Lab 9: Bootstrapping the Kubernetes Worker Nodes¶
This is a fork of the original "Kubernetes the hard way" originally written by Kelsey Hightower (GitHub: kelseyhightower). Unlike the original that bases itself on Debian like distributions for the ARM64 architecture, this fork targets Enterprise Linux distributions such as Rocky Linux running on x86_64 architecture.
In this lab you will bootstrap two Kubernetes worker nodes. You will install the following components: runc, container networking plugins, containerd, kubelet, and kube-proxy.
Prerequisites¶
From the jumpbox
, copy Kubernetes binaries and systemd
unit files to each worker instance:
for host in node-0 node-1; do
SUBNET=$(grep $host machines.txt | cut -d " " -f 5)
sed "s|SUBNET|$SUBNET|g" \
configs/10-bridge.conf > 10-bridge.conf
sed "s|SUBNET|$SUBNET|g" \
configs/kubelet-config.yaml > kubelet-config.yaml
scp 10-bridge.conf kubelet-config.yaml \
root@$host:~/
done
for host in node-0 node-1; do
scp \
downloads/runc.amd64 \
downloads/crictl-v1.32.0-linux-amd64.tar.gz \
downloads/cni-plugins-linux-amd64-v1.6.2.tgz \
downloads/containerd-2.0.3-linux-amd64.tar.gz \
downloads/kubectl \
downloads/kubelet \
downloads/kube-proxy \
configs/99-loopback.conf \
configs/containerd-config.toml \
configs/kubelet-config.yaml \
configs/kube-proxy-config.yaml \
units/containerd.service \
units/kubelet.service \
units/kube-proxy.service \
root@$host:~/
done
The commands in this lab must be separately run on each worker instance: node-0
, node-1
. The steps for node-0
are the only ones shown. You will need to repeat the exact steps and commands on node-1
.
Login to the worker node-0
instance with the ssh
command.
ssh root@node-0
Provisioning a Kubernetes Worker Node¶
Install the operating system dependencies:
dnf -y update
dnf -y install socat conntrack ipset tar
The
socat
binary enables support for thekubectl port-forward
command.
Disable Swap¶
If you have swap enabled, the kubelet will fail to start. The recommendation is to disable swap to ensure Kubernetes provides proper resource allocation and quality of service.
Verify if swap is on:
swapon --show
If output is empty then swap is not enabled. If the output is not empty, run the following command to disable swap immediately:
swapoff -a
To ensure swap remains off after reboot comment out the line that automatically mounts the swap volume in the /etc/fstab
file. Type:
sudo sed -i '/swap/s/^/#/' /etc/fstab
Create the installation directories:
mkdir -p \
/etc/cni/net.d \
/opt/cni/bin \
/var/lib/kubelet \
/var/lib/kube-proxy \
/var/lib/kubernetes \
/var/run/kubernetes
Install the worker binaries:
mkdir -p containerd
tar -xvf crictl-v1.32.0-linux-amd64.tar.gz
tar -xvf containerd-2.0.3-linux-amd64.tar.gz -C containerd
tar -xvf cni-plugins-linux-amd64-v1.6.2.tgz -C /opt/cni/bin/
mv runc.amd64 runc
chmod +x crictl kubectl kube-proxy kubelet runc
mv crictl kubectl kube-proxy kubelet runc /usr/local/bin/
mv containerd/bin/* /bin/
Configure CNI Networking¶
Create the bridge
network configuration file:
mv 10-bridge.conf 99-loopback.conf /etc/cni/net.d/
Configure containerd
¶
Install the containerd
configuration files:
mkdir -p /etc/containerd/
mv containerd-config.toml /etc/containerd/config.toml
mv containerd.service /etc/systemd/system/
Configure the Kubelet¶
Create the kubelet-config.yaml
configuration file:
mv kubelet-config.yaml /var/lib/kubelet/
mv kubelet.service /etc/systemd/system/
Configure the Kubernetes Proxy¶
mv kube-proxy-config.yaml /var/lib/kube-proxy/
mv kube-proxy.service /etc/systemd/system/
Note
Although considered bad security form, you might have to temporarily or permanently disable SELinux if you run into any issues starting the needed systemd services. The proper fix is to investigate and create the needed policy files using tools such as ausearch, audit2allow and so on.
The fix for getting SELinux out of the way and disabling it is by running the following:
sudo sed -i 's/SELINUX=enforcing/SELINUX=disabled/g' /etc/selinux/config
setenforce 0
Start the Worker Services¶
systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl enable containerd kubelet kube-proxy
systemctl start containerd kubelet kube-proxy
Verification¶
The compute instances created in this tutorial will not have permission to complete this verification section. Run the following commands from the jumpbox
machine.
List the registered Kubernetes nodes:
ssh root@server "kubectl get nodes --kubeconfig admin.kubeconfig"
NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION
node-0 Ready <none> 1m v1.32.0
After completing all the previous steps in this lab on both node-0
and node-1
the output of the kubectl get nodes
command should show:
NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION
node-0 Ready <none> 1m v1.32.0
node-1 Ready <none> 10s v1.32.0
Next: Configuring kubectl for Remote Access
Author: Wale Soyinka
Contributors: Steven Spencer