119 lines
5.2 KiB
Markdown
119 lines
5.2 KiB
Markdown
HA endpoints for K8s
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====================
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The following components require a highly available endpoints:
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* etcd cluster,
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* kube-apiserver service instances.
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The latter relies on a 3rd side reverse proxies, like Nginx or HAProxy, to
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achieve the same goal.
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Etcd
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----
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The `etcd_access_endpoint` fact provides an access pattern for clients. And the
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`etcd_multiaccess` (defaults to `True`) group var controls that behavior.
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It makes deployed components to access the etcd cluster members
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directly: `http://ip1:2379, http://ip2:2379,...`. This mode assumes the clients
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do a loadbalancing and handle HA for connections.
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Kube-apiserver
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--------------
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K8s components require a loadbalancer to access the apiservers via a reverse
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proxy. Kubespray includes support for an nginx-based proxy that resides on each
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non-master Kubernetes node. This is referred to as localhost loadbalancing. It
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is less efficient than a dedicated load balancer because it creates extra
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health checks on the Kubernetes apiserver, but is more practical for scenarios
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where an external LB or virtual IP management is inconvenient. This option is
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configured by the variable `loadbalancer_apiserver_localhost` (defaults to
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`True`. Or `False`, if there is an external `loadbalancer_apiserver` defined).
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You may also define the port the local internal loadbalancer uses by changing,
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`nginx_kube_apiserver_port`. This defaults to the value of
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`kube_apiserver_port`. It is also important to note that Kubespray will only
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configure kubelet and kube-proxy on non-master nodes to use the local internal
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loadbalancer.
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If you choose to NOT use the local internal loadbalancer, you will need to
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configure your own loadbalancer to achieve HA. Note that deploying a
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loadbalancer is up to a user and is not covered by ansible roles in Kubespray.
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By default, it only configures a non-HA endpoint, which points to the
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`access_ip` or IP address of the first server node in the `kube-master` group.
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It can also configure clients to use endpoints for a given loadbalancer type.
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The following diagram shows how traffic to the apiserver is directed.
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![Image](figures/loadbalancer_localhost.png?raw=true)
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Note: Kubernetes master nodes still use insecure localhost access because
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there are bugs in Kubernetes <1.5.0 in using TLS auth on master role
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services. This makes backends receiving unencrypted traffic and may be a
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security issue when interconnecting different nodes, or maybe not, if those
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belong to the isolated management network without external access.
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A user may opt to use an external loadbalancer (LB) instead. An external LB
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provides access for external clients, while the internal LB accepts client
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connections only to the localhost.
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Given a frontend `VIP` address and `IP1, IP2` addresses of backends, here is
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an example configuration for a HAProxy service acting as an external LB:
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```
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listen kubernetes-apiserver-https
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bind <VIP>:8383
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option ssl-hello-chk
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mode tcp
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timeout client 3h
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timeout server 3h
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server master1 <IP1>:6443
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server master2 <IP2>:6443
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balance roundrobin
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```
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And the corresponding example global vars config:
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```
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apiserver_loadbalancer_domain_name: "my-apiserver-lb.example.com"
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loadbalancer_apiserver:
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address: <VIP>
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port: 8383
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```
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Note: The default kubernetes apiserver configuration binds to all interfaces,
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so you will need to use a different port for the vip from that the API is
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listening on, or set the kube_apiserver_bind_address so that the API only
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listens on a specific interface (to avoid conflict with haproxy binding the
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port on the VIP adddress)
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This domain name, or default "lb-apiserver.kubernetes.local", will be inserted
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into the `/etc/hosts` file of all servers in the `k8s-cluster` group. Note that
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the HAProxy service should as well be HA and requires a VIP management, which
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is out of scope of this doc. Specifying an external LB overrides any internal
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localhost LB configuration.
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Note: In order to achieve HA for HAProxy instances, those must be running on
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the each node in the `k8s-cluster` group as well, but require no VIP, thus
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no VIP management.
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Access API endpoints are evaluated automagically, as the following:
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| Endpoint type | kube-master | non-master |
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|------------------------------|----------------|---------------------|
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| Local LB (default) | https://lc:sp | https://lc:nsp |
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| External LB, no internal | https://lb:lp | https://lb:lp |
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| No ext/int LB, bind 0.0.0.0 | https://lc:sp | https://m[0].aip:sp |
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| No ext/int LB, a custom bind | https://bip:sp | https://m[0].aip:sp |
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Where:
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* `m[0]` - the first node in the `kube-master` group;
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* `lb` - LB FQDN, `apiserver_loadbalancer_domain_name`;
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* `lc` - localhost;
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* `bip` - a custom bind IP value (defaults to '0.0.0.0');
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* `nsp` - nginx secure port, `nginx_kube_apiserver_port`, defers to `sp`;
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* `sp` - secure port, `kube_apiserver_port`;
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* `lp` - LB port, `loadbalancer_apiserver.port`, defers to the secure port;
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* `ip` - the node IP, defers to the ansible IP;
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* `aip` - `access_ip`, defers to the ip.
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**Note** that for some cases, like healthchecks of applications deployed by
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Kubespray, the masters' APIs are accessed via the insecure endpoint, which
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consists of the local `kube_apiserver_insecure_bind_address` and
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`kube_apiserver_insecure_port`.
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