7c440409e3
Signed-off-by: Andras Timar <andras.timar@collabora.com> Change-Id: I0d0f553a11e1a78d4160cdd0fd8c5ae1c959399a |
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grafana_dashboards | ||
templates | ||
Chart.yaml | ||
README.md | ||
values.yaml |
Collabora Online for Kubernetes
In order for Collaborative Editing and copy/paste to function correctly on kubernetes, it is vital to ensure that all users editing the same document and all the clipboard request end up being served by the same pod. Using the WOPI protocol, the https URL includes a unique identifier (WOPISrc) for use with this document. Thus load balancing can be done by using WOPISrc -- ensuring that all URLs that contain the same WOPISrc are sent to the same pod.
Deploying Collabora Online in Kubernetes
-
Install helm
-
Setting up Kubernetes Ingress Controller
A. Nginx:
Install Nginx Ingress Controller
B. HAProxy:
Install HAProxy Ingress Controller
Note:
Openshift uses minimized version of HAproxy called Router that doesn't support all functionality of HAProxy but for COOL we need advance annotations Therefore it is recommended deploy HAproxy Kubernetes Ingress in
collabora
namespace
-
Create an
my_values.yaml
(if your setup differs e.g. take an look in thenvalues.yaml ./collabora-online/values.yaml
) of the helmchartA. HAproxy:
replicaCount: 3 ingress: enabled: true className: "haproxy" annotations: haproxy.org/timeout-tunnel: "3600s" haproxy.org/backend-config-snippet: | balance url_param WOPISrc check_post hash-type consistent hosts: - host: chart-example.local paths: - path: / pathType: ImplementationSpecific image: tag: "latest" autoscaling: enabled: false collabora: aliasgroups: - host: "https://example.integrator.com:443" extra_params: --o:ssl.enable=false --o:ssl.termination=true resources: limits: cpu: "1800m" memory: "2000Mi" requests: cpu: "1800m" memory: "2000Mi"
B. Nginx:
replicaCount: 3 ingress: enabled: true className: "nginx" annotations: nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/upstream-hash-by: "$arg_WOPISrc" nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/proxy-body-size: "0" nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/proxy-read-timeout: "600" nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/proxy-send-timeout: "600" hosts: - host: chart-example.local paths: - path: / pathType: ImplementationSpecific image: tag: "latest" autoscaling: enabled: false collabora: aliasgroups: - host: "https://example.integrator.com:443" extra_params: --o:ssl.enable=false --o:ssl.termination=true resources: limits: cpu: "1800m" memory: "2000Mi" requests: cpu: "1800m" memory: "2000Mi"
Note:
-
Horizontal Pod Autoscaling(HPA) is disabled for now. Because after scaling it breaks the collaborative editing and copy/paste Therefore please set replicaCount as per your needs
-
If you have multiple host and aliases setup set aliasgroups in
my_values.yaml
:collabora: - host: "<protocol>://<host-name>:<port>" # if there are no aliases you can ignore the below line aliases: ["<protocol>://<its-first-alias>:<port>, <protocol>://<its-second-alias>:<port>"] # more host and aliases list is possible
-
Specify
server_name
when the hostname is not reachable directly for example behind reverse-proxycollabora: server_name: <hostname>:<port>
-
In Openshift , it is recommended to use HAproxy deployment instead of default router. And add
className
in ingress block so that Openshift uses HAProxy Ingress Controller instead ofRouter
:ingress: className: "haproxy"
-
-
Install helm-chart using below command, it should deploy the collabora-online
helm repo add collabora https://collaboraonline.github.io/online/ helm install --create-namespace --namespace collabora collabora-online collabora/collabora-online -f my_values.yaml
-
Follow only if you are using
NodePort
service type in HAProxy and/or using minikube to setup, otherwise skipA. HAProxy service is deployed as NodePort so we can access it with node's ip address. To get node ip
minikube ip
Example output:
192.168.0.106
B. Each container port is mapped to a
NodePort
port via theService
