# Sync Options Argo CD allows users to customize some aspects of how it syncs the desired state in the target cluster. Some Sync Options can be defined as annotations in a specific resource. Most of the Sync Options are configured in the Application resource `spec.syncPolicy.syncOptions` attribute. Multiple Sync Options which are configured with the `argocd.argoproj.io/sync-options` annotation can be concatenated with a `,` in the annotation value; white spaces will be trimmed. Below you can find details about each available Sync Option: ## No Prune Resources >v1.1 You may wish to prevent an object from being pruned: ```yaml metadata: annotations: argocd.argoproj.io/sync-options: Prune=false ``` In the UI, the pod will simply appear as out-of-sync: ![sync option no prune](../assets/sync-option-no-prune.png) The sync-status panel shows that pruning was skipped, and why: ![sync option no prune](../assets/sync-option-no-prune-sync-status.png) The app will be out of sync if Argo CD expects a resource to be pruned. You may wish to use this along with [compare options](compare-options.md). ## Resource Pruning With Confirmation Resources such as Namespaces are critical and should not be pruned without confirmation. You can set the `Prune=confirm` sync option to require manual confirmation before pruning. ```yaml metadata: annotations: argocd.argoproj.io/sync-options: Prune=confirm ``` To confirm the pruning you can use Argo CD UI, CLI or manually apply the `argocd.argoproj.io/deletion-approved: ` annotation to the application. ## Disable Kubectl Validation For a certain class of objects, it is necessary to `kubectl apply` them using the `--validate=false` flag. Examples of this are Kubernetes types which uses `RawExtension`, such as [ServiceCatalog](https://github.com/kubernetes-incubator/service-catalog/blob/master/pkg/apis/servicecatalog/v1beta1/types.go#L497). You can do using this annotations: ```yaml metadata: annotations: argocd.argoproj.io/sync-options: Validate=false ``` If you want to exclude a whole class of objects globally, consider setting `resource.customizations` in [system level configuration](../user-guide/diffing.md#system-level-configuration). ## Skip Dry Run for new custom resources types When syncing a custom resource which is not yet known to the cluster, there are generally two options: 1) The CRD manifest is part of the same sync. Then Argo CD will automatically skip the dry run, the CRD will be applied and the resource can be created. 2) In some cases the CRD is not part of the sync, but it could be created in another way, e.g. by a controller in the cluster. An example is [gatekeeper](https://github.com/open-policy-agent/gatekeeper), which creates CRDs in response to user defined `ConstraintTemplates`. Argo CD cannot find the CRD in the sync and will fail with the error `the server could not find the requested resource`. To skip the dry run for missing resource types, use the following annotation: ```yaml metadata: annotations: argocd.argoproj.io/sync-options: SkipDryRunOnMissingResource=true ``` The dry run will still be executed if the CRD is already present in the cluster. ## No Resource Deletion For certain resources you might want to retain them even after your application is deleted, for eg. Persistent Volume Claims. In such situations you can stop those resources from being cleaned up during app deletion by using the following annotation: ```yaml metadata: annotations: argocd.argoproj.io/sync-options: Delete=false ``` ## Resource Deletion With Confirmation Resources such as Namespaces are critical and should not be deleted without confirmation. You can set the `Delete=confirm` sync option to require manual confirmation before deletion. ```yaml metadata: annotations: argocd.argoproj.io/sync-options: Delete=confirm ``` To confirm the deletion you can use Argo CD UI, CLI or manually apply the `argocd.argoproj.io/deletion-approved: ` annotation to the application. ## Selective Sync Currently when syncing using auto sync Argo CD applies every object in the application. For applications containing thousands of objects this takes quite a long time and puts undue pressure on the api server. Turning on selective sync option which will sync only out-of-sync resources. You can add this option by following ways 1) Add `ApplyOutOfSyncOnly=true` in manifest Example: ```yaml apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1 kind: Application spec: syncPolicy: syncOptions: - ApplyOutOfSyncOnly=true ``` 2) Set sync option via argocd cli Example: ```bash $ argocd app set guestbook --sync-option ApplyOutOfSyncOnly=true ``` ## Resources Prune Deletion Propagation Policy By default, extraneous resources get pruned using foreground deletion policy. The propagation policy can be controlled using `PrunePropagationPolicy` sync option. Supported policies are background, foreground and orphan. More information about those policies could be found [here](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/controllers/garbage-collection/#controlling-how-the-garbage-collector-deletes-dependents). ```yaml apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1 kind: Application spec: syncPolicy: syncOptions: - PrunePropagationPolicy=foreground ``` ## Prune