Chapter 21. ConfigMaps
21.1. Overview
Many applications require configuration using some combination of configuration files, command line arguments, and environment variables. These configuration artifacts should be decoupled from image content in order to keep containerized applications portable.
The ConfigMap
object provides mechanisms to inject containers with configuration data while keeping containers agnostic of OpenShift Container Platform. A ConfigMap
can be used to store fine-grained information like individual properties or coarse-grained information like entire configuration files or JSON blobs.
The ConfigMap
API object holds key-value pairs of configuration data that can be consumed in pods or used to store configuration data for system components such as controllers. ConfigMap
is similar to secrets, but designed to more conveniently support working with strings that do not contain sensitive information.
For example:
ConfigMap Object Definition
kind: ConfigMap apiVersion: v1 metadata: creationTimestamp: 2016-02-18T19:14:38Z name: example-config namespace: default data: 1 example.property.1: hello example.property.2: world example.property.file: |- property.1=value-1 property.2=value-2 property.3=value-3 binaryData: bar: L3Jvb3QvMTAw 2
You can use the binaryData
field when you create a configmap from a file.
Configuration data can be consumed in pods in a variety of ways. A ConfigMap
can be used to:
- Populate the value of environment variables.
- Set command-line arguments in a container.
- Populate configuration files in a volume.
Both users and system components may store configuration data in a ConfigMap
.
21.2. Creating ConfigMaps
You can use the following command to create a ConfigMap
easily from directories, specific files, or literal values:
$ oc create configmap <configmap_name> [options]
The following sections cover the different ways you can create a ConfigMap
.
21.2.1. Creating from Directories
Consider a directory with some files that already contain the data with which you want to populate a ConfigMap
:
$ ls example-files game.properties ui.properties $ cat example-files/game.properties enemies=aliens lives=3 enemies.cheat=true enemies.cheat.level=noGoodRotten secret.code.passphrase=UUDDLRLRBABAS secret.code.allowed=true secret.code.lives=30 $ cat example-files/ui.properties color.good=purple color.bad=yellow allow.textmode=true how.nice.to.look=fairlyNice
You can use the following command to create a ConfigMap
holding the content of each file in this directory:
$ oc create configmap game-config \ --from-file=example-files/
When the --from-file
option points to a directory, each file directly in that directory is used to populate a key in the ConfigMap
, where the name of the key is the file name, and the value of the key is the content of the file.
For example, the above command creates the following ConfigMap
:
$ oc describe configmaps game-config Name: game-config Namespace: default Labels: <none> Annotations: <none> Data game.properties: 121 bytes ui.properties: 83 bytes
You can see the two keys in the map are created from the file names in the directory specified in the command. Because the content of those keys may be large, the output of oc describe
only shows the names of the keys and their sizes.
If you want to see the values of the keys, you can oc get
the object with the -o
option:
$ oc get configmaps game-config -o yaml apiVersion: v1 data: game.properties: |- enemies=aliens lives=3 enemies.cheat=true enemies.cheat.level=noGoodRotten secret.code.passphrase=UUDDLRLRBABAS secret.code.allowed=true secret.code.lives=30 ui.properties: | color.good=purple color.bad=yellow allow.textmode=true how.nice.to.look=fairlyNice kind: ConfigMap metadata: creationTimestamp: 2016-02-18T18:34:05Z name: game-config namespace: default resourceVersion: "407"- selflink: /api/v1/namespaces/default/configmaps/game-config uid: 30944725-d66e-11e5-8cd0-68f728db1985
21.2.2. Creating from Files
You can also pass the --from-file
option with a specific file, and pass it multiple times to the CLI. The following yields equivalent results to the Creating from Directories example:
If you create a configmap from a file, you can include files containing non-UTF8 data will be placed in this new field without corrupting the non-UTF8 data. OpenShift Container Platform detects binary files and transparently encodes the file as MIME. On the server, the MIME payload is decoded and stored without corrupting the data.
