Additional Configuration Options
This document describes additional options to configure your Tekton Pipelines installation.
Table of Contents
- Configuring built-in remote Task and Pipeline resolution
- Configuring CloudEvents notifications
- Configuring self-signed cert for private registry
- Configuring environment variables
- Customizing basic execution parameters
- Enabling larger results using sidecar logs
- Configuring High Availability
- Configuring tekton pipeline controller performance
- Platform Support
- Creating a custom release of Tekton Pipelines
- Verify Tekton Pipelines Release
- Verify Tekton Resources
- Pipelinerun with Affinity Assistant
- TaskRuns with
imagePullBackOff
Timeout - Disabling Inline Spec in TaskRun and PipelineRun
- Next steps
Configuring built-in remote Task and Pipeline resolution
Four remote resolvers are currently provided as part of the Tekton Pipelines installation.
By default, these remote resolvers are enabled. Each resolver can be disabled by setting
the appropriate feature flag in the resolvers-feature-flags
ConfigMap in the tekton-pipelines-resolvers
namespace:
- The
bundles
resolver, disabled by setting theenable-bundles-resolver
feature flag tofalse
. - The
git
resolver, disabled by setting theenable-git-resolver
feature flag tofalse
. - The
hub
resolver, disabled by setting theenable-hub-resolver
feature flag tofalse
. - The
cluster
resolver, disabled by setting theenable-cluster-resolver
feature flag tofalse
.
Configuring CloudEvents notifications
When configured so, Tekton can generate CloudEvents
for TaskRun
,
PipelineRun
and CustomRun
lifecycle events. The main configuration parameter is the
URL of the sink. When not set, no notification is generated.
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: config-events
namespace: tekton-pipelines
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/instance: default
app.kubernetes.io/part-of: tekton-pipelines
data:
formats: tektonv1
sink: https://my-sink-url
The sink used to be configured in the config-defaults
config map.
This option is still available, but deprecated, and will be removed.
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: config-defaults
namespace: tekton-pipelines
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/instance: default
app.kubernetes.io/part-of: tekton-pipelines
data:
default-cloud-events-sink: https://my-sink-url
Additionally, CloudEvents for CustomRuns
require an extra configuration to be
enabled. This setting exists to avoid collisions with CloudEvents that might
be sent by custom task controllers:
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: feature-flags
namespace: tekton-pipelines
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/instance: default
app.kubernetes.io/part-of: tekton-pipelines
data:
send-cloudevents-for-runs: true
Configuring self-signed cert for private registry
The SSL_CERT_DIR
is set to /etc/ssl/certs
as the default cert directory. If you are using a self-signed cert for private registry and the cert file is not under the default cert directory, configure your registry cert in the config-registry-cert
ConfigMap
with the key cert
.
Configuring environment variables
Environment variables can be configured in the following ways, mentioned in order of precedence from lowest to highest.
- Implicit environment variables
Step
/StepTemplate
environment variables- Environment variables specified via a
default
PodTemplate
. - Environment variables specified via a
PodTemplate
.
The environment variables specified by a PodTemplate
supercedes all other ways of specifying environment variables. However, there exists a configuration i.e. default-forbidden-env
, the environment variable specified in this list cannot be updated via a PodTemplate
.
For example:
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: config-defaults
namespace: tekton-pipelines
data:
default-timeout-minutes: "50"
default-service-account: "tekton"
default-forbidden-env: "TEST_TEKTON"
---
apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1beta1
kind: Task
metadata:
name: mytask
namespace: default
spec:
steps:
- name: echo-env
image: ubuntu
command: ["bash", "-c"]
args: ["echo $TEST_TEKTON "]
env:
- name: "TEST_TEKTON"
value: "true"
---
apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1beta1
kind: TaskRun
metadata:
name: mytaskrun
namespace: default
spec:
taskRef:
name: mytask
podTemplate:
env:
- name: "TEST_TEKTON"
value: "false"
In the above example the environment variable TEST_TEKTON
will not be overriden by value specified in podTemplate, because the config-default
option default-forbidden-env
is configured with value TEST_TEKTON
.
