Kubernetes Janitor cleans up (deletes) Kubernetes resources on (1) a configured TTL (time to live) or (2) a configured expiry date (absolute timestamp).
It processes all namespaces and all namespaced resources including custom resource definitions (CRDs) and will delete them (1) if the janitor/ttl
annotation or a TTL rule indicates the resource as expired, or (2) if the janitor/expires
annotation marks the resource as expired.
- Deploy the janitor to a test (non-prod) cluster and use namespaces with a TTL of 7 days (
janitor/ttl: 7d
on the namespace object) for prototyping - Annotate your temporary manual test nginx deployment with
kubectl annotate deploy nginx janitor/ttl=24h
to automatically delete it after 24 hours - Automatically set
janitor/ttl
on resources created by your CI/CD pipeline for pull requests (so PR tests can run and resources are cleaned up later) - Define a rule to automatically delete resources after 4 days if required labels were not set (see Rules File below)
- Deploy the janitor to a test (non-prod) cluster and use namespaces with an expiry date (
janitor/expires: 2020-01-17T15:14:38Z
on the namespace object) - Annotate your temporary manual test nginx deployment with
kubectl annotate deploy nginx janitor/expires=2020-01-01
to automatically delete it at midnight (UTC) of 1st of January 2020.
Deploy the janitor into your cluster via (also works with Minikube):
$ kubectl apply -f deploy/common/
$ kubectl apply -f deploy/deployment/
The example configuration uses the --dry-run
as a safety flag to prevent any deletion --- remove it to enable the janitor, e.g. by editing the deployment:
$ kubectl edit deploy kube-janitor
To see the janitor in action, deploy a simple nginx and annotate it accordingly:
$ kubectl run temp-nginx --image=nginx
$ kubectl annotate deploy temp-nginx janitor/ttl=5m
You should see the temp-nginx
deployment being deleted after 5 minutes.
Edit the example rules file via kubectl edit configmap kube-janitor
to try out generic TTL rules (needs a pod restart to reload rules).
The janitor is configured via command line args, environment variables, Kubernetes annotations, and an optional YAML rules file.
Supported Kubernetes annotations:
janitor/ttl
- Maximum time to live (TTL) for the annotated resource. Annotation value must be a string composed of a integer value and a unit suffix (one of
s
,m
,h
,d
, orw
), e.g.120s
(120 seconds),5m
(5 minutes),8h
(8 hours),7d
(7 days), or2w
(2 weeks). Note that the actual time of deletion depends on the Janitor's clean up interval. The resource will be deleted if its age (delta between now and the resource creation time) is greater than the specified TTL. janitor/expires
- Absolute timestamp in the format
YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SSZ
,YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM
orYYYY-MM-DD
to mark the resource for deletion after the specified date/time. The date formatYYYY-MM-DD
is short forYYYY-MM-DDT00:00:00Z
, i.e. the resource will expire at midnight UTC of the specified date. Example annotation values:2019-02-28T20:40:00Z
,2019-02-28T20:40
,2019-02-28
.
Available command line options:
--dry-run
- Dry run mode: do not change anything, just print what would be done
--debug
- Debug mode: print more information
--once
- Run only once and exit. This is useful if you run the Kubernetes Janitor as a
CronJob
. --interval
- Loop interval (default: 30s). This option only makes sense when the
--once
flag is not set. --include-resources
- Include resources for clean up (default: all resources), can also be configured via environment variable
INCLUDE_RESOURCES
. This option can be used if you want to clean up only certain resource types, e.g. onlydeployments
. --exclude-resources
- Exclude resources from clean up (default: events,controllerrevisions), can also be configured via environment variable
EXCLUDE_RESOURCES
. This option takes precedence over--include-resources
, i.e.--exclude-resources=foos
in combination with--include-resources=foos,bars
would makekube-janitor
only processbars
resources. --include-namespaces
- Include namespaces for clean up (default: all namespaces), can also be configured via environment variable
INCLUDE_NAMESPACES
--exclude-namespaces
- Exclude namespaces from clean up (default: kube-system), can also be configured via environment variable
EXCLUDE_NAMESPACES
. This option takes precedence over--include-namespaces
, i.e.--exclude-namespaces=ns1
in combination with--include-namespaces=ns1,ns2
would only process resources in thens2
namespace. --rules-file
- Optional: filename pointing to a YAML file with a list of rules to apply TTL values to arbitrary Kubernetes objects, e.g. to delete all deployments without a certain label automatically after N days. See Rules File configuration section below.
Example flags:
--interval=20
--include-resources=deployments,pods
--exclude-resources=replicasets
--include-namespaces=default,kube-public
--exclude-namespaces=kube-system
--rules-file=/config/my-rules-file.yml
When using the --rules-file
option, the path needs to point to a valid YAML file with the following format:
rules:
# remove deployments and statefulsets without a label "application"
- id: require-application-label
resources:
- deployments
- statefulsets
jmespath: "!(spec.template.metadata.labels.application)"
ttl: 4d
# delete all deployments with a name starting with "pr-*"
- id: temporary-pr-deployments
resources:
- deployments
jmespath: "starts_with(metadata.name, 'pr-')"
ttl: 4h
# delete all resources within the "temp" namespace after 3 days
- id: temp-namespace-cleanup
resources:
- "*"
jmespath: "metadata.namespace == 'temp'"
ttl: 3d
# require the "foo" pod label for all new deployments starting April 2019
- id: require-foo-label-april-2019
resources:
- deployments
- statefulsets
jmespath: "!(spec.template.metadata.labels.foo) && metadata.creationTimestamp > '2019-04-01'"
ttl: 7d
The first matching rule will define the TTL (ttl
field). Kubernetes objects with a janitor/ttl
annotation will not be matched against any rule.
A rule matches for a given Kubernetes object if all of the following criteria is true:
- the object has no
janitor/ttl
annotation (otherwise the TTL value from the annotation is applied) - the object's type is included in the
resources
list of the rule or the special value*
is part of theresources
list (similar to Kubernetes RBAC) - the JMESPath evaluates to a truth-like value (boolean
true
, non-empty list, non-empty object, or non-empty string)
The first matching rule will define the TTL for the object (as if the object would have a janitor/ttl
annotation with the same value).
Each rule has the following attributes:
id
- Some string identifying the rule (e.g. for log output), must be lowercase and match the regex
^[a-z][a-z0-9-]*$
. The ID has no special meaning and is only used to refer to the rule in log output/statistics. resources
- List of resources (e.g.
deployments
,namespaces
, ..) this rule should be applied to. The special value*
will match all resource types. jmespath
- JMESPath expression to evaluate on the resource object. The rule will only match if the expression evaluates to true. The expression will get the Kubernetes object as input.
The expression
metadata.labels.foo
would evaluate to true if the object has the labelfoo
and it has a non-empty string as value. ttl
- TTL value (e.g.
15m
) to apply to the object if the rule matches.
Easiest way to contribute is to provide feedback! We would love to hear what you like and what you think is missing. Create an issue or ping try_except_ on Twitter.
PRs are welcome. Please also have a look at issues labeled with "help wanted".
You can run Kubernetes Janitor against your current kubeconfig context, e.g. local Minikube:
$ pipenv install --dev
$ pipenv shell
$ python3 -m kube_janitor --dry-run --debug --once
To run PEP8 (flake8) checks and unit tests including coverage report:
$ make test
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.