global policies (limit ranges, resource quotas, etc) are enforced. Future proposals will improve how this is done across the cluster.

Namespaces

When a namespaced resource is created in any of the federated server, that server first needs to check with the kubernetes server that:

  • The namespace exists.
  • User has authorization to create resources in that namespace.
  • Resource quota for the namespace is not exceeded.

To prevent race conditions, the kubernetes server might need to expose an atomic API for all these operations.

While deleting a namespace, kubernetes server needs to ensure that resources in that namespace maintained by other servers are deleted as well. We can do this using resource finalizers. Each server will add themselves in the set of finalizers before they create a resource in the corresponding namespace and delete all their resources in that namespace, whenever it is to be deleted (kubernetes API server already has this code, we will refactor it into a library to enable reuse).

Future proposal will talk about this in more detail and provide a better mechanism.

Limit ranges and resource quotas

kubernetes server maintains resource quotas and limit ranges for all resources. Federated servers will need to check with the kubernetes server before creating any resource.

Running on hosted kubernetes cluster

This proposal is not enough for hosted cluster users, but allows us to improve that in the future. On a hosted kubernetes cluster, for eg on GKE - where Google manages the kubernetes API server, users will have to bring up and maintain the proxy and federated servers themselves. Other system components like the various controllers, will not be aware of the proxy and will only talk to the kubernetes API server.

One possible solution to fix this is to update kubernetes API server to detect when there are federated servers in the cluster and then change its advertise address to the IP address of the proxy. Future proposal will talk about this in more detail.

Alternatives

There were other alternatives that we had discussed.

  • Instead of adding a proxy in front, let the core kubernetes server provide an API for other servers to register themselves. It can also provide a discovery API which the clients can use to discover other servers and then talk to them directly. But this would have required another server API a lot of client logic as well.
  • Validating federated servers: We can validate new servers when they are registered with the proxy, or keep validating them at regular intervals, or validate them only when explicitly requested, or not validate at all. We decided that the proxy will just assume that all the servers are valid (conform to our api conventions). In future, we can provide conformance tests.

Future Work

  • Validate servers: We should have some conformance tests that validate that the servers follow kubernetes api-conventions.
  • Provide centralised auth service: It is very hard to ensure homogeneous auth across multiple federated servers, especially in case of hosted clusters (where different people control the different servers). We can fix it by providing a centralised authentication and authorization service which all of the servers can use.

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