{ stdenv , lib , makeWrapper , socat , iptables , iproute , bridge-utils , conntrack-tools , buildGoPackage , git , runc , libseccomp , pkgconfig , ethtool , utillinux , ipset , fetchFromGitHub , fetchurl , fetchzip , fetchgit }: with lib; # k3s is a kinda weird derivation. One of the main points of k3s is the # simplicity of it being one binary that can perform several tasks. # However, when you have a good package manager (like nix), that doesn't # actually make much of a difference; you don't really care if it's one binary # or 10 since with a good package manager, installing and running it is # identical. # Since upstream k3s packages itself as one large binary with several # "personalities" (in the form of subcommands like 'k3s agent' and 'k3s # kubectl'), it ends up being easiest to mostly mimic upstream packaging, with # some exceptions. # K3s also carries patches to some packages (such as containerd and cni # plugins), so we intentionally use the k3s versions of those binaries for k3s, # even if the upstream version of those binaries exist in nixpkgs already. In # the end, that means we have a thick k3s binary that behaves like the upstream # one for the most part. # However, k3s also bundles several pieces of unpatched software, from the # strongswan vpn software, to iptables, to socat, conntrack, busybox, etc. # Those pieces of software we entirely ignore upstream's handling of, and just # make sure they're in the path if desired. let k3sVersion = "1.18.8+k3s1"; # k3s git tag traefikChartVersion = "1.81.0"; # taken from ./scripts/download at the above k3s tag k3sRootVersion = "0.4.1"; # taken from ./scripts/download at the above k3s tag k3sCNIVersion = "0.8.6-k3s1"; # taken from ./scripts/version.sh at the above k3s tag # bundled into the k3s binary traefikChart = fetchurl { url = "https://kubernetes-charts.storage.googleapis.com/traefik-${traefikChartVersion}.tgz"; sha256 = "1aqpzgjlvqhil0g3angz94zd4xbl4iq0qmpjcy5aq1xv9qciwdi9"; }; # so, k3s is a complicated thing to package # This derivation attempts to avoid including any random binaries from the # internet. k3s-root is _mostly_ binaries built to be bundled in k3s (which # we don't care about doing, we can add those as build or runtime # dependencies using a real package manager). # In addition to those binaries, it's also configuration though (right now # mostly strongswan configuration), and k3s does use those files. # As such, we download it in order to grab 'etc' and bundle it into the final # k3s binary. k3sRoot = fetchzip { # Note: marked as apache 2.0 license url = "https://github.com/rancher/k3s-root/releases/download/v${k3sRootVersion}/k3s-root-amd64.tar"; sha256 = "0ppj8y9g410hn6mjkfgfsi2j9yv7rcpic21znpmbrkx8b2070hf0"; stripRoot = false; }; k3sPlugins = buildGoPackage rec { name = "k3s-cni-plugins"; version = k3sCNIVersion; goPackagePath = "github.com/containernetworking/plugins"; subPackages = [ "." ]; src = fetchFromGitHub { owner = "rancher"; repo = "plugins"; rev = "v${version}"; sha256 = "13kx9msn5y9rw8v1p717wx0wbjqln59g6y3qfb1760aiwknva35q"; }; meta = { description = "CNI plugins, as patched by rancher for k3s"; license = licenses.asl20; homepage = "https://k3s.io"; maintainers = [ maintainers.euank ]; platforms = platforms.linux; }; }; # Grab this separately from a build because it's used by both stages of the # k3s build. k3sRepo = fetchgit { url = "https://github.com/rancher/k3s"; rev = "v${k3sVersion}"; leaveDotGit = true; # ./scripts/version.sh depends on git sha256 = "17qsvbj1lvgxqdkxayyqnjwsjs3cx06nfv2hqvixjszn4vf30qlg"; }; # Stage 1 of the k3s build: # Let's talk about how k3s is structured. # One of the ideas of k3s is that there's the single "k3s" binary which can # do everything you need, from running a k3s server, to being a worker node, # to running kubectl. # The way that actually works is that k3s is a single go binary that contains # a bunch of bindata that it unpacks at runtime into directories (either the # user's home directory or /var/lib/rancher if run as root). # This bindata includes both binaries and configuration. # In order to let nixpkgs do all its autostripping/patching/etc, we split this into two derivations. # First, we build all the binaries that get packed into the thick k3s binary # (and output them from one derivation so they'll all be suitably patched up). # Then, we bundle those binaries into our thick k3s binary and use that as # the final single output. # This approach was chosen because it ensures the bundled binaries all are # correctly built to run with nix (we can lean on the existing buildGoPackage # stuff), and we can again lean on that tooling for the final k3s binary too. # Other alternatives would be to manually run the # strip/patchelf/remove-references step ourselves in the installPhase of the # derivation when we've built all the binaries, but haven't bundled them in # with generated bindata yet. k3sBuildStage1 = buildGoPackage rec { name = "k3s-build-1"; version = "${k3sVersion}"; goPackagePath = "github.com/rancher/k3s"; src = k3sRepo; patches = [ ./patches/0001-Use-rm-from-path-in-go-generate.patch ./patches/0002-Add-nixpkgs-patches.patch ]; nativeBuildInputs = [ git pkgconfig ]; buildInputs = [ libseccomp ]; buildPhase = '' pushd go/src/${goPackagePath} patchShebangs ./scripts/build ./scripts/version.sh mkdir -p bin ./scripts/build popd ''; installPhase = '' pushd go/src/${goPackagePath} mkdir -p "$out/bin" install -m 0755 -t "$out/bin" ./bin/* popd ''; meta = { description = "The various binaries that get packaged into the final k3s binary."; license = licenses.asl20; homepage = "https://k3s.io"; maintainers = [ maintainers.euank ]; platforms = platforms.linux; }; }; k3sBuild = buildGoPackage rec { name = "k3s-build"; version = "${k3sVersion}"; goPackagePath = "github.com/rancher/k3s"; src = k3sRepo; patches = [ ./patches/0001-Use-rm-from-path-in-go-generate.patch ./patches/0002-Add-nixpkgs-patches.patch ]; nativeBuildInputs = [ git pkgconfig ]; buildInputs = [ k3sBuildStage1 k3sPlugins runc ]; # k3s appends a suffix to the final distribution binary for some arches archSuffix = if stdenv.hostPlatform.system == "x86_64-linux" then "" else if stdenv.hostPlatform.system == "aarch64-linux" then "-arm64" else throw "k3s isn't being built for ${stdenv.hostPlatform.system} yet."; # In order to build the thick k3s binary (which is what # ./scripts/package-cli does), we need to get all the binaries that script # expects in place. buildPhase = '' pushd go/src/${goPackagePath} patchShebangs ./scripts/build ./scripts/version.sh ./scripts/package-cli mkdir -p bin install -m 0755 -t ./bin ${k3sBuildStage1}/bin/* install -m 0755 -T "${k3sPlugins}/bin/plugins" ./bin/cni # Note: use the already-nixpkgs-bundled k3s rather than the one bundled # in k3s because the k3s one is completely unmodified from upstream # (unlike containerd, cni, etc) install -m 0755 -T "${runc}/bin/runc" ./bin/runc cp -R "${k3sRoot}/etc" ./etc mkdir -p "build/static/charts" cp "${traefikChart}" "build/static/charts/traefik-${traefikChartVersion}.tgz" ./scripts/package-cli popd ''; installPhase = '' pushd go/src/${goPackagePath} mkdir -p "$out/bin" install -m 0755 -T ./dist/artifacts/k3s${archSuffix} "$out/bin/k3s" popd ''; meta = { description = "The k3s go binary which is used by the final wrapped output below."; license = licenses.asl20; homepage = "https://k3s.io"; maintainers = [ maintainers.euank ]; platforms = platforms.linux; }; }; in stdenv.mkDerivation rec { name = "k3s"; # Important utilities used by the kubelet, see # https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/issues/26093#issuecomment-237202494 # Note the list in that issue is stale and some aren't relevant for k3s. k3sRuntimeDeps = [ socat iptables iproute bridge-utils ethtool utillinux ipset conntrack-tools ]; buildInputs = [ k3sBuild makeWrapper ] ++ k3sRuntimeDeps; unpackPhase = "true"; # And, one final derivation (you thought the last one was it, right?) # We got the binary we wanted above, but it doesn't have all the runtime # dependencies k8s wants, including mount utilities for kubelet, networking # tools for cni/kubelet stuff, etc # Use a wrapper script to reference all the binaries that k3s tries to # execute, but that we didn't bundle with it. installPhase = '' mkdir -p "$out/bin" makeWrapper ${k3sBuild}/bin/k3s "$out/bin/k3s" \ --prefix PATH : ${lib.makeBinPath k3sRuntimeDeps} \ --prefix PATH : "$out/bin" ''; meta = { description = "A lightweight Kubernetes distribution."; license = licenses.asl20; homepage = "https://k3s.io"; maintainers = [ maintainers.euank ]; platforms = platforms.linux; }; }