Now markdownlint covers ./README.md and md files under ./docs only. However we have a lot of md files under different directories also. This enables markdownlint for other md files also.
8.3 KiB
Kubespray DIND experimental setup
This ansible playbook creates local docker containers to serve as Kubernetes "nodes", which in turn will run "normal" Kubernetes docker containers, a mode usually called DIND (Docker-IN-Docker).
The playbook has two roles:
- dind-host: creates the "nodes" as containers in localhost, with appropriate settings for DIND (privileged, volume mapping for dind storage, etc).
- dind-cluster: customizes each node container to have required system packages installed, and some utils (swapoff, lsattr) symlinked to /bin/true to ease mimicking a real node.
This playbook has been test with Ubuntu 16.04 as host and ubuntu:16.04 as docker images (note that dind-cluster has specific customization for these images).
The playbook also creates a /tmp/kubespray.dind.inventory_builder.sh
helper (wraps up running contrib/inventory_builder/inventory.py
with
node containers IPs and prefix).
Deploying
See below for a complete successful run:
- Create the node containers
# From the kubespray root dir
cd contrib/dind
pip install -r requirements.txt
ansible-playbook -i hosts dind-cluster.yaml
# Back to kubespray root
cd ../..
NOTE: if the playbook run fails with something like below error
message, you may need to specifically set ansible_python_interpreter
,
see ./hosts
file for an example expanded localhost entry.
failed: [localhost] (item=kube-node1) => {"changed": false, "item": "kube-node1", "msg": "Failed to import docker or docker-py - No module named requests.exceptions. Try `pip install docker` or `pip install docker-py` (Python 2.6)"}
- Customize kubespray-dind.yaml
Note that there's coupling between above created node containers
and kubespray-dind.yaml
settings, in particular regarding selected node_distro
(as set in group_vars/all/all.yaml
), and docker settings.
$EDITOR contrib/dind/kubespray-dind.yaml
- Prepare the inventory and run the playbook
INVENTORY_DIR=inventory/local-dind
mkdir -p ${INVENTORY_DIR}
rm -f ${INVENTORY_DIR}/hosts.ini
CONFIG_FILE=${INVENTORY_DIR}/hosts.ini /tmp/kubespray.dind.inventory_builder.sh
ansible-playbook --become -e ansible_ssh_user=debian -i ${INVENTORY_DIR}/hosts.ini cluster.yml --extra-vars @contrib/dind/kubespray-dind.yaml
NOTE: You could also test other distros without editing files by
passing --extra-vars
as per below commandline,
replacing DISTRO
by either debian
, ubuntu
, centos
, fedora
:
cd contrib/dind
ansible-playbook -i hosts dind-cluster.yaml --extra-vars node_distro=DISTRO
cd ../..
CONFIG_FILE=inventory/local-dind/hosts.ini /tmp/kubespray.dind.inventory_builder.sh
ansible-playbook --become -e ansible_ssh_user=DISTRO -i inventory/local-dind/hosts.ini cluster.yml --extra-vars @contrib/dind/kubespray-dind.yaml --extra-vars bootstrap_os=DISTRO
Resulting deployment
See below to get an idea on how a completed deployment looks like, from the host where you ran kubespray playbooks.
node_distro: debian
Running from an Ubuntu Xenial host:
$ uname -a
Linux ip-xx-xx-xx-xx 4.4.0-1069-aws #79-Ubuntu SMP Mon Sep 24
15:01:41 UTC 2018 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
$ docker ps
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
1835dd183b75 debian:9.5 "sh -c 'apt-get -qy …" 43 minutes ago Up 43 minutes kube-node5
30b0af8d2924 debian:9.5 "sh -c 'apt-get -qy …" 43 minutes ago Up 43 minutes kube-node4
3e0d1510c62f debian:9.5 "sh -c 'apt-get -qy …" 43 minutes ago Up 43 minutes kube-node3
738993566f94 debian:9.5 "sh -c 'apt-get -qy …" 44 minutes ago Up 44 minutes kube-node2
c581ef662ed2 debian:9.5 "sh -c 'apt-get -qy …" 44 minutes ago Up 44 minutes kube-node1
$ docker exec kube-node1 kubectl get node
NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION
kube-node1 Ready master,node 18m v1.12.1
kube-node2 Ready master,node 17m v1.12.1
kube-node3 Ready node 17m v1.12.1
kube-node4 Ready node 17m v1.12.1
kube-node5 Ready node 17m v1.12.1
$ docker exec kube-node1 kubectl get pod --all-namespaces
NAMESPACE NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
default netchecker-agent-67489 1/1 Running 0 2m51s
default netchecker-agent-6qq6s 1/1 Running 0 2m51s
default netchecker-agent-fsw92 1/1 Running 0 2m51s
default netchecker-agent-fw6tl 1/1 Running 0 2m51s
default netchecker-agent-hostnet-8f2zb 1/1 Running 0 3m
default netchecker-agent-hostnet-gq7ml 1/1 Running 0 3m
default netchecker-agent-hostnet-jfkgv 1/1 Running 0 3m
default netchecker-agent-hostnet-kwfwx 1/1 Running 0 3m
default netchecker-agent-hostnet-r46nm 1/1 Running 0 3m
default netchecker-agent-lxdrn 1/1 Running 0 2m51s
default netchecker-server-864bd4c897-9vstl 1/1 Running 0 2m40s
default sh-68fcc6db45-qf55h 1/1 Running 1 12m
kube-system coredns-7598f59475-6vknq 1/1 Running 0 14m
kube-system coredns-7598f59475-l5q5x 1/1 Running 0 14m
kube-system kube-apiserver-kube-node1 1/1 Running 0 17m
kube-system kube-apiserver-kube-node2 1/1 Running 0 18m
kube-system kube-controller-manager-kube-node1 1/1 Running 0 18m
kube-system kube-controller-manager-kube-node2 1/1 Running 0 18m
kube-system kube-proxy-5xx9d 1/1 Running 0 17m
kube-system kube-proxy-cdqq4 1/1 Running 0 17m
kube-system kube-proxy-n64ls 1/1 Running 0 17m
kube-system kube-proxy-pswmj 1/1 Running 0 18m
kube-system kube-proxy-x89qw 1/1 Running 0 18m
kube-system kube-scheduler-kube-node1 1/1 Running 4 17m
kube-system kube-scheduler-kube-node2 1/1 Running 4 18m
kube-system kubernetes-dashboard-5db4d9f45f-548rl 1/1 Running 0 14m
kube-system nginx-proxy-kube-node3 1/1 Running 4 17m
kube-system nginx-proxy-kube-node4 1/1 Running 4 17m
kube-system nginx-proxy-kube-node5 1/1 Running 4 17m
kube-system weave-net-42bfr 2/2 Running 0 16m
kube-system weave-net-6gt8m 2/2 Running 0 16m
kube-system weave-net-88nnc 2/2 Running 0 16m
kube-system weave-net-shckr 2/2 Running 0 16m
kube-system weave-net-xr46t 2/2 Running 0 16m
$ docker exec kube-node1 curl -s http://localhost:31081/api/v1/connectivity_check
{"Message":"All 10 pods successfully reported back to the server","Absent":null,"Outdated":null}
Using ./run-test-distros.sh
You can use ./run-test-distros.sh
to run a set of tests via DIND,
and excerpt from this script, to get an idea:
# The SPEC file(s) must have two arrays as e.g.
# DISTROS=(debian centos)
# EXTRAS=(
# 'kube_network_plugin=calico'
# 'kube_network_plugin=flannel'
# 'kube_network_plugin=weave'
# )
# that will be tested in a "combinatory" way (e.g. from above there'll be
# be 6 test runs), creating a sequenced <spec_filename>-nn.out with each output.
#
# Each $EXTRAS element will be whitespace split, and passed as --extra-vars
# to main kubespray ansible-playbook run.
See e.g. test-some_distros-most_CNIs.env
and
test-some_distros-kube_router_combo.env
in particular for a richer
set of CNI specific --extra-vars
combo.