YAML API Guide
In this guide you’ll learn how to use the TSB CLI (tctl
) to perform common
operations on the platform. You will learn how to configure the CLI to access
your TSB installation and how to manage TSB resources from the command line.
Getting started
To use the YAML API you need the TSB CLI installed and configured.
Once you have the CLI installed and configured to talk to your TSB installation,
you’ll need to configure access to the TSB platform with the tctl login
command:
tctl login
You will be prompted for the TSB organization, which was set in the TSB install process or made available to you, the tenant, and the credentials.
The platform administrator should have already assigned a tenant to you. If not, or you are an administrator performing an initial setup, it is OK to leave it blank. You can always edit the configured user later and set the tenant when needed.
Organization: tetrate
Tenant:
Username: admin
Password:
Login Successful!
Configured user: demo-admin
User "demo-admin" enabled in profile: demo
Important
The Organization and Tenant pre-configured in the user settings are used only in
the tctl get
and tctl delete
commands. When creating or modifying resources
with tctl apply
, the organization and tenant will be taken from each resource
metadata section, as you’ll see below.
YAML API fundamentals
The TSB YAML API has declarative semantics. All TSB objects share a common set of properties that are used to uniquely identify the object in the resource hierarchy, and a specific model that holds the values that belong to that particular resource. For example, the following TSB resource configures the traffic settings for a given traffic group:
# block 1 - resource type
apiVersion: traffic.tsb.tetrate.io/v2
kind: TrafficSetting
# block 2 - resource metadata
metadata:
name: defaults
group: helloworld
workspace: helloworld
tenant: tetrate
organization: tetrate
# block 3 - resource contents
spec:
reachability:
mode: GROUP
resilience:
circuitBreakerSensitivity: MEDIUM
- The first block (
apiVersion
andkind
) identifies the type of the resource. - The second block defines the
metadata
for the resource. All resources have aname
and a set of metadata properties that configure where in the resource hierarchy the resource belongs. - The third block (
spec
) contains the actual contents of the resource object.
Applying resources
Resources are applied with the tctl apply
command. If an applied resource does
not yet exist, this will create it. If the resource already exists, the command
will replace the contents with the information it contains.
note
Update operations are full object updates. The entire object must be sent on every apply operation as partial updates are not supported.
When applying resources, the parent resources must exist as well. If the apply
request contains several resources, they must be provided in the right order to
make sure the operation will not fail because a resource is missing its parent.
The following example shows how to create a tenant and a workspace in an
existing organization:
tctl apply -f - <<EOF
apiVersion: api.tsb.tetrate.io/v2
kind: Tenant
metadata:
organization: tetrate # This organization must exist
name: example-tenant # Name of the tenant to be created
spec:
displayName: Example Tenant
description: An example tenant for the YAML guide
---
apiversion: api.tsb.tetrate.io/v2
kind: Workspace
metadata:
organization: tetrate
tenant: example-tenant # Name of the tenant above
name: first-workspace # Name of the workspace to be created
spec:
displayName: First Workspace
description: An example workspace
namespaceSelector:
names:
- "*/default"
---
EOF
Listing and getting resources
The tctl get
command retrieves resources. If no name is specified, all
resources of the requested kind will be returned. If a specific name is given,
then only the requested resource is returned.
The syntax for the get command is: tctl get <resource type> <parameters>
Where the parameters include the optional resource name, and the necessary flags to configure the location in the resource hierarchy where the resource belongs.
The command also accepts several output parameters, to retrieve the objects in a table form (default), YAML or JSON:
Get all workspaces in the configured tenant
tctl get workspace
Example output:
NAME DISPLAY NAME DESCRIPTION
helloworld Helloworld Helloworld application
bookinfo Bookinfo Bookinfo application
Get the details of a workspace
tctl get workspace helloworld -o yaml
Example output:
apiVersion: api.tsb.tetrate.io/v2
kind: Workspace
metadata:
description: Helloworld application
displayName: Helloworld
name: helloworld
organization: tetrate
resourceVersion: '"BePMGaj00FM="'
tenant: tetrate
spec:
description: Helloworld application
displayName: Helloworld
etag: '"BePMGaj00FM="'
fqn: organizations/tetrate/tenants/tetrate/workspaces/helloworld
namespaceSelector:
names:
- '*/helloworld'
Get all service routes in a given traffic group
Note that we need to provide the flags to specify which is the workspace and group we want to get the service routes for:
tctl get serviceroute \
--workspace helloworld \
--trafficgroup helloworld -o yaml
Example output:
apiVersion: traffic.tsb.tetrate.io/v2
kind: ServiceRoute
metadata:
group: helloworld
name: hello
organization: tetrate
resourceVersion: '"NWEYABT/fjM="'
tenant: tetrate
workspace: helloworld
spec:
etag: '"NWEYABT/fjM="'
fqn: organizations/tetrate/tenants/tetrate/workspaces/helloworld/trafficgroups/helloworld/serviceroutes/hello
service: helloworld/helloworld.helloworld.svc.cluster.local
subsets:
- labels:
version: v1
name: v1
weight: 80
- labels:
version: v2
name: v2
weight: 20
Deleting resources
The tctl delete
command deletes resources. It follows the same semantics as
the tctl get command, except that the name parameter is required.
warning
Note that deleting a resource will delete the resource and all its child objects, so use this with caution, especially when deleting resources that are at higher levels of the resource hierarchy.
Assume you have an existing trafficgroup
you can query with the command below:
tctl get trafficgroup --workspace test
Example output:
NAME DISPLAY NAME DESCRIPTION
test-tg test-tg et-tg
To delete the trafficgroup
:
tctl delete trafficgroup test-tg --workspace test
Query it again:
tctl get trafficgroup -w test
No resources found