6.8 KiB
Getting started
Building your own inventory
Ansible inventory can be stored in 3 formats: YAML, JSON, or INI-like. There is an example inventory located here.
You can use an
inventory generator
to create or modify an Ansible inventory. Currently, it is limited in
functionality and is only used for configuring a basic Kubespray cluster inventory, but it does
support creating inventory file for large clusters as well. It now supports
separated ETCD and Kubernetes control plane roles from node role if the size exceeds a
certain threshold. Run python3 contrib/inventory_builder/inventory.py help
for more information.
Example inventory generator usage:
cp -r inventory/sample inventory/mycluster
declare -a IPS=(10.10.1.3 10.10.1.4 10.10.1.5)
CONFIG_FILE=inventory/mycluster/hosts.yml python3 contrib/inventory_builder/inventory.py ${IPS[@]}
Then use inventory/mycluster/hosts.yml
as inventory file.
Starting custom deployment
Once you have an inventory, you may want to customize deployment data vars and start the deployment:
IMPORTANT: Edit my_inventory/groups_vars/*.yaml to override data vars:
ansible-playbook -i inventory/mycluster/hosts.yml cluster.yml -b -v \
--private-key=~/.ssh/private_key
See more details in the ansible guide.
Adding nodes
You may want to add worker, control plane or etcd nodes to your existing cluster. This can be done by re-running the cluster.yml
playbook, or you can target the bare minimum needed to get kubelet installed on the worker and talking to your control planes. This is especially helpful when doing something like autoscaling your clusters.
- Add the new worker node to your inventory in the appropriate group (or utilize a dynamic inventory).
- Run the ansible-playbook command, substituting
cluster.yml
forscale.yml
:
ansible-playbook -i inventory/mycluster/hosts.yml scale.yml -b -v \
--private-key=~/.ssh/private_key
Remove nodes
You may want to remove control plane, worker, or etcd nodes from your
existing cluster. This can be done by re-running the remove-node.yml
playbook. First, all specified nodes will be drained, then stop some
kubernetes services and delete some certificates,
and finally execute the kubectl command to delete these nodes.
This can be combined with the add node function. This is generally helpful
when doing something like autoscaling your clusters. Of course, if a node
is not working, you can remove the node and install it again.
Use --extra-vars "node=<nodename>,<nodename2>"
to select the node(s) you want to delete.
ansible-playbook -i inventory/mycluster/hosts.yml remove-node.yml -b -v \
--private-key=~/.ssh/private_key \
--extra-vars "node=nodename,nodename2"
If a node is completely unreachable by ssh, add --extra-vars reset_nodes=false
to skip the node reset step. If one node is unavailable, but others you wish
to remove are able to connect via SSH, you could set reset_nodes=false
as a host
var in inventory.
Connecting to Kubernetes
By default, Kubespray configures kube_control_plane hosts with insecure access to kube-apiserver via port 8080. A kubeconfig file is not necessary in this case, because kubectl will use http://localhost:8080 to connect. The kubeconfig files generated will point to localhost (on kube_control_planes) and kube_node hosts will connect either to a localhost nginx proxy or to a loadbalancer if configured. More details on this process are in the HA guide.
Kubespray permits connecting to the cluster remotely on any IP of any kube_control_plane host on port 6443 by default. However, this requires authentication. One can get a kubeconfig from kube_control_plane hosts (see below).
For more information on kubeconfig and accessing a Kubernetes cluster, refer to the Kubernetes documentation.
Accessing Kubernetes Dashboard
Supported version is kubernetes-dashboard v2.0.x :
- Login option : token/kubeconfig by default
- Deployed by default in "kube-system" namespace, can be overridden with
dashboard_namespace: kubernetes-dashboard
in inventory, - Only serves over https
Access is described in dashboard docs. With kubespray's default deployment in kube-system namespace, instead of kubernetes-dashboard :
- Proxy URL is http://localhost:8001/api/v1/namespaces/kube-system/services/https:kubernetes-dashboard:/proxy/#/login
- kubectl commands must be run with "-n kube-system"
Accessing through Ingress is highly recommended. For proxy access, please note that proxy must listen to localhost (proxy --address="x.x.x.x"
will not work)
For token authentication, guide to create Service Account is provided in dashboard sample user doc. Still take care of default namespace.
Access can also by achieved via ssh tunnel on a control plane :
# localhost:8081 will be sent to control-plane-1's own localhost:8081
ssh -L8001:localhost:8001 user@control-plane-1
sudo -i
kubectl proxy
Accessing Kubernetes API
The main client of Kubernetes is kubectl
. It is installed on each kube_control_plane
host and can optionally be configured on your ansible host by setting
kubectl_localhost: true
and kubeconfig_localhost: true
in the configuration:
- If
kubectl_localhost
enabled,kubectl
will download onto/usr/local/bin/
and setup with bash completion. A helper scriptinventory/mycluster/artifacts/kubectl.sh
also created for setup with belowadmin.conf
. - If
kubeconfig_localhost
enabledadmin.conf
will appear in theinventory/mycluster/artifacts/
directory after deployment. - The location where these files are downloaded to can be configured via the
artifacts_dir
variable.
NOTE: The controller host name in the admin.conf file might be a private IP. If so, change it to use the controller's public IP or the cluster's load balancer.
You can see a list of nodes by running the following commands:
cd inventory/mycluster/artifacts
./kubectl.sh get nodes
If desired, copy admin.conf to ~/.kube/config.
Setting up your first cluster
Setting up your first cluster is an applied step-by-step guide for setting up your first cluster with Kubespray.