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Kubernetes on Openstack with Terraform
Provision a Kubernetes cluster with Terraform on Openstack.
Status
This will install a Kubernetes cluster on an Openstack Cloud. It should work on most modern installs of OpenStack that support the basic services.
Approach
The terraform configuration inspects variables found in
variables.tf to create resources in your OpenStack cluster.
There is a python script that reads the generated.tfstate
file to generate a dynamic inventory that is consumed by the main ansible script
to actually install kubernetes and stand up the cluster.
Networking
The configuration includes creating a private subnet with a router to the external net. It will allocate floating IPs from a pool and assign them to the hosts where that makes sense. You have the option of creating bastion hosts inside the private subnet to access the nodes there. Alternatively, a node with a floating IP can be used as a jump host to nodes without.
Kubernetes Nodes
You can create many different kubernetes topologies by setting the number of different classes of hosts. For each class there are options for allocating floating IP addresses or not.
- Master nodes with etcd
- Master nodes without etcd
- Standalone etcd hosts
- Kubernetes worker nodes
Note that the Ansible script will report an invalid configuration if you wind up with an even number of etcd instances since that is not a valid configuration.
GlusterFS
The Terraform configuration supports provisioning of an optional GlusterFS shared file system based on a separate set of VMs. To enable this, you need to specify:
- the number of Gluster hosts (minimum 2)
- Size of the non-ephemeral volumes to be attached to store the GlusterFS bricks
- Other properties related to provisioning the hosts
Even if you are using Container Linux by CoreOS for your cluster, you will still need the GlusterFS VMs to be based on either Debian or RedHat based images. Container Linux by CoreOS cannot serve GlusterFS, but can connect to it through binaries available on hyperkube v1.4.3_coreos.0 or higher.
Requirements
- Install Terraform
- Install Ansible
- you already have a suitable OS image in Glance
- you already have a floating IP pool created
- you have security groups enabled
- you have a pair of keys generated that can be used to secure the new hosts
Module Architecture
The configuration is divided into three modules:
- Network
- IPs
- Compute
The main reason for splitting the configuration up in this way is to easily accommodate situations where floating IPs are limited by a quota or if you have any external references to the floating IP (e.g. DNS) that would otherwise have to be updated.
You can force your existing IPs by modifying the compute variables in
kubespray.tf
as follows:
k8s_master_fips = ["151.101.129.67"]
k8s_node_fips = ["151.101.129.68"]
Terraform
Terraform will be used to provision all of the OpenStack resources with base software as appropriate.
Configuration
Inventory files
Create an inventory directory for your cluster by copying the existing sample and linking the hosts
script (used to build the inventory based on Terraform state):
$ cp -LRp contrib/terraform/openstack/sample-inventory inventory/$CLUSTER
$ ln -s contrib/terraform/openstack/hosts inventory/$CLUSTER/
$ cd inventory/$CLUSTER
This will be the base for subsequent Terraform commands.
OpenStack access and credentials
No provider variables are hardcoded inside variables.tf
because Terraform
supports various authentication methods for OpenStack: the older script and
environment method (using openrc
) as well as a newer declarative method, and
different OpenStack environments may support Identity API version 2 or 3.
These are examples and may vary depending on your OpenStack cloud provider, for an exhaustive list on how to authenticate on OpenStack with Terraform please read the OpenStack provider documentation.
Declarative method (recommended)
The recommended authentication method is to describe credentials in a YAML file clouds.yaml
that can be stored in:
- the current directory
~/.config/openstack
/etc/openstack
clouds.yaml
:
clouds:
mycloud:
auth:
auth_url: https://openstack:5000/v3
username: "username"
project_name: "projectname"
project_id: projectid
user_domain_name: "Default"
password: "password"
region_name: "RegionOne"
interface: "public"
identity_api_version: 3
If you have multiple clouds defined in your clouds.yaml
file you can choose
the one you want to use with the environment variable OS_CLOUD
:
export OS_CLOUD=mycloud
Openrc method (deprecated)
When using classic environment variables, Terraform uses default OS_*
environment variables:
With identity v2:
source openrc
env | grep OS
OS_AUTH_URL=https://openstack:5000/v2.0
OS_PROJECT_ID=projectid
OS_PROJECT_NAME=projectname
OS_USERNAME=username
OS_PASSWORD=password
OS_REGION_NAME=RegionOne
OS_INTERFACE=public
OS_IDENTITY_API_VERSION=2
With identity v3 :
source openrc
env | grep OS
OS_AUTH_URL=https://openstack:5000/v3
OS_PROJECT_ID=projectid
OS_PROJECT_NAME=username
OS_PROJECT_DOMAIN_ID=default
OS_USERNAME=username
OS_PASSWORD=password
OS_REGION_NAME=RegionOne
OS_INTERFACE=public
OS_IDENTITY_API_VERSION=3
OS_USER_DOMAIN_NAME=Default
Terraform does not support a mix of DomainName and DomainID, choose one or the other:
* provider.openstack: You must provide exactly one of DomainID or DomainName to authenticate by Username
unset OS_USER_DOMAIN_NAME
export OS_USER_DOMAIN_ID=default
or
unset OS_PROJECT_DOMAIN_ID
set OS_PROJECT_DOMAIN_NAME=Default
Cluster variables
The construction of the cluster is driven by values found in variables.tf.