Configuring default resources requirements
Resource requirements of containers created by the controller can be assigned default values. This allows to fully control the resources requirement of TaskRun
.
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: config-defaults
namespace: tekton-pipelines
data:
default-container-resource-requirements: |
place-scripts: # updates resource requirements of a 'place-scripts' container
requests:
memory: "64Mi"
cpu: "250m"
limits:
memory: "128Mi"
cpu: "500m"
prepare: # updates resource requirements of a 'prepare' container
requests:
memory: "64Mi"
cpu: "250m"
limits:
memory: "256Mi"
cpu: "500m"
working-dir-initializer: # updates resource requirements of a 'working-dir-initializer' container
requests:
memory: "64Mi"
cpu: "250m"
limits:
memory: "512Mi"
cpu: "500m"
prefix-scripts: # updates resource requirements of containers which starts with 'scripts-'
requests:
memory: "64Mi"
cpu: "250m"
limits:
memory: "128Mi"
cpu: "500m"
prefix-sidecar-scripts: # updates resource requirements of containers which starts with 'sidecar-scripts-'
requests:
memory: "64Mi"
cpu: "250m"
limits:
memory: "128Mi"
cpu: "500m"
default: # updates resource requirements of init-containers and containers which has empty resource resource requirements
requests:
memory: "64Mi"
cpu: "250m"
limits:
memory: "256Mi"
cpu: "500m"
Any resource requirements set at the Task
and TaskRun
levels will overidde the default one specified in the config-defaults
configmap.
Customizing basic execution parameters
You can specify your own values that replace the default service account (ServiceAccount
), timeout (Timeout
), resolver (Resolver
), and Pod template (PodTemplate
) values used by Tekton Pipelines in TaskRun
and PipelineRun
definitions. To do so, modify the ConfigMap config-defaults
with your desired values.
The example below customizes the following:
- the default service account from
default
totekton
. - the default timeout from 60 minutes to 20 minutes.
- the default
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by
label is applied to all Pods created to executeTaskRuns
. - the default Pod template to include a node selector to select the node where the Pod will be scheduled by default. A list of supported fields is available here.
For more information, see
PodTemplate
inTaskRuns
orPodTemplate
inPipelineRuns
. - the default
Workspace
configuration can be set for anyWorkspaces
that a Task declares but that a TaskRun does not explicitly provide. - the default maximum combinations of
Parameters
in aMatrix
that can be used to fan out aPipelineTask
. For more information, seeMatrix
. - the default resolver type to
git
.
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: config-defaults
data:
default-service-account: "tekton"
default-timeout-minutes: "20"
default-pod-template: |
nodeSelector:
kops.k8s.io/instancegroup: build-instance-group
default-managed-by-label-value: "my-tekton-installation"
default-task-run-workspace-binding: |
emptyDir: {}
default-max-matrix-combinations-count: "1024"
default-resolver-type: "git"
Note: The _example
key in the provided config-defaults.yaml
file lists the keys you can customize along with their default values.
Customizing the Pipelines Controller behavior
To customize the behavior of the Pipelines Controller, modify the ConfigMap feature-flags
via
kubectl edit configmap feature-flags -n tekton-pipelines
.
Note: Changing feature flags may result in undefined behavior for TaskRuns and PipelineRuns that are running while the change occurs.
