- Preparing ansible for Odroid N2+ Armbian Ubuntu Focal
- Domain prepared and DNS set to cloudflare
Highly opinionated template for deploying a single k3s cluster with Ansible and Terraform backed by Flux and SOPS.
The purpose here is to showcase how you can deploy an entire Kubernetes cluster and show it off to the world using the GitOps tool Flux. When completed, your Git repository will be driving the state of your Kubernetes cluster. In addition with the help of the Ansible, Terraform and Flux SOPS integrations you'll be able to commit Age encrypted secrets to your public repo.
The following components will be installed in your k3s cluster by default. They are only included to get a minimum viable cluster up and running. You are free to add / remove components to your liking but anything outside the scope of the below components are not supported by this template.
Feel free to read up on any of these technologies before you get started to be more familiar with them.
- cert-manager - SSL certificates - with Cloudflare DNS challenge
- calico - CNI (container network interface)
- echo-server - REST Server Tests (Echo-Server) API (useful for debugging HTTP issues)
- flux - GitOps tool for deploying manifests from the
cluster
directory - hajimari - start page with ingress discovery
- kube-vip - layer 2 load balancer for the Kubernetes control plane
- local-path-provisioner - default storage class provided by k3s
- metallb - bare metal load balancer
- reloader - restart pods when Kubernetes
configmap
orsecret
changes - reflector - mirror
configmap
s orsecret
s to other Kubernetes namespaces - system-upgrade-controller - automate upgrading k3s
- traefik - ingress controller
For provisioning the following tools will be used:
- Ubuntu - this is a pretty universal operating system that supports running all kinds of home related workloads in Kubernetes
- Ansible - this will be used to provision the Ubuntu operating system to be ready for Kubernetes and also to install k3s
- Terraform - in order to help with the DNS settings this will be used to provision an already existing Cloudflare domain and DNS settings
- One or more nodes with a fresh install of Ubuntu Server 20.04. These nodes can be bare metal or VMs.
- A Cloudflare account with a domain, this will be managed by Terraform.
- Some experience in debugging problems and a positive attitude ;)
📍 You should install the below CLI tools on your workstation. Make sure you pull in the latest versions.
Tool | Purpose |
---|---|
ansible | Preparing Ubuntu for Kubernetes and installing k3s |
direnv | Exports env vars based on present working directory |
flux | Operator that manages your k8s cluster based on your Git repository |
age | A simple, modern and secure encryption tool (and Go library) with small explicit keys, no config options, and UNIX-style composability. |
go-task | A task runner / simpler Make alternative written in Go |
ipcalc | Used to verify settings in the configure script |
jq | Used to verify settings in the configure script |
kubectl | Allows you to run commands against Kubernetes clusters |
sops | Encrypts k8s secrets with Age |
terraform | Prepare a Cloudflare domain to be used with the cluster |
Tool | Purpose |
---|---|
helm | Manage Kubernetes applications |
kustomize | Template-free way to customize application configuration |
pre-commit | Runs checks pre git commit |
gitleaks | Scan git repos (or files) for secrets |
prettier | Prettier is an opinionated code formatter. |
It is advisable to install pre-commit and the pre-commit hooks that come with this repository. sops-pre-commit and gitleaks will check to make sure you are not by accident committing your secrets un-encrypted.
After pre-commit is installed on your machine run:
task pre-commit:init
Remember to run this on each new clone of the repository for it to have effect.
Commands are of interest, for learning purposes:
This command makes it so pre-commit runs on git commit
, and also installs environments per the config file.
pre-commit install --install-hooks
This command checks for new versions of hooks, though it will occasionally make mistakes, so verify its results.
pre-commit autoupdate
The Git repository contains the following directories under cluster
and are ordered below by how Flux will apply them.
- base directory is the entrypoint to Flux
- crds directory contains custom resource definitions (CRDs) that need to exist globally in your cluster before anything else exists
- core directory (depends on crds) are important infrastructure applications (grouped by namespace) that should never be pruned by Flux
- apps directory (depends on core) is where your common applications (grouped by namespace) could be placed, Flux will prune resources here if they are not tracked by Git anymore
cluster
├── apps
│ ├── default
│ ├── networking
│ └── system-upgrade
├── base
│ └── flux-system
├── core
│ ├── cert-manager
│ ├── metallb-system
│ ├── namespaces
│ └── system-upgrade
└── crds
└── cert-manager
- Install docker on local workstation
maintenance_workspace/early_preparation_for_ansible/prepare_maintenance_workspace/install_