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Drupal is an advanced and powerful content management framework, built on the PHP scripting language and supported by a database engine like MySQL. Drupal provides a flexible system that can be used to manage websites for a variety of use cases. For example, you can create rich, interactive “community” websites with forums, user blogs, and private messaging.

In This Guide

This guide provides instructions to:

Important

This guide’s example instructions create several billable resources on your Linode account. If you do not want to keep using the example cluster that you create, be sure to delete it when you have finished the guide.

If you remove the resources afterward, you will only be billed for the hour(s) that the resources were present on your account. Consult the Billing and Payments guide for detailed information about how hourly billing works and for a table of plan pricing.

Before You Begin

Familiarize yourself with Kubernetes using our series A Beginner’s Guide to Kubernetes and Advantages of Using Kubernetes .

Create an LKE Cluster

Follow the instructions in Deploying and Managing a Cluster with Linode Kubernetes Engine Tutorial to create and connect to an LKE cluster.

Create Manifest Files

  1. Create a drupal folder on your local machine to contain the kustamization.yaml, mysql-deployment.yaml, and drupal-deployment.yaml files.

    sudo mkdir drupal
  2. Create a kustomization.yaml file in the drupal folder. Open a text editor and create the file with a secret generator and resource config files for the single-instance MySQL deployment, as well as a single-instance Drupal deployment. Be sure to replace MySQLpassword with the secure password that you want to use to access MySQL:

    File: /drupal/kustomization.yaml
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    ---
    secretGenerator:
    - name: mysql-pass
      literals:
      - password=MySQLpassword
    resources:
      - mysql-deployment.yaml
      - drupal-deployment.yaml
  3. Create a mysql-deployment.yaml file in the drupal folder. Open a text editor and create a manifest file that describes a single-instance deployment of MySQL.

    File: /drupal/mysql-deployment.yaml
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    ---
    apiVersion: v1
    kind: Service
    metadata:
      name: drupal-mysql
      labels:
        app: drupal
    spec:
      ports:
        - protocol: TCP
          port: 3306
      selector:
        app: drupal
        tier: backend
    ---
    apiVersion: v1
    kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
    metadata:
      name: mysql-claim
      labels:
        app: drupal
    spec:
      accessModes:
        - ReadWriteOnce
      resources:
        requests:
          storage: 10Gi
      storageClassName: linode-block-storage
    ---
    apiVersion: apps/v1
    kind: Deployment
    metadata:
      name: mysql
      labels:
        app: drupal
    spec:
      selector:
        matchLabels:
          app: drupal
          tier: backend
      strategy:
        type: Recreate
      template:
        metadata:
          labels:
            app: drupal
            tier: backend
        spec:
          containers:
            - image: mysql:latest
              name: mysql
              env:
                - name: MYSQL_DATABASE
                  value: drupal-db
                - name: MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD
                  valueFrom:
                    secretKeyRef:
                      name: mysql-pass
                      key: password
              ports:
                - containerPort: 3306
                  name: mysql
                  protocol: TCP
              volumeMounts:
                - name: mysql
                  mountPath: /var/lib/mysql
          volumes:
            - name: mysql
              persistentVolumeClaim:
                claimName: mysql-claim

    This manifest is doing several things:

    • First it sets up the Service called drupal-mysql that is available over TCP on the port 3306.
    • Next, it creates a Persistent Volume Claim (PVC) for the service. On Linode, this is a Block Storage Volume.
    • Finally, it declares the deployment for mysql and all it’s specifications.
      • The specification creates a container called mysql.
      • It includes two environment variables MYSQL_DATABASE and MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD.
      • The volumes section associates the PVC created before to this deployment.
  4. Create a drupal-deployment.yaml file in the drupal folder. Open a text editor and create a manifest file that describes a single-instance deployment of Drupal.

    File: /drupal/drupal-deployment.yaml
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    ---
    apiVersion: v1
    kind: Service
    metadata:
      name: drupal
      labels:
        app: drupal
    spec:
      ports:
        - port: 8081
          protocol: TCP
          name: web
          targetPort: 80
      selector:
        app: drupal
        tier: frontend
      type: LoadBalancer
    ---
    apiVersion: v1
    kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
    metadata:
      name: drupal-claim
      labels:
        app: drupal
    spec:
      accessModes:
        - ReadWriteOnce
      resources:
        requests:
          storage: 10Gi
      storageClassName: linode-block-storage
    ---
    apiVersion: apps/v1
    kind: Deployment
    metadata:
      name: drupal
      labels:
        app: drupal
        tier: frontend
    spec:
      selector:
        matchLabels:
          app: drupal
          tier: frontend
      strategy:
        type: Recreate
      template:
        metadata:
          labels:
            app: drupal
            tier: frontend
        spec:
          initContainers:
            - name: init-sites-volume
              image: drupal:latest
              command: ['/bin/bash', '-c']
              args: ['cp -r /var/www/html/sites /data; chown www-data:www-data /data/ -R']
              volumeMounts:
                - mountPath: /data
                  name: drupal
          containers:
            - image: drupal:latest
              name: drupal
              env:
                - name: DRUPAL_DATABASE_HOST
                  value: drupal-mysql
                - name: DRUPAL_DATABASE_PASSWORD
                  valueFrom:
                    secretKeyRef:
                      name: mysql-pass
                      key: password
              ports:
                - containerPort: 8081
                  name: drupal
              volumeMounts:
                - name: drupal
                  mountPath: /var/www/html/modules
                  subPath: modules
                - name: drupal
                  mountPath: /var/www/html/profiles
                  subPath: profiles
                - name: drupal
                  mountPath: /var/www/html/sites
                  subPath: sites
                - name: drupal
                  mountPath: /var/www/html/themes
                  subPath: themes
          volumes:
            - name: drupal
              persistentVolumeClaim:
                claimName: drupal-claim

