Kustomizer is an experimental package manager for distributing Kubernetes configuration as OCI artifacts. It offers commands to publish, fetch, diff, customize, validate, apply and prune Kubernetes resources.
Kustomizer relies on server-side apply and requires a Kubernetes cluster v1.20 or newer.
The Kustomizer CLI is available as a binary executable for all major platforms, the binaries can be downloaded from GitHub releases. The binaries checksums are signed with Cosign and each release comes with a Software Bill of Materials (SBOM) in SPDX format.
Install the latest release on macOS or Linux with Homebrew:
brew install stefanprodan/tap/kustomizer
For other installation methods, see kustomizer.dev/install.
To get started with Kustomizer please visit the documentation website at kustomizer.dev.
Kustomizer offers a way to distribute Kubernetes configuration using container registries. It can package Kubernetes manifests in an OCI image and store them in a container registry, right next to your applications' images.
Kustomizer comes with commands for managing OCI artifacts:
kustomizer push artifact oci://<image-url>:<tag> -k [-f] [-p]
kustomizer tag artifact oci://<image-url>:<tag> <new-tag>
kustomizer list artifacts oci://<repo-url> --semver <condition>
kustomizer pull artifact oci://<image-url>:<tag>
kustomizer inspect artifact oci://<image-url>:<tag>
kustomizer diff artifact <oci url> <oci url>
Kustomizer is compatible with Docker Hub, GHCR, ACR, ECR, GCR, Artifactory,
self-hosted Docker Registry and others. For auth, it uses the credentials from ~/.docker/config.json
.
Kustomizer can sign and verify artifacts using sigstore/cosign either with static keys, Cloud KMS or keyless signatures (when running Kustomizer with GitHub Actions):
kustomizer push artifact --sign --cosign-key <private key>
kustomizer pull artifact --verify --cosign-key <public key>
kustomizer inspect artifact --verify --cosign-key <public key>
For an example on how to secure your Kubernetes supply chain with Kustomizer and Cosign please see this guide.
Kustomizer offers a way for grouping Kubernetes resources.
It generates an inventory which keeps track of the set of resources applied together.
The inventory is stored inside the cluster in a ConfigMap
object and contains metadata
such as the resources provenance and revision.
The Kustomizer garbage collector uses the inventory to keep track of the applied resources and prunes the Kubernetes objects that were previously applied but are missing from the current revision.
You specify an inventory name and namespace at apply time, and then you can use Kustomizer to list, diff, update, and delete inventories:
kustomizer apply inventory <name> [--artifact <oci url>] [-f] [-p] -k
kustomizer diff inventory <name> [-a] [-f] [-p] -k
kustomizer get inventories --namespace <namespace>
kustomizer inspect inventory <name> --namespace <namespace>
kustomizer delete inventory <name> --namespace <namespace>
When applying resources from OCI artifacts, Kustomizer saves the artifacts URL and the image SHA-2 digest in the inventory. For deterministic and repeatable apply operations, you could use digests instead of tags.
Kustomizer has builtin support for encrypting and decrypting Kubernetes configuration (packaged as OCI artifacts) using age asymmetric keys.
To securely distribute sensitive Kubernetes configuration to trusted users, you can encrypt the artifacts with their age public keys:
kustomizer push artifact oci://<image-url>:<tag> --age-recipients <public keys>
Users can access the artifacts by decrypting them with their age private keys:
kustomizer inspect artifact oci://<image-url>:<tag> --age-identities <private keys>
kustomizer pull artifact oci://<image-url>:<tag> --age-identities <private keys>
kustomizer apply inventory <name> [--artifact <oci url>] --age-identities <private keys>
kustomizer diff inventory <name> [--artifact <oci url>] --age-identities <private keys>
Kustomizer is Apache 2.0 licensed and accepts contributions via GitHub pull requests.