We would love to hear from you! Here are some places you can find us.
Our mailing list is metallb-users@googlegroups.com. It’s for discussions around MetalLB usage, community support, and developer discussion (although for the latter we mostly use Github directly).
For a more interactive experience, we have the #metallb slack channel on k8s.slack.com. If you’re not already logged into the Kubernetes slack organization, you’ll need to request an invite before you can join.
If you prefer a more classic chat experience, we’re also on #metallb
on the Freenode IRC network. You can use Freenode’s web
client
if you don’t already have an IRC client.
Use the GitHub issue tracker to file bugs and features request. If you need support, please send your questions to the metallb-users mailing list rather than filing a GitHub issue.
We welcome contributions to MetalLB! Here’s some information to get you started.
This project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms.
Before you make significant code changes, please open an issue to discuss your plans. This will minimize the amount of review required for pull requests.
All submissions require review. We use GitHub pull requests for this purpose. Consult GitHub Help for more information on using pull requests.
MetalLB’s code is divided between a number of binaries, and some
supporting libraries. The libraries live in the internal
directory,
and each binary has its own top-level directory. Here’s what we
currently have, relative to the top-level directory:
controller
is the cluster-wide MetalLB controller, in charge of
IP assignment.speaker
is the per-node daemon that advertises services with
assigned IPs using various advertising strategies.internal/k8s
contains the bowels of the logic to talk to the
Kubernetes apiserver to get and modify service information. It
allows most of the rest of the MetalLB code to be ignorant of the
Kubernetes client library, other than the objects (Service,
ConfigMap…) that they manipulate.internal/config
parses and validates the MetalLB configmap.internal/allocator
is the IP address manager. Given pools from the
MetalLB configmap, it can allocate addresses on demand.internal/bgp
is a very stripped down implementation of BGP. It
speaks just enough of the protocol to keep peering sessions up, and
to push routes to the peer.internal/layer2
is an implementation of an ARP and NDP responder.internal/logging
is a logging shim that redirects both
Kubernetes’s klog
and Go’s standard library log
output to
go-kit’s structured logger, which is what MetalLB itself uses for
logging.internal/version
just burns version numbers and git commit
information into compiled binaries, so that MetalLB can print its
build information.In addition to code, there’s deployment configuration and documentation:
manifests
contains a variety of Kubernetes manifests. The most
important one is manifests/metallb.yaml
, which specifies how to
deploy MetalLB onto a cluster.website
contains the website for MetalLB. The website/content
subdirectory is where all the pages live, in Markdown format.To develop MetalLB, you’ll need a couple of pieces of software:
go
tool)Start by fetching the MetalLB repository, with git clone
https://github.com/danderson/metallb
.
From there, you can use Invoke to build Docker images, push them to
registries, and so forth. inv -l
lists the available tasks.
For development, fork
the github repository, and add
your fork as a remote in $GOPATH/src/go.universe.tf/metallb
, with
git remote add fork git@github.com:<your-github-user>/metallb.git
.
The website at https://metallb.universe.tf is pinned to the latest released version, so that users who don’t care about ongoing development see documentation that is consistent with the released code.
However, there is a version of the website synced to the latest master
branch
at
https://master–metallb.netlify.com. Similarly,
every branch has a published website at <branch
name>--metallb.netlify.com
. So if you want to view the documentation
for the 0.2 version, regardless of what the currently released version
is, you can
visit
https://v0.2–metallb.netlify.com.
When editing the website, you can preview your changes locally by
installing Hugo and running hugo server
from
the website
directory.