KEDA example
March 15, 2023 ยท View on GitHub
This repository consists of everything you need to setup simple Kubernetes cluster and demonstrate usage of KEDA redis and mysql scalers. For more samples check https://github.com/kedacore/samples
The included helper provides an easy way to perform both 0 -> n and n -> 0 scalings.
Create cluster
The deployment consists of 4 components:
- MySQL instance
- Redis instance
- Dummy pod that will be scaled up and down
- App service that provides some helper methods
kubectl apply -f deployment/
Install KEDA
Follow the official KEDA guide https://keda.sh/deploy/
Observe
To observe how everything works you can watch two things:
- number of pods and their state:
watch -n2 "kubectl get pods" - HPA stats:
watch -n2 "kubectl get hpa"
Redis example
To scale the dummy deployment using
Redis scaler first we have to
deploy the ScaledObjects:
kubectl apply -f keda/redis-hpa.yaml
this should result in creation of a new ScaledObjects and new HPA
# kubectl get scaledobjects
NAME DEPLOYMENT TRIGGERS AGE
redis-scaledobject dummy redis 5s
# kubectl get hpa
NAME REFERENCE TARGETS MINPODS MAXPODS REPLICAS AGE
keda-hpa-dummy Deployment/dummy <unknown>/10 (avg) 1 4 0 45s
To scale up we have to populate the Redis queue. To do this we can use the helper app:
kubectl exec $(kubectl get pods | grep "server" | cut -f 1 -d " ") -- keda-talk redis publish
and to scale down:
kubectl exec $(kubectl get pods | grep "server" | cut -f 1 -d " ") -- keda-talk redis drain
MySQL example
To scale the dummy deployment using
MySQL scaler first we have to
deploy the ScaledObjects:
kubectl apply -f keda/mysql-hpa.yaml
this should result again in creation of ScaleObject and an HPA:
# kubectl get scaledobjects
NAME DEPLOYMENT TRIGGERS AGE
mysql-scaledobject dummy redis 5s
# kubectl get hpa
NAME REFERENCE TARGETS MINPODS MAXPODS REPLICAS AGE
keda-hpa-dummy Deployment/dummy <unknown>/10 (avg) 1 4 0 45s
To scale up we have to insert some values to MySQL database. To do this we can use the helper app:
kubectl exec $(kubectl get pods | grep "server" | cut -f 1 -d " ") -- keda-talk mysql insert
and to scale down:
kubectl exec $(kubectl get pods | grep "server" | cut -f 1 -d " ") -- keda-talk mysql delete