6.2 KiB
Adding/replacing a node
Modified from comments in #3471
Limitation: Removal of first kube_control_plane and etcd-master
Currently you can't remove the first node in your kube_control_plane and etcd-master list. If you still want to remove this node you have to:
1) Change order of current control planes
Modify the order of your control plane list by pushing your first entry to any other position. E.g. if you want to remove node-1
of the following example:
children:
kube_control_plane:
hosts:
node-1:
node-2:
node-3:
kube_node:
hosts:
node-1:
node-2:
node-3:
etcd:
hosts:
node-1:
node-2:
node-3:
change your inventory to:
children:
kube_control_plane:
hosts:
node-2:
node-3:
node-1:
kube_node:
hosts:
node-2:
node-3:
node-1:
etcd:
hosts:
node-2:
node-3:
node-1:
2) Upgrade the cluster
run upgrade-cluster.yml
or cluster.yml
. Now you are good to go on with the removal.
Adding/replacing a worker node
This should be the easiest.
1) Add new node to the inventory
2) Run scale.yml
You can use --limit=NODE_NAME
to limit Kubespray to avoid disturbing other nodes in the cluster.
Before using --limit
run playbook facts.yml
without the limit to refresh facts cache for all nodes.
3) Remove an old node with remove-node.yml
With the old node still in the inventory, run remove-node.yml
. You need to pass -e node=NODE_NAME
to the playbook to limit the execution to the node being removed.
If the node you want to remove is not online, you should add reset_nodes=false
and allow_ungraceful_removal=true
to your extra-vars: -e node=NODE_NAME -e reset_nodes=false -e allow_ungraceful_removal=true
.
Use this flag even when you remove other types of nodes like a control plane or etcd nodes.
4) Remove the node from the inventory
That's it.
Adding/replacing a control plane node
1) Run cluster.yml
Append the new host to the inventory and run cluster.yml
. You can NOT use scale.yml
for that.
2) Restart kube-system/nginx-proxy
In all hosts, restart nginx-proxy pod. This pod is a local proxy for the apiserver. Kubespray will update its static config, but it needs to be restarted in order to reload.
# run in every host
docker ps | grep k8s_nginx-proxy_nginx-proxy | awk '{print $1}' | xargs docker restart
3) Remove old control plane nodes
With the old node still in the inventory, run remove-node.yml
. You need to pass -e node=NODE_NAME
to the playbook to limit the execution to the node being removed.
If the node you want to remove is not online, you should add reset_nodes=false
and allow_ungraceful_removal=true
to your extra-vars.
Replacing a first control plane node
1) Change control plane nodes order in inventory
from
[kube_control_plane]
node-1
node-2
node-3
to
[kube_control_plane]
node-2
node-3
node-1
2) Remove old first control plane node from cluster
With the old node still in the inventory, run remove-node.yml
. You need to pass -e node=node-1
to the playbook to limit the execution to the node being removed.
If the node you want to remove is not online, you should add reset_nodes=false
and allow_ungraceful_removal=true
to your extra-vars.
3) Edit cluster-info configmap in kube-system namespace
kubectl edit cm -n kube-public cluster-info
Change ip of old kube_control_plane node with ip of live kube_control_plane node (server
field). Also, update certificate-authority-data
field if you changed certs.
4) Add new control plane node
Update inventory (if needed)
Run cluster.yml
with --limit=kube_control_plane
Adding an etcd node
You need to make sure there are always an odd number of etcd nodes in the cluster. In such a way, this is always a replace or scale up operation. Either add two new nodes or remove an old one.
1) Add the new node running cluster.yml
Update the inventory and run cluster.yml
passing --limit=etcd,kube_control_plane -e ignore_assert_errors=yes
.
If the node you want to add as an etcd node is already a worker or control plane node in your cluster, you have to remove him first using remove-node.yml
.
Run upgrade-cluster.yml
also passing --limit=etcd,kube_control_plane -e ignore_assert_errors=yes
. This is necessary to update all etcd configuration in the cluster.
At this point, you will have an even number of nodes. Everything should still be working, and you should only have problems if the cluster decides to elect a new etcd leader before you remove a node. Even so, running applications should continue to be available.
If you add multiple etcd nodes with one run, you might want to append -e etcd_retries=10
to increase the amount of retries between each etcd node join.
Otherwise the etcd cluster might still be processing the first join and fail on subsequent nodes. etcd_retries=10
might work to join 3 new nodes.
2) Add the new node to apiserver config
In every control plane node, edit /etc/kubernetes/manifests/kube-apiserver.yaml
. Make sure the new etcd nodes are present in the apiserver command line parameter --etcd-servers=...
.
Removing an etcd node
1) Remove an old etcd node
With the node still in the inventory, run remove-node.yml
passing -e node=NODE_NAME
as the name of the node that should be removed.
If the node you want to remove is not online, you should add reset_nodes=false
and allow_ungraceful_removal=true
to your extra-vars.
2) Make sure only remaining nodes are in your inventory
Remove NODE_NAME
from your inventory file.
3) Update kubernetes and network configuration files with the valid list of etcd members
Run cluster.yml
to regenerate the configuration files on all remaining nodes.
4) Remove the old etcd node from apiserver config
In every control plane node, edit /etc/kubernetes/manifests/kube-apiserver.yaml
. Make sure only active etcd nodes are still present in the apiserver command line parameter --etcd-servers=...
.
5) Shutdown the old instance
That's it.