The flags in this ConfigMap are as follows:
-
disable-affinity-assistant
- set this flag totrue
to disable the Affinity Assistant that is used to provide Node Affinity forTaskRun
pods that share workspace volume. The Affinity Assistant is incompatible with other affinity rules configured forTaskRun
pods.Note: This feature flag is deprecated and will be removed in release
v0.60
. Consider usingcoschedule
feature flag to configure Affinity Assistant behavior.Note: Affinity Assistant use Inter-pod affinity and anti-affinity that require substantial amount of processing which can slow down scheduling in large clusters significantly. We do not recommend using them in clusters larger than several hundred nodes
Note: Pod anti-affinity requires nodes to be consistently labelled, in other words every node in the cluster must have an appropriate label matching
topologyKey
. If some or all nodes are missing the specifiedtopologyKey
label, it can lead to unintended behavior. -
coschedule
: set this flag determines how PipelineRun Pods are scheduled with Affinity Assistant. Acceptable values are “workspaces” (default), “pipelineruns”, “isolate-pipelinerun”, or “disabled”. Setting it to “workspaces” will schedule all the taskruns sharing the same PVC-based workspace in a pipelinerun to the same node. Setting it to “pipelineruns” will schedule all the taskruns in a pipelinerun to the same node. Setting it to “isolate-pipelinerun” will schedule all the taskruns in a pipelinerun to the same node, and only allows one pipelinerun to run on a node at a time. Setting it to “disabled” will not apply any coschedule policy. -
await-sidecar-readiness
: set this flag to"false"
to allow the Tekton controller to start a TasksRun’s first step immediately without waiting for sidecar containers to be running first. Using this option should decrease the time it takes for a TaskRun to start running, and will allow TaskRun pods to be scheduled in environments that don’t support Downward API volumes (e.g. some virtual kubelet implementations). However, this may lead to unexpected behaviour with Tasks that use sidecars, or in clusters that use injected sidecars (e.g. Istio). Setting this flag to"false"
will mean therunning-in-environment-with-injected-sidecars
flag has no effect. -
running-in-environment-with-injected-sidecars
: set this flag to"false"
to allow the Tekton controller to start a TasksRun’s first step immediately if it has no Sidecars specified. Using this option should decrease the time it takes for a TaskRun to start running. However, for clusters that use injected sidecars (e.g. Istio) this can lead to unexpected behavior. -
require-git-ssh-secret-known-hosts
: set this flag to"true"
to require that Git SSH Secrets include aknown_hosts
field. This ensures that a git remote server’s key is validated before data is accepted from it when authenticating over SSH. Secrets that don’t include aknown_hosts
will result in the TaskRun failing validation and not running. -
enable-tekton-oci-bundles
: set this flag to"true"
to enable the tekton OCI bundle usage (see the tekton bundle contract). Enabling this option allows the use ofbundle
field intaskRef
andpipelineRef
forPipeline
,PipelineRun
andTaskRun
. By default, this option is disabled ("false"
), which means it is disallowed to use thebundle
field. -
disable-creds-init
- set this flag to"true"
to disable Tekton’s built-in credential initialization and use Workspaces to mount credentials from Secrets instead. The default isfalse
. For more information, see the associated issue. -
enable-api-fields
: When using v1beta1 APIs, setting this field to “stable” or “beta” enables beta features. When using v1 APIs, setting this field to “stable” allows only stable features, and setting it to “beta” allows only beta features. Set this field to “alpha” to allow alpha features to be used.
For example:
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: feature-flags
data:
enable-api-fields: "alpha" # Allow alpha fields to be used in Tasks and Pipelines.
-
trusted-resources-verification-no-match-policy
: Setting this flag tofail
will fail the taskrun/pipelinerun if no matching policies found. Setting towarn
will skip verification and log a warning if no matching policies are found, but not fail the taskrun/pipelinerun. Setting toignore
will skip verification if no matching policies found. Defaults to “ignore”. -
results-from
: set this flag to “termination-message” to use the container’s termination message to fetch results from. This is the default method of extracting results. Set it to “sidecar-logs” to enable use of a results sidecar logs to extract results instead of termination message. -
enable-provenance-in-status
: Set this flag to"true"
to enable populating theprovenance
field inTaskRun
andPipelineRun
status. Theprovenance
field contains metadata about resources used in the TaskRun/PipelineRun such as the source from where a remote Task/Pipeline definition was fetched. By default, this is set totrue
. To disable populating this field, set this flag to"false"
. -
set-security-context
: Set this flag totrue
to set a security context for containers injected by Tekton that will allow TaskRun pods to run in namespaces withrestricted
pod security admission. By default, this is set tofalse
.
