Helps you properly wait for cert-manager installation to be ready to use.
All versions of cert-manager are supported down to 0.12.
Pretty much every kubernetes installation nowadays depends on cert-manager for certificate provisioning. But at the same time, I've seen a lot of flakiness in several projects that were caused by inproperly implemented wait on cert-manager to be ready.
Currently the right way to do this is documented in installation guide. It consists of several steps and typically in a CI or automated environment, you don't want to execute those manually and that's where this project aims to help.
There are two ways how to use the verifier - CLI and as a go library and your choice depends on what your cluster installation tooling looks like.
The CLI is just another binary you call from your CI/CD pipeline or cluster installation scripts. When it returns exitcode 0 you know cert-manager is ready to use.
It expects kubeconfig/user that is allowed to create namespace in the default settings (it creates and cleans up cert-manager-test ns to deploy the test certificates). See cm-verifier --help
for more information about how to configure this.
./cm-verifier
Waiting for following deployments in namespace cert-manager:
- cert-manager
- cert-manager-cainjector
- cert-manager-webhook
Deployment cert-manager READY! ヽ(•‿•)ノ
Deployment cert-manager-cainjector READY! ヽ(•‿•)ノ
Deployment cert-manager-webhook READY! ヽ(•‿•)ノ
Resource cert-manager-test created
Resource test-selfsigned created
Resource selfsigned-cert created
ヽ(•‿•)ノ Cert-manager is READY!%
You can configure what the CLI does via flags:
--debug 'print out debug logs as well'
--namespace 'namespace into which cert-manager is installed'
--timeout 'set timeout after which we give up waiting for cert-manager'
For a full example see examples/main.go
import "github.com/alenkacz/cert-manager-verifier/pkg/verify"
...
result, err := verify.Verify(ctx, config, &verify.Options{CertManagerNamespace: "cert-manager"})
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
if result.Success {
fmt.Println("Success!!!")
} else {
fmt.Println("Failure :-(")
}