97 lines
3.9 KiB
Markdown
97 lines
3.9 KiB
Markdown
# Migrating from Docker to Containerd
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❗MAKE SURE YOU READ BEFORE PROCEEDING❗
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**Migrating container engines is not officially supported by Kubespray**. The following procedure covers one particular scenario and involves manual steps, along with multiple runs of `cluster.yml`. It provides no guarantees that it will actually work or that any further action is needed. Please, consider these instructions as experimental guidelines. While they can be used to migrate your cluster, they will likely evolve over time. At the moment, they are intended as an additional resource to provide insight into how these steps can be officially integrated into the Kubespray playbooks.
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As of Kubespray 2.18.0, containerd is already the default container engine. If you have the chance, it is still advisable and safer to reset and redeploy the entire cluster with a new container engine.
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Input and feedback are always appreciated.
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## Tested environment
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Nodes: Ubuntu 18.04 LTS\
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Cloud Provider: None (baremetal or VMs)\
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Kubernetes version: 1.21.5\
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Kubespray version: 2.18.0
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## Important considerations
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If you require minimum downtime, nodes need to be cordoned and drained before being processed, one by one. If you wish to run `cluster.yml` only once and get it all done in one swoop, downtime will be significantly higher. Docker will need to be manually removed from all nodes before the playbook runs (see [#8431](https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/kubespray/issues/8431)). For minimum downtime, the following steps will be executed multiple times, once for each node.
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Processing nodes one by one also means you will not be able to update any other cluster configuration using Kubespray before this procedure is finished and the cluster is fully migrated.
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Everything done here requires full root access to every node.
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## Migration steps
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Before you begin, adjust `k8s-cluster.yml` in your inventory.
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```yaml
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resolvconf_mode: host_resolvconf
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container_manager: containerd
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```
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### 1) Pick one or more nodes for processing
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It is still unclear how the order might affect this procedure. So, to be sure, it might be best to start with the control plane and etcd nodes all together, followed by each worker node individually.
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### 2) Cordon and drain the node
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... because, downtime.
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### 3) Stop docker and kubelet daemons
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```commandline
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service kubelet stop
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service docker stop
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```
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### 4) Uninstall docker + dependencies
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```commandline
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apt-get remove -y --allow-change-held-packages containerd.io docker-ce docker-ce-cli docker-ce-rootless-extras
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```
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### 5) Run `cluster.yml` playbook with `--limit`
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```commandline
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ansible-playbook cluster.yml -i inventory/sample/hosts.ini cluster.yml --limit=NODENAME
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```
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This effectively reinstalls containerd and seems to place all config files in the right place. When this completes, kubelet will immediately pick up the new container engine and start spinning up DaemonSets and kube-system Pods.
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Optionally, if you feel confident, you can remove `/var/lib/docker` anytime after this step.
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```commandline
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rm -fr /var/lib/docker
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```
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You can watch new containers using `crictl`.
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```commandline
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crictl ps -a
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```
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### 6) Replace the cri-socket node annotation
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Node annotations need to be adjusted. Kubespray will not do this, but a simple kubectl is enough.
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```commandline
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kubectl annotate node NODENAME --overwrite kubeadm.alpha.kubernetes.io/cri-socket=/var/run/containerd/containerd.sock
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```
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The annotation is required by kubeadm to follow through future cluster upgrades.
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### 7) Reboot the node
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Reboot, just to make sure everything restarts fresh before the node is uncordoned.
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## After thoughts
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If your cluster runs a log aggregator, like fluentd+Graylog, you will likely need to adjust collection filters and parsers. While docker generates Json logs, containerd has its own space delimited format. Example:
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```text
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2020-01-10T18:10:40.01576219Z stdout F application log message...
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```
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