Use the default Compose Bridge transformation
Experimental
Compose Bridge is an Experimental product.
Compose Bridge supplies an out-of-the box transformation for your Compose configuration file. Based on an arbitrary compose.yaml
file, Compose Bridge produces:
- A Namespace so all your resources are isolated and don't conflict with resources from other deployments.
- A ConfigMap with an entry for each and every config resource in your Compose application.
- Deployments for application services. This ensures that the specified number of instances of your application are maintained in the Kubernetes cluster.
- Services for ports exposed by your services, used for service-to-service communication.
- Services for ports published by your services, with type
LoadBalancer
so that Docker Desktop will also expose the same port on the host. - Network policies to replicate the networking topology defined in your
compose.yaml
file. - PersistentVolumeClaims for your volumes, using
hostpath
storage class so that Docker Desktop manages volume creation. - Secrets with your secret encoded. This is designed for local use in a testing environment.
It also supplies a Kustomize overlay dedicated to Docker Desktop with:
Loadbalancer
for services which need to expose ports on host.- A
PersistentVolumeClaim
to use the Docker Desktop storage provisionerdesktop-storage-provisioner
to handle volume provisioning more effectively. - A Kustomize file to link all the resources together.
Use the default Compose Bridge transformation
To use the default transformation run the following command:
$ compose-bridge convert
Compose looks for a compose.yaml
file inside the current directory and then converts it.
The following output is displayed
$ compose-bridge convert -f compose.yaml
Kubernetes resource api-deployment.yaml created
Kubernetes resource db-deployment.yaml created
Kubernetes resource web-deployment.yaml created
Kubernetes resource api-expose.yaml created
Kubernetes resource db-expose.yaml created
Kubernetes resource web-expose.yaml created
Kubernetes resource 0-avatars-namespace.yaml created
Kubernetes resource default-network-policy.yaml created
Kubernetes resource private-network-policy.yaml created
Kubernetes resource public-network-policy.yaml created
Kubernetes resource db-db_data-persistentVolumeClaim.yaml created
Kubernetes resource api-service.yaml created
Kubernetes resource web-service.yaml created
Kubernetes resource kustomization.yaml created
Kubernetes resource db-db_data-persistentVolumeClaim.yaml created
Kubernetes resource api-service.yaml created
Kubernetes resource web-service.yaml created
Kubernetes resource kustomization.yaml created
These files are then stored within your project in the /out
folder.
The Kubernetes manifests can then be used to run the application on Kubernetes using
the standard deployment command kubectl apply -k out/overlays/desktop/
.
Note
Make sure you have enabled Kubernetes in Docker Desktop before you deploy your Compose Bridge transformations.
If you want to convert a compose.yaml
file that is located in another directory, you can run:
$ compose-bridge convert -f <path-to-file>/compose.yaml
To see all available flags, run:
$ compose-bridge convert --help
Tip
You can now convert and deploy your Compose project to a Kubernetes cluster from the Compose file viewer.
Make sure you are signed in to your Docker account, navigate to your container in the Containers view, and in the top-right corner select View configurations and then Convert and Deploy to Kubernetes.