/service-catalog

Share and consume services in Kubernetes using service brokers

Primary LanguageGoApache License 2.0Apache-2.0

service-catalog

Build Status

Introduction

The service-catalog project is in incubation to bring integration with service brokers to the Kubernetes ecosystem via the Open Service Broker API. A service broker is an endpoint that manages a set of services. The end-goal of the service- catalog project is to provide a way for Kubernetes users to consume services from brokers and easily configure their applications to use those services, without needing detailed knowledge about how those services are created / managed.

As an example:

Most applications need a datastore of some kind. The service-catalog allows Kubernetes applications to consume services like databases that exist somewhere in a simple way:

  1. A user wanting to consume a database in their application browses a list of available services in the catalog

  2. The user asks for a new instance of that service to be provisioned

    Provisioning means that the broker somehow creates a new instance of a service. This could mean basically anything that results in a new instance of the service becoming available. Possibilities include: creating a new set of Kubernetes resources in another namespace in the same Kubernetes cluster as the consumer or a different cluster, or even creating a new tenant in a multi-tenant SaaS system. The point is that the consumer doesn't have to be aware of or care at all about the details.

  3. The user binds that service to their application

    Binding means that the application is injected with the information necessary to use the service, such as coordinates, credentials, and configuration items. Applications are injected using the existing application configuration primitives in Kubernetes: Services, Secrets, and ConfigMaps.

For more details about the design and features of this project see the design doc.

Video links


Overall Status

We are currently working toward an MVP release to be used in conjunction with Kubernetes 1.6. See the milestones list for information about current and future milestones.

Documentation

See here for documentation.

Terminology

This project's problem domain contains a few inconvenient but unavoidable overloads with other Kubernetes terms. Check out our terminology page for definitions of terms as they are used in this project.

Contributing

Interested in contributing? Check out the documentation.

Also see the developer's guide for information on how to build and test the code.

Kubernetes Incubator

This is a Kubernetes Incubator project. The project was established 2016-Sept-12. The incubator team for the project is:

For more information about sig-service-catalog such as meeting times and agenda, check out the community site.

Code of Conduct

Participation in the Kubernetes community is governed by the Kubernetes Code of Conduct.