An example of read module for Mesh for Data.
In this repository we show how to create a read module for Mesh for Data. We tested the read module with a python application that launches a web server to respond to GET requests of datasets.
- Kubernetes cluster 1.10+
- Helm 3.0.0+
- Install Mesh for Data using the Quick Start guide.
- Docker repository (such as ghcr.io).
Create a file to implement your usage of the read module. An example can be found in hello-world-read-module.py
where you can find a python code that runs a simple web server and responds to GET requests of datasets.
In Makefile
:
- Create a registry for helm chart and docker image. Then change the fields
DOCKER_USERNAME
,DOCKER_PASSWORD
,DOCKER_HOSTNAME
,DOCKER_NAMESPACE
,DOCKER_TAGNAME
,DOCKER_IMG_NAME
, andDOCKER_CHART_IMG_NAME
to your own preferences. An example can be found inMakefile
. - One possible option is to create public registries in github. Then create a Personal Access Token. In this case the field
DOCKER_USERNAME
will be your github username andDOCKER_PASSWORD
is the Personal Access Token.
Create a Dockerfile to run your code that you created in a previous step. Then, run the following command to build a docker image from the Dockerfile.
make docker-build
Run the following command to login to the registry meant to store the docker image and to push the image to the registry.
make docker-push
This helm chart defines a common structure to deploy a Kubernetes pod for an M4D module. In the helm chart a service, a serviceaccount, and a deployment are defined.
- The helm chart defines some Kubernetes resources depending on the values in
values.yaml
. - Modify repository in
values.yaml
to your Docker image registry. - At runtime, the
m4d-manager
will pass in the values (like data location, format, and credentials) to the module so you can leave them blank in your final chart.
Run the following command to login to the registry meant to store the helm chart.
make helm-login
Run the following command to create a helm chart from the helm directory hello-world-read-module
.
make helm-verify
Run the following command to login to your registry that intended to store the helm chart and to push the chart to the registry.
make helm-chart-push
After pushing the chart to registry, it is possible to uninstall the helm chart.
make helm-uninstall
-
In your module yaml spec (
hello-world-read-module.yaml
):- Change
spec.chart.name
to your chart registry. - Define
flows
andcapabilities
for your module, an example can be found inhello-world-read-module.yaml
.
- Change
-
Deploy
M4DModule
inm4d-system
namespace:
kubectl create -f hello-world-read-module.yaml -n m4d-system
- Check if
M4DApplication
successfully deployed:
kubectl get m4dmodule hello-world-read-module -n m4d-system
kubectl describe m4dmodule hello-world-read-module -n m4d-system
You need to register your data asset in a data catalog in order for it to be used by the m4d-manager
.
-
Follow step
Register the dataset in a data catalog
in this example. These steps register the credentials required for accessing the dataset, and then register the data asset in the catalog. -
As an example you can run these commands to register two assets exist in
sample_assets
:
kubectl apply -f sample_assets/assetMedals.yaml
kubectl apply -f sample_assets/secretMedals.yaml
kubectl apply -f sample_assets/assetBank.yaml
kubectl apply -f sample_assets/secretBank.yaml
You can define OpenPolicyAgent policy to apply them to datasets. You can follow the Define data access policies
section in this example.
-
In
m4dapplication.yaml
:- Change
metadata.name
to your application name. - Define
appInfo.purpose
,appInfo.role
, andspec.data
. - Change
data.dataSetID
field to the identifier of the asset in the catalog which is in the format<namespace>/<name>
.
- Change
-
Deploy
M4DApplication
indefault
namespace:
kubectl apply -f m4dapplication.yaml -n default
- Check if
M4DApplication
successfully deployed:
kubectl get m4dapplication -n default
kubectl describe M4DApplication hello-world-read-module-test -n default
- Check if module was triggered in
m4d-blueprints
:
kubectl get blueprint -n m4d-blueprints
kubectl describe blueprint hello-world-read-module-test-default -n m4d-blueprints
kubectl get pods -n m4d-blueprints
If you are using the existing hello-world-read-module.py
, you should see this in the kubectl logs
of the m4d-blueprints
Pod:
$ kubectl logs <m4d-blueprints pod> -n m4d-blueprints
INFO:root:
Hello World Read Module!
INFO:root:Starting httpd server on localhost:8000
Then, you can do port forwarding in order to use the server by the following command:
kubectl port-forward <m4d-blueprints pod> -n m4d-blueprints 8000:8000 &
If you run the following request:
curl -X GET localhost:8000/medals-winners
you get the first 10 rows of the medals-winners dataset.