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Getting started with service binding on IBM Power, IBM Z, and LinuxONE - Connecting applications to services | Building applications | OKD 4.10
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The Service Binding Operator manages the data plane for workloads and backing services. This guide provides instructions with examples to help you create a database instance, deploy an application, and use the Service Binding Operator to create a binding connection between the application and the database service.

Prerequisites

  • You have access to an OKD cluster using an account with cluster-admin permissions.

  • You have installed the oc CLI.

  • You have installed the Service Binding Operator from OperatorHub.

Deploying a PostgreSQL Operator

Procedure
  1. To deploy the Dev4Devs PostgreSQL Operator in the my-petclinic namespace run the following command in shell:

$ oc apply -f - << EOD
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Namespace
metadata:
  name: my-petclinic
---
apiVersion: operators.coreos.com/v1
kind: OperatorGroup
metadata:
  name: postgres-operator-group
  namespace: my-petclinic
---
apiVersion: operators.coreos.com/v1alpha1
kind: CatalogSource
metadata:
  name: ibm-multiarch-catalog
  namespace: openshift-marketplace
spec:
  sourceType: grpc
  image: quay.io/ibm/operator-registry-<architecture> (1)
  imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
  displayName: ibm-multiarch-catalog
  updateStrategy:
    registryPoll:
      interval: 30m
---
apiVersion: operators.coreos.com/v1alpha1
kind: Subscription
metadata:
  name: postgresql-operator-dev4devs-com
  namespace: openshift-operators
spec:
  channel: alpha
  installPlanApproval: Automatic
  name: postgresql-operator-dev4devs-com
  source: ibm-multiarch-catalog
  sourceNamespace: openshift-marketplace
---
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: ClusterRole
metadata:
  name: database-view
  labels:
    servicebinding.io/controller: "true"
rules:
  - apiGroups:
      - postgresql.dev4devs.com
    resources:
      - databases
    verbs:
      - get
      - list
EOD
1 The Operator image.
  • For IBM Power: quay.io/ibm/operator-registry-ppc64le:release-4.9

  • For IBM Z and LinuxONE: quay.io/ibm/operator-registry-s390x:release-4.8

Verification
  1. After the operator is installed, list the operator subscriptions in the openshift-operators namespace:

    $ oc get subs -n openshift-operators
    Example output
    NAME                               PACKAGE                            SOURCE                  CHANNEL
    postgresql-operator-dev4devs-com   postgresql-operator-dev4devs-com   ibm-multiarch-catalog   alpha
    rh-service-binding-operator        rh-service-binding-operator        redhat-operators        stable

Creating a PostgreSQL database instance

To create a PostgreSQL database instance, you must create a Database custom resource (CR) and configure the database.

Procedure
  1. Create the Database CR in the my-petclinic namespace by running the following command in shell:

    $ oc apply -f - << EOD
    apiVersion: postgresql.dev4devs.com/v1alpha1
    kind: Database
    metadata:
      name: sampledatabase
      namespace: my-petclinic
      annotations:
        host: sampledatabase
        type: postgresql
        port: "5432"
        service.binding/database: 'path={.spec.databaseName}'
        service.binding/port: 'path={.metadata.annotations.port}'
        service.binding/password: 'path={.spec.databasePassword}'
        service.binding/username: 'path={.spec.databaseUser}'
        service.binding/type: 'path={.metadata.annotations.type}'
        service.binding/host: 'path={.metadata.annotations.host}'
    spec:
      databaseCpu: 30m
      databaseCpuLimit: 60m
      databaseMemoryLimit: 512Mi
      databaseMemoryRequest: 128Mi
      databaseName: "sampledb"
      databaseNameKeyEnvVar: POSTGRESQL_DATABASE
      databasePassword: "samplepwd"
      databasePasswordKeyEnvVar: POSTGRESQL_PASSWORD
      databaseStorageRequest: 1Gi
      databaseUser: "sampleuser"
      databaseUserKeyEnvVar: POSTGRESQL_USER
      image: registry.redhat.io/rhel8/postgresql-13:latest
      databaseStorageClassName: nfs-storage-provisioner
      size: 1
    EOD

    The annotations added in this Database CR enable the service binding connection and trigger the Operator reconciliation.

