Projecting binding data

This section provides information on how you can consume the binding data.

Consumption of binding data

After the backing service exposes the binding data, for a workload to access and consume this data, you must project it into the workload from a backing service. Service Binding Operator automatically projects this set of data into the workload in the following methods:

  1. By default, as files.

  2. As environment variables, after you configure the .spec.bindAsFiles parameter from the ServiceBinding resource.

Configuration of the directory path to project the binding data inside workload container

By default, Service Binding Operator mounts the binding data as files at a specific directory in your workload resource. You can configure the directory path using the SERVICE_BINDING_ROOT environment variable setup in the container where your workload runs.

Within this service binding root directory, there can be multiple binding metadata projected through different ServiceBinding resource reconciliations. For example, a workload requires a connection to a database and a cache server. In that case, one Service Binding resource could provide the database, and the other Service Binding resource could provide the binding data to the cache server.

Example: Binding data mounted as files
$SERVICE_BINDING_ROOT (1)
├── account-database (2)
│   ├── type (3)
│   ├── provider (4)
│   ├── uri
│   ├── username
│   └── password
└── transaction-event-stream (2)
    ├── type
    ├── connection-count
    ├── uri
    ├── certificates
    └── private-key
1 Root directory.
2 Directory that stores the binding data.
3 Mandatory identifier that identifies the type of the binding data projected into the corresponding directory.
4 Optional: Identifier to identify the provider so that the application can identify the type of backing service it can connect to.

Retrieving the binding data through the binding data directory name is not a good practice. It makes your workload less portable. Always use the type field and, if necessary, the provider field to look up the binding data.

For using the binding data directory name to look up the binding data: The Service Binding Operator uses the ServiceBinding resource name (.metadata.name) as the binding data directory name, but the spec also provides a way to override that name through the .spec.name field. Hence there is a chance for binding data name collision. However, due to the nature of the volume mount in Kubernetes, the binding data directory will contain values from only one of the Secret resources.

Environment variables

The Service Binding Operator supports projecting environment variables. To consume the binding data as environment variables, use the built-in language feature of your programming language of choice that can read environment variables.

Example: Python client usage
import os

username = os.getenv("USERNAME")
password = os.getenv("PASSWORD")

The container must restart to update the values of environment variables if there is a change in the Secret resource.

Computation of the final path for projecting the binding data as files

The following table summarizes the configuration of how the final path for the binding data projection is computed when files are mounted at a specific directory:

Table 1. Summary of the final path computation
SERVICE_BINDING_ROOT Final path

Not available

/bindings/<ServiceBinding_ResourceName>

dir/path/root

dir/path/root/<ServiceBinding_ResourceName>

In the previous table, the <ServiceBinding_ResourceName> entry specifies the name of the ServiceBinding resource that you configure in the .metadata.name section of the custom resource (CR).

To access and consume the binding data within the existing SERVICE_BINDING_ROOT environment variable, use the built-in language feature of your programming language of choice that can read environment variables.

Example: Python client usage
from pyservicebinding import binding
try:
    sb = binding.ServiceBinding()
except binding.ServiceBindingRootMissingError as msg:
    # log the error message and retry/exit
    print("SERVICE_BINDING_ROOT env var not set")

sb = binding.ServiceBinding()

bindings_list = sb.bindings("postgresql")

In the previous example, the bindings_list variable contains the binding data for the postgresql database service type. For full API, see the documentation.

Following are the language or framework specific programs that you can use for accessing the binding data within the existing SERVICE_BINDING_ROOT environment variable:

All these libraries expect SERVICE_BINDING_ROOT to be set.

Projecting the binding data

Depending on your workload requirements and environment, you can choose to project the binding data either as files or environment variables.

Prerequisites
  • You understand the following concepts:

    • Environment and requirements of your workload, and how it works with the provided services.

    • Consumption of the binding data in your workload resource.

    • Configuration of how the final path for data projection is computed for the default method.

  • The binding data is exposed from the backing service.

Procedure

  1. To project the binding data as files, determine the destination folder by ensuring that the existing SERVICE_BINDING_ROOT environment variable is present in the container where your workload runs.

  2. To project the binding data as environment variables, set the value for the .spec.bindAsFiles parameter to false from the ServiceBinding resource in the custom resource (CR).

By default, the projected files get their permissions set to 0644. Service Binding Operator cannot set specific permissions due to a bug in Kubernetes that causes issues if the service expects specific permissions such as, 0600. As a workaround, you can modify the code of the program or the application that is running inside a workload resource to copy the file to the /tmp directory and set the appropriate permissions.

Understanding the rebinding behavior

Consider a case where after a successful binding, you are using the name field to identify a workload. In such a case, if you delete an existing workload and recreate it, the projected binding data are lost. The ServiceBinding reconciler does not rebind the workload. However, if you use the label selector field to identify a workload, the ServiceBinding reconciler rebinds the workload, and the Operator projects the binding data.