4.4 KiB
Bootstrapping the Kubernetes Control Plane
In this lab you will bootstrap the Kubernetes control plane. The following components will be installed on the controller machine: Kubernetes API Server, Scheduler, and Controller Manager.
Prerequisites
Connect to the jumpbox
and copy Kubernetes binaries and systemd unit files to the server
instance:
scp \
downloads/kube-apiserver \
downloads/kube-controller-manager \
downloads/kube-scheduler \
downloads/kubectl \
units/kube-apiserver.service \
units/kube-controller-manager.service \
units/kube-scheduler.service \
configs/kube-scheduler.yaml \
configs/kube-apiserver-to-kubelet.yaml \
root@server:~/
The commands in this lab must be run on the controller instance: server
. Login to the controller instance using the ssh
command. Example:
ssh root@server
Provision the Kubernetes Control Plane
Create the Kubernetes configuration directory:
mkdir -p /etc/kubernetes/config
Install the Kubernetes Controller Binaries
Install the Kubernetes binaries:
{
chmod +x kube-apiserver \
kube-controller-manager \
kube-scheduler kubectl
mv kube-apiserver \
kube-controller-manager \
kube-scheduler kubectl \
/usr/local/bin/
}
Configure the Kubernetes API Server
{
mkdir -p /var/lib/kubernetes/
mv ca.crt ca.key \
kube-api-server.key kube-api-server.crt \
service-accounts.key service-accounts.crt \
encryption-config.yaml \
/var/lib/kubernetes/
}
Create the kube-apiserver.service
systemd unit file:
mv kube-apiserver.service \
/etc/systemd/system/kube-apiserver.service
Configure the Kubernetes Controller Manager
Move the kube-controller-manager
kubeconfig into place:
mv kube-controller-manager.kubeconfig /var/lib/kubernetes/
Create the kube-controller-manager.service
systemd unit file:
mv kube-controller-manager.service /etc/systemd/system/
Configure the Kubernetes Scheduler
Move the kube-scheduler
kubeconfig into place:
mv kube-scheduler.kubeconfig /var/lib/kubernetes/
Create the kube-scheduler.yaml
configuration file:
mv kube-scheduler.yaml /etc/kubernetes/config/
Create the kube-scheduler.service
systemd unit file:
mv kube-scheduler.service /etc/systemd/system/
Start the Controller Services
{
systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl enable kube-apiserver \
kube-controller-manager kube-scheduler
systemctl start kube-apiserver \
kube-controller-manager kube-scheduler
}
Allow up to 10 seconds for the Kubernetes API Server to fully initialize.
Verification
kubectl cluster-info \
--kubeconfig admin.kubeconfig
Kubernetes control plane is running at https://127.0.0.1:6443
RBAC for Kubelet Authorization
In this section you will configure RBAC permissions to allow the Kubernetes API Server to access the Kubelet API on each worker node. Access to the Kubelet API is required for retrieving metrics, logs, and executing commands in pods.
This tutorial sets the Kubelet
--authorization-mode
flag toWebhook
. Webhook mode uses the SubjectAccessReview API to determine authorization.
The commands in this section will affect the entire cluster and only need to be run on the controller node.
ssh root@server
Create the system:kube-apiserver-to-kubelet
ClusterRole with permissions to access the Kubelet API and perform most common tasks associated with managing pods:
kubectl apply -f kube-apiserver-to-kubelet.yaml \
--kubeconfig admin.kubeconfig
Verification
At this point the Kubernetes control plane is up and running. Run the following commands from the jumpbox
machine to verify it's working:
Make a HTTP request for the Kubernetes version info:
curl -k --cacert ca.crt https://server.kubernetes.local:6443/version
{
"major": "1",
"minor": "31",
"gitVersion": "v1.31.2",
"gitCommit": "5864a4677267e6adeae276ad85882a8714d69d9d",
"gitTreeState": "clean",
"buildDate": "2024-10-22T20:28:14Z",
"goVersion": "go1.22.8",
"compiler": "gc",
"platform": "linux/arm64"
}