Cyphernetes turns this: 😣
# Delete all pods that are not running
kubectl get pods --all-namespaces --field-selector 'status.phase!=Running' \
-o 'custom-columns=NAMESPACE:.metadata.namespace,NAME:.metadata.name' \
--no-headers | xargs -L1 -I {} bash -c 'set -- {}; kubectl delete pod $2 -n $1'
Into this: 🤩
# Do the same thing!
MATCH (p:Pod)
WHERE p.status.phase != "Running"
DELETE p;
Cyphernetes is a Cypher-inspired query language for Kubernetes. Cypher is a mixture of ASCII-art, SQL and JSON that lets us express graph operations in an efficeint way that is also fun and creative. Cyphernetes extends Cypher with Kubernetes-specific syntax and features. It allows you to query and mutate Kubernetes resources in a natural way, works out-of-the-box with your CRDs, supports multi-cluster queries, and more.
There are multiple ways to run Cyphernetes queries:
- Using the web client by running
cyphernetes web
from your terminal, then visitinghttp://localhost:8080
- Using the interactive shell by running
cyphernetes shell
in your terminal - Running a single query from the command line by running
cyphernetes query "your query"
- great for scripting and CI/CD pipelines - Creating a Cyphernetes DynamicOperator using the cyphernetes-operator to define powerful Kubernetes workflows on-the-fly
- Using the Cyphernetes API in your own Go programs
To learn more about how to use Cyphernetes, refer to these documents:
- LANGUAGE.md - a crash-course in Cyphernetes language syntax
- CLI.md - a guide to using Cyphernetes shell, query command and macros
- OPERATOR.md - a guide to using Cyphernetes DynamicOperator
# Get the desired and running replicas for all deployments
MATCH (d:Deployment)
RETURN d.spec.replicas AS desiredReplicas,
d.status.availableReplicas AS runningReplicas;
{
"d": [
{
"desiredReplicas": 2,
"name": "coredns",
"runningReplicas": 2
}
]
}
Query executed in 9.081292ms
Cyphernetes' superpower is understanding the relationships between Kubernetes resource kinds.
This feature is expressed using the arrows (->
) you see in the example queries.
Relationships let us express connected operations in a natural way, and without having to worry about the underlying Kubernetes API:
# This is similar to `kubectl expose`
> MATCH (d:Deployment {name: "nginx"})
CREATE (d)->(s:Service);
Created services/nginx
Query executed in 30.692208ms
Using Homebrew:
brew install cyphernetes
Using go:
go install github.com/avitaltamir/cyphernetes/cmd/cyphernetes@latest
Alternatively, grab a binary from the Releases page.
The Cyphernetes monorepo is a multi-package project that includes the core Cyphernetes Go package, a CLI, a web client, and an operator. Additionally, there's a grammer folder which contains the yacc grammar for generating the parser.
.
├── cmd # The CLI (this is where the cyphernetes binary lives)
│ └── cyphernetes
│ └── ...
├── grammar # The yacc grammar for generating the parser
│ └── ...
├── operator # The operator
│ └── ...
├── pkg # The core Cyphernetes package (and parser)
│ └── parser
│ └── ...
├── web # The web client
│ └── src
│ └── ...
- Go (Latest)
- goyacc (for generating the parser)
- Make (for running make commands)
- NodeJS (Latest, for building the web client)
- pnpm (9+, for building the web client)
To get started with development:
Clone the repository:
git clone https://github.com/avitaltamir/cyphernetes.git
Navigate to the project directory:
cd cyphernetes
Running make
will build the operator manifests and web client static assets, then build the binary and run the tests.
make
make web-build
make operator-build
Contributions are welcome! Please feel free to submit pull requests, open issues, and provide feedback.
Cyphernetes is open-sourced under the Apache 2.0 license. See the LICENSE file for details.
- Thanks to Neo4j for the inspiration behind the query language.
- Thanks to ggerganov for the dot-to-ascii project - it's the webserver that serves the ASCII art on https://ascii.cyphernet.es in case you want to host your own.
- Thanks to shlomif for the graph-easy project - it's the package that actually converts the dot graphs into ASCII art used by dot-to-ascii.
- Thanks anthonybrice and chenrui333 for getting us into Homebrew.
- Initial work - Avital Tamir
- Enhancements, Bug fixes - James Kim
- Enhancements, Bug fixes - Naor Peled