Update run-in-container.sh script

Add detailed information on how to perform the task manually.
This commit is contained in:
Rodolfo Carvalho 2015-06-01 14:07:14 +02:00
parent c09d32e758
commit 96070d958a
1 changed files with 60 additions and 17 deletions

View File

@ -1,23 +1,66 @@
#!/bin/bash
# Use this script to run one-off commands inside a container of a pod
# (where your application code lives in)
# Use this script to run one-off commands inside a container of a pod where your
# Python application code lives in.
# You can accomplish the same results by using regular commands from OpenShift.
# This script is just wrapping calls to `osc` to make it a little more
# convenient to use. In the future, the `osc` cli tool might incorporate changes
# that make this script obsolete.
# Here is how you would run a command in a pod specified by label [1]:
#
# Examples:
# ./run-in-container.sh web date
# ./run-in-container.sh database env
# ./run-in-container.sh web ./manage.py migrate
# ./run-in-container.sh web ./manage.py createsuperuser
# ./run-in-container.sh web tail -f access.log
# POD_INDEX=1 ./run-in-container.sh web tail -f access.log
# 1. Inpect the output of the command below to find the name of a pod that
# matches a given label:
#
# osc get pods -l <your-label-selector>
#
# 2. Open a bash shell in the pod of your choice:
#
# osc exec -p <pod-name> -it -- bash
#
# 3. Because of how `kubectl exec` and `osc exec` work right now [2], your
# current working directory is root (/). Change it to where your code lives:
#
# cd $HOME
#
# 4. Because of how the images produced with CentOS and RHEL work currently [3],
# you need to manually enable any Software Collections you need to use:
#
# source scl_source enable python33
#
# 5. Finally, execute any command that you need and exit the shell.
#
# Related GitHub issues:
# [1] https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/kubernetes/issues/8876
# [2] https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/kubernetes/issues/7770
# [3] https://github.com/openshift/origin/issues/2001
POD_NAME="$1"
if [[ -z "$POD_NAME" ]]; then
echo "missing pod name"
exit 1
fi
shift
quoted_args="$(printf " %q" "${@:-echo}")"
osc exec -p $(osc get pods -l "name=$POD_NAME" -t "{{ with index .items ${POD_INDEX:-0} }}{{ .metadata.name }}{{ end }}") -it -- bash -c "cd \$HOME && scl enable python33 \"$quoted_args\""
# You can use this wrapper like this:
#
# ./run-in-container.sh ./manage.py migrate
# ./run-in-container.sh ./manage.py createsuperuser
# ./run-in-container.sh tail -f access.log
#
# If your Python pods are labeled with a name other than "web", you can use:
#
# POD_NAME=something ./run-in-container.sh ./manage.py check
#
# You can also specify a POD by index:
#
# POD_INDEX=1 ./run-in-container.sh tail -f access.log
#
# Or both together:
#
# POD_NAME=frontend POD_INDEX=2 ./run-in-container.sh tail -f access.log
# Get name of a currently deployed pod by label and index
POD_INSTANCE_NAME=`osc get pods \
-l "name=${POD_NAME:-web}" \
-t "{{ with index .items ${POD_INDEX:-0} }}{{ .metadata.name }}{{ end }}"`
# Run command in a container of the specified pod:
osc exec -p "$POD_INSTANCE_NAME" -it -- bash -c \
"cd \$HOME && source scl_source enable python33 && ${@:-echo}"