Refactor inventroty for the lab

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Aleksandr Didenko 2016-06-14 19:02:27 +02:00
parent d365fab9ec
commit 70519e2c5a
2 changed files with 144 additions and 0 deletions

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# Directory where the binaries will be installed
bin_dir: /usr/local/bin
# Where the binaries will be downloaded.
# Note: ensure that you've enough disk space (about 1G)
local_release_dir: "/tmp/releases"
# Uncomment this line for CoreOS only.
# Directory where python binary is installed
# ansible_python_interpreter: "/opt/bin/python"
# This is the group that the cert creation scripts chgrp the
# cert files to. Not really changable...
kube_cert_group: kube-cert
# Cluster Loglevel configuration
kube_log_level: 2
# Users to create for basic auth in Kubernetes API via HTTP
kube_api_pwd: "changeme"
kube_users:
kube:
pass: "{{kube_api_pwd}}"
role: admin
root:
pass: "changeme"
role: admin
# Kubernetes cluster name, also will be used as DNS domain
cluster_name: cluster.local
# For some environments, each node has a pubilcally accessible
# address and an address it should bind services to. These are
# really inventory level variables, but described here for consistency.
#
# When advertising access, the access_ip will be used, but will defer to
# ip and then the default ansible ip when unspecified.
#
# When binding to restrict access, the ip variable will be used, but will
# defer to the default ansible ip when unspecified.
#
# The ip variable is used for specific address binding, e.g. listen address
# for etcd. This is use to help with environments like Vagrant or multi-nic
# systems where one address should be preferred over another.
# ip: 10.2.2.2
#
# The access_ip variable is used to define how other nodes should access
# the node. This is used in flannel to allow other flannel nodes to see
# this node for example. The access_ip is really useful AWS and Google
# environments where the nodes are accessed remotely by the "public" ip,
# but don't know about that address themselves.
# access_ip: 1.1.1.1
# Choose network plugin (calico, weave or flannel)
kube_network_plugin: calico
# Kubernetes internal network for services, unused block of space.
kube_service_addresses: 10.233.0.0/18
# internal network. When used, it will assign IP
# addresses from this range to individual pods.
# This network must be unused in your network infrastructure!
kube_pods_subnet: 10.233.64.0/18
# internal network total size (optional). This is the prefix of the
# entire network. Must be unused in your environment.
# kube_network_prefix: 18
# internal network node size allocation (optional). This is the size allocated
# to each node on your network. With these defaults you should have
# room for 4096 nodes with 254 pods per node.
kube_network_node_prefix: 24
# With calico it is possible to distributed routes with border routers of the datacenter.
peer_with_router: false
# Warning : enabling router peering will disable calico's default behavior ('node mesh').
# The subnets of each nodes will be distributed by the datacenter router
# The port the API Server will be listening on.
kube_apiserver_ip: "{{ kube_service_addresses|ipaddr('net')|ipaddr(1)|ipaddr('address') }}"
kube_apiserver_port: 443 # (https)
kube_apiserver_insecure_port: 8080 # (http)
# Internal DNS configuration.
# Kubernetes can create and mainatain its own DNS server to resolve service names
# into appropriate IP addresses. It's highly advisable to run such DNS server,
# as it greatly simplifies configuration of your applications - you can use
# service names instead of magic environment variables.
# You still must manually configure all your containers to use this DNS server,
# Kubernetes won't do this for you (yet).
# Upstream dns servers used by dnsmasq
upstream_dns_servers:
- 8.8.8.8
- 8.8.4.4
#
# # Use dns server : https://github.com/ansibl8s/k8s-skydns/blob/master/skydns-README.md
dns_setup: true
dns_domain: "{{ cluster_name }}"
#
# # Ip address of the kubernetes skydns service
skydns_server: "{{ kube_service_addresses|ipaddr('net')|ipaddr(3)|ipaddr('address') }}"
dns_server: "{{ kube_service_addresses|ipaddr('net')|ipaddr(2)|ipaddr('address') }}"
# There are some changes specific to the cloud providers
# for instance we need to encapsulate packets with some network plugins
# If set the possible values are either 'gce', 'aws' or 'openstack'
# When openstack is used make sure to source in the openstack credentials
# like you would do when using nova-client before starting the playbook.
# cloud_provider:
# For multi masters architecture:
# kube-proxy doesn't support multiple apiservers for the time being so you'll need to configure your own loadbalancer
# This domain name will be inserted into the /etc/hosts file of all servers
# configuration example with haproxy :
# listen kubernetes-apiserver-https
# bind 10.99.0.21:8383
# option ssl-hello-chk
# mode tcp
# timeout client 3h
# timeout server 3h
# server master1 10.99.0.26:443
# server master2 10.99.0.27:443
# balance roundrobin
# apiserver_loadbalancer_domain_name: "lb-apiserver.kubernetes.local"
## Set these proxy values in order to update docker daemon to use proxies
# http_proxy: ""
# https_proxy: ""
# no_proxy: ""
## A string of extra options to pass to the docker daemon.
## This string should be exactly as you wish it to appear.
## An obvious use case is allowing insecure-registry access
## to self hosted registries like so:
docker_options: "--insecure-registry={{ kube_service_addresses }}"
# default packages to install within the cluster
kpm_packages:
- name: kube-system/kubedns
namespace: kube-system
variables:
cluster_ip: "{{skydns_server}}"
# - name: kube-system/grafana