object. To find those portskubectl get svc --namespace=haproxy-controller
Example output:
|----------------|---------|--------------|------------|------------------------------------------| |NAME |TYPE |CLUSTER-IP |EXTERNAL-IP |PORT(S) | |----------------|---------|--------------|------------|------------------------------------------| |haproxy-ingress |NodePort |10.108.214.98 |<none> |80:30536/TCP,443:31821/TCP,1024:30480/TCP | |----------------|---------|--------------|------------|------------------------------------------|
In this instance, the following ports were mapped:
- Container port 80 to NodePort 30536
- Container port 443 to NodePort 31821
- Container port 1024 to NodePort 30480
-
Additional step if deploying on minikube for testing:
-
Get minikube ip:
minikube ip
Example output:
192.168.0.106
-
Add hostname to
/etc/hosts
192.168.0.106 chart-example.local
-
To check if everything is setup correctly you can run:
curl -I -H 'Host: chart-example.local' 'http://192.168.0.106:30536/'
It should return a similar output as below:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK last-modified: Tue, 18 May 2021 10:46:29 user-agent: COOLWSD WOPI Agent 6.4.8 content-length: 2 content-type: text/plain
-
Kubernetes cluster monitoring
-
Install kube-prometheus-stack, a collection of Grafana dashboards, and Prometheus rules combined with documentation and scripts to provide easy to operate end-to-end Kubernetes cluster monitoring with Prometheus using the Prometheus Operator.
-
Enable prometheus service monitor, rules and grafana in your
my_values.yaml
prometheus: servicemonitor: enabled: true labels: release: "kube-prometheus-stack" rules: enabled: true # will deploy alert rules additionalLabels: release: "kube-prometheus-stack" grafana: dashboards: enabled: true # will deploy default dashboards
Note:
Use
kube-prometheus-stack
as release name when installing kube-prometheus-stack helm chart because we have passedrelease=kube-prometheus-stack
label in ourmy_values.yaml
. For Grafana Dashboards you may need to enable scan in correct namespaces (or ALL), enabled bysidecar.dashboards.searchNamespace
in Helmchart of grafana (which is part of PrometheusOperator, sografana.sidecar.dashboards.searchNamespace
)
Dynamic/Remote configuration in kubernetes
For big setups, you may not want to restart every pod to modify WOPI hosts, therefore it is possible to setup an additional webserver to serve a ConfigMap for using Remote/Dynamic Configuration
collabora:
env:
- name: remoteconfigurl
value: https://dynconfig.public.example.com/config/config.json
dynamicConfig:
enabled: true
ingress:
enabled: true
annotations:
"cert-manager.io/issuer": letsencrypt-zprod
hosts:
- host: "dynconfig.public.example.com"
tls:
- secretName: "collabora-online-dynconfig-tls"
hosts:
- "dynconfig.public.example.com"
configuration:
kind: "configuration"
storage:
wopi:
alias_groups:
groups:
- host: "https://domain1\\.xyz\\.abc\\.com/"
allow: true
- host: "https://domain2\\.pqr\\.def\\.com/"
allow: true
aliases:
- "https://domain2\\.ghi\\.leno\\.de/"
Note:
In current state of COOL remoteconfigurl for Remote/DynamicConfiguration only uses HTTPS. see here in wsd/COOLWSD.cpp
Useful commands to check what is happening
Where is this pods, are they ready?
kubectl -n collabora get pod
example output :
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
collabora-online-5fb4869564-dnzmk 1/1 Running 0 28h
collabora-online-5fb4869564-fb4cf 1/1 Running 0 28h
collabora-online-5fb4869564-wbrv2 1/1 Running 0 28h
What is the outside host that multiple coolwsd servers actually answering?
kubectl get ingress -n collabora
example output :
|-----------|------------------|--------------------------|------------------------|-------|
| NAMESPACE | NAME | HOSTS | ADDRESS | PORTS |
|-----------|------------------|--------------------------|------------------------|-------|
| collabora | collabora-online |chart-example.local | | 80 |
|-----------|------------------|--------------------------|------------------------|-------|
To uninstall the helm chart
helm uninstall collabora-online -n collabora