Last This feature is to allow the ability for resource pruning to happen as a final, implicit wave of a sync operation, after the other resources have been deployed and become healthy, and after all other waves completed successfully. ```yaml apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1 kind: Application spec: syncPolicy: syncOptions: - PruneLast=true ``` This can also be configured at individual resource level. ```yaml metadata: annotations: argocd.argoproj.io/sync-options: PruneLast=true ``` ## Replace Resource Instead Of Applying Changes By default, Argo CD executes `kubectl apply` operation to apply the configuration stored in Git. In some cases `kubectl apply` is not suitable. For example, resource spec might be too big and won't fit into `kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration` annotation that is added by `kubectl apply`. In such cases you might use `Replace=true` sync option: ```yaml apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1 kind: Application spec: syncPolicy: syncOptions: - Replace=true ``` If the `Replace=true` sync option is set the Argo CD will use `kubectl replace` or `kubectl create` command to apply changes. !!! warning During the sync process, the resources will be synchronized using the 'kubectl replace/create' command. This sync option has the potential to be destructive and might lead to resources having to be recreated, which could cause an outage for your application. This can also be configured at individual resource level. ```yaml metadata: annotations: argocd.argoproj.io/sync-options: Replace=true ``` ## Force Sync For certain resources you might want to delete and recreate. e.g. job resources that should run every time when syncing. !!! warning During the sync process, the resources will be synchronized using the 'kubectl delete/create' command. This sync option has a destructive action, which could cause an outage for your application. In such cases you might use `Force=true` sync option in target resources annotation: ```yaml metadata: annotations: argocd.argoproj.io/sync-options: Force=true,Replace=true ``` ## Server-Side Apply This option enables Kubernetes [Server-Side Apply](https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/using-api/server-side-apply/). By default, Argo CD executes `kubectl apply` operation to apply the configuration stored in Git. This is a client side operation that relies on `kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration` annotation to store the previous resource state. However, there are some cases where you want to use `kubectl apply --server-side` over `kubectl apply`: - Resource is too big to fit in 262144 bytes allowed annotation size. In this case server-side apply can be used to avoid this issue as the annotation is not used in this case. - Patching of existing resources on the cluster that are not fully managed by Argo CD. - Use a more declarative approach, which tracks a user's field management, rather than a user's last applied state. If `ServerSideApply=true` sync option is set, Argo CD will use `kubectl apply --server-side` command to apply changes. It can be enabled at the application level like in the example below: ```yaml apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1 kind: Application spec: syncPolicy: syncOptions: - ServerSideApply=true ``` To enable ServerSideApply just for an individual resource, the sync-option annotation can be used: ```yaml metadata: annotations: argocd.argoproj.io/sync-options: ServerSideApply=true ``` ServerSideApply can also be used to patch existing resources by providing a partial yaml. For example, if there is a requirement to update just the number of replicas in a given Deployment, the following yaml can be provided to Argo CD: ```yaml apiVersion: apps/v1 kind: Deployment metadata: name: my-deployment spec: replicas: 3 ``` Note that by the Deployment schema specification, this isn't a valid manifest. In this case an additional sync option *must* be provided to skip schema validation. The example below shows how to configure the application to enable the two necessary sync options: ```yaml apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1 kind: Application spec: syncPolicy: syncOptions: - ServerSideApply=true - Validate=false ``` In this case, Argo CD will use `kubectl apply --server-side --validate=false` command to apply changes. Note: [`Replace=true`](#replace-resource-instead-of-applying-changes) takes precedence over `ServerSideApply=true`. ## Fail the sync if a shared resource is found By default, Argo CD will apply all manifests found in the git path configured in the Application regardless if the resources defined in the yamls are already applied by another Application. If the `FailOnSharedResource` sync option is set, Argo CD will fail the sync whenever it finds a resource in the current Application that is already applied in the cluster by another Application. ```yaml apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1 kind: Application spec: syncPolicy: syncOptions: - FailOnSharedResource=true ``` ## Respect ignore difference configs This sync option is used to enable Argo CD to consider the configurations made in the `spec.ignoreDifferences` attribute