Tasks

Documentation for Kubernetes v1.11 is no longer actively maintained. The version you are currently viewing is a static snapshot. For up-to-date documentation, see the latest version.

Edit This Page

Migrate a ThirdPartyResource to CustomResourceDefinition

This page shows how to migrate data stored in a ThirdPartyResource (TPR) to a CustomResourceDefinition (CRD).

Kubernetes does not automatically migrate existing TPRs. This is due to API changes introduced as part of graduating to beta under a new name and API group. Instead, both TPR and CRD are available and operate independently in Kubernetes 1.7. Users must migrate each TPR one by one to preserve their data before upgrading to Kubernetes 1.8.

The simplest way to migrate is to stop all clients that use a given TPR, then delete the TPR and start from scratch with a CRD. This page describes an optional process that eases the transition by migrating existing TPR data for you on a best-effort basis.

Before you begin

You need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl command-line tool must be configured to communicate with your cluster. If you do not already have a cluster, you can create one by using Minikube, or you can use one of these Kubernetes playgrounds:

To check the version, enter kubectl version.

Migrate TPR data

  1. Rewrite the TPR definition

    Clients that access the REST API for your custom resource should not need any changes. However, you will need to rewrite your TPR definition as a CRD.

    Make sure you specify values for the CRD fields that match what the server used to fill in for you with TPR.

    For example, if your ThirdPartyResource looks like this:

    ```yaml apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1 kind: ThirdPartyResource metadata: name: cron-tab.stable.example.com description: “A specification of a Pod to run on a cron style schedule” versions:

    • name: v1 ```

    A matching CustomResourceDefinition could look like this:

    apiVersion: apiextensions.k8s.io/v1beta1
    kind: CustomResourceDefinition
    metadata:
      name: crontabs.stable.example.com
    spec:
      scope: Namespaced
      group: stable.example.com
      versions:
        - name: v1
          served: true
          storage: true
      names:
        kind: CronTab
        plural: crontabs
        singular: crontab
  2. Install the CustomResourceDefinition

    While the source TPR is still active, install the matching CRD with kubectl create. Existing TPR data remains accessible because TPRs take precedence over CRDs when both try to serve the same resource.

    After you create the CRD, make sure the Established condition goes to True. You can check it with a command like this:

    kubectl get crd -o 'custom-columns=NAME:{.metadata.name},ESTABLISHED:{.status.conditions[?(@.type=="Established")].status}'

    The output should look like this:

    NAME                          ESTABLISHED
    crontabs.stable.example.com   True
  3. Stop all clients that use the TPR

    The API server attempts to prevent TPR data for the resource from changing while it copies objects to the CRD, but it can’t guarantee consistency in all cases, such as with multiple masters. Stopping clients, such as TPR-based custom controllers, helps to avoid inconsistencies in the copied data.

    In addition, clients that watch TPR data do not receive any more events once the migration begins. You must restart them after the migration completes so they start watching CRD data instead.

  4. Back up TPR data

    In case the data migration fails, save a copy of existing data for the resource:

    kubectl get crontabs --all-namespaces -o yaml > crontabs.yaml

    You should also save a copy of the TPR definition if you don’t have one already:

    kubectl get thirdpartyresource cron-tab.stable.example.com -o yaml --export > tpr.yaml
  5. Delete the TPR definition

    Normally, when you delete a TPR definition, the API server tries to clean up any objects stored in that resource. Because a matching CRD exists, the server copies objects to the CRD instead of deleting them.

    kubectl delete thirdpartyresource cron-tab.stable.example.com
  6. Verify the new CRD data

    It can take up to 10 seconds for the TPR controller to notice when you delete the TPR definition and to initiate the migration. The TPR data remains accessible during this time.

    Once the migration completes, the resource begins serving through the CRD. Check that all your objects were correctly copied:

    kubectl get crontabs --all-namespaces -o yaml

    If the copy failed, you can quickly revert to the set of objects that existed just before the migration by recreating the TPR definition:

    kubectl create -f tpr.yaml
  7. Restart clients

    After verifying the CRD data, restart any clients you stopped before the migration, such as custom controllers and other watchers. These clients now access CRD data when they make requests on the same API endpoints that the TPR previously served.

What's next

Analytics

Create an Issue Edit this Page