set kubelet hostname

pull/857/head
Kelsey Hightower 2025-04-07 17:08:56 -07:00
parent c9690e523a
commit ea9178edae
3 changed files with 35 additions and 5 deletions

View File

@ -105,9 +105,10 @@ Set the hostname on each machine listed in the `machines.txt` file:
```bash
while read IP FQDN HOST SUBNET; do
CMD="sed -i 's/^127.0.0.1.*/127.0.0.1\t${FQDN} ${HOST} localhost/' /etc/hosts"
CMD="sed -i 's/^127.0.1.1.*/127.0.1.1\t${FQDN} ${HOST}/' /etc/hosts"
ssh -n root@${IP} "$CMD"
ssh -n root@${IP} hostnamectl hostname ${HOST}
ssh -n root@${IP} hostnamectl set-hostname ${HOST}
ssh -n root@${IP} systemctl restart systemd-hostnamed
done < machines.txt
```
@ -199,9 +200,9 @@ done
```
```text
server aarch64 GNU/Linux
node-0 aarch64 GNU/Linux
node-1 aarch64 GNU/Linux
server.kubernetes.local aarch64 GNU/Linux
node-0.kubernetes.local aarch64 GNU/Linux
node-1.kubernetes.local aarch64 GNU/Linux
```
## Adding `/etc/hosts` Entries To The Remote Machines

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@ -122,9 +122,28 @@ mv kube-scheduler.service /etc/systemd/system/
> Allow up to 10 seconds for the Kubernetes API Server to fully initialize.
You can check if the Kubernetes API Server is active by running the following command:
```bash
systemctl is-active kube-apiserver
```
For a more detailed status check run the following command:
```bash
systemctl status kube-apiserver
```
If you run into any errors or want to view the logs run the following command:
```bash
journalctl -u kube-apiserver --no-pager
```
### Verification
At this point the Kubernetes control plane components should be up and running. Verify this using the `kubectl` command line tool:
```bash
kubectl cluster-info \
--kubeconfig admin.kubeconfig

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@ -156,6 +156,16 @@ Create the `kubelet-config.yaml` configuration file:
}
```
Check if the kubelet service is running:
```bash
systemctl is-active kubelet
```
```text
active
```
Be sure to complete the steps in this section on each worker node, `node-0` and `node-1`, before moving on to the next section.
## Verification