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Provision Unmanaged Kubernetes Cluster using Terraform
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DeprecatedThis guide has been deprecated and is no longer being maintained.
Terraform
, the orchestration tool by HashiCorp
, can be used to deploy a Kubernetes cluster on Linode. Linode’s Terraform K8s module
creates a Kubernetes(K8s) cluster running on Ubuntu, and simplifies many of the steps involved in deploying a Kubernetes cluster with kubeadm
. After creating master and worker nodes, the module connects over SSH to these instances and installs kubeadm, kubectl
, and other Kubernetes binaries to the /opt/bin
directory. It also initializes kubeadm, joins the worker nodes to the master, and configures kubectl to control the cluster. Calico is installed for the container networking interface of the cluster. A kubectl config file is installed to the local environment which connects to the API server of the cluster.
Before You Begin
Before starting to deploy a Kubernetes cluster with Terraform, make sure:
You are familiar with Terraform. You can read through A Beginner’s Guide to Terraform to familiarize yourself with key concepts.
You are familiar with Kubernetes concepts. For an introduction, see the A Beginner’s Guide to Kubernetes series. Read through Getting Started with Kubernetes: Use kubeadm to Deploy a Cluster on Linode to get familiar with kubeadm.
You have a personal access token for the Linode API to use with Terraform. Follow the Getting Started with the Linode API to get a token.
Note When creating a personal access token, ensure it is set to Read/Write access as new Linode servers are being created.Terraform is installed on your computer. See Install Terraform for more information.
Note This guide was written using Terraform version 0.12.24 . The module requires at least Terraform 0.10.And, lastly, kubectl is installed on your computer. The kubectl is necessary to connect to and manage the Kubernetes cluster; deployment using the Terraform module fails if kubectl is not installed locally. See Install kubectl for more information.
Configure the Local Environment
Deploying a Kubernetes cluster with Linode’s K8s Terraform module requires:
- a local environment with a kubectl instance
- a system-wide installation of Python
- SSH keys, SSH keys configured with the SSH agent
- the
sed
andscp
command-line utilities The module’s scriptpreflight.sh
verifies these requirements are installed on the local environment and generates a$var not found
error if any of the tools are missing. In this section learn how to: - install and configure kubectl
- set up the SSH agent
- create an environment variable to store the API v4 token
If there is an error stating the system is missing Python, scp, or sed, use the operating system’s package manager to install the missing utilities.
If Python is invoked using python3
, alias the command so Terraform can execute scripts locally
using Python as its interpreter. Using a text editor, edit ~/.bashrc
file to include the following alias:
alias python=python3
Then, reinitialize ~/.bashrc
file for the changes to take effect.
source ~/.bashrc
Install kubectl
macOS:
Install via Homebrew :
brew install kubectl
If you don’t have Homebrew installed, visit the Homebrew home page for instructions. Alternatively, you can manually install the binary; visit the Kubernetes documentation for instructions.
Linux:
Download the latest kubectl release:
curl -LO "https://dl.k8s.io/release/$(curl -L -s https://dl.k8s.io/release/stable.txt)/bin/linux/amd64/kubectl"
Make the downloaded file executable:
chmod +x ./kubectl
Move the command into your PATH:
sudo mv ./kubectl /usr/local/bin/kubectl
Windows:
Visit the Kubernetes documentation for a link to the most recent Windows release.
SSH Agent
By default, Terraform uses the SSH agent of the operating system to connect to a Linode instance through SSH. In this section learn how to run the SSH agent and add the necessary SSH keys to it.
Run the SSH agent with the following command:
eval `ssh-agent`
The output is similar to:
Agent pid 11308
Add the SSH keys to the agent. For more information, see creating an authentication key-pair . This command adds keys from the default location,
~/.ssh/
ssh-add
The output is similar to:
Identity added: /home/example_user/.ssh/id_rsa (/home/example_user/.ssh/id_rsa)
Linode API Token
Before running the project, create an access token for Terraform to connect to the Linode API.
Using the token and your access key, create the LINODE_TOKEN
environment variable:
|
|
This variable needs to be supplied to every Terraform apply
, plan
, and destroy
command using -var linode_token=$LINODE_TOKEN
unless a terraform.tfvars
file is created with this secret token.