Alpha Features
Alpha features in the following table are still in development and their syntax is subject to change.
- To enable the features without an individual flag:
set the
enable-api-fields
feature flag to"alpha"
in thefeature-flags
ConfigMap alongside your Tekton Pipelines deployment viakubectl patch cm feature-flags -n tekton-pipelines -p '{"data":{"enable-api-fields":"alpha"}}'
. - To enable the features with an individual flag:
set the individual flag accordingly in the
feature-flag
ConfigMap alongside your Tekton Pipelines deployment. Example:kubectl patch cm feature-flags -n tekton-pipelines -p '{"data":{"<FLAG-NAME>":"<FLAG-VALUE>"}}'
.
Features currently in “alpha” are:
Feature | Proposal | Release | Individual Flag |
---|---|---|---|
Bundles | TEP-0005 | v0.18.0 | enable-tekton-oci-bundles |
Hermetic Execution Mode | TEP-0025 | v0.25.0 | |
Windows Scripts | TEP-0057 | v0.28.0 | |
Debug | TEP-0042 | v0.26.0 | |
Step and Sidecar Overrides | TEP-0094 | v0.34.0 | |
StdoutConfig and StderrConfig | TEP-0011 | v0.38.0 | |
Trusted Resources | TEP-0091 | v0.49.0 | trusted-resources-verification-no-match-policy |
Configure Default Resolver | TEP-0133 | v0.46.0 | |
Coschedule | TEP-0135 | v0.51.0 | coschedule |
keep pod on cancel | N/A | v0.52.0 | keep-pod-on-cancel |
CEL in WhenExpression | TEP-0145 | v0.53.0 | enable-cel-in-whenexpression |
Param Enum | TEP-0144 | v0.54.0 | enable-param-enum |
Ignore Task Failure | TEP-0050 | N/A |
Beta Features
Beta features are fields of stable CRDs that follow our “beta” compatibility policy.
To enable these features, set the enable-api-fields
feature flag to "beta"
in
the feature-flags
ConfigMap alongside your Tekton Pipelines deployment via
kubectl patch cm feature-flags -n tekton-pipelines -p '{"data":{"enable-api-fields":"beta"}}'
.
Features currently in “beta” are:
Feature | Proposal | Alpha Release | Beta Release | Individual Flag |
---|---|---|---|---|
Remote Tasks and Remote Pipelines | TEP-0060 | v0.41.0 | ||
Provenance field in Status |
issue#5550 | v0.41.0 | v0.48.0 | enable-provenance-in-status |
Isolated Step & Sidecar Workspaces |
TEP-0029 | v0.24.0 | v0.50.0 | |
Matrix | TEP-0090 | v0.38.0 | v0.53.0 | |
Task-level Resource Requirements | TEP-0104 | v0.39.0 | v0.53.0 | |
Reusable Steps via StepActions | TEP-0142 | v0.54.0 | enable-step-actions |
|
Larger Results via Sidecar Logs | TEP-0127 | v0.43.0 | v0.61.0 | results-from |
Enabling larger results using sidecar logs
Note: The maximum size of a Task’s results is limited by the container termination message feature of Kubernetes, as results are passed back to the controller via this mechanism. At present, the limit is per task is “4096 bytes”. All results produced by the task share this upper limit.
To exceed this limit of 4096 bytes, you can enable larger results using sidecar logs. By enabling this feature, you will have a configurable limit (with a default of 4096 bytes) per result with no restriction on the number of results. The results are still stored in the taskRun CRD, so they should not exceed the 1.5MB CRD size limit.
Note: to enable this feature, you need to grant get
access to all pods/log
to the tekton-pipelines-controller
.
