In Kubernetes there is few different way to release an application, you have to carefully choose the right strategy to make your infrastructure resilient.
- recreate: terminate the old version and release the new one
- ramped: release a new version on a rolling update fashion, one after the other
- blue/green: release a new version alongside the old version then switch traffic
- canary: release a new version to a subset of users, then proceed to a full rollout
- a/b testing: release a new version to a subset of users in a precise way (HTTP headers, cookie, weight, etc.). This doesn’t come out of the box with Kubernetes, it imply extra work to setup a smarter loadbalancing system (Istio, Linkerd, Traeffik, custom nginx/haproxy, etc).
- shadow: release a new version alongside the old version. Incoming traffic is mirrored to the new version and doesn't impact the response.
Before experimenting, checkout the following resources:
- CNCF prensentation
- CNCF prensentation slides
- Kubernetes deployment strategies
- Six Strategies for Application Deployment.
- Canary deployment using Istio and Helm
These examples were created and tested on Minikube running with Kubernetes v1.10.0.
$ minikube start --kubernetes-version v1.10.0 --memory 8192 --cpus 2
The following steps describe how to setup Prometheus and Grafana to visualize the progress and performance of a deployment.
To install Helm, follow the instructions provided on their website.
$ helm init
$ helm install \
--namespace=monitoring \
--name=prometheus \
--version=7.0.0 \
stable/prometheus
$ helm install \
--namespace=monitoring \
--name=grafana \
--version=1.12.0 \
--set=adminUser=admin \
--set=adminPassword=admin \
--set=service.type=NodePort \
stable/grafana
Now that Prometheus and Grafana are up and running, you can access Grafana:
$ minikube service grafana
To login, username: admin
, password: admin
.
Then you need to connect Grafana to Prometheus, to do so, add a DataSource:
Name: prometheus
Type: Prometheus
Url: http://prometheus-server
Access: Server
Create a dashboard with a Graph. Use the following query:
sum(rate(http_requests_total{app="my-app"}[5m])) by (version)
To have a better overview of the version, add {{version}}
in the legend field.
Recreate:
Ramped:
Blue/Green:
Canary:
A/B testing:
Shadow: