Kubewatch
kubewatch
is a Kubernetes watcher that currently publishes notification to Slack. Run it in your k8s cluster, and you will get event notifications in a slack channel.
Run kubewatch in a Kubernetes cluster
In order to run kubewatch in a Kubernetes cluster quickly, the easiest way is for you to create a ConfigMap to hold kubewatch configuration. It contains a SLACK API token, channel.
An example is provided at kubewatch-configmap.yaml
, do not forget to update your own slack channel and token parameters. Alternatively, you could use secrets.
Create k8s configmap:
$ kubectl create -f kubewatch-configmap.yaml
Create the Pod directly, or create your own deployment:
$ kubectl create -f kubewatch.yaml
A kubewatch
container will be created along with kubectl
sidecar container in order to reach the API server.
Once the Pod is running, you will start seeing Kubernetes events in your configured Slack channel. Here is a screenshot:
To modify what notifications you get, update the kubewatch
ConfigMap and turn on and off (true/false) resources:
resource:
deployment: false
replicationcontroller: false
replicaset: false
daemonset: false
services: true
pod: true
Building
Building with go
- you need go v1.5 or later.
- if your working copy is not in your
GOPATH
, you need to set it accordingly.
$ go build -o kubewatch main.go
You can also use the Makefile directly:
$ make build
Building with Docker
Buiding builder image:
$ make builder-image
Using the kubewatch-builder
image to build kubewatch
binary:
$ make binary-image
$ docker images
REPOSITORY TAG IMAGE ID CREATED SIZE
kubewatch latest f1ade726c6e2 31 seconds ago 33.08 MB
kubewatch-builder latest 6b2d325a3b88 About a minute ago 514.2 MB
Download kubewatch package
$ go get -u github.com/skippbox/kubewatch
Configuration
Kubewatch supports config
command for configuration. Config file will be saved at $HOME/.kubewatch.yaml
Configure slack
$ kubewatch config slack --channel <slack_channel> --token <slack_token>
Configure resources to be watched
// rc, po and svc will be watched
$ kubewatch config resource --rc --po --svc
// only svc will be watched
$ kubewatch config resource --svc
Environment variables
You have an altenative choice to set your SLACK token, channel via environment variables:
$ export KW_SLACK_TOKEN='XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX'
$ export KW_SLACK_CHANNEL='#channel_name'
Run kubewatch locally
$ kubewatch