-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 26
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Patch existing resources by matching labels, not resource template name #20
Comments
Perhaps something like this could work: apiVersion: apiextensions.crossplane.io/v1
kind: Composition
metadata:
name: dynamo-with-bucket
spec:
compositeTypeRef:
apiVersion: database.example.com/v1alpha1
kind: NoSQL
# This pipeliene renders some Go templates, then passes them to P&T
pipeline:
- step: render-go-templates
functionRef:
name: function-go-templates
input: {} # Omitted for brevity :)
- step: patch-and-transform
functionRef:
name: function-patch-and-transform
input:
apiVersion: pt.fn.crossplane.io/v1beta1
kind: Resources
# This can be specified instead of or in addition to the
# resources array. It doesn't have base templates. Instead it
# only matches existing resources.
matchResources:
# Do we need a 'name' field? A map key would be helpful, but
# name could easily be misunderstood to mean resource name.
- match:
apiVersion: example.org/v1
kind: SomeComposedResource
labels:
# This isn't a special label, just a suggested convention.
crossplane.io/composition-resource-type: patch-me
patches:
- type: FromCompositeFieldPath
fromFieldPath: "location"
toFieldPath: "spec.forProvider.region"
transforms:
- type: map
map:
EU: "eu-north-1"
US: "us-east-2" |
I personally kinda prefer this API that extends the existing apiVersion: apiextensions.crossplane.io/v1
kind: Composition
metadata:
name: dynamo-with-bucket
spec:
compositeTypeRef:
apiVersion: database.example.com/v1alpha1
kind: NoSQL
# This pipeliene renders some Go templates, then passes them to P&T
pipeline:
- step: render-go-templates
functionRef:
name: function-go-templates
input: {} # Omitted for brevity :)
- step: patch-and-transform
functionRef:
name: function-patch-and-transform
input:
apiVersion: pt.fn.crossplane.io/v1beta1
kind: Resources
resources:
- name: match-some-existing-resources
# What would the default type be? The default behaviour is
# currently to either render the base template, or if there is
# none to try patch a resource with the same name.
type: MatchResources
match:
apiVersion: example.org/v1
kind: SomeComposedResource
labels:
# This isn't a special label, just a suggested convention.
crossplane.io/composition-resource-type: patch-me
patches:
- type: FromCompositeFieldPath
fromFieldPath: "location"
toFieldPath: "spec.forProvider.region"
transforms:
- type: map
map:
EU: "eu-north-1"
US: "us-east-2" |
It makes sense in the case of generated resources higher up in the pipeline. Would it make sense to also support something like I wonder if it makes sense to have an alpha channel for f-p-and-t where users can experiment. |
Yeah that sounds like a good idea. |
A good point was raised on Slack - how would this work with a |
Hey folks, is there a possibility that this feature will be implemented? It would be great to have it. |
I'm not planning to work on it, but if someone wants to give it a shot I can review. |
One neat thing about
function-patch-and-transform
is that you can patch composed resources that are produced by another Function, earlier in the pipeline. For example here we P&T some resources produced byfunction-go-templates
:One shortcoming with this is that you have to know the names (as in composition template names, not object metadata names) of the composed resources some other function produced in order to patch them.
@vfarcic noted that it would be useful to be able to patch resources without knowing their name in advance. Consider for example a Function that produced an arbitrary number of resources, where the number of resources was derived from an XR field. It wouldn't be possible to know what (or more specifically how many) names that Function would produce.
I think this would be pretty easy to implement if we can find a good API to describe it.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: