26 lines
1.5 KiB
Markdown
26 lines
1.5 KiB
Markdown
Kubespray vs [Kops](https://github.com/kubernetes/kops)
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Kubespray runs on bare metal and most clouds, using Ansible as its substrate for
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provisioning and orchestration. Kops performs the provisioning and orchestration
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itself, and as such is less flexible in deployment platforms. For people with
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familiarity with Ansible, existing Ansible deployments or the desire to run a
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Kubernetes cluster across multiple platforms, Kubespray is a good choice. Kops,
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however, is more tightly integrated with the unique features of the clouds it
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supports so it could be a better choice if you know that you will only be using
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one platform for the foreseeable future.
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Kubespray vs [Kubeadm](https://github.com/kubernetes/kubeadm)
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------------------
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Kubeadm provides domain Knowledge of Kubernetes clusters' life cycle
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management, including self-hosted layouts, dynamic discovery services and so
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on. Had it belong to the new [operators world](https://coreos.com/blog/introducing-operators.html),
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it would've likely been named a "Kubernetes cluster operator". Kubespray however,
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does generic configuration management tasks from the "OS operators" ansible
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world, plus some initial K8s clustering (with networking plugins included) and
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control plane bootstrapping. Kubespray [strives](https://github.com/kubernetes-incubator/kubespray/issues/553)
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to adopt kubeadm as a tool in order to consume life cycle management domain
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knowledge from it and offload generic OS configuration things from it, which
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hopefully benefits both sides.
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