This repo is the canonical source for Kubernetes Operators that appear on OperatorHub.io, OpenShift Container Platform and OKD.
To add your operator to any of the above platforms, you will need to submit a PR with your Operator packaged for use with Operator Lifecycle Manager. This package contains all of the Custom Resource Definitions (CRDs), access control rules and references to the container image needed to install and securely run your Operator, plus other info like a description of its features and supported Kubernetes versions. Follow this guide to create an OLM-compatible CSV for your operator, CRDs, and the package.yaml file for your operator.
An Operator's CSV must contain the annotations mentioned here for it to be displayed properly within the various platforms.
Your PR needs to be formatted as a bundle
which is a directory named after your Operator with all CustomResourceDefinitions
, the ClusterServiceVersion
and package definitons in separate YAML manifests like so:
$ ls my-operator/
my-operator.v1.0.0.clusterserviceversion.yaml
my-operator-crd1.crd.yaml
my-operator-crd2.crd.yaml
my-operator.package.yaml
Please note that the directory name should match the packageName
of your operator in it's package.yaml
, and should be used as a prefix for all files in the bundle. Please follow the conventions of the example above.
There are 3 directories where you can contribute, depending on a set of requirements:
Target Directory | Type of Operators | Target Platform | Requirements |
---|---|---|---|
community-operators |
Community OpenShift Operators | OpenShift / OKD | needs to work on OpenShift 3.11 or newer |
upstream-community-operators |
Community Kubernetes Operators | Kubernetes / OperatorHub.io | needs to work on Kubernetes 1.7 or newer |
redhat-operators |
Red Hat-provided Operators | OpenShift / OKD | needs to work on OpenShift 3.11 or newer |
The column Target Platform denotes where this Operator will be visible (embedded OperatorHub in OpenShift and OKD, or OperatorHub.io for Kubernetes) and where it's intended to run.
If you Operator works on both Kubernetes and OpenShift, place a copy of your bundle in the upstream-community-operators
directory, as well as the appropriate OpenShift directory.
For partners and ISVs, certified operators can now be submitted via connect.redhat.com
Note that OpenShift and OKD clusters by default come with access to operators from community-operators
, redhat-operators
, and certified operators. Please keep this in mind when submitting operators, as duplicate operators across these sources will not be tolerated.
The maintainers will work with you to make sure your Operator has the required metadata to function properly and be displayed with useful information for the end user.
You can help us with that by validating your bundle
with operator-courier. This tool will check against the required fields in your CSV.
operator-courier verify --ui_validate_io path/to/bundle
Similarly, to update your operator you need to submit a PR with any changes to your Operator resources. Within your CSV, add the additional replaces: my-operator.v1.0.0
parameter which indicates that existing installations of your Operator may be upgraded seamlessly to the new version. It is encouraged to use continuous delivery to update your Operator often as new features are added and bugs are fixed.
Read more about testing your Operator
New Operator PRs are automatically checked for required fields using the operator-courier
and are run through a operator-sdk scorecard
test against a live cluster. PRs are also reviewed manually by the maintainers to ensure that the automated tests are running smoothly and that Operators with additional setup can be verified.
You can learn more about the tests run on submitted Operators in this doc
Report bugs using the project issue tracker.