Create Terraform Configuration Files
In the directory where Terraform was installed, create a new directory to store the configuration files of the K8s cluster.
cd terraform mkdir k8s-cluster
Using a text editor, create the main configuration file of the cluster and name it
main.tf
. Add the following contents to the file.- File: ~/terraform/k8s-cluster/main.tf
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
terraform { required_providers { linode = { source = "linode/linode" version = "1.16.0" } } } module "k8s" { source = "linode/k8s/linode" version = "0.1.2" linode_token = var.linode_token server_type_master = var.server_type_master server_type_node = var.server_type_node cluster_name = var.cluster_name k8s_version = var.k8s_version region = var.region nodes = var.nodes }
This file contains the main configuration arguments of the cluster. The only required configurations are
source
andlinode_token
.source
calls Linode’s k8s module, while thelinode_token
gives access to viewing, creating, and destroying Linode resources.The rest of the configurations are optional and have some default values. In this example, however, Terraform’s input variables are used, so the
main.tf
configuration can be reused across different clusters.Create an input variables file, named
variables.tf
, with the example content.- File: ~/terraform/k8s-cluster/variables.tf
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34
variable "linode_token" { description = " Linode API token" } variable "server_type_master" { default = "g6-standard-2" description = " Linode API token" } variable "cluster_name" { description = " Linode API token" default = "example-cluster-1" } variable "server_type_node" { description = " Linode API token" default = "g6-standard-1" } variable "k8s_version" { description = " Linode API token" default = "v1.14.0" } variable "region" { description = "Values: us-east, ap-west, etc." default = "us-east" } variable "nodes" { description = " Linode API token" default = 3 }
The example file creates input variables referenced in the main configuration file that was created. The values for those variables are assigned in a separate file in the next step. The default values of the k8s module can be overridden, as in the example file. For more details about input variables, see the Input Variables section in the A Beginner’s Guide to Terraform .
Create an input variables values file to provide the main configuration file with values that differ from the defaults in input variable file.
- File: ~/terraform/k8s-cluster/terraform.tfvars
1 2 3
server_type_master = "g6-standard-4" cluster_name = "example-cluster-2"
In this example, the master node of the cluster uses a
g6-standard-4
Linode plan, instead of the defaultg6-standard-2
, and thecluster_name
is set toexample-cluster-2
, instead ofexample-cluster-1
.
Deploy the Kubernetes Cluster using Terraform
Change to the
~/terraform/k8s-cluster/
directory and initialize Terraform to install the Linode K8s module.terraform init
Verify Terraform creates the resources of the cluster as expected before making any actual changes to the infrastructure. To do this, run the
plan
command:terraform plan
This command generates a report detailing what actions Terraform takes to set up the Kubernetes cluster.
If satisfied with the generated report, run the
apply
command to create the Kubernetes cluster. This command prompts confirmation to proceed.terraform apply -var-file="terraform.tfvars"
After a few minutes, when Terraform has finished applying the configuration, it displays a report of the actions were taken. And the Kubernetes cluster is ready for you to connect to it.
Connect to the Kubernetes cluster with kubectl
After Terraform finishes deploying the Kubernetes cluster, the ~/terraform/k8s-cluster/
directory should contain a file named default.conf
. This file contains the kubeconfig
file. Use kubectl, along with this file, to gain access to the Kubernetes cluster.
Save the path of the kubeconfig file to the
$KUBECONFIG
environment variable. In the example command, the kubeconfig file is located in the Terraform directory created at the beginning of this guide. Ensure the command is updated with the location of thedefault.conf
file:export KUBECONFIG=~/terraform/k8s-cluster/default.conf
Note It is common practice to store kubeconfig files in~/.kube
directory. By default, kubectl searches for a kubeconfig file namedconfig
that is located in the~/.kube
directory. Other kubeconfig files can also be specified by setting the$KUBECONFIG
environment variable.View the nodes in the cluster using kubectl.
kubectl get nodes
Note If the kubectl commands are not returning the resources and information you expect, then the client may be assigned to the wrong cluster context. Visit the Troubleshooting Kubernetes guide to learn how to switch cluster contexts.
You are now ready to manage the cluster using kubectl. For more information about using kubectl, see the Kubernetes Overview of kubectl .
