Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History

getting-started

Tutorial: Getting started with Tekton Triggers

The following tutorial walks you through building and deploying a Docker image using Tekton Triggers to detect a GitHub webhook request and execute a Pipeline.

Overview

In this tutorial, you will:

  1. Set up a Pipeline that builds a Docker image using kaniko and deploys it locally on your Kubernetes cluster. The workflow in the Pipeline is as follows:

    1. Retrieve the source code.
    2. Build and push the source code into a Docker image.
    3. Push the image to the specified repository.
    4. Run the image locally.
  2. Set up an EventListener that accepts and processes GitHub push events.

  3. Set up a TriggerTemplate that instantiates a PipelineResource and executes a PipelineRun and its associated 'TaskRuns' when the EventListener detects the push event from a GitHub repository.

  4. Run the completed stack to experience Tekton Triggers in action.

Prerequisites

Before you begin, you must satisfy the following prerequisites:

Configure your cluster

Now that you have your Kubernetes cluster up and running, you must set up your namespace and RBAC. You will keep all of the artifacts for this tutorial within this namespace. This way, you can easily start over by deleting and recreating this namespace if necessary.

Note: Record your ingress sub-domain or the external IP address of your cluster as you will need it to create your GitHub webhook later in this tutorial.

Configure your cluster as follows:

  1. Create a namespace named getting-started using the following command:

    kubectl create namespace getting-started
    
  2. Create the admin user, role, and rolebinding using the following command:

    kubectl -n getting-started apply -f ./docs/getting-started/rbac/admin-role.yaml \
                -f ./docs/getting-started/rbac/clusterrolebinding.yaml
    
  3. (Optional) If you have already provisioned a cluster secret for a "Let's Encrypt" certificate, you must export it and then import it into your getting-started namespace. For example:

     kubectl get secret <name> --namespace=<namespace> -o yaml |\
        grep -v '^\s*namespace:\s' |\
        kubectl apply --namespace=<new namespace> -f -
  4. Create the create-webhook user, role, and rolebinding using the following command:

    kubectl -n getting-started apply -f ./docs/getting-started/rbac/webhook-role.yaml
    

This allows your webhook to work with Tekton Triggers.

  1. (Optional) If your cluster doesn't have access to your Docker registry, you must add a secret to both your cluster and the pipeline.yaml file in this tutorial as follows:

    1. Add a secret to your cluster as described in Configuring Task execution credentials.
    2. Add the secret you created in the previous step to your pipeline.yaml file by adding the following to each Task within the file:
      env:
        - name: "DOCKER_CONFIG"
          value: "/tekton/home/.docker/"
    

Install the example resources

You are now ready to install the example resources to use in the tutorial:

  • A Pipeline
  • A TriggerTemplate
  • A TriggerBinding
  • An EventListener
  1. Install the example Pipeline using the following command:

    kubectl -n getting-started apply -f ./docs/getting-started/pipeline.yaml
    
  2. Install the example Triggers resources as follows:

    1. Update the triggers.yaml file with the repository to which you want your Pipeline to push the Docker image binary by replacing the DOCKERREPO-REPLACEME placeholder string throughout the file.
    2. Apply the updated triggers.yaml file on your cluster using the following command:
    kubectl -n getting-started apply -f ./docs/getting-started/triggers.yaml
    

Your Tekton stack is now configured to detect and respond to GitHub events.

Create and execute the ingress and webhook Tasks

Now, you must create and execute the following Tasks:

  • Ingress Task - exposes the EventListener at a publicly accessible address to which the GitHub webhook can send events.
  • Webhook Task - creates the Github webhook that sends events to your EventListener.
  1. Create the ingress Task:

    kubectl -n getting-started apply -f ./docs/getting-started/create-ingress.yaml
    
  2. Create the webhook Task:

    kubectl -n getting-started apply -f ./docs/getting-started/create-webhook.yaml
    
  3. Update the TaskRun for the ingress Task. At the minimum, you must update the ExternalDomain field in the docs/getting-started/ingress-run.yaml file to match your DNS name. You might also need to modify other settings as appropriate.

  4. Run the ingress Task:

    kubectl -n getting-started apply -f docs/getting-started/ingress-run.yaml
    
  5. Create a GitHub Personal Access Token with the following access privileges:

    • public_repo
    • admin:repo_hook

    This token can contain any plain text string.

  6. Add the token to the docs/getting-started/secret.yaml file. Do NOT base64-encode the token when adding it to the secret.yaml file.

  7. Create the required secret with the following command:

    kubectl -n getting-started apply -f docs/getting-started/secret.yaml
    
  8. Update the TaskRun for the webhook Task. At the minimum, you must update the following fields in the docs/getting-started/webhook-run.yaml file:

    • GitHubOrg - the GitHub organization you're using for the namespace in this tutorial.
    • GitHubUser - your GitHub username.
    • GitHubRepo - the GitHub repository you're using for this tutorial.
    • ExternalDomain - set this to a value appropriate to your environment: the external domain of the event listener instance.
    • GitHubDomain (optional) - if you are using github enterprise, set this to your GitHub domain (e.g. git.corp.com)
  9. Run the webhook Task:

    kubectl -n getting-started apply -f docs/getting-started/webhook-run.yaml
    

Run the completed Tekton Triggers stack

You are now ready to experience Tekton Triggers in action! Do the following:

  1. Make an empty commit and push it to your repository:

    git commit -a -m "build commit" --allow-empty && git push origin mybranch
    
  2. Monitor the execution of your Tasks:

    • Monitor the image builder Task using the following command:
      kubectl logs -l somelabel=somekey --all-containers
      
    • Monitor the deployer Task using the following command:
      kubectl -n getting-started logs -l tekton.dev/pipeline=getting-started-pipeline --all-containers
      

    You can see that the system is working and that pushing images to your repository results in a running Pod using the following command:

    kubectl -n getting-started logs tekton-triggers-built-me --all-containers
    

Congratulations! Your new image has been retrieved, tested, vetted, built, docker-pushed and pulled, and is now running on your cluster as a Pod.

Cleaning up

To clean up, simply delete the getting-started namespace using the following command:

kubectl delete namespace getting-started