also during the sync stage. By default, Argo CD uses the `ignoreDifferences` config just for computing the diff between the live and desired state which defines if the application is synced or not. However during the sync stage, the desired state is applied as-is. The patch is calculated using a 3-way-merge between the live state the desired state and the `last-applied-configuration` annotation. This sometimes leads to an undesired results. This behavior can be changed by setting the `RespectIgnoreDifferences=true` sync option like in the example below: ```yaml apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1 kind: Application spec: ignoreDifferences: - group: "apps" kind: "Deployment" jsonPointers: - /spec/replicas syncPolicy: syncOptions: - RespectIgnoreDifferences=true ``` The example above shows how an Argo CD Application can be configured so it will ignore the `spec.replicas` field from the desired state (git) during the sync stage. This is achieved by calculating and pre-patching the desired state before applying it in the cluster. Note that the `RespectIgnoreDifferences` sync option is only effective when the resource is already created in the cluster. If the Application is being created and no live state exists, the desired state is applied as-is. ## Create Namespace ```yaml apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1 kind: Application metadata: namespace: argocd spec: destination: server: https://kubernetes.default.svc namespace: some-namespace syncPolicy: syncOptions: - CreateNamespace=true ``` The example above shows how an Argo CD Application can be configured so it will create the namespace specified in `spec.destination.namespace` if it doesn't exist already. Without this either declared in the Application manifest or passed in the CLI via `--sync-option CreateNamespace=true`, the Application will fail to sync if the namespace doesn't exist. Note that the namespace to be created must be informed in the `spec.destination.namespace` field of the Application resource. The `metadata.namespace` field in the Application's child manifests must match this value, or can be omitted, so resources are created in the proper destination. ### Namespace Metadata We can also add labels and annotations to the namespace through `managedNamespaceMetadata`. If we extend the example above we could potentially do something like below: ```yaml apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1 kind: Application metadata: namespace: test spec: syncPolicy: managedNamespaceMetadata: labels: # The labels to set on the application namespace any: label you: like annotations: # The annotations to set on the application namespace the: same applies: for annotations: on-the-namespace syncOptions: - CreateNamespace=true ``` In order for Argo CD to manage the labels and annotations on the namespace, `CreateNamespace=true` needs to be set as a sync option, otherwise nothing will happen. If the namespace doesn't already exist, or if it already exists and doesn't already have labels and/or annotations set on it, you're good to go. Using `managedNamespaceMetadata` will also set the resource tracking label (or annotation) on the namespace, so you can easily track which namespaces are managed by Argo CD. In the case you do not have any custom annotations or labels but would nonetheless want to have resource tracking set on your namespace, that can be done by setting `managedNamespaceMetadata` with an empty `labels` and/or `annotations` map, like the example below: ```yaml apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1 kind: Application metadata: namespace: test spec: syncPolicy: managedNamespaceMetadata: labels: # The labels to set on the application namespace annotations: # The annotations to set on the application namespace syncOptions: - CreateNamespace=true ``` In the case where Argo CD is "adopting" an existing namespace which already has metadata set on it, you should first [upgrade the resource to server-side apply](https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/using-api/server-side-apply/#upgrading-from-client-side-apply-to-server-side-apply) before enabling `managedNamespaceMetadata`. Argo CD relies on `kubectl`, which does not support managing client-side-applied resources with server-side-applies. If you do not upgrade the resource to server-side apply, Argo CD may remove existing labels/annotations, which may or may not be the desired behavior. Another thing to keep mind of is that if you have a k8s manifest for the same namespace in your Argo CD application, that will take precedence and *overwrite whatever values that have been set in `managedNamespaceMetadata`*. In other words, if you have an application that sets `managedNamespaceMetadata` ```yaml apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1 kind: Application spec: syncPolicy: managedNamespaceMetadata: annotations: abc: 123 syncOptions: - CreateNamespace=true ``` But you also have a k8s manifest with a matching name ```yaml apiVersion: v1 kind: Namespace metadata: name: foobar annotations: foo: bar something: completely-different ``` The resulting namespace will have its annotations set to ```yaml annotations: foo: bar something: completely-different ```