Persist the Kubeconfig Context
A new terminal window does not have access to the context specified using the previous instructions. This context information can be made persistent between new terminals by setting the KUBECONFIG
environment variable
in the configuration file of the shell.
These instructions are for the Bash shell and they are similar to other shells:
Navigate to the
$HOME/.kube
directory:cd $HOME/.kube
Create a directory named
configs
within$HOME/.kube
. This directory can be used to store the kubeconfig files.mkdir configs
Copy the
default.conf
file to the$HOME/.kube/configs
directory.cp ~/terraform/k8s-cluster/default.conf $HOME/.kube/configs/default.conf
Note Optionally, you can provide the copied file a different name to help distinguish it from other files in theconfigs
directory.Open up the Bash profile (
~/.bashrc
) in a text editor and add the configuration file to the$KUBECONFIG
PATH variable.If an
export KUBECONFIG
line is already present in the file, append to the end of this line as follows; if it is not present, add this line to the end of the file:export KUBECONFIG=$KUBECONFIG:$HOME/.kube/config:$HOME/.kube/configs/default.conf
Close the terminal window and open a new window to receive the changes to the
$KUBECONFIG
variable.Use the
config get-contexts
command forkubectl
to view the available cluster contexts:kubectl config get-contexts
The output should be similar to the following:
CURRENT NAME CLUSTER AUTHINFO NAMESPACE * kubernetes-admin@example-cluster-1 example-cluster-1 kubernetes-admin
If your context is not already selected, which is denoted by an asterisk in the
current
column, switch to this context using theconfig use-context
command. Supply the full name of the cluster including the authorized user and the cluster:kubectl config use-context kubernetes-admin@example-cluster-1
The output should be similar to the following:
Switched to context "kubernetes-admin@example-cluster-1".
You are now ready to interact with the cluster using
kubectl
. Test the ability to interact with the cluster by retrieving a list of Pods. Use theget pods
command with the-A
flag to see all pods running across all namespaces:kubectl get pods -A
The output should be similar to the following:
NAMESPACE NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE kube-system calico-node-5bkc6 2/2 Running 0 17m kube-system calico-node-gp5ls 2/2 Running 0 17m kube-system calico-node-grpnj 2/2 Running 0 17m kube-system calico-node-qd85t 2/2 Running 0 17m kube-system ccm-linode-mjgzz 1/1 Running 0 17m kube-system coredns-fb8b8dccf-5tlbm 1/1 Running 0 17m kube-system coredns-fb8b8dccf-7tpgf 1/1 Running 0 17m kube-system csi-linode-controller-0 3/3 Running 0 17m kube-system csi-linode-node-gfd8m 2/2 Running 0 17m kube-system csi-linode-node-hrfnd 2/2 Running 0 16m kube-system csi-linode-node-q6fmd 2/2 Running 0 17m kube-system etcd-mytestcluster-master-1 1/1 Running 0 16m kube-system external-dns-7885f88564-tvpjf 1/1 Running 0 17m kube-system kube-apiserver-mytestcluster-master-1 1/1 Running 0 16m kube-system kube-controller-manager-mytestcluster-master-1 1/1 Running 0 16m kube-system kube-proxy-cs9tm 1/1 Running 0 17m kube-system kube-proxy-qljn5 1/1 Running 0 17m kube-system kube-proxy-sr5h8 1/1 Running 0 17m kube-system kube-proxy-ww2tx 1/1 Running 0 17m kube-system kube-scheduler-mytestcluster-master-1 1/1 Running 0 16m kube-system kubernetes-dashboard-5f7b999d65-jk99z 1/1 Running 0 17m kube-system metrics-server-58db9f9647-tz8f8 1/1 Running 0 17m reboot-coordinator container-linux-update-agent-6kgqm 1/1 Running 0 16m reboot-coordinator container-linux-update-agent-7nck5 1/1 Running 0 17m reboot-coordinator container-linux-update-agent-nhlxj 1/1 Running 0 17m reboot-coordinator container-linux-update-agent-vv8db 1/1 Running 0 17m reboot-coordinator container-linux-update-operator-5c9d67d4cf-78wbp 1/1 Running 0 17m
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