Scala client for the Kubernetes API.
This example lists pods in kube-system
namespace:
import skuber._
import skuber.json.format._
import org.apache.pekko.actor.ActorSystem
import scala.util.{Success, Failure}
implicit val system = ActorSystem()
implicit val dispatcher = system.dispatcher
val k8s = k8sInit
val listPodsRequest = k8s.list[PodList](Some("kube-system"))
listPodsRequest.onComplete {
case Success(pods) => pods.items.foreach { p => println(p.name) }
case Failure(e) => throw(e)
}
Read the documentation and join discord community to ask your questions!
Note: Since Akka license is no longer an "Open Source” license, the Skuber project moved on to using Apache Pekko, an open-source Akka fork.
To help migration from Akka to Pekko, please refer to Pekko's migration guides.
Important: please make sure to rename your akka
configuration keys to pekko
. This is important when configuring, e.g., the dispatcher for the application.
- Uses standard
kubeconfig
files for configuration - see the configuration guide for details - Scala 3.2, 2.13, 2.12 support
- Typed Kubernetes Client for creating, reading, updating, removing, listing and watching resources on a Kubernetes cluster.
- Dynamic Kubernetes Client, which allows you to interact with Kubernetes API without strict types.
- Refreshing EKS tokens Refresh EKS Token guide
- Comprehensive support for Kubernetes API model represented as Scala case classes
- Support for core, extensions and other Kubernetes API groups
- Full support for converting resources between the case class and standard JSON representations
- The API is asynchronous and strongly typed e.g.
k8s get[Deployment]("nginx")
returns a value of typeFuture[Deployment]
- Fluent API for creating and updating specifications of Kubernetes resources
- Java 17
- Kubernetes cluster
A Kubernetes cluster is needed at runtime. For local development purposes, minikube is recommended. To get minikube follow the instructions here
You can use the latest release by adding to your build:
- Scala 3.2, 2.13, 2.12 support
libraryDependencies += "io.github.hagay3" %% "skuber" % "4.0.0"
Building the library from source is very straightforward. Simply run sbt test
in the root directory of the project to build the library (and examples) and run the unit tests to verify the build.
The CI parameters defined in build.sbt
.
ci.yaml and clean.yaml are generated automatically with sbt-github-actions plugin.
Run sbt githubWorkflowGenerate && bash infra/ci/fix-workflows.sh
in order to regenerate ci.yaml and clean.yaml.
CI Running against the following k8s versions
- v1.19.6
- v1.20.11
- v1.21.5
- v1.22.9
- v1.23.6
- v1.24.1
skuber supports all other k8s versions, not all of them tested under CI.
https://kubernetes.io/releases/
I'm trying to be responsive to any new issues, you can create github issue or contact me.
Skuber chat on discord: https://discord.gg/byEh56vFJR
Email: [email protected]