buildEnvs:
- name: EXAMPLE1
value: one
The func.yaml file contains the configuration for your function project. Values specified in func.yaml are used when you execute a kn func command. For example, when you run the kn func build command, the value in the build field is used. In some cases, you can override these values with command line flags or environment variables.
Many of the fields in func.yaml are generated automatically when you create, build, and deploy your function. However, there are also fields that you modify manually to change things, such as the function name or the image name.
The buildEnvs field enables you to set environment variables to be available to the environment that builds your function. Unlike variables set using envs, a variable set using buildEnv is not available during function runtime.
You can set a buildEnv variable directly from a value. In the following example, the buildEnv variable named EXAMPLE1 is directly assigned the one value:
buildEnvs:
- name: EXAMPLE1
value: one
You can also set a buildEnv variable from a local environment variable. In the following example, the buildEnv variable named EXAMPLE2 is assigned the value of the LOCAL_ENV_VAR local environment variable:
buildEnvs:
- name: EXAMPLE1
value: '{{ env:LOCAL_ENV_VAR }}'
The envs field enables you to set environment variables to be available to your function at runtime. You can set an environment variable in several different ways:
Directly from a value.
From a value assigned to a local environment variable. See the section "Referencing local environment variables from func.yaml fields" for more information.
From a key-value pair stored in a secret or config map.
You can also import all key-value pairs stored in a secret or config map, with keys used as names of the created environment variables.
This examples demonstrates the different ways to set an environment variable:
name: test
namespace: ""
runtime: go
...
envs:
- name: EXAMPLE1 (1)
value: value
- name: EXAMPLE2 (2)
value: '{{ env:LOCAL_ENV_VALUE }}'
- name: EXAMPLE3 (3)
value: '{{ secret:mysecret:key }}'
- name: EXAMPLE4 (4)
value: '{{ configMap:myconfigmap:key }}'
- value: '{{ secret:mysecret2 }}' (5)
- value: '{{ configMap:myconfigmap2 }}' (6)
| 1 | An environment variable set directly from a value. |
| 2 | An environment variable set from a value assigned to a local environment variable. |
| 3 | An environment variable assigned from a key-value pair stored in a secret. |
| 4 | An environment variable assigned from a key-value pair stored in a config map. |
| 5 | A set of environment variables imported from key-value pairs of a secret. |
| 6 | A set of environment variables imported from key-value pairs of a config map. |
The builder field specifies the strategy used by the function to build the image. It accepts values of pack or s2i.
The build field indicates how the function should be built. The value local indicates that the function is built locally on your machine. The value git indicates that the function is built on a cluster by using the values specified in the git field.
The volumes field enables you to mount secrets and config maps as a volume accessible to the function at the specified path, as shown in the following example:
name: test
namespace: ""
runtime: go
...
volumes:
- secret: mysecret (1)
path: /workspace/secret
- configMap: myconfigmap (2)
path: /workspace/configmap
| 1 | The mysecret secret is mounted as a volume residing at /workspace/secret. |
| 2 | The myconfigmap config map is mounted as a volume residing at /workspace/configmap. |
The options field enables you to modify Knative Service properties for the deployed function, such as autoscaling. If these options are not set, the default ones are used.
These options are available:
scale
min: The minimum number of replicas. Must be a non-negative integer. The default is 0.
max: The maximum number of replicas. Must be a non-negative integer. The default is 0, which means no limit.
metric: Defines which metric type is watched by the Autoscaler. It can be set to concurrency, which is the default, or rps.
target: Recommendation for when to scale up based on the number of concurrently incoming requests. The target option can be a float value greater than 0.01. The default is 100, unless the options.resources.limits.concurrency is set, in which case target defaults to its value.
utilization: Percentage of concurrent requests utilization allowed before scaling up. It can be a float value between 1 and 100. The default is 70.
resources
requests
cpu: A CPU resource request for the container with deployed function.
memory: A memory resource request for the container with deployed function.
limits
cpu: A CPU resource limit for the container with deployed function.
memory: A memory resource limit for the container with deployed function.
concurrency: Hard Limit of concurrent requests to be processed by a single replica. It can be integer value greater than or equal to 0, default is 0 - meaning no limit.
This is an example configuration of the scale options:
name: test
namespace: ""
runtime: go
...
options:
scale:
min: 0
max: 10
metric: concurrency
target: 75
utilization: 75
resources:
requests:
cpu: 100m
memory: 128Mi
limits:
cpu: 1000m
memory: 256Mi
concurrency: 100
The image field sets the image name for your function after it has been built. You can modify this field. If you do, the next time you run kn func build or kn func deploy, the function image will be created with the new name.
The imageDigest field contains the SHA256 hash of the image manifest when the function is deployed. Do not modify this value.
The labels field enables you to set labels on a deployed function.
You can set a label directly from a value. In the following example, the label with the role key is directly assigned the value of backend:
labels:
- key: role
value: backend
You can also set a label from a local environment variable. In the following example, the label with the author key is assigned the value of the USER local environment variable:
labels:
- key: author
value: '{{ env:USER }}'
If you want to avoid storing sensitive information such as an API key in the function configuration, you can add a reference to an environment variable available in the local environment. You can do this by modifying the envs field in the func.yaml file.
You need to have the function project created.
The local environment needs to contain the variable that you want to reference.
To refer to a local environment variable, use the following syntax:
{{ env:ENV_VAR }}
Substitute ENV_VAR with the name of the variable in the local environment that you want to use.
For example, you might have the API_KEY variable available in the local environment. You can assign its value to the MY_API_KEY variable, which you can then directly use within your function:
name: test
namespace: ""
runtime: go
...
envs:
- name: MY_API_KEY
value: '{{ env:API_KEY }}'
...