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Kubestack

Provision a Kubernetes cluster with Packer and Terraform on Google Compute Engine.

Status

Ready for testing. Over the next couple of weeks the repo should be generic enough for reuse with complete documentation.

Prep

The Packer and Terraform configs assume your authentication JSON file is stored under /etc/kubestack-account.json

Packer Images

Immutable infrastructure is the future. Instead of using cloud-init to provision machines at boot we'll create a custom image using Packer.

Run the packer commands below will create the following image:

kubestack-0-17-1-v20150606

Create the Kubestack Base Image

cd packer
packer build -var-file=settings.json kubestack.json

Terraform

Terraform will be used to declare and provision a Kubernetes cluster.

Prep

Generate an etcd discovery token:

curl https://discovery.etcd.io/new?size=3
https://discovery.etcd.io/465df9c06a9d589...

Edit terraform/terraform.tfvars. Add the required values:

discovery_url = "https://discovery.etcd.io/465df9c06a9d589..."
project = "kubestack"
sshkey_metadata = "core: ssh-rsa AAAAB3NzaC1yc2EA..."

Example tokens.csv

04b6d6bfe5bexample82db624, kelseyhightower, kelseyhightower
  • Ensure your local ssh-agent is running and your ssh key has been added. This step is required by the terraform provisioner.
ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa

Provision the Kubernetes Cluster

cd terraform
terraform plan
terraform apply

If you run into the follow error try changing the GCE zone and try again.

The zone 'projects/kubestack/zones/us-central1-a' does not have enough resources available to fulfill the request.
terraform destroy

Get a list of GCE zones.

gcloud compute zones list
NAME           REGION       STATUS NEXT_MAINTENANCE TURNDOWN_DATE
asia-east1-c   asia-east1   UP
asia-east1-a   asia-east1   UP
asia-east1-b   asia-east1   UP
europe-west1-c europe-west1 UP
europe-west1-b europe-west1 UP
europe-west1-d europe-west1 UP
us-central1-a  us-central1  UP
us-central1-b  us-central1  UP
us-central1-c  us-central1  UP
us-central1-f  us-central1  UP

Edit terraform.tfvars

zone = "us-central1-b"

Be sure to generate a new etcd discovery token:

curl https://discovery.etcd.io/new?size=3
https://discovery.etcd.io/2e5df9c06a9d590...

Edit terraform.tfvars

discovery_url = "https://discovery.etcd.io/2e5df9c06a9d590..."

Try again.

terraform apply

Resize the number of worker nodes

Edit terraform/terraform.tfvars. Set worker_count to the desired value:

worker_count = 3

Apply the changes:

terraform plan
terraform apply
Apply complete! Resources: 10 added, 0 changed, 0 destroyed.

The state of your infrastructure has been saved to the path
below. This state is required to modify and destroy your
infrastructure, so keep it safe. To inspect the complete state
use the `terraform show` command.

State path: terraform.tfstate

Outputs:

  kubernetes-api-server = https://203.0.113.158:6443

Next Steps

Configure kubectl

Replace $kubernetes-api-server with the terraform output. Replace $token and $user with the info from terraform/secrets/tokens.csv.

kubectl config set-cluster kubestack --insecure-skip-tls-verify=true --server=$kubernetes-api-server
kubectl config set-credentials kelseyhightower --token='$token'
kubectl config set-context kubestack --cluster=kubestack --user=$user
kubectl config use-context kubestack
kubectl config view
apiVersion: v1
clusters:
- cluster:
    insecure-skip-tls-verify: true
    server: $kubernetes-api-server
  name: kubestack
contexts:
- context:
    cluster: kubestack
    user: $user
  name: kubestack
current-context: kubestack
kind: Config
preferences: {}
users:
- name: $user
  user:
    token: $token

Register the worker nodes

Nodes will be named based on the following convention:

${cluster_name}-kube${count}.c.${project}.internal

Edit testing-kube0.c.kubestack.internal.json

{
  "kind": "Node",
  "apiVersion": "v1beta3",
  "metadata": {
    "name": "testing-kube0.c.kubestack.internal"
  },
  "spec": {
    "externalID": "testing-kube0.c.kubestack.internal"
  }
}
kubectl create -f testing-kube0.c.kubestack.internal.json

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