* Kubernetes v1.8.2 fixes a memory leak in the v1.8.1 apiserver * Switch to using the `gcr.io/google_containers/hyperkube` for the on-host kubelet and shutdown drains * Update terraform-render-bootkube manifests generation * Update flannel from v0.8.0 to v0.9.0 * Add `hairpinMode` to flannel CNI config * Add `--no-negcache` to kube-dns dnsmasq
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Concepts
Let's cover the concepts you'll need to get started.
Kubernetes
Kubernetes is an open-source cluster system for deploying, scaling, and managing containerized applications across a pool of compute nodes (bare-metal, droplets, instances).
Nodes
Cluster nodes provision themselves from a declarative configuration upfront. Nodes run a kubelet
service and register themselves with the control plane to join the higher order cluster. All nodes run kube-proxy
and calico
or flannel
pods.
Controllers
Controller nodes are scheduled to run the Kubernetes apiserver
, scheduler
, controller-manager
, kube-dns
, and kube-proxy
. A fully qualified domain name (e.g. cluster_name.domain.com) resolving to a network load balancer or round-robin DNS (depends on platform) is used to refer to the control plane.
Workers
Worker nodes register with the control plane and run application workloads.
Terraform
Terraform config files declare resources that Terraform should manage. Resources include infrastructure components created through a provider API (e.g. Compute instances, DNS records) or local assets like TLS certificates and config files.
# Declare an instance
resource "google_compute_instance" "pet" {
# ...
}
The terraform
tool parses configs, reconciles the desired state with actual state, and updates resources to reach desired state.
$ terraform plan
Plan: 4 to add, 0 to change, 0 to destroy.
$ terraform apply
Apply complete! Resources: 4 added, 0 changed, 0 destroyed.
With Typhoon, you'll be able to manage clusters with Terraform.
Modules
Terraform modules allow a collection of resources to be configured and managed together. Typhoon provides a Kubernetes cluster Terraform module for each supported platform and operating system.
Clusters are declared in Terraform by referencing the module.
module "google-cloud-yavin" {
source = "git::https://github.com/poseidon/typhoon//google-cloud/container-linux/kubernetes"
cluster_name = "yavin"
...
}
Versioning
Modules are updated regularly, set the version to a release tag or commit hash.
...
source = "git:https://github.com/poseidon/typhoon//google-cloud/container-linux/kubernetes?ref=hash"
Module versioning ensures terraform get --update
only fetches the desired version, so plan and apply don't change cluster resources, unless the version is altered.
Organize
Maintain Terraform configs for "live" infrastructure in a versioned repository. Seek to organize configs to reflect resources that should be managed together in a terraform apply
invocation.
You may choose to organize resources all together, by team, by project, or some other scheme. Here's an example that manages four clusters together:
.git/
infra/
└── terraform
└── clusters
├── aws-tempest.tf
├── bare-metal-mercury.tf
├── google-cloud-yavin.tf
├── digital-ocean-nemo.tf
├── providers.tf
├── terraform.tfvars
└── remote-backend.tf
By convention, providers.tf
registers provider APIs, terraform.tfvars
stores shared values, and state is written to a remote backend.
State
Terraform syncs its state with provider APIs to plan changes to reconcile to the desired state. By default, Terraform writes state data (including secrets!) to a terraform.tfstate
file. At a minimum, add a .gitignore
file (or equivalent) to prevent state from being committed to your infrastructure repository.
# .gitignore
*.tfstate
*.tfstate.backup
.terraform/
Remote Backend
Later, you may wish to checkout Terraform remote backends which store state in a remote bucket like Google Storage or S3.
terraform {
backend "gcs" {
credentials = "/path/to/credentials.json"
project = "project-id"
bucket = "bucket-id"
path = "metal.tfstate"
}
}