CloudStack is a software to build public and private clouds based on hardware virtualization principles (traditional IaaS). To deploy Kubernetes on CloudStack there are several possibilities depending on the Cloud being used and what images are made available. CloudStack also has a vagrant plugin available, hence Vagrant could be used to deploy Kubernetes either using the existing shell provisioner or using new Salt based recipes.
CoreOS templates for CloudStack are built nightly. CloudStack operators need to register this template in their cloud before proceeding with these Kubernetes deployment instructions.
This guide uses a single Ansible playbook, which is completely automated and can deploy Kubernetes on a CloudStack based Cloud using CoreOS images. The playbook, creates an ssh key pair, creates a security group and associated rules and finally starts coreOS instances configured via cloud-init.
$ sudo apt-get install -y python-pip libssl-dev
$ sudo pip install cs
$ sudo pip install sshpubkeys
$ sudo apt-get install software-properties-common
$ sudo apt-add-repository ppa:ansible/ansible
$ sudo apt-get update
$ sudo apt-get install ansible
On CloudStack server you also have to install libselinux-python :
yum install libselinux-python
cs is a python module for the CloudStack API.
Set your CloudStack endpoint, API keys and HTTP method used.
You can define them as environment variables: CLOUDSTACK_ENDPOINT
, CLOUDSTACK_KEY
, CLOUDSTACK_SECRET
and CLOUDSTACK_METHOD
.
Or create a ~/.cloudstack.ini
file:
[cloudstack]
endpoint = <your cloudstack api endpoint>
key = <your api access key>
secret = <your api secret key>
method = post
We need to use the http POST method to pass the large userdata to the coreOS instances.
$ git clone https://github.com/apachecloudstack/k8s
$ cd kubernetes-cloudstack
You simply need to run the playbook.
$ ansible-playbook k8s.yml
Some variables can be edited in the k8s.yml
file.
vars:
ssh_key: k8s
k8s_num_nodes: 2
k8s_security_group_name: k8s
k8s_node_prefix: k8s2
k8s_template: <templatename>
k8s_instance_type: <serviceofferingname>
This will start a Kubernetes master node and a number of compute nodes (by default 2).
The instance_type
and template
are specific, edit them to specify your CloudStack cloud specific template and instance type (i.e. service offering).
Check the tasks and templates in roles/k8s
if you want to modify anything.
Once the playbook as finished, it will print out the IP of the Kubernetes master:
TASK: [k8s | debug msg='k8s master IP is {{ k8s_master.default_ip }}'] ********
SSH to it using the key that was created and using the core user and you can list the machines in your cluster:
$ ssh -i ~/.ssh/id_rsa_k8s core@<master IP>
$ fleetctl list-machines
MACHINE IP METADATA
a017c422... <node #1 IP> role=node
ad13bf84... <master IP> role=master
e9af8293... <node #2 IP> role=node
IaaS Provider | Config. Mgmt | OS | Networking | Docs | Conforms | Support Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CloudStack | Ansible | CoreOS | flannel | docs | Community (@Guiques) |
For support level information on all solutions, see the Table of solutions chart.
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