Dieser Inhalt ist in der von Ihnen ausgewählten Sprache nicht verfügbar.

Chapter 14. Using a sink binding with Service Mesh


You can use a sink binding with Service Mesh.

14.1. Configuring a sink binding with Service Mesh

This procedure describes how to configure a sink binding with Service Mesh.

Prerequisites

  • You have set up integration of Service Mesh and Serverless.

Procedure

  1. Create a Service object in a namespace that is member of the ServiceMeshMemberRoll:

    Example event-display-service.yaml configuration file

    apiVersion: serving.knative.dev/v1
    kind: Service
    metadata:
      name: event-display
      namespace: <namespace> 1
    spec:
      template:
        metadata:
          annotations:
            sidecar.istio.io/inject: "true" 2
            sidecar.istio.io/rewriteAppHTTPProbers: "true"
        spec:
          containers:
          - image: quay.io/openshift-knative/knative-eventing-sources-event-display:latest

    1
    A namespace that is a member of the ServiceMeshMemberRoll.
    2
    This annotation injects Service Mesh sidecars into the Knative service pods.
  2. Apply the Service object:

    $ oc apply -f event-display-service.yaml
  3. Create a SinkBinding object:

    Example heartbeat-sinkbinding.yaml configuration file

    apiVersion: sources.knative.dev/v1alpha1
    kind: SinkBinding
    metadata:
      name: bind-heartbeat
      namespace: <namespace> 1
    spec:
      subject:
        apiVersion: batch/v1
        kind: Job 2
        selector:
          matchLabels:
            app: heartbeat-cron
    
      sink:
        ref:
          apiVersion: serving.knative.dev/v1
          kind: Service
          name: event-display

    1
    A namespace that is part of the ServiceMeshMemberRoll.
    2
    Bind any Job with the label app: heartbeat-cron to the event sink.
  4. Apply the SinkBinding object:

    $ oc apply -f heartbeat-sinkbinding.yaml
  5. Create a CronJob object:

    Example heartbeat-cronjob.yaml configuration file

    apiVersion: batch/v1
    kind: CronJob
    metadata:
      name: heartbeat-cron
      namespace: <namespace> 1
    spec:
      # Run every minute
      schedule: "* * * * *"
      jobTemplate:
        metadata:
          labels:
            app: heartbeat-cron
            bindings.knative.dev/include: "true"
        spec:
          template:
            metadata:
              annotations:
                sidecar.istio.io/inject: "true" 2
                sidecar.istio.io/rewriteAppHTTPProbers: "true"
            spec:
              restartPolicy: Never
              containers:
                - name: single-heartbeat
                  image: quay.io/openshift-knative/heartbeats:latest
                  args:
                    - --period=1
                  env:
                    - name: ONE_SHOT
                      value: "true"
                    - name: POD_NAME
                      valueFrom:
                        fieldRef:
                          fieldPath: metadata.name
                    - name: POD_NAMESPACE
                      valueFrom:
                        fieldRef:
                          fieldPath: metadata.namespace

    1
    A namespace that is part of the ServiceMeshMemberRoll.
    2
    Inject Service Mesh sidecars into the CronJob pods.
  6. Apply the CronJob object:

    $ oc apply -f heartbeat-cronjob.yaml
  7. Optional: Verify that the events were sent to the Knative event sink by looking at the message dumper function logs:

    Example command

    $ oc logs $(oc get pod -o name | grep event-display) -c user-container

    Example output

    ☁️  cloudevents.Event
    Validation: valid
    Context Attributes,
      specversion: 1.0
      type: dev.knative.eventing.samples.heartbeat
      source: https://knative.dev/eventing-contrib/cmd/heartbeats/#event-test/mypod
      id: 2b72d7bf-c38f-4a98-a433-608fbcdd2596
      time: 2019-10-18T15:23:20.809775386Z
      contenttype: application/json
    Extensions,
      beats: true
      heart: yes
      the: 42
    Data,
      {
        "id": 1,
        "label": ""
      }

Red Hat logoGithubRedditYoutubeTwitter

Lernen

Testen, kaufen und verkaufen

Communitys

Über Red Hat Dokumentation

Wir helfen Red Hat Benutzern, mit unseren Produkten und Diensten innovativ zu sein und ihre Ziele zu erreichen – mit Inhalten, denen sie vertrauen können.

Mehr Inklusion in Open Source

Red Hat hat sich verpflichtet, problematische Sprache in unserem Code, unserer Dokumentation und unseren Web-Eigenschaften zu ersetzen. Weitere Einzelheiten finden Sie in Red Hat Blog.

Über Red Hat

Wir liefern gehärtete Lösungen, die es Unternehmen leichter machen, plattform- und umgebungsübergreifend zu arbeiten, vom zentralen Rechenzentrum bis zum Netzwerkrand.

© 2024 Red Hat, Inc.