Tutorial: Deploy an OCI artifact using Flux (FREE ALL)
This tutorial teaches you how to package your Kubernetes manifests into an OCI artifact and deploy them to your cluster using Flux. You'll set up a sample manifest project, configure it to store manifests as an artifact in the project's Container Registry, and configure Flux to sync the artifact. With this setup, you can run additional steps in GitLab pipelines before Flux picks up the changes from the OCI image.
This tutorial deploys an application from a public project. If you want to add a non-public project, you should create a project deploy token.
To deploy an OCI artifact using Flux:
- Create the Kubernetes manifest repository
- Configure the manifest repository to create an OCI artifact
- Configure Flux to sync your artifact
- Verify your configuration
Prerequisites:
- You have a Flux repository connected to a Kubernetes cluster. If you're starting from scratch, see Set up Flux for GitOps.
Create the Kubernetes manifest repository
First, create a repository for your Kubernetes manifests:
-
In GitLab, create a new repository called
web-app-manifests
. -
In
web-app-manifests
, add a file namedsrc/nginx-deployment.yaml
with the following contents:apiVersion: apps/v1 kind: Deployment metadata: name: nginx spec: replicas: 1 template: spec: containers: - name: nginx image: nginx:1.14.2 ports: - containerPort: 80
-
In
web-app-manifests
, add a file namedsrc/kustomization.yaml
with the following contents:apiVersion: kustomize.config.k8s.io/v1beta1 kind: Kustomization resources: - nginx-deployment.yaml commonLabels: app: flux-oci-tutorial
Configure the manifest repository to create an OCI artifact
Next, configure GitLab CI/CD to package your manifests into an OCI artifact, and push the artifact to the GitLab Container Registry:
-
In the root of
web-app-manifests
, create and push a.gitlab-ci.yml
file with the following contents:package: stage: deploy image: name: fluxcd/flux-cli:v2.0.0-rc.1 entrypoint: [""] script: - mkdir -p manifests - kubectl kustomize ./src --output ./manifests - | flux push artifact oci://$CI_REGISTRY_IMAGE:latest \ --path="./manifests" \ --source="$CI_REPOSITORY_URL" \ --revision="$CI_COMMIT_SHORT_SHA" \ --creds="$CI_REGISTRY_USER:$CI_REGISTRY_PASSWORD" \ --annotations="org.opencontainers.image.url=$CI_PROJECT_URL" \ --annotations="org.opencontainers.image.title=$CI_PROJECT_NAME" \ --annotations="com.gitlab.job.id=$CI_JOB_ID" \ --annotations="com.gitlab.job.url=$CI_JOB_URL"
When the file is pushed to GitLab, a CI/CD pipeline with a single
package
job is created. This job:- Uses
kustomization.yaml
to render your final Kubernetes manifests. - Packages your manifests into an OCI artifact.
- Pushes the OCI artifact to the Container Registry.
After the pipeline has completed, you can check your OCI artifact with the Container Registry UI.
- Uses
Configure Flux to sync your artifact
Next, configure your Flux repository to sync the artifact produced by the web-app-manifests
repository.
To configure, create an OCIRepository
resource:
-
In your local clone of your Flux repository, add a file named
clusters/my-cluster/web-app-manifests-source.yaml
with the following contents:apiVersion: source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1 kind: OCIRepository metadata: name: web-app-manifests namespace: flux-system spec: interval: 1m0s url: oci://registry.gitlab.com/gitlab-org/configure/examples/flux/web-app-manifests-oci ref: tag: latest
You will need to substitute the
url
with the URL of yourweb-app-manifests
project's container registry. -
In your local clone of your Flux repository, add a file named
clusters/my-cluster/web-app-manifests-kustomization.yaml
with the following contents:apiVersion: kustomize.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1 kind: Kustomization metadata: name: nginx-source-kustomization namespace: flux-system spec: interval: 1m0s path: ./ prune: true sourceRef: kind: OCIRepository name: web-app-manifests targetNamespace: default
This file adds a Kustomization resource that tells Flux to sync the manifests in the artifact fetched from the registry.
-
Commit the new files and push.
Verify your configuration
You should see a newly created nginx
pod in your cluster.
If you want to see the deployment sync again, try updating the number of replicas in the
src/nginx-deployment.yaml
file and push to the default branch. If all is working well, the change
should sync to the cluster when the pipeline has finished.
Congratulations! You successfully configured a project to deploy an application and synchronize your changes!