For your cluster, edit inventory/$CLUSTER/cluster.tf
.
Variable | Description |
---|---|
cluster_name |
All OpenStack resources will use the Terraform variablecluster_name (defaultexample ) in their name to make it easier to track. For example the first compute resource will be namedexample-kubernetes-1 . |
network_name |
The name to be given to the internal network that will be generated |
dns_nameservers |
An array of DNS name server names to be used by hosts in the internal subnet. |
floatingip_pool |
Name of the pool from which floating IPs will be allocated |
external_net |
UUID of the external network that will be routed to |
flavor_k8s_master ,flavor_k8s_node ,flavor_etcd , flavor_bastion ,flavor_gfs_node |
Flavor depends on your openstack installation, you can get available flavor IDs throughnova flavor-list |
image ,image_gfs |
Name of the image to use in provisioning the compute resources. Should already be loaded into glance. |
ssh_user ,ssh_user_gfs |
The username to ssh into the image with. This usually depends on the image you have selected |
public_key_path |
Path on your local workstation to the public key file you wish to use in creating the key pairs |
number_of_k8s_masters , number_of_k8s_masters_no_floating_ip |
Number of nodes that serve as both master and etcd. These can be provisioned with or without floating IP addresses |
number_of_k8s_masters_no_etcd , number_of_k8s_masters_no_floating_ip_no_etcd |
Number of nodes that serve as just master with no etcd. These can be provisioned with or without floating IP addresses |
number_of_etcd |
Number of pure etcd nodes |
number_of_k8s_nodes , number_of_k8s_nodes_no_floating_ip |
Kubernetes worker nodes. These can be provisioned with or without floating ip addresses. |
number_of_bastions |
Number of bastion hosts to create. Scripts assume this is really just zero or one |
number_of_gfs_nodes_no_floating_ip |
Number of gluster servers to provision. |
gfs_volume_size_in_gb |
Size of the non-ephemeral volumes to be attached to store the GlusterFS bricks |
Terraform state files
In the cluster's inventory folder, the following files might be created (either by Terraform
or manually), to prevent you from pushing them accidentally they are in a
.gitignore
file in the terraform/openstack
directory :
.terraform
.tfvars
.tfstate
.tfstate.backup
You can still add them manually if you want to.
Initialization
Before Terraform can operate on your cluster you need to install the required plugins. This is accomplished as follows:
$ cd inventory/$CLUSTER
$ terraform init contrib/terraform/openstack
This should finish fairly quickly telling you Terraform has successfully initialized and loaded necessary modules.
Provisioning cluster
You can apply the Terraform configuration to your cluster with the following command
issued from your cluster's inventory directory (inventory/$CLUSTER
):
$ terraform apply -var-file=cluster.tf ../../contrib/terraform/openstack
if you chose to create a bastion host, this script will create
contrib/terraform/openstack/k8s-cluster.yml
with an ssh command for Ansible to
be able to access your machines tunneling through the bastion's IP address. If
you want to manually handle the ssh tunneling to these machines, please delete
or move that file. If you want to use this, just leave it there, as ansible will
pick it up automatically.
Destroying cluster
You can destroy your new cluster with the following command issued from the cluster's inventory directory:
$ terraform destroy -var-file=cluster.tf ../../contrib/terraform/openstack
Debugging
You can enable debugging output from Terraform by setting
OS_DEBUG
to 1 andTF_LOG
toDEBUG
before running the Terraform command.
Terraform output
Terraform can output values that are useful for configure Neutron/Octavia LBaaS or Cinder persistent volume provisioning as part of your Kubernetes deployment:
private_subnet_id
: the subnet where your instances are running is used foropenstack_lbaas_subnet_id
floating_network_id
: the network_id where the floating IP are provisioned is used foropenstack_lbaas_floating_network_id
Ansible
Node access
SSH
Ensure your local ssh-agent is running and your ssh key has been added. This step is required by the terraform provisioner:
$ eval $(ssh-agent -s)
$ ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa
If you have deployed and destroyed a previous iteration of your cluster, you will need to clear out any stale keys from your SSH "known hosts" file ( ~/.ssh/known_hosts
).
