Chapter 1. Deploying a Spring Boot application with Argo CD
With Argo CD, you can deploy your applications to the OpenShift cluster either by using the Argo CD dashboard or by using the oc
tool.
1.1. Prerequisites
- Red Hat OpenShift GitOps is installed in your cluster.
- Logged into Argo CD instance.
1.2. Creating an application by using the Argo CD dashboard
Argo CD provides a dashboard which allows you to create applications.
Procedure
- In the Argo CD dashboard, click NEW APP to add a new Argo CD application.
For this workflow, create a spring-petclinic application with the following configurations:
- Application Name
-
spring-petclinic
- Project
-
default
- Sync Policy
-
Automatic
- Repository URL
-
https://github.com/redhat-developer/openshift-gitops-getting-started
- Revision
-
HEAD
- Path
-
app
- Destination
-
https://kubernetes.default.svc
- Namespace
-
spring-petclinic
- Click CREATE to create your application.
-
Open the Administrator perspective of the web console and navigate to Administration
Namespaces in the menu on the left. -
Search for and select the namespace, then enter
argocd.argoproj.io/managed-by=openshift-gitops
in the Label field so that the Argo CD instance in theopenshift-gitops
namespace can manage your namespace.
1.3. Creating an application by using the oc
tool
You can create Argo CD applications in your terminal by using the oc
tool.
Procedure
Download the sample application:
$ git clone git@github.com:redhat-developer/openshift-gitops-getting-started.git
Create the application:
$ oc create -f openshift-gitops-getting-started/argo/app.yaml
Run the
oc get
command to review the created application:$ oc get application -n openshift-gitops
Add a label to the namespace your application is deployed in so that the Argo CD instance in the
openshift-gitops
namespace can manage it:$ oc label namespace spring-petclinic argocd.argoproj.io/managed-by=openshift-gitops
1.4. Verifying Argo CD self-healing behavior
Argo CD constantly monitors the state of deployed applications, detects differences between the specified manifests in Git and live changes in the cluster, and then automatically corrects them. This behavior is referred to as self-healing.
You can test and observe the self-healing behavior in Argo CD.
Prerequisites
-
The sample
app-spring-petclinic
application is deployed and configured.
Procedure
-
In the Argo CD dashboard, verify that your application has the
Synced
status. -
Click the
app-spring-petclinic
tile in the Argo CD dashboard to view the application resources that are deployed to the cluster. - In the OpenShift Container Platform web console, navigate to the Developer perspective.
Modify the Spring PetClinic deployment and commit the changes to the
app/
directory of the Git repository. Argo CD will automatically deploy the changes to the cluster.- Fork the OpenShift GitOps getting started repository.
-
In the
deployment.yaml
file, change thefailureThreshold
value to5
. In the deployment cluster, run the following command to verify the changed value of the
failureThreshold
field:$ oc edit deployment spring-petclinic -n spring-petclinic
Test the self-healing behavior by modifying the deployment on the cluster and scaling it up to two pods while watching the application in the OpenShift Container Platform web console.
Run the following command to modify the deployment:
$ oc scale deployment spring-petclinic --replicas 2 -n spring-petclinic
- In the OpenShift Container Platform web console, notice that the deployment scales up to two pods and immediately scales down again to one pod. Argo CD detected a difference from the Git repository and auto-healed the application on the OpenShift Container Platform cluster.
-
In the Argo CD dashboard, click the app-spring-petclinic tile
APP DETAILS EVENTS. The EVENTS tab displays the following events: Argo CD detecting out of sync deployment resources on the cluster and then resyncing the Git repository to correct it.