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CLI tool used to simplify (or orchestrate) kubeadm-based Kubernetes cluster deployment and update

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skuba

Tool to manage the full lifecycle of a cluster.

Table of Content

Prerequisites

The required infrastructure for deploying CaaSP needs to exist beforehand, it's required for you to have SSH access to these machines from the machine that you are running skuba from. skuba requires you to have added your SSH keys to the SSH agent on this machine, e.g:

ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa

If you want to perform an HA deployment you also need to set up a load balancer, depending on your needs this setup can be as advanced as required.

The target nodes must have some packages already preinstalled:

  • cri-o
  • kubelet
  • kubeadm

The terraform based deployments are taking care of fulfilling these requirements.

Installation

go get github.com/SUSE/skuba/cmd/skuba

Development

A development build will:

  • Pull container images from registry.suse.de/devel/caasp/4.0/containers/containers/caasp/v4

To build it, run:

make

Staging

A staging build will:

  • Pull container images from registry.suse.de/suse/sle-15-sp1/update/products/casp40/containers/caasp/v4

To build it, run:

make staging

Release

A release build will:

  • Pull container images from registry.suse.com/caasp/v4

To build it, run:

make release

Creating a cluster

Go to any directory in your machine, e.g. ~/clusters. From there, execute:

cluster init

The init process creates the definition of your cluster. Ideally there's nothing to tweak in the general case, but you can go through the generated configurations and check if everything is fine for your taste.

skuba cluster init --control-plane load-balancer.example.com company-cluster

This command will have generated a basic project scaffold in the company-cluster folder. You need to change the directory to this new folder in order to run the rest of the commands in this README.

node bootstrap

You need to bootstrap your first master node of the cluster. For this purpose you have to be inside the company-cluster folder.

skuba node bootstrap --user opensuse --sudo --target <IP/fqdn> my-master

You can check skuba node bootstrap --help for further options, but the previous command means:

  • Bootstrap node using a SSH connection to target <IP/fqdn>
    • Use opensuse user when opening the SSH session
    • Use sudo when executing commands inside the machine
  • Name the node my-master: this is what Kubernetes will use to refer to your node

When this command has finished, some secrets will have been copied to your company-cluster folder. Namely:

  • Generated secrets will be copied inside the pki folder
  • The administrative admin.conf file of the cluster has been copied in root of the company-cluster folder

Growing a cluster

node join

Joining a node allows you to grow your Kubernetes cluster. You can join master nodes as well as worker nodes to your existing cluster. For this purpose you have to be inside the company-cluster folder.

This task will automatically create a new bootstrap token on the existing cluster that will be used for the kubelet TLS bootstrap to happen on the new node. The token will be fed automatically to the configuration used to join the new node.

This task will create the configuration file inside the kubeadm-join.conf.d folder as well with a file named <IP/fqdn>.conf that will contain the join configuration used. If this file existed before it will be honored, only overriding a small subset of settings automatically:

  • Bootstrap token to the one generated on demand
  • Kubelet extra args
    • node-ip if the --target is an IP address
    • hostname-override to the node-name provided as an argument
    • cni-bin-dir directory location if required
  • Node registration name to node-name provided as an argument

master node join

This command will join a new master node to the cluster. This will also increase the etcd member count by one.

skuba node join --role master --user opensuse --sudo --target <IP/fqdn> second-master

worker node join

This command will join a new worker node to the cluster.

skuba node join --role worker --user opensuse --sudo --target <IP/fqdn> my-worker

Shrinking a cluster

node remove

It's possible to remove master and worker nodes from the cluster. All the required tasks to remove the target node will be performed automatically:

  • Drain the node (also cordoning it)
  • Mask and disable the kubelet service
  • If it's a master node:
    • Remove persisted information
      • etcd store
      • PKI secrets
    • Remove etcd member from the etcd cluster
    • Remove the endpoint from the kubeadm-config config map
  • Remove node from the cluster

For removing a node you only need to provide the name of the node known to Kubernetes:

skuba node remove my-worker

Or, if you want to remove a master node:

skuba node remove second-master

kubectl-caasp

This project also comes with a kubectl plugin that has the same layout as skuba. You can call to the same commands presented in skuba as kubectl caasp when installing the kubectl-caasp binary in your path.

The purpose of the tool is to provide a quick way to see if nodes have pending upgrades. The tool is currently returning fake data.

$ kubectl caasp cluster status
NAME      OS-IMAGE             KERNEL-VERSION                CONTAINER-RUNTIME   HAS-UPDATES   HAS-DISRUPTIVE-UPDATES
master0   openSUSE Leap 15.0   4.12.14-lp150.12.28-default   docker://18.6.1     <none>        <none>
master1   openSUSE Leap 15.0   4.12.14-lp150.12.28-default   docker://18.6.1     <none>        <none>
master2   openSUSE Leap 15.0   4.12.14-lp150.12.28-default   docker://18.6.1     <none>        <none>
worker0   openSUSE Leap 15.0   4.12.14-lp150.12.28-default   docker://18.6.1     <none>        <none>
worker1   openSUSE Leap 15.0   4.12.14-lp150.12.28-default   cri-o://1.13.0      <none>        <none>

Demo

This is a quick screencast showing how it's easy to deploy a multi master node on top of AWS. The procedure is the same as the deployment on OpenStack or on libvirt.

The deployment is done on AWS via the terraform files shared inside of the infra repository.

Videos:

The videos are uncut, as you will see the whole deployment takes around 7 minutes: 4 minutes for the infrastructure, 3 minutes for the actual cluster.

The demo uses a small script to automate the sequential invocations of skuba. Anything can be used to do that, including bash.

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CLI tool used to simplify (or orchestrate) kubeadm-based Kubernetes cluster deployment and update

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