c12s-kubespray/contrib/terraform/openstack/group_vars/all.yml
Matthew Mosesohn f106bf5bc4 adds ability to have hosts with no floating ips on terraform/openstack (+8 squashed commits)
Squashed commits:
[f9355ea] Swap order in which we reload docker/socket
[2ca6819] Reload docker.socket after installing flannel on coreos

Workaround for #569
[9f976e5] Vagrantfile: setup proxy inside virtual machines

In corporate networks, it is good to pre-configure proxy variables.
[9d7142f] Vagrantfile: use Ubuntu 16.04 LTS

Use recent supported version of Ubuntu for local development setup
with Vagrant.
[50f77cc] Add CI test layouts

* Drop Wily from test matrix
* Replace the Wily cases dropped with extra cases to test separate
  roles deployment

Signed-off-by: Bogdan Dobrelya <bdobrelia@mirantis.com>
[03e162b] Update OWNERS
[c7b00ca] Use tar+register instead of copy/slurp for distributing tokens and certs

Related bug: https://github.com/ansible/ansible/issues/15405

Uses tar and register because synchronize module cannot sudo on the
remote side correctly and copy is too slow.

This patch dramatically cuts down the number of tasks to process
for cert synchronization.
[2778ac6] Add new var skip_dnsmasq_k8s

If skip_dnsmasq is set, it will still not set up dnsmasq
k8s pod. This enables independent setup of resolvconf section
before kubelet is up.
2016-11-07 10:53:13 +00:00

144 lines
5.5 KiB
YAML

# Valid bootstrap options (required): xenial, coreos, none
bootstrap_os: "none"
# 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"
# Random shifts for retrying failed ops like pushing/downloading
retry_stagger: 5
# 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
# Subdomains of DNS domain to be resolved via /etc/resolv.conf
ndots: 5
# 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
# Etcd access modes:
# Enable multiaccess to configure clients to access all of the etcd members directly
# as the "http://hostX:port, http://hostY:port, ..." and ignore the proxy loadbalancers.
# This may be the case if clients support and loadbalance multiple etcd servers natively.
etcd_multiaccess: false
# Assume there are no internal loadbalancers for apiservers exist and listen on
# kube_apiserver_port (default 443)
loadbalancer_apiserver_localhost: true
# Choose network plugin (calico, weave or flannel)
kube_network_plugin: flannel
# 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).
# Do not install additional dnsmasq
skip_dnsmasq: false
# 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:
## 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/grafana