Bastion host
If you are not using a bastion host, but not all of your nodes have floating IPs, create a file inventory/$CLUSTER/group_vars/no-floating.yml
with the following content. Use one of your nodes with a floating IP (this should have been output at the end of the Terraform step) and the appropriate user for that OS, or if you have another jump host, use that.
ansible_ssh_common_args: '-o ProxyCommand="ssh -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no -W %h:%p -q USER@MASTER_IP"'
Test access
Make sure you can connect to the hosts. Note that Container Linux by CoreOS will have a state FAILED
due to Python not being present. This is okay, because Python will be installed during bootstrapping, so long as the hosts are not UNREACHABLE
.
$ ansible -i inventory/$CLUSTER/hosts -m ping all
example-k8s_node-1 | SUCCESS => {
"changed": false,
"ping": "pong"
}
example-etcd-1 | SUCCESS => {
"changed": false,
"ping": "pong"
}
example-k8s-master-1 | SUCCESS => {
"changed": false,
"ping": "pong"
}
If it fails try to connect manually via SSH. It could be something as simple as a stale host key.
Configure cluster variables
Edit inventory/$CLUSTER/group_vars/all.yml
:
- Set variable bootstrap_os appropriately for your desired image:
# Valid bootstrap options (required): ubuntu, coreos, centos, none
bootstrap_os: coreos
- bin_dir:
# Directory where the binaries will be installed
# Default:
# bin_dir: /usr/local/bin
# For Container Linux by CoreOS:
bin_dir: /opt/bin
- and cloud_provider:
cloud_provider: openstack
Edit inventory/$CLUSTER/group_vars/k8s-cluster.yml
:
- Set variable kube_network_plugin to your desired networking plugin.
- flannel works out-of-the-box
- calico requires configuring OpenStack Neutron ports to allow service and pod subnets
# Choose network plugin (calico, weave or flannel)
# Can also be set to 'cloud', which lets the cloud provider setup appropriate routing
kube_network_plugin: flannel
- Set variable resolvconf_mode
# Can be docker_dns, host_resolvconf or none
# Default:
# resolvconf_mode: docker_dns
# For Container Linux by CoreOS:
resolvconf_mode: host_resolvconf
Deploy Kubernetes
$ ansible-playbook --become -i inventory/$CLUSTER/hosts cluster.yml
This will take some time as there are many tasks to run.
Kubernetes
Set up kubectl
- Install kubectl on your workstation
- Add a route to the internal IP of a master node (if needed):
sudo route add [master-internal-ip] gw [router-ip]
or
sudo route add -net [internal-subnet]/24 gw [router-ip]
- List Kubernetes certificates & keys:
ssh [os-user]@[master-ip] sudo ls /etc/kubernetes/ssl/
- Get
admin
's certificates and keys:
ssh [os-user]@[master-ip] sudo cat /etc/kubernetes/ssl/admin-[cluster_name]-k8s-master-1-key.pem > admin-key.pem
ssh [os-user]@[master-ip] sudo cat /etc/kubernetes/ssl/admin-[cluster_name]-k8s-master-1.pem > admin.pem
ssh [os-user]@[master-ip] sudo cat /etc/kubernetes/ssl/ca.pem > ca.pem
- Configure kubectl:
$ kubectl config set-cluster default-cluster --server=https://[master-internal-ip]:6443 \
--certificate-authority=ca.pem
$ kubectl config set-credentials default-admin \
--certificate-authority=ca.pem \
--client-key=admin-key.pem \
--client-certificate=admin.pem
$ kubectl config set-context default-system --cluster=default-cluster --user=default-admin
$ kubectl config use-context default-system
- Check it:
kubectl version
If you are using floating ip addresses then you may get this error:
Unable to connect to the server: x509: certificate is valid for 10.0.0.6, 10.0.0.6, 10.233.0.1, 127.0.0.1, not 132.249.238.25
You can tell kubectl to ignore this condition by adding the
--insecure-skip-tls-verify
option.
GlusterFS
GlusterFS is not deployed by the standardcluster.yml
playbook, see the
GlusterFS playbook documentation
for instructions.
Basically you will install Gluster as
$ ansible-playbook --become -i inventory/$CLUSTER/hosts ./contrib/network-storage/glusterfs/glusterfs.yml
What's next
Try out your new Kubernetes cluster with the Hello Kubernetes service.