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KubeKey

Since v3.0, KubeSphere changes the ansible-based installer to the new installer called KubeKey that is developed in Go language. With KubeKey, you can install Kubernetes and KubeSphere separately or as a whole easily, efficiently and flexibly.

There are three scenarios to use KubeKey.

  • Install Kubernetes only
  • Install Kubernetes and KubeSphere together in one command
  • Install Kubernetes first, then deploy KubeSphere on it using ks-installer

Motivation

  • Ansible-based installer has a bunch of software dependency such as Python. KubeKey is developed in Go language to get rid of the problem in a variety of environment so that increasing the success rate of installation.
  • KubeKey uses Kubeadm to install K8s cluster on nodes in parallel as much as possible in order to reduce installation complexity and improve efficiency. It will greatly save installation time compared to the older installer.
  • KubeKey supports for scaling cluster from allinone to multi-node cluster.
  • KubeKey aims to install cluster as an object, i.e., CaaO.

Supported Environment

Linux Distributions

  • Ubuntu 16.04, 18.04
  • Debian Buster, Stretch
  • CentOS/RHEL 7

Kubernetes Versions

  • v1.15:   v1.15.12
  • v1.16:   v1.16.12
  • v1.17:   v1.17.8 (default)
  • v1.18:   v1.18.5

Requirements and Recommendations

  • Minimum resource requirements (For Minimal Installation of KubeSphere only):
    • 2 vCPUs
    • 4 GB RAM
    • 20 GB Storage

/var/lib/docker is mainly used to store the container data, and will gradually increase in size during use and operation. In the case of a production environment, it is recommended that /var/lib/docker mounts a drive separately.

  • OS requirements:
    • SSH can access to all nodes.
    • Time synchronization for all nodes.
    • sudo/curl/openssl should be used in all nodes.
    • ebtables/socat/ipset/conntrack should be installed in all nodes.
    • docker can be installed by yourself or by KubeKey.
  • It's recommended that Your OS is clean (without any other software installed), otherwise there may be conflicts.
  • A container image mirror (accelerator) is recommended to be prepared if you have trouble downloading images from dockerhub.io. Configure registry-mirrors for the Docker daemon.
  • KubeKey will install OpenEBS to provision LocalPV for development and testing environment by default, this is convenient for new users. For production, please use NFS / Ceph / GlusterFS as persistent storage, and install the relevant client in all nodes.
  • Networking and DNS requirements:
    • Make sure the DNS address in /etc/resolv.conf is available. Otherwise, it may cause some issues of DNS in cluster.
    • If your network configuration uses Firewall or Security Group,you must ensure infrastructure components can communicate with each other through specific ports. It's recommended that you turn off the firewall or follow the link configuriation: NetworkAccess.

Usage

Get the Installer Excutable File

  • Download Binary

    curl -O -k https://kubernetes.pek3b.qingstor.com/tools/kubekey/kk
    chmod +x kk

or

  • Build Binary from Source Code

    git clone https://github.com/kubesphere/kubekey.git
    cd kubekey
    ./build.sh

Note:

  • Docker needs to be installed before building.
  • If you have problem to access https://proxy.golang.org/ in China mainland, excute build.sh -p instead.

Create a Cluster

Quick Start

Quick Start is for all-in-one installation which is a good start to get familiar with KubeSphere.

Command
./kk create cluster [--with-kubernetes version] [--with-kubesphere version]
Examples
  • Create a pure Kubernetes cluster with default version.

    ./kk create cluster
  • Create a Kubernetes cluster with a specified version ([supported versions](#Kubernetes Versions))

    ./kk create cluster --with-kubernetes v1.17.6
  • Create a Kubernetes cluster with KubeSphere installed

    ./kk create cluster --with-kubesphere [version]

Advanced

You have more control to customize parameters or create a multi-node cluster using the advanced installation. Specifically, create a cluster by specifying a configuration file.

  1. First, create an example configuration file

    ./kk create config [--with-kubernetes version] [--with-storage plugins] [--with-kubesphere version] [(-f | --file) path]

    examples:

    • create an example config file with default configurations. You also can specify the file that could be a different filename, or in different folder.
    ./kk create config [-f ~/myfolder/abc.yaml]
    • with storage plugins (supported: localVolume, nfsClient, rbd, glusterfs). You can specify multiple plugins separated by comma. Please note the first one you add will be the default storage class.
    ./kk create config --with-storage localVolume
    • with KubeSphere
    ./kk create config --with-kubesphere
  2. Modify the file config-sample.yaml according to your environment

  3. Create a cluster using the configuration file

    ./kk create cluster -f config-sample.yaml

Add Nodes

Add new node's information to the cluster config file, then apply the changes.

./kk scale -f config-sample.yaml

Delete Cluster

You can delete the cluster by the following command:

  • If you started with the quick start (all-in-one):
./kk delete cluster
  • If you started with the advanced (created with a configuration file):
./kk delete cluster [-f config-sample.yaml]

Enable kubectl autocompletion

KubeKey doesn't enable kubectl autocompletion. Refer to the guide below and turn it on:

Prerequisite: make sure bash-autocompletion is installed and works.

# Install bash-completion
$ apt-get install bash-completion

# Source the completion script in your ~/.bashrc file
$ echo 'source <(kubectl completion bash)' >>~/.bashrc

# Add the completion script to the /etc/bash_completion.d directory
$ kubectl completion bash >/etc/bash_completion.d/kubectl

More detail reference could be found here.

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