Files
charts/bitnami/kubewatch

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.

TL;DR;

$ helm repo add bitnami https://charts.bitnami.com/bitnami
$ helm install my-release bitnami/kubewatch

Introduction

This chart bootstraps a kubewatch deployment on a Kubernetes cluster using the Helm package manager.

Prerequisites

  • Kubernetes 1.12+
  • Helm 2.12+ or Helm 3.0-beta3+

Installing the Chart

To install the chart with the release name my-release:

$ helm install my-release bitnami/kubewatch

The command deploys kubewatch on the Kubernetes cluster in the default configuration. The Parameters section lists the parameters that can be configured during installation.

Uninstalling the Chart

To uninstall/delete the my-release deployment:

$ helm delete my-release

The command removes all the Kubernetes components associated with the chart and deletes the release.

Parameters

The following table lists the configurable parameters of the kubewatch chart and their default values.

Parameter Description Default
global.imageRegistry Global Docker image registry nil
global.imagePullSecrets Global Docker registry secret names as an array [] (does not add image pull secrets to deployed pods)
affinity node/pod affinities None
image.registry Image registry docker.io
image.repository Image repository bitnami/kubewatch
image.tag Image tag {VERSION}
image.pullPolicy Image pull policy Always
nameOverride String to partially override kubewatch.fullname template with a string (will prepend the release name) nil
fullnameOverride String to fully override kubewatch.fullname template with a string nil
nodeSelector node labels for pod assignment {}
podAnnotations annotations to add to each pod {}
podLabels additional labesl to add to each pod {}
replicaCount desired number of pods 1
rbac.create If true, create & use RBAC resources true
serviceAccount.create If true, create a serviceAccount true
serviceAccount.name existing ServiceAccount to use (ignored if rbac.create=true) ``
resources pod resource requests & limits {}
slack.enabled Enable Slack notifications true
slack.channel Slack channel to notify ""
slack.token Slack API token ""
hipchat.enabled Enable HipChat notifications false
hipchat.url HipChat URL ""
hipchat.room HipChat room to notify ""
hipchat.token HipChat token ""
mattermost.enabled Enable Mattermost notifications false
mattermost.channel Mattermost channel to notify ""
mattermost.username Mattermost user to notify ""
mattermost.url Mattermost URL ""
flock.enabled Enable Flock notifications false
flock.url Flock URL ""
webhook.enabled Enable Webhook notifications false
webhook.url Webhook URL ""
tolerations List of node taints to tolerate (requires Kubernetes >= 1.6) []
namespaceToWatch namespace to watch, leave it empty for watching all ""
resourcesToWatch list of resources which kubewatch should watch and notify slack {pod: true, deployment: true}
resourcesToWatch.pod watch changes to Pods true
resourcesToWatch.deployment watch changes to Deployments true
resourcesToWatch.replicationcontroller watch changes to ReplicationControllers false
resourcesToWatch.replicaset watch changes to ReplicaSets false
resourcesToWatch.daemonset watch changes to DaemonSets false
resourcesToWatch.services watch changes to Services false
resourcesToWatch.job watch changes to Jobs false
resourcesToWatch.persistentvolume watch changes to PersistentVolumes false

Specify each parameter using the --set key=value[,key=value] argument to helm install. For example,

$ helm install my-release bitnami/kubewatch \
  --set=slack.channel="#bots",slack.token="XXXX-XXXX-XXXX"

Alternatively, a YAML file that specifies the values for the above parameters can be provided while installing the chart. For example,

$ helm install my-release -f values.yaml bitnami/kubewatch

Tip

: You can use the default values.yaml

Configuration and installation details

Rolling VS Immutable tags

It is strongly recommended to use immutable tags in a production environment. This ensures your deployment does not change automatically if the same tag is updated with a different image.

Bitnami will release a new chart updating its containers if a new version of the main container, significant changes, or critical vulnerabilities exist.

Create a Slack bot

Open https://my.slack.com/services/new/bot to create a new Slack bot. The API token can be found on the edit page (it starts with xoxb-).

Invite the Bot to your channel by typing /join @name_of_your_bot in the Slack message area.

Upgrading

To 1.0.0

Helm performs a lookup for the object based on its group (apps), version (v1), and kind (Deployment). Also known as its GroupVersionKind, or GVK. Changing the GVK is considered a compatibility breaker from Kubernetes' point of view, so you cannot "upgrade" those objects to the new GVK in-place. Earlier versions of Helm 3 did not perform the lookup correctly which has since been fixed to match the spec.

In https://github.com/helm/charts/pull/17285 the apiVersion of the deployment resources was updated to apps/v1 in tune with the api's deprecated, resulting in compatibility breakage.

This major version signifies this change.