PLEASE NOTE: This document applies to the HEAD of the source tree
If you are using a released version of Kubernetes, you should refer to the docs that go with that version.
The latest release of this document can be found [here](http://releases.k8s.io/release-1.3/examples/rethinkdb/README.md).Documentation for other releases can be found at releases.k8s.io.
RethinkDB Cluster on Kubernetes
Setting up a rethinkdb cluster on kubernetes
Features
- Auto configuration cluster by querying info from k8s
- Simple
Quick start
Step 1
Rethinkdb will discover its peer using endpoints provided by kubernetes service, so first create a service so the following pod can query its endpoint
$kubectl create -f examples/rethinkdb/driver-service.yaml
check out:
$kubectl get services
NAME              CLUSTER_IP       EXTERNAL_IP       PORT(S)       SELECTOR               AGE
rethinkdb-driver  10.0.27.114      <none>            28015/TCP     db=rethinkdb           10m
[...]
Step 2
start the first server in the cluster
$kubectl create -f examples/rethinkdb/rc.yaml
Actually, you can start servers as many as you want at one time, just modify the replicas in rc.ymal
check out again:
$kubectl get pods
NAME                                                  READY     REASON    RESTARTS   AGE
[...]
rethinkdb-rc-r4tb0                                    1/1       Running   0          1m
Done!
Scale
You can scale up your cluster using kubectl scale. The new pod will join to the existing cluster automatically, for example
$kubectl scale rc rethinkdb-rc --replicas=3
scaled
$kubectl get pods
NAME                                                  READY     REASON    RESTARTS   AGE
[...]
rethinkdb-rc-f32c5                                    1/1       Running   0          1m
rethinkdb-rc-m4d50                                    1/1       Running   0          1m
rethinkdb-rc-r4tb0                                    1/1       Running   0          3m
Admin
You need a separate pod (labeled as role:admin) to access Web Admin UI
kubectl create -f examples/rethinkdb/admin-pod.yaml
kubectl create -f examples/rethinkdb/admin-service.yaml
find the service
$kubectl get services
NAME              CLUSTER_IP       EXTERNAL_IP       PORT(S)       SELECTOR                  AGE
[...]
rethinkdb-admin   10.0.131.19      104.197.19.120    8080/TCP      db=rethinkdb,role=admin   10m
rethinkdb-driver  10.0.27.114      <none>            28015/TCP     db=rethinkdb              20m
We request an external load balancer in the admin-service.yaml file:
type: LoadBalancer
The external load balancer allows us to access the service from outside the firewall via an external IP, 104.197.19.120 in this case.
Note that you may need to create a firewall rule to allow the traffic, assuming you are using Google Compute Engine:
$ gcloud compute firewall-rules create rethinkdb --allow=tcp:8080
Now you can open a web browser and access to http://104.197.19.120:8080 to manage your cluster.
Why not just using pods in replicas?
This is because kube-proxy will act as a load balancer and send your traffic to different server,
since the ui is not stateless when playing with Web Admin UI will cause Connection not open on server error.
BTW
- 
gen_pod.shis using to generate pod templates for my local cluster, the generated pods which is usingnodeSelectorto force k8s to schedule containers to my designate nodes, for I need to access persistent data on my host dirs. Note that one needs to label the node before 'nodeSelector' can work, see this tutorial
- 
see antmanler/rethinkdb-k8s for detail 