Create the
ConfigMap
specifying a specific file:$ oc create configmap game-config-2 \ --from-file=example-files/game.properties \ --from-file=example-files/ui.properties
Verify the results:
$ oc get configmaps game-config-2 -o yaml apiVersion: v1 data: game.properties: |- enemies=aliens lives=3 enemies.cheat=true enemies.cheat.level=noGoodRotten secret.code.passphrase=UUDDLRLRBABAS secret.code.allowed=true secret.code.lives=30 ui.properties: | color.good=purple color.bad=yellow allow.textmode=true how.nice.to.look=fairlyNice kind: ConfigMap metadata: creationTimestamp: 2016-02-18T18:52:05Z name: game-config-2 namespace: default resourceVersion: "516" selflink: /api/v1/namespaces/default/configmaps/game-config-2 uid: b4952dc3-d670-11e5-8cd0-68f728db1985
You can also set the key to use for an individual file with the --from-file
option by passing an expression of key=value
. For example:
Create the
ConfigMap
specifying a key-value pair:$ oc create configmap game-config-3 \ --from-file=game-special-key=example-files/game.properties
Verify the results:
$ oc get configmaps game-config-3 -o yaml apiVersion: v1 data: game-special-key: |- enemies=aliens lives=3 enemies.cheat=true enemies.cheat.level=noGoodRotten secret.code.passphrase=UUDDLRLRBABAS secret.code.allowed=true secret.code.lives=30 kind: ConfigMap metadata: creationTimestamp: 2016-02-18T18:54:22Z name: game-config-3 namespace: default resourceVersion: "530" selflink: /api/v1/namespaces/default/configmaps/game-config-3 uid: 05f8da22-d671-11e5-8cd0-68f728db1985
21.2.3. Creating from Literal Values
You can also supply literal values for a ConfigMap
. The --from-literal
option takes a key=value
syntax that allows literal values to be supplied directly on the command line:
Create the
ConfigMap
specifying a literal value:$ oc create configmap special-config \ --from-literal=special.how=very \ --from-literal=special.type=charm
Verify the results:
$ oc get configmaps special-config -o yaml apiVersion: v1 data: special.how: very special.type: charm kind: ConfigMap metadata: creationTimestamp: 2016-02-18T19:14:38Z name: special-config namespace: default resourceVersion: "651" selflink: /api/v1/namespaces/default/configmaps/special-config uid: dadce046-d673-11e5-8cd0-68f728db1985
21.3. Use Cases: Consuming ConfigMaps in Pods
The following sections describe some uses cases when consuming ConfigMap
objects in pods.
21.3.1. Consuming in Environment Variables
ConfigMaps
can be used to populate individual environment variables or can populate environment variables from all keys that form valid environment variable names. As an example, consider the following ConfigMaps
:
ConfigMap with two environment variables
apiVersion: v1 kind: ConfigMap metadata: name: special-config 1 namespace: default data: special.how: very 2 special.type: charm 3
ConfigMap with one environment variable
apiVersion: v1 kind: ConfigMap metadata: name: env-config 1 namespace: default data: log_level: INFO 2
You can consume the keys of this ConfigMap
in a pod using configMapKeyRef
sections:
Sample pod specification configured to inject specific environment variables
apiVersion: v1 kind: Pod metadata: name: dapi-test-pod spec: containers: - name: test-container image: gcr.io/google_containers/busybox command: [ "/bin/sh", "-c", "env" ] env: 1 - name: SPECIAL_LEVEL_KEY valueFrom: configMapKeyRef: name: special-config 2 key: special.how 3 - name: SPECIAL_TYPE_KEY valueFrom: configMapKeyRef: name: special-config 4 key: special.type 5 optional: true 6 envFrom: 7 - configMapRef: name: env-config 8 restartPolicy: Never
- 1
- Stanza to pull the specified environment variables from a
ConfigMap
. - 2 4
- Name of the
ConfigMap
to pull specific environment variables from. - 3 5
- Environment variable to pull from the
ConfigMap
. - 6
- Makes the environment variable optional. As optional, the pod will be started even if the specified
ConfigMap
and keys do not exist. - 7
- Stanza to pull all environment variables from a
ConfigMap
. - 8
- Name of the
ConfigMap
to pull all environment variables.
When this pod is run, its output will include the following lines:
SPECIAL_LEVEL_KEY=very log_level=INFO
21.3.2. Setting Command-line Arguments
A ConfigMap
can also be used to set the value of the command or arguments in a container. This is accomplished using the Kubernetes substitution syntax $(VAR_NAME)
. Consider the following ConfigMaps
:
apiVersion: v1 kind: ConfigMap metadata: name: special-config namespace: default data: special.how: very special.type: charm
To inject values into the command line, you must consume the keys you want to use as environment variables, as in the Consuming in Environment Variables use case. Then you can refer to them in a container’s command using the $(VAR_NAME)
syntax.
