Deploys nginx
to a Kubernetes cluster, and publicly exposes it to the Internet with an IP address,
using a Kubernetes Service
.
In the gif below we see the experience of deploying this example with pulumi up
. Notice that
Pulumi has an inherent notion of "done-ness" -- Pulumi waits for the IP address to be allocated to
the Service
. Because this example uses the Pulumi concept of stack exports to report this IP
address, in this example we are also able to use curl
to reach the nginx
server.
If you haven't already, follow the steps in Pulumi Installation and Setup and Configuring Pulumi Kubernetes to get setup with Pulumi and Kubernetes.
Now, install dependencies:
npm install
Create a new stack:
$ pulumi stack init
Enter a stack name: exposed-deployment-dev
This example will attempt to expose the nginx
deployment Internet with a Service
of type
LoadBalancer
. Since minikube does not support LoadBalancer
, the application already knows to use
type ClusterIP
instead; all you need to do is to tell it whether you're deploying to minikube:
pulumi config set isMinikube <value>
Perform the deployment:
$ pulumi up
Updating stack 'exposed-deployment-dev'
Performing changes:
Type Name Status Info
+ pulumi:pulumi:Stack exposed-deployment-exposed-deployment-dev created 1 warning
+ ├─ kubernetes:apps:Deployment nginx created
+ └─ kubernetes:core:Service nginx created 2 info messages
Diagnostics:
kubernetes:core:Service: nginx
info: ✅ Service 'nginx-rn6uipeg' successfully created endpoint objects
info: ✅ Service has been allocated an IP
---outputs:---
frontendIp: "35.226.79.225"
info: 3 changes performed:
+ 3 resources created
Update duration: 46.555593397s
Permalink: https://app.pulumi.com/hausdorff/exposed-deployment-dev/updates/1
We can see here in the ---outputs:---
section that Wordpress was allocated a public IP, in this
case 35.226.79.225
. It is exported with a stack output variable, frontendIp
. We can use curl
and grep
to retrieve the <title>
of the site the proxy points at.
Note: minikube does not support type
LoadBalancer
; if you are deploying to minikube, make sure to runkubectl port-forward svc/frontend 8080:80
to forward the cluster port to the local machine and access the service vialocalhost:8080
.
$ curl -sL $(pulumi stack output frontendIp) | grep "<title>"
<title>Welcome to nginx!</title>
Now that nginx
is deployed and exposed to the internet with an IP, try playing around with the
example!
If we change the nginx
image to nginx:1.16-alpine
, we can run pulumi preview --diff
and see
this change reported to us:
Notice also that if you provide an image that does not exist, Pulumi will report errors as it sees them. You should see something similar in principle to this: