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Deploy applications consistently at scale using Flux v2 configurations and Azure Policy

You can use Azure Policy to apply Flux v2 configurations (Microsoft.KubernetesConfiguration/fluxConfigurations resource type) at scale on Azure Arc-enabled Kubernetes (Microsoft.Kubernetes/connectedClusters) or AKS (Microsoft.ContainerService/managedClusters) clusters. To use Azure Policy, you select a built-in policy definition and create a policy assignment.

Before you assign the policy that creates Flux configurations, you must ensure that the Flux extension is deployed to your clusters. You can do this by first assigning a policy that deploys the extension to all clusters in the selected scope (all resource groups in a subscription or management group, or to specific resource groups). Then, when creating the policy assignment to deploy configurations, you set parameters for the Flux configuration that will be applied to the clusters in that scope.

To enable separation of concerns, you can create multiple policy assignments, each with a different Flux v2 configuration pointing to a different source. For example, one Git repository can be used by cluster admins while other repositories can be used by application teams.

Built-in policy definitions

The following built-in policy definitions provide support for these scenarios:

Description Policy
Flux extension install (required for all scenarios) Configure installation of Flux extension on Kubernetes cluster
Flux configuration using public Git repository (generally a test scenario) Configure Kubernetes clusters with Flux v2 configuration using public Git repository
Flux configuration using private Git repository with SSH auth Configure Kubernetes clusters with Flux v2 configuration using Git repository and SSH secrets
Flux configuration using private Git repository with HTTPS auth Configure Kubernetes clusters with Flux v2 configuration using Git repository and HTTPS secrets
Flux configuration using private Git repository with HTTPS CA cert auth Configure Kubernetes clusters with Flux v2 configuration using Git repository and HTTPS CA Certificate
Flux configuration using private Git repository with local K8s secret Configure Kubernetes clusters with Flux v2 configuration using Git repository and local secrets
Flux configuration using private Bucket source and KeyVault secrets Configure Kubernetes clusters with Flux v2 configuration using Bucket source and secrets in KeyVault
Flux configuration using private Bucket source and local K8s secret Configure Kubernetes clusters with specified Flux v2 Bucket source using local secrets

To find all of the Flux v2 policy definitions, search for flux. For more information, see Azure policy built-in definitions for Azure Arc-enabled Kubernetes.

Prerequisites

  • One or more Arc-enabled Kubernetes clusters and/or AKS clusters.
  • Microsoft.Authorization/policyAssignments/write permissions on the scope (subscription or resource group) where you'll create the policy assignments.

Create a policy assignment to install the Flux extension

In order for a policy to apply Flux v2 configurations to a cluster, the Flux extension must first be installed on the cluster. To ensure that the extension is installed to each of your clusters, assign the Configure installation of Flux extension on Kubernetes cluster policy definition to the desired scope.

  1. In the Azure portal, navigate to Policy.
  2. In the Authoring section of the sidebar, select Definitions.
  3. In the "Kubernetes" category, select the Configure installation of Flux extension on Kubernetes cluster built-in policy definition.
  4. Select Assign.
  5. Set the Scope to the management group, subscription, or resource group to which the policy assignment will apply.
    • If you want to exclude any resources from the policy assignment scope, set Exclusions.
  6. Give the policy assignment an easily identifiable Assignment name and Description.
  7. Ensure Policy enforcement is set to Enabled.
  8. Select Review + create, then select Create.

Create a policy assignment to apply Flux configurations

Next, return to the Definitions list (in the Authoring section of Policy) to apply the configuration policy definition to the same scope.

  1. In the "Kubernetes" category, select the Configure Kubernetes clusters with Flux v2 configuration using public Git repository built-in policy definition, or one of the other policy definitions to apply Flux configurations.

  2. Select Assign.

  3. Set the Scope to the same scope that you selected when assigning the first policy, including any exclusions.

  4. Give the policy assignment an easily identifiable Assignment name and Description.

  5. Ensure Policy enforcement is set to Enabled.

  6. Select Next, then select Next again to open the Parameters tab.

  7. Set the parameter values to be used.

    • For more information about parameters, see the tutorial on deploying Flux v2 configurations.
    • When creating Flux configurations, you must provide a value for one (and only one) of these parameters: repositoryRefBranch, repositoryRefTag, repositoryRefSemver, repositoryRefCommit.
  8. Select Next to open the Remediation task.

  9. Enable Create a remediation task.

  10. Verify that Create a Managed Identity is checked, and that the identity has Contributor permissions. For more information, see Quickstart: Create a policy assignment to identify non-compliant resources and Remediate non-compliant resources with Azure Policy.

  11. Select Review + create, then select Create.

The configuration is then applied to new Azure Arc-enabled Kubernetes or AKS clusters created within the scope of policy assignment.

For existing clusters, you might need to manually run a remediation task. This task typically takes 10 to 20 minutes for the policy assignment to take effect.

Verify the policy assignment

  1. In the Azure portal, navigate to one of your Azure Arc-enabled Kubernetes or AKS clusters.

  2. In the Settings section of the sidebar, select GitOps.

    In the configurations list, you should see the configuration created by the policy assignment.

  3. In the Kubernetes resources section of the sidebar, select Namespaces and Workloads.

    You should see the namespace and artifacts that were created by the Flux configuration. You should also see the objects described by the manifests in the Git repo deployed on the cluster.

Customize a policy

The built-in policies cover the main scenarios for using GitOps with Flux v2 in your Kubernetes clusters. However, due to limitations on the number of parameters allowed in Azure Policy assignments (max of 20), not all parameters are present in the built-in policies. Also, to fit within the 20-parameter limit, only a single kustomization can be created with the built-in policies.

If you have a scenario that differs from the built-in policies, you can overcome the limitations by creating custom policies using the built-in policies as templates. You can create custom policies that contain only the parameters you need, and hard-code the rest, therefore working around the 20-parameter limit.

Next steps