This means that the tekton pipeline controller has the ability to access the pod logs.
- Create a cluster role and rolebinding by applying the following spec to provide log access to
tekton-pipelines-controller
.
kubectl apply -f optional_config/enable-log-access-to-controller/
- Set the
results-from
feature flag to use sidecar logs by settingresults-from: sidecar-logs
in the configMap.
kubectl patch cm feature-flags -n tekton-pipelines -p '{"data":{"results-from":"sidecar-logs"}}'
- If you want the size per result to be something other than 4096 bytes, you can set the
max-result-size
feature flag in bytes by settingmax-result-size: 8192(whatever you need here)
. Note: The value you can set here cannot exceed the size of the CRD limit of 1.5 MB.
kubectl patch cm feature-flags -n tekton-pipelines -p '{"data":{"max-result-size":"<VALUE-IN-BYTES>"}}'
Configuring High Availability
If you want to run Tekton Pipelines in a way so that webhooks are resiliant against failures and support high concurrency scenarios, you need to run a Metrics Server in your Kubernetes cluster. This is required by the Horizontal Pod Autoscalers to compute replica count.
See HA Support for Tekton Pipeline Controllers for instructions on configuring High Availability in the Tekton Pipelines Controller.
The default configuration is defined in webhook-hpa.yaml which can be customized to better fit specific usecases.
Configuring tekton pipeline controller performance
Out-of-the-box, Tekton Pipelines Controller is configured for relatively small-scale deployments but there have several options for configuring Pipelines’ performance are available. See the Performance Configuration document which describes how to change the default ThreadsPerController, QPS and Burst settings to meet your requirements.
Running TaskRuns and PipelineRuns with restricted pod security standards
To allow TaskRuns and PipelineRuns to run in namespaces with restricted pod security standards, set the “set-security-context” feature flag to “true” in the feature-flags configMap. This configuration option applies a SecurityContext to any containers injected into TaskRuns by the Pipelines controller. This SecurityContext may not be supported in all Kubernetes implementations (for example, OpenShift).
Note: running TaskRuns and PipelineRuns in the “tekton-pipelines” namespace is discouraged.
Platform Support
The Tekton project provides support for running on x86 Linux Kubernetes nodes.
The project produces images capable of running on other architectures and operating systems, but may not be able to help debug issues specific to those platforms as readily as those that affect Linux on x86.
The controller and webhook components are currently built for:
- linux/amd64
- linux/arm64
- linux/arm (Arm v7)
- linux/ppc64le (PowerPC)
- linux/s390x (IBM Z)
The entrypoint component is also built for Windows, which enables TaskRun workloads to execute on Windows nodes. See Windows documentation for more information.
Creating a custom release of Tekton Pipelines
You can create a custom release of Tekton Pipelines by following and customizing the steps in Creating an official release. For example, you might want to customize the container images built and used by Tekton Pipelines.
Verify Tekton Pipelines Release
We will refine this process over time to be more streamlined. For now, please follow the steps listed in this section to verify Tekton pipeline release.
Tekton Pipeline’s images are being signed by Tekton Chains since 0.27.1. You can verify the images with
cosign
using the Tekton’s public key.
Verify signatures using cosign
With Go 1.16+, you can install cosign
by running:
go install github.com/sigstore/cosign/cmd/cosign@latest
You can verify Tekton Pipelines official images using the Tekton public key:
cosign verify -key https://raw.githubusercontent.com/tektoncd/chains/main/tekton.pub gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/controller:v0.28.1
which results in:
Verification for gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/controller:v0.28.1 --
The following checks were performed on each of these signatures:
- The cosign claims were validated
- The signatures were verified against the specified public key
- Any certificates were verified against the Fulcio roots.