    This manifest is doing several things:

    • First it sets up the Service called drupal that is available over TCP on the port 8081, listening to port 80, with a type of LoadBalancer. This creates a Linode NodeBalancer.
    • Next, it creates a Persistent Volume Claim (PVC) for the service. On Linode, this is a Block Storage Volume.
    • Finally, it declares the deployment for drupal and all it’s specifications.
      • The specification creates a container called drupal.
      • Drupal set-up needs to be able to write to some directories during installation, so the initContainers sets these permissions.
      • Similar to the MySQL manifest, this manifest also includes two environment variables DRUPAL_DATABASE_HOST and DRUPAL_DATABASE_PASSWORD.
      • The volumes section associates the PVC created before with this deployment.

Install Drupal

  1. If you are not already there, change into the drupal directory.

    cd drupal
  2. Deploy Drupal and MySQL. The kustomization.yaml file contains all the resources required to deploy Drupal and MySQL.

    kubectl apply -k ./

    The output is similar to:

    secret/mysql-pass-g764cgb8b9 created
    service/drupal-mysql created
    service/drupal configured
    deployment.apps/drupal created
    deployment.apps/mysql created
    persistentvolumeclaim/drupal-claim created
    persistentvolumeclaim/mysql-claim created
  3. Verify that the Secret exists:

    kubectl get secrets

    The output is similar to:

    NAME                    TYPE                                  DATA   AGE
    default-token-8wt7g     kubernetes.io/service-account-token   3      44m
    mysql-pass-g764cgb8b9   Opaque                                1      24m
  4. Verify that a PersistentVolume is dynamically provisioned:

    kubectl get pvc

    The output is similar to the following:

    NAME          STATUS  VOLUME                                    CAPACITY  ACCESS MODES   STORAGECLASS            AGE
    mysql-claim   Bound   pvc-13c1086a-0a4a-4945-b473-0110ebd09725  10Gi       RWO           linode-block-storage    24m
    drupal-claim  Bound   pvc-8d907b17-72c0-4c5b-a3c4-d87e170ad87d  10Gi       RWO           linode-block-storage    24m

    Note, you may have to wait a few moments for the status to switch from Pending to Bound.

  5. Verify that the Pod is running with the following command:

    kubectl get pods

    The output is similar to:

    NAME                      READY   STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
    mysql-6bf46f94bf-tcgs2    1/1     Running   0          13m
    drupal-77f665d45b-568tl   1/1     Running   0          5m1s

    Note, you may have to wait a few moments for the status to change from Container Creating to Running.

  6. Verify that the Service is running:

    kubectl get services drupal

    The output is similar to:

    NAME     TYPE           CLUSTER-IP     EXTERNAL-IP     PORT(S)        AGE
    drupal   LoadBalancer   10.0.0.89      192.0.2.3       8081:31266/TCP   33m

Configure MySQL

You need to log into the mysql Pod to set the root password for the Drupal UI to be able to connect during setup.

  1. Log into the ‘mysql’ Pod and open a bash shell. In the following command replace mysql-6bf46f94bf-tcgs2 with the mysql Pod name from the kubectl get pods command output above:

    kubectl exec -it mysql-6bf46f94bf-tcgs2 -- /bin/bash
  2. At the prompt, log into MySQL:

    mysql -u root -p

    The system prompts you for a password, this is the password that you set in the kustomization.yaml file.

  3. MySQL prompt appears after you are logged into the Pod. Run the following SQL command, where MySQLpassword is the password from kustomization.yaml:

    ALTER USER root IDENTIFIED WITH mysql_native_password by 'MySQLpassword';
    exit;
  4. Exit the Pod:

    exit

Setup Drupal

  1. In the browser, type the IP address listed under EXTERNAL_IP from the kubectl get services drupal command above followed by the port :8081, for example, http://192.0.2.3:8081. The Drupal configuration page appears.

    Note
    If you have a registered domain name that you want to use for the Drupal website, add the domain in Cloud Manager and select Insert default records from one of my NodeBalancers option. In this case, the EXTERNAL_IP address is the IP address of the NodeBalancer. For more information, see Add a Domain .

  2. Click the Save and Continue button to go to the Chose Profile screen.

  3. Leave the default Standard selected and click the Save and Continue button. Some verification checks are performed and then the Set Up Database screen appears.

    • Leave the default for MySQL selected.
    • In the Database name field, use drupal-db, or what you used for the MYSQL_DATABASE env value in the mysql-deployment.yaml file.
    • The Database username is root.
    • The Database password is what you set in the kustomization.yaml file and what you used in the Configure MySQL section.
    • Under ADVANCED OPTIONS, change the Host to the value you used for the DRUPAL_DATABASE_HOST in drupal-deployment.yaml, in this case, drupal-mysql.
    • The port should be correctly set to the container port as listed in the mysql-deployment.yaml, in this example 3306.
  4. Click the Save and Continue button. Drupal takes several minutes to install the site.

  5. After the installation is complete, the system prompts you for some basic configuration information about your site.

  6. Click the Save and Continue button. The site loads and the Welcome Screen appears.

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