Launch an instance¶
In environments that include the Container Infrastructure Management service, you can provision container clusters made up of virtual machines or baremetal servers. The Container Infrastructure Management service uses Cluster Templates to describe how a Cluster is constructed. In each of the following examples you will create a Cluster Template for a specific COE and then you will provision a Cluster using the corresponding Cluster Template. Then, you can use the appropriate COE client or endpoint to create containers.
Create an external network (Optional)¶
To create a magnum cluster, you need an external network. If there are no external networks, create one.
Create an external network with an appropriate provider based on your cloud provider support for your case:
$ openstack network create public --provider-network-type vxlan \ --external \ --project service +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+ | Field | Value | +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+ | admin_state_up | UP | | availability_zone_hints | | | availability_zones | | | created_at | 2017-03-27T10:09:04Z | | description | | | dns_domain | None | | id | 372170ca-7d2e-48a2-8449-670e4ab66c23 | | ipv4_address_scope | None | | ipv6_address_scope | None | | is_default | False | | mtu | 1450 | | name | public | | port_security_enabled | True | | project_id | 224c32c0dd2e49cbaadfd1cda069f149 | | provider:network_type | vxlan | | provider:physical_network | None | | provider:segmentation_id | 3 | | qos_policy_id | None | | revision_number | 4 | | router:external | External | | segments | None | | shared | False | | status | ACTIVE | | subnets | | | updated_at | 2017-03-27T10:09:04Z | +---------------------------+--------------------------------------+ $ openstack subnet create public-subnet --network public \ --subnet-range 192.168.1.0/24 \ --gateway 192.168.1.1 \ --ip-version 4 +-------------------+--------------------------------------+ | Field | Value | +-------------------+--------------------------------------+ | allocation_pools | 192.168.1.2-192.168.1.254 | | cidr | 192.168.1.0/24 | | created_at | 2017-03-27T10:46:15Z | | description | | | dns_nameservers | | | enable_dhcp | True | | gateway_ip | 192.168.1.1 | | host_routes | | | id | 04185f6c-ea31-4109-b20b-fd7f935b3828 | | ip_version | 4 | | ipv6_address_mode | None | | ipv6_ra_mode | None | | name | public-subnet | | network_id | 372170ca-7d2e-48a2-8449-670e4ab66c23 | | project_id | d9e40a0aff30441083d9f279a0ff50de | | revision_number | 2 | | segment_id | None | | service_types | | | subnetpool_id | None | | updated_at | 2017-03-27T10:46:15Z | +-------------------+--------------------------------------+
Create a keypair (Optional)¶
To create a magnum cluster, you need a keypair which will be passed in all compute instances of the cluster. If you don’t have a keypair in your project, create one.
Create a keypair on the Compute service:
$ openstack keypair create --public-key ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub mykey +-------------+-------------------------------------------------+ | Field | Value | +-------------+-------------------------------------------------+ | fingerprint | 05:be:32:07:58:a7:e8:0b:05:9b:81:6d:80:9a:4e:b1 | | name | mykey | | user_id | 2d4398dbd5274707bf100a9dbbe85819 | +-------------+-------------------------------------------------+
Upload the images required for your clusters to the Image service¶
The Kubernetes driver require a Fedora CoreOS image. Plese refer to ‘Supported versions’ for each Magnum release.
Download the image:
$ export FCOS_VERSION="35.20220116.3.0" $ wget https://builds.coreos.fedoraproject.org/prod/streams/stable/builds/${FCOS_VERSION}/x86_64/fedora-coreos-${FCOS_VERSION}-openstack.x86_64.qcow2.xz $ unxz fedora-coreos-${FCOS_VERSION}-openstack.x86_64.qcow2.xz
Register the image to the Image service setting the
os_distro
property tofedora-coreos
:$ openstack image create \ --disk-format=qcow2 \ --container-format=bare \ --file=fedora-coreos-${FCOS_VERSION}-openstack.x86_64.qcow2 \ --property os_distro='fedora-coreos' \ fedora-coreos-latest
Provision a Kubernetes cluster and create a deployment¶
Following this example, you will provision a Kubernetes cluster with one
master and one node. Then, using Kubernetes’s native client kubectl
, you
will create a deployment.
Create a cluster template for a Kubernetes cluster using the
fedora-coreos-latest
image,m1.small
as the flavor for the master and the node,public
as the external network and8.8.8.8
for the DNS nameserver, using the following command:$ openstack coe cluster template create kubernetes-cluster-template \ --image fedora-coreos-latest \ --external-network public \ --dns-nameserver 8.8.8.8 \ --master-flavor m1.small \ --flavor m1.small \ --coe kubernetes
Create a cluster with one node and one master using
mykey
as the keypair, using the following command:$ openstack coe cluster create kubernetes-cluster \ --cluster-template kubernetes-cluster-template \ --master-count 1 \ --node-count 1 \ --keypair mykey Request to create cluster b1ef3528-ac03-4459-bbf7-22649bfbc84f has been accepted.
Your cluster is now being created. Creation time depends on your infrastructure’s performance. You can check the status of your cluster using the commands:
openstack coe cluster list
oropenstack coe cluster show kubernetes-cluster
.$ openstack coe cluster list +--------------------------------------+--------------------+---------+------------+--------------+-----------------+ | uuid | name | keypair | node_count | master_count | status | +--------------------------------------+--------------------+---------+------------+--------------+-----------------+ | b1ef3528-ac03-4459-bbf7-22649bfbc84f | kubernetes-cluster | mykey | 1 | 1 | CREATE_COMPLETE | +--------------------------------------+--------------------+---------+------------+--------------+-----------------+
Add the credentials of the above cluster to your environment:
$ mkdir -p ~/clusters/kubernetes-cluster $ cd ~/clusters/kubernetes-cluster $ openstack coe cluster config kubernetes-cluster
The above command will save the authentication artifacts in the directory
~/clusters/kubernetes-cluster
. It will output a command to set theKUBECONFIG
environment variable:export KUBECONFIG=/home/user/clusters/kubernetes-cluster/config
You can list the controller components of your Kubernetes cluster and check if they are
Running
:$ kubectl -n kube-system get po NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE kube-controller-manager-ku-hesuip7l3i-0-5mqijvszepxw-kube-master-rqwmwne7rjh2 1/1 Running 0 1h kube-proxy-ku-hesuip7l3i-0-5mqijvszepxw-kube-master-rqwmwne7rjh2 1/1 Running 0 1h kube-proxy-ku-wmmticfvdr-0-k53p22xmlxvx-kube-minion-x4ly6zfhrrui 1/1 Running 0 1h kube-scheduler-ku-hesuip7l3i-0-5mqijvszepxw-kube-master-rqwmwne7rjh2 1/1 Running 0 1h kubernetes-dashboard-3203831700-zvj2d 1/1 Running 0 1h
Now, you can create a nginx deployment and verify it is running:
$ kubectl run nginx --image=nginx --replicas=5 deployment "nginx" created $ kubectl get po NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE nginx-701339712-2ngt8 1/1 Running 0 15s nginx-701339712-j8r3d 1/1 Running 0 15s nginx-701339712-mb6jb 1/1 Running 0 15s nginx-701339712-q115k 1/1 Running 0 15s nginx-701339712-tb5lp 1/1 Running 0 15s
Delete the cluster:
$ openstack coe cluster delete kubernetes-cluster Request to delete cluster kubernetes-cluster has been accepted.