{
"Critical": {
"Identity": {
"docker-reference": "gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/controller"
},
"Image": {
"Docker-manifest-digest": "sha256:0c320bc09e91e22ce7f01e47c9f3cb3449749a5f72d5eaecb96e710d999c28e8"
},
"Type": "Tekton container signature"
},
"Optional": {}
}
The verification shows a list of checks performed and returns the digest in Critical.Image.Docker-manifest-digest
which can be used to retrieve the provenance from the transparency logs for that image using rekor-cli
.
Verify the transparency logs using rekor-cli
Install the rekor-cli
by running:
go install -v github.com/sigstore/rekor/cmd/rekor-cli@latest
Now, use the digest collected from the previous section in
Critical.Image.Docker-manifest-digest
, for example,
sha256:0c320bc09e91e22ce7f01e47c9f3cb3449749a5f72d5eaecb96e710d999c28e8
.
Search the transparency log with the digest just collected:
rekor-cli search --sha sha256:0c320bc09e91e22ce7f01e47c9f3cb3449749a5f72d5eaecb96e710d999c28e8
which results in:
Found matching entries (listed by UUID):
68a53d0e75463d805dc9437dda5815171502475dd704459a5ce3078edba96226
Tekton Chains generates provenance based on the custom format
in which the subject
holds the list of artifacts which were built as part of the release. For the Pipeline release,
subject
includes a list of images including pipeline controller, pipeline webhook, etc. Use the UUID
to get the provenance:
rekor-cli get --uuid 68a53d0e75463d805dc9437dda5815171502475dd704459a5ce3078edba96226 --format json | jq -r .Attestation | base64 --decode | jq
which results in:
{
"_type": "https://in-toto.io/Statement/v0.1",
"predicateType": "https://tekton.dev/chains/provenance",
"subject": [
{
"name": "gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/controller",
"digest": {
"sha256": "0c320bc09e91e22ce7f01e47c9f3cb3449749a5f72d5eaecb96e710d999c28e8"
}
},
{
"name": "gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/entrypoint",
"digest": {
"sha256": "2fa7f7c3408f52ff21b2d8c4271374dac4f5b113b1c4dbc7d5189131e71ce721"
}
},
{
"name": "gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/git-init",
"digest": {
"sha256": "83d5ec6addece4aac79898c9631ee669f5fee5a710a2ed1f98a6d40c19fb88f7"
}
},
{
"name": "gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/imagedigestexporter",
"digest": {
"sha256": "e4d77b5b8902270f37812f85feb70d57d6d0e1fed2f3b46f86baf534f19cd9c0"
}
},
{
"name": "gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/nop",
"digest": {
"sha256": "59b5304bcfdd9834150a2701720cf66e3ebe6d6e4d361ae1612d9430089591f8"
}
},
{
"name": "gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/pullrequest-init",
"digest": {
"sha256": "4992491b2714a73c0a84553030e6056e6495b3d9d5cc6b20cf7bc8c51be779bb"
}
},
{
"name": "gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/webhook",
"digest": {
"sha256": "bf0ef565b301a1981cb2e0d11eb6961c694f6d2401928dccebe7d1e9d8c914de"
}
}
],
...
Now, verify the digest in the release.yaml
by matching it with the provenance, for example, the digest for the release v0.28.1
:
curl -s https://storage.googleapis.com/tekton-releases/pipeline/previous/v0.28.1/release.yaml | grep github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/controller:v0.28.1 | awk -F"github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/controller:v0.28.1@" '{print $2}'
which results in:
sha256:0c320bc09e91e22ce7f01e47c9f3cb3449749a5f72d5eaecb96e710d999c28e8
Now, you can verify the deployment specifications in the release.yaml
to match each of these images and their digest.
