In our day-to-day big-data job orchestration, Apache DolphinScheduler has become one of our most critical tools. We used to run it on bare-metal (v3.1.9 still sat on physical machines), but that approach exposed gaps in elastic scaling, resource isolation, and operational efficiency. As the company’s cloud-native strategy accelerated, we finally upgraded DolphinScheduler to 3.2.2 in 2025 and partially migrated it to Kubernetes.

The motivation was crystal-clear: first, elastic scaling—K8s can spin up extra Worker pods at peak load; second, resource isolation so jobs don’t clobber each other; third, automated rollout & rollback, slashing maintenance costs; and finally, and most importantly, alignment with our cloud-native direction.


Image Build: From Source to Modules

The first step of the migration was image construction.



We prepared a base image containing Hadoop, Hive, Spark, Flink, Python, etc., then built DolphinScheduler’s base image on top, bundling recompiled modules and the MySQL driver.



Note: MySQL stores DolphinScheduler’s metadata, so the driver JAR must be symlinked into every module: dolphinscheduler-toolsdolphinscheduler-masterdolphinscheduler-workerdolphinscheduler-api, and dolphinscheduler-alert-server.



Module images are customized on top of the base DS image, mainly tweaking ports and configs. To minimize later changes, we kept the image names identical to the official ones. You can build a single module:

./build.sh worker-server


or batch-build everything:

./build-all.sh


Typical headaches: huge base image → slow builds; refactored JARs not overwriting old ones; mismatched port configs & start scripts across modules. Overlook any of these and you’ll suffer later.



Deployment: From Hand-Rolled YAML to Official Helm Chart

Early on, we hand-wrote YAMLs—painful for config sprawl and upgrades. We switched to the official Helm chart for centralized configs and smoother upgrades.

K8s cluster version: v1.25. Firs,t create the namespace:

kubectl create ns dolphinscheduler
helm pull oci://registry-1.docker.io/apache/dolphinscheduler-helm --version 3.2.2

values.yaml is where the dragons hide. Key snippets:


1. Image

image:
  registry: my.private.repo
  repository: dolphinscheduler
  tag: 3.2.2
  pullPolicy: IfNotPresent

💡 Pre-push utility images to your private repo to avoid network hiccups.


2. External MySQL

mysql:
  enabled: false   # disable embedded MySQL
externalMysql:
  host: mysql.prod.local
  port: 3306
  username: ds_user
  password: ds_password
  database: dolphinscheduler

💡 Always disable the built-in DB; prod uses external MySQL (future plan: migrate to PostgreSQL).


3. LDAP Auth

ldap:
  enabled: true
  url: ldap://ldap.prod.local:389
  userDn: cn=admin,dc=company,dc=com
  password: ldap_password
  baseDn: dc=company,dc=com

💡 Single sign-on via corporate LDAP simplifies permission management.


4. Shared Storage

sharedStoragePersistence:
  enabled: true
  storageClassName: nfs-rwx
  size: 100Gi
  mountPath: /dolphinscheduler/shared


💡 storageClassName must support ReadWriteMany, or multiple Workers can’t share.



5. HDFS

hdfs:
  defaultFS: hdfs://hdfs-nn:8020
  path: /dolphinscheduler
  rootUser: hdfs


💡 Ensure big-data paths like /opt/soft exist beforehand.


6. Zookeeper

zookeeper:
  enabled: false   # disable embedded ZK
externalZookeeper:
  quorum: zk1.prod.local:2181,zk2.prod.local:2181,zk3.prod.local:2181


💡 When using external ZK, disable the built-in one and verify version compatibility.


Pitfalls & Maintenance Battles

We stepped on plenty of rakes:


Roadmap & Thoughts

To cut long-term OPEX, we’re standardizing:

K8s gives DolphinScheduler far better elasticity, isolation, and portability than bare metal ever could. Custom images and configs did hurt, but as we converge on community releases and standardized ops, pain will fade and velocity will rise.

Our end goal: a highly available, easily extensible, unified scheduling platform that truly unlocks cloud-native value. If you’re also considering moving your scheduler to K8s, hit the comments or join the DolphinScheduler community—let’s dig together!