    The output verifies that the database instance is created:

    Example output
    database.postgresql.dev4devs.com/sampledatabase created
  2. After you have created the database instance, ensure that all the pods in the my-petclinic namespace are running:

    $ oc get pods -n my-petclinic

    The output, which takes a few minutes to display, verifies that the database is created and configured:

    Example output
    NAME                                     READY    STATUS      RESTARTS   AGE
    sampledatabase-cbc655488-74kss            0/1     Running        0       32s

After the database is configured, you can deploy the sample application and connect it to the database service.

Deploying the Spring PetClinic sample application

To deploy the Spring PetClinic sample application on an OKD cluster, you must use a deployment configuration and configure your local environment to be able to test the application.

Procedure
  1. Deploy the spring-petclinic application with the PostgresCluster custom resource (CR) by running the following command in shell:

    $ oc apply -n my-petclinic -f - << EOD
    ---
    apiVersion: apps/v1
    kind: deployment
    metadata:
      name: spring-petclinic
      labels:
        app: spring-petclinic
    spec:
      replicas: 1
      selector:
        matchLabels:
          app: spring-petclinic
      template:
        metadata:
          labels:
            app: spring-petclinic
        spec:
          containers:
            - name: app
              image: quay.io/service-binding/spring-petclinic:latest
              imagePullPolicy: Always
              env:
              - name: SPRING_PROFILES_ACTIVE
                value: postgres
              - name: org.springframework.cloud.bindings.boot.enable
                value: "true"
              ports:
              - name: http
                containerPort: 8080
    ---
    apiVersion: v1
    kind: Service
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: spring-petclinic
      name: spring-petclinic
    spec:
      type: NodePort
      ports:
        - port: 80
          protocol: TCP
          targetPort: 8080
      selector:
        app: spring-petclinic
    EOD

    The output verifies that the Spring PetClinic sample application is created and deployed:

    Example output
    deployment.apps/spring-petclinic created
    service/spring-petclinic created

    If you are deploying the application using Container images in the Developer perspective of the web console, you must enter the following environment variables under the deployment section of the Advanced options:

    • Name: SPRING_PROFILES_ACTIVE

    • Value: postgres

  2. Verify that the application is not yet connected to the database service by running the following command:

    $ oc get pods -n my-petclinic

    It takes take a few minutes until the CrashLoopBackOff status is displayed:

    Example output
    NAME                                READY   STATUS             RESTARTS      AGE
    spring-petclinic-5b4c7999d4-wzdtz   0/1     CrashLoopBackOff   4 (13s ago)   2m25s

    At this stage, the pod fails to start. If you try to interact with the application, it returns errors.

You can now use the Service Binding Operator to connect the application to the database service.

Connecting the Spring PetClinic sample application to the PostgreSQL database service

To connect the sample application to the database service, you must create a ServiceBinding custom resource (CR) that triggers the Service Binding Operator to project the binding data into the application.

Procedure
  1. Create a ServiceBinding CR to project the binding data:

    $ oc apply -n my-petclinic -f - << EOD
    ---
    apiVersion: binding.operators.coreos.com/v1alpha1
    kind: ServiceBinding
    metadata:
        name: spring-petclinic-pgcluster
    spec:
      services: (1)
        - group: postgresql.dev4devs.com
          kind: Database (2)
          name: sampledatabase
          version: v1alpha1
      application: (3)
        name: spring-petclinic
        group: apps
        version: v1
        resource: deployments
    EOD
    1 Specifies a list of service resources.
    2 The CR of the database.
    3 The sample application that points to a deployment or any other similar resource with an embedded PodSpec.

    The output verifies that the ServiceBinding CR is created to project the binding data into the sample application.

    Example output
    servicebinding.binding.operators.coreos.com/spring-petclinic created
  2. Verify that the request for service binding is successful:

    $ oc get servicebindings -n my-petclinic
    Example output
    NAME                          READY   REASON              AGE
    spring-petclinic-postgresql   True    ApplicationsBound   47m

    By default, the values from the binding data of the database service are projected as files into the workload container that runs the sample application. For example, all the values from the Secret resource are projected into the bindings/spring-petclinic-pgcluster directory.

  3. Once this is created, you can go to the topology to see the visual connection.

    img power
    Figure 1. Connecting spring-petclinic to a sample database
  4. Set up the port forwarding from the application port to access the sample application from your local environment:

    $ oc port-forward --address 0.0.0.0 svc/spring-petclinic 8080:80 -n my-petclinic
    Example output
    Forwarding from 0.0.0.0:8080 -> 8080
    Handling connection for 8080
  5. Access http://localhost:8080.

    You can now remotely access the Spring PetClinic sample application at localhost:8080 and see that the application is now connected to the database service.