Creating a ModuleLoader image
Kernel Module Management works with purpose-built ModuleLoader images. Those are standard OCI images that satisfy a few requirements:
.ko
files must be located under/opt/lib/modules/${KERNEL_VERSION}
- the
modprobe
andsleep
binaries must be in the$PATH
.
depmod
It is recommended to run depmod
at the end of the build process to generate modules.dep
and map files.
This is especially useful if your ModuleLoader image contains several kernel modules and if one of the modules depend on
another.
To generate dependencies and map files for a specific kernel version, run depmod -b /opt ${KERNEL_VERSION}
.
Example Dockerfile
The Dockerfile
below can accommodate any kernel available in the Ubuntu repositories.
Pass the kernel version you are building an image from using the --build-arg KERNEL_VERSION=1.2.3
Docker CLI switch.
FROM ubuntu as builder
ARG KERNEL_VERSION
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y bc \
bison \
flex \
libelf-dev \
gnupg \
wget \
git \
make \
gcc \
linux-headers-${KERNEL_VERSION}
WORKDIR /usr/src
RUN ["git", "clone", "https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/kernel-module-management.git"]
WORKDIR /usr/src/kernel-module-management/ci/kmm-kmod
RUN ["make"]
FROM ubuntu
ARG KERNEL_VERSION
RUN apt-get update && apt-get install -y kmod
COPY --from=builder /usr/src/kernel-module-management/ci/kmm-kmod/kmm_ci_a.ko /opt/lib/modules/${KERNEL_VERSION}/
COPY --from=builder /usr/src/kernel-module-management/ci/kmm-kmod/kmm_ci_b.ko /opt/lib/modules/${KERNEL_VERSION}/
RUN depmod -b /opt ${KERNEL_VERSION}
Building in cluster
KMM is able to build ModuleLoader images in cluster.
Build instructions must be provided using the build
section of a kernel mapping.
The Dockerfile
for your container image should be copied into a ConfigMap
object, under the Dockerfile
key.
The ConfigMap
needs to be located in the same namespace as the Module
.
KMM will first check if the image name specified in the containerImage
field exists.
If it does, the build will be skipped.
Otherwise, KMM will create a Pod to build your image.
The kaniko build system is used.
KMM monitors the health of the build pod, retrying if necessary.
The following build arguments are automatically set by KMM:
Name | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
KERNEL_FULL_VERSION |
The kernel version we are building for | 6.3.5-200.fc38.x86_64 |
KERNEL_VERSION (deprecated) |
The kernel version we are building for | 6.3.5-200.fc38.x86_64 |
MOD_NAME |
The Module 's name |
my-mod |
MOD_NAMESPACE |
The Module 's namespace |
my-namespace |
Once the image is built, KMM proceeds with the Module
reconciliation.
# ...
- regexp: '^.+$'
containerImage: "some.registry/org/my-kmod:${KERNEL_FULL_VERSION}"
build:
buildArgs: # Optional
- name: ARG_NAME
value: some-value
secrets: # Optional
- name: some-kubernetes-secret # Will be mounted in the build pod as /run/secrets/some-kubernetes-secret.
baseImageRegistryTLS:
# Optional and not recommended! If true, the build will be allowed to pull the image in the Dockerfile's
# FROM instruction using plain HTTP.
insecure: false
# Optional and not recommended! If true, the build will skip any TLS server certificate validation when
# pulling the image in the Dockerfile's FROM instruction using plain HTTP.
insecureSkipTLSVerify: false
dockerfileConfigMap: # Required
name: my-kmod-dockerfile
registryTLS:
# Optional and not recommended! If true, KMM will be allowed to check if the container image already exists
# using plain HTTP.
insecure: false
# Optional and not recommended! If true, KMM will skip any TLS server certificate validation when checking if
# the container image already exists.
insecureSkipTLSVerify: false