Local Kubernetes Deployment
This installation doc will help you start a OpenMetadata standalone instance on your local machine.
openmetadata-helm-charts houses Kubernetes Helm charts for deploying OpenMetadata and its dependencies (Elasticsearch, MySQL and Airflow) on a Kubernetes cluster.
Requirements
- A local Kubernetes cluster with installation of Docker Desktop or MiniKube
- kubectl to manage Kubernetes resources
- Helm to deploy resources based on Helm charts from the OpenMetadata repository
OpenMetadata ONLY supports Helm 3.
This guide assumes your helm chart release names as openmetadata
and openmetadata-dependencies
and the kubernetes namespace used is default
.
Procedure
1. Start Local Kubernetes Cluster
For this guide, we will be using minikube as our local kubernetes cluster. Run the following command to start a minikube cluster with 4 vCPUs and 8 GiB Memory.
If you are using minikube to start a local kubernetes instance on MacOS with M1 chipset, use the following command to start the cluster required for OpenMetadata Helm Charts to install locally (with docker desktop running as container runtime engine).
minikube start --cpus=4 --memory=8192 --cni=bridge --driver=docker
2. Create Kubernetes Secrets required for Helm Charts
Create kubernetes secrets that contains MySQL and Airflow passwords as secrets.
3. Add Helm Repository for Local Deployment
Run the below command to add OpenMetadata Helm Repository -
To verify, run helm repo list
to ensure the OpenMetadata repository was added.
4. Install OpenMetadata Dependencies Helm Chart
We created a separate chart to configure and install the OpenMetadata Application Dependencies with example configurations.
Deploy the dependencies by running the following command -
Run kubectl get pods
to check whether all the pods for the dependencies are running. You should get a result similar to below.
Wait for all the above Pods to be in running
status and ready
state.
Please note that the pods names above as openmetadata-dependencies-*
are part of airflow deployments.
Helm Chart for OpenMetadata Dependencies uses the following helm charts:
- Bitnami MySQL (helm chart version 9.7.2)
- OpenSearch (helm chart version 2.12.2)
- Airflow (helm chart version 8.8.0)
5. Install OpenMetadata Helm Chart
Deploy OpenMetadata Application by running the following command -
Run kubectl get pods --selector=app.kubernetes.io/name=openmetadata
to check the status of pods running. You should get a result similar to the output below -
Wait for the above Pod to be in running
status and ready
state.
6. Port Forward OpenMetadata Kubernetes Service to view UI
To expose the OpenMetadata UI on a local Kubernetes Cluster, run the below command -
The above command will port forward traffic from local machine port 8585 to a named port of OpenMetadata kubernetes service http
.
Browse the Application with url http://localhost:8585
from your Browser. The default login credentials are admin@open-metadata.org:admin
to log into OpenMetadata Application.
7. Cleanup
Use the below command to uninstall OpenMetadata Helm Charts Release.
MySQL and ElasticSearch OpenMetadata Dependencies are deployed as StatefulSets and have persistent volumes (pv) and persistent volume claims (pvc
). These will need to be manually cleaned after helm uninstall. You can use kubectl delete persistentvolumeclaims mysql-0 elasticsearch-0
CLI command for the same.
Troubleshooting
Pods fail to start due to ErrImagePull
issue
Sometimes, kubernetes timeout pulling the docker images. In such cases, you will receive ErrImagePull
issue. In order to resolve this, you can manually pull the required docker images in your kubernetes environment.
You can find the docker image name of the failing pods using the command below -
The command docker pull <docker_image_name>
will make sure to get the image available for kubernetes and resolve the issue.
View openmetadata kubernetes pod logs
Run the below command to list openmetadata kubernetes pods deployed in a namespace:
For example, list pods deployed by helm release name openmetadata
in the namespace ometa-dev
:
Next, view the logs of pod by running the below command,
For more information, visit the kubectl logs command line reference documentation here.
Next Steps
- Refer the How-to Guides for an overview of all the features in OpenMetadata.
- Visit the Connectors documentation to see what services you can integrate with OpenMetadata.
- Visit the API documentation and explore the rich set of OpenMetadata APIs.