The tekton-pipelines-controller
deployment specification has a container named tekton-pipeline-controller
and a
list of image references with their digest as part of the args
:
containers:
- name: tekton-pipelines-controller
image: gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/controller:v0.28.1@sha256:0c320bc09e91e22ce7f01e47c9f3cb3449749a5f72d5eaecb96e710d999c28e8
args: [
# These images are built on-demand by `ko resolve` and are replaced
# by image references by digest.
"-git-image",
"gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/git-init:v0.28.1@sha256:83d5ec6addece4aac79898c9631ee669f5fee5a710a2ed1f98a6d40c19fb88f7",
"-entrypoint-image",
"gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/entrypoint:v0.28.1@sha256:2fa7f7c3408f52ff21b2d8c4271374dac4f5b113b1c4dbc7d5189131e71ce721",
"-nop-image",
"gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/nop:v0.28.1@sha256:59b5304bcfdd9834150a2701720cf66e3ebe6d6e4d361ae1612d9430089591f8",
"-imagedigest-exporter-image",
"gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/imagedigestexporter:v0.28.1@sha256:e4d77b5b8902270f37812f85feb70d57d6d0e1fed2f3b46f86baf534f19cd9c0",
"-pr-image",
"gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/pullrequest-init:v0.28.1@sha256:4992491b2714a73c0a84553030e6056e6495b3d9d5cc6b20cf7bc8c51be779bb",
Similarly, you can verify the rest of the images which were published as part of the Tekton Pipelines release:
gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/git-init
gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/entrypoint
gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/nop
gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/imagedigestexporter
gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/pullrequest-init
gcr.io/tekton-releases/github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/cmd/webhook
Verify Tekton Resources
Trusted Resources is a feature to verify Tekton Tasks and Pipelines. The current
version of feature supports v1beta1
Task
and Pipeline
. For more details
please take a look at Trusted Resources.
Pipelineruns with Affinity Assistant
The cluster operators can review the guidelines to cordon
a node in the cluster
with the tekton controller and the affinity assistant is enabled.
TaskRuns with imagePullBackOff
Timeout
Tekton pipelines has adopted a fail fast strategy with a taskRun failing with TaskRunImagePullFailed
in case of an
imagePullBackOff
. This can be limited in some cases, and it generally depends on the infrastructure. To allow the
cluster operators to decide whether to wait in case of an imagePullBackOff
, a setting is available to configure
the wait time such that the controller will wait for the specified duration before declaring a failure.
For example, with the following config-defaults
, the controller does not mark the taskRun as failure for 5 minutes since
the pod is scheduled in case the image pull fails with imagePullBackOff
. The default-imagepullbackoff-timeout
is
of type time.Duration
and can be set to a duration such as “1m”, “5m”, “10s”, “1h”, etc.
See issue https://github.com/tektoncd/pipeline/issues/5987 for more details.
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: config-defaults
namespace: tekton-pipelines
data:
default-imagepullbackoff-timeout: "5m"
Disabling Inline Spec in Pipeline, TaskRun and PipelineRun
Tekton users may embed the specification of a Task
(via taskSpec
) or a Pipeline
(via pipelineSpec
) as an alternative to referring to an external resource via taskRef
and pipelineRef
respectively. This behaviour can be selectively disabled for three Tekton resources: TaskRun
, PipelineRun
and Pipeline
.
In certain clusters and scenarios, an admin might want to disable the customisation of Tasks
and Pipelines
and only allow users to run pre-defined resources. To achieve that the admin should disable embedded specification via the disable-inline-spec
flag, and remote resolvers too.
To disable inline specification, set the disable-inline-spec
flag to "pipeline,pipelinerun,taskrun"
in the feature-flags
configmap.
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: feature-flags
namespace: tekton-pipelines
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/instance: default
app.kubernetes.io/part-of: tekton-pipelines
data:
disable-inline-spec: "pipeline,pipelinerun,taskrun"
Inline specifications can be disabled for specific resources only. To achieve that, set the disable-inline-spec flag to a comma-separated list of the desired resources. Valid values are pipeline, pipelinerun and taskrun.
The default value of disable-inline-spec is “”, which means inline specification is enabled in all cases.
Next steps
To get started with Tekton check the Introductory tutorials, the how-to guides, and the examples folder.
Source for this document available on GitHub.
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