Sample pod specification configured to inject specific environment variables
apiVersion: v1 kind: Pod metadata: name: dapi-test-pod spec: containers: - name: test-container image: gcr.io/google_containers/busybox command: [ "/bin/sh", "-c", "echo $(SPECIAL_LEVEL_KEY) $(SPECIAL_TYPE_KEY)" ] env: - name: SPECIAL_LEVEL_KEY valueFrom: configMapKeyRef: name: special-config key: special.how - name: SPECIAL_TYPE_KEY valueFrom: configMapKeyRef: name: special-config key: special.type restartPolicy: Never
When this pod is run, the output from the test-container container will be:
very charm
21.3.3. Consuming in Volumes
A ConfigMap
can also be consumed in volumes. Returning again to the following example ConfigMap
:
apiVersion: v1 kind: ConfigMap metadata: name: special-config namespace: default data: special.how: very special.type: charm
You have a couple different options for consuming this ConfigMap
in a volume. The most basic way is to populate the volume with files where the key is the file name and the content of the file is the value of the key:
apiVersion: v1 kind: Pod metadata: name: dapi-test-pod spec: containers: - name: test-container image: gcr.io/google_containers/busybox command: [ "/bin/sh", "cat", "/etc/config/special.how" ] volumeMounts: - name: config-volume mountPath: /etc/config volumes: - name: config-volume configMap: name: special-config restartPolicy: Never
When this pod is run, the output will be:
very
You can also control the paths within the volume where ConfigMap
keys are projected:
apiVersion: v1 kind: Pod metadata: name: dapi-test-pod spec: containers: - name: test-container image: gcr.io/google_containers/busybox command: [ "/bin/sh", "cat", "/etc/config/path/to/special-key" ] volumeMounts: - name: config-volume mountPath: /etc/config volumes: - name: config-volume configMap: name: special-config items: - key: special.how path: path/to/special-key restartPolicy: Never
When this pod is run, the output will be:
very
21.4. Example: Configuring Redis
For a real-world example, you can configure Redis using a ConfigMap
. To inject Redis with the recommended configuration for using Redis as a cache, the Redis configuration file should contain the following:
maxmemory 2mb maxmemory-policy allkeys-lru
If your configuration file is located at example-files/redis/redis-config, create a ConfigMap
with it:
Create the
ConfigMap
specifying the configuration file:$ oc create configmap example-redis-config \ --from-file=example-files/redis/redis-config
Verify the results:
$ oc get configmap example-redis-config -o yaml apiVersion: v1 data: redis-config: | maxmemory 2mb maxmemory-policy allkeys-lru kind: ConfigMap metadata: creationTimestamp: 2016-04-06T05:53:07Z name: example-redis-config namespace: default resourceVersion: "2985" selflink: /api/v1/namespaces/default/configmaps/example-redis-config uid: d65739c1-fbbb-11e5-8a72-68f728db1985
Now, create a pod that uses this ConfigMap
:
Create a pod definition like the following and save it to a file, for example redis-pod.yaml:
apiVersion: v1 kind: Pod metadata: name: redis spec: containers: - name: redis image: kubernetes/redis:v1 env: - name: MASTER value: "true" ports: - containerPort: 6379 resources: limits: cpu: "0.1" volumeMounts: - mountPath: /redis-master-data name: data - mountPath: /redis-master name: config volumes: - name: data emptyDir: {} - name: config configMap: name: example-redis-config items: - key: redis-config path: redis.conf
Create the pod:
$ oc create -f redis-pod.yaml
The newly-created pod has a ConfigMap
volume that places the redis-config key of the example-redis-config ConfigMap
into a file called redis.conf. This volume is mounted into the /redis-master directory in the Redis container, placing our configuration file at /redis-master/redis.conf, which is where the image looks for the Redis configuration file for the master.
If you oc exec
into this pod and run the redis-cli
tool, you can check that the configuration was applied correctly:
$ oc exec -it redis redis-cli 127.0.0.1:6379> CONFIG GET maxmemory 1) "maxmemory" 2) "2097152" 127.0.0.1:6379> CONFIG GET maxmemory-policy 1) "maxmemory-policy" 2) "allkeys-lru"
21.5. Restrictions
A ConfigMap
must be created before they are consumed in pods. Controllers can be written to tolerate missing configuration data; consult individual components configured via ConfigMap
on a case-by-case basis.
ConfigMap
objects reside in a project. They can only be referenced by pods in the same project.
The Kubelet only supports use of a ConfigMap
for pods it gets from the API server. This includes any pods created using the CLI, or indirectly from a replication controller. It does not include pods created using the OpenShift Container Platform node’s --manifest-url
flag, its --config
flag, or its REST API (these are not common ways to create pods).