Skip to main content

@cdk8s/cdktf-resolver

Project description

CDK For Terraform Resolver

The CdkTfResolver is able to resolve any TerraformOutput defined by your CDKTF application. In this example, we create an S3 Bucket with the CDKTF, and pass its (deploy time generated) name as an environment variable to a Kubernetes CronJob resource.

import * as tf from "cdktf";
import * as aws from "@cdktf/provider-aws";
import * as k8s from 'cdk8s';
import * as kplus from 'cdk8s-plus-26';

import { CdkTfResolver } from '@cdk8s/cdktf-resolver';

const awsApp = new tf.App();
const stack = new tf.TerraformStack(awsApp, 'aws');

const k8sApp = new k8s.App({ resolvers: [new resolver.CdktfResolver({ app: awsApp })] });
const manifest = new k8s.Chart(k8sApp, 'Manifest', { resolver });

const bucket = new aws.s3Bucket.S3Bucket(stack, 'Bucket');
const bucketName = new tf.TerraformOutput(constrcut, 'BucketName', {
  value: bucket.bucket,
});

new kplus.CronJob(manifest, 'CronJob', {
  schedule: k8s.Cron.daily(),
  containers: [{
    image: 'job',
    envVariables: {
      // directly passing the value of the `TerraformOutput` containing
      // the deploy time bucket name
      BUCKET_NAME: kplus.EnvValue.fromValue(bucketName.value),
    }
 }]
});

awsApp.synth();
k8sApp.synth();

During cdk8s synthesis, the custom resolver will detect that bucketName.value is not a concrete value, but rather a value of a TerraformOutput. It will then perform cdktf CLI commands in order to fetch the actual value from the deployed infrastructure in your account. This means that in order for cdk8s synth to succeed, it must be executed after the CDKTF resources have been deployed. So your deployment workflow should (conceptually) be:

  1. cdktf deploy
  2. cdk8s synth

Note that the CdkTfResolver is only able to fetch tokens that have a TerraformOutput defined for them.

Permissions

Since running cdk8s synth will now require reading terraform outputs, it must have permissions to do so. In case a remote state file is used, this means providing a set of credentials for the account that have access to where the state is stored. This will vary depending on your cloud provider, but in most cases will involve giving read permissions on a blob storage device (e.g S3 bucket).

Note that the permissions cdk8s require are far more scoped down than those normally required for the deployment of CDKTF applications. It is therefore recommended to not reuse the same set of credentials, and instead create a scoped down ReadOnly role dedicated for cdk8s resolvers.

Following are the set of commands the resolver will execute:

Cross Repository Workflow

As we've seen, your cdk8s application needs access to the objects defined in your cloud application. If both applications are defined within the same file, this is trivial to achieve. If they are in different files, a simple import statement will suffice. However, what if the applications are managed in two separate repositories? This makes it a little trickier, but still possible.

In this scenario, cdktf.ts in the CDKTF application, stored in a dedicated repository.

import * as tf from "cdktf";
import * as aws from "@cdktf/provider-aws";

import { CdkTfResolver } from '@cdk8s/cdktf-resolver';

const awsApp = new tf.App();
const stack = new tf.TerraformStack(awsApp, 'aws');

const bucket = new aws.s3Bucket.S3Bucket(stack, 'Bucket');
const bucketName = new tf.TerraformOutput(constrcut, 'BucketName', {
  value: bucket.bucket,
});

awsApp.synth();

In order for the cdk8s application to have cross repository access, the CDKTF object instances that we want to expose need to be available via a package repository. To do this, break up the CDKTF application into the following files:

app.ts

import * as tf from "cdktf";
import * as aws from "@cdktf/provider-aws";

import { CdkTfResolver } from '@cdk8s/cdktf-resolver';

// export the app so we can pass it to the cdk8s resolver
export const awsApp = new tf.App();
const stack = new tf.TerraformStack(awsApp, 'aws');

const bucket = new aws.s3Bucket.S3Bucket(stack, 'Bucket');
// export the thing we want to have available for cdk8s applications
export const bucketName = new tf.TerraformOutput(constrcut, 'BucketName', {
  value: bucket.bucket,
});

// note that we don't call awsApp.synth here

main.ts

import { awsApp } from './app.ts'

awsApp.synth();

Now, publish the app.ts file to a package manager, so that your cdk8s application can install and import it. This approach might be somewhat counter intuitive, because normally we only publish classes to the package manager, not instances. Indeed, these types of applications introduce a new use-case that requires the sharing of instances. Conceptually, this is no different than writing state* to an SSM parameter or an S3 bucket, and it allows us to remain in the boundaries of our programming language, and the typing guarantees it provides.

* Actually, we are only publishing instructions for fetching state, not the state itself.

Assuming app.ts was published as the my-cdktf-app package, our cdk8s application will now look like so:

import * as k8s from 'cdk8s';
import * as kplus from 'cdk8s-plus-27';

// import the desired instance from the CDKTF app.
import { bucketName, awsApp } from 'my-cdktf-app';

import { CdkTfResolver } from '@cdk8s/cdktf-resolver';

const k8sApp = new k8s.App({ resolvers: [new resolver.CdktfResolver({ app: awsApp })] });
const manifest = new k8s.Chart(k8sApp, 'Manifest');

new kplus.CronJob(manifest, 'CronJob', {
  schedule: k8s.Cron.daily(),
  containers: [{
    image: 'job',
    envVariables: {
      // directly passing the value of the `TerraformOutput` containing
      // the deploy time bucket name
      BUCKET_NAME: kplus.EnvValue.fromValue(bucketName.value),
    }
 }]
});

k8sApp.synth();

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

cdk8s_cdktf_resolver-0.0.178.tar.gz (35.1 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

cdk8s_cdktf_resolver-0.0.178-py3-none-any.whl (33.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file cdk8s_cdktf_resolver-0.0.178.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: cdk8s_cdktf_resolver-0.0.178.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 35.1 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/6.1.0 CPython/3.13.5

File hashes

Hashes for cdk8s_cdktf_resolver-0.0.178.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 1b0be5dc4e9843c5699b44b83b9231c659ef4a4ab9d5d2c1f7d4a74feff5551c
MD5 a4db05d5e13df64b0c8b4607d7d0f9cd
BLAKE2b-256 1a1bdabdcd1f4eae7edd48687231211b4dec99099b0364f68ed3abef4a9edbed

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file cdk8s_cdktf_resolver-0.0.178-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for cdk8s_cdktf_resolver-0.0.178-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 d5004dd3c3fb961b2f029d11d878bbfd8cfb50614e53a978efdfc8ad7ea7fd5a
MD5 41531d75a878b9ce5dccee5e2fcccd3b
BLAKE2b-256 09d57699b6d11def07eb55738135fdbbe959b6232778f79d2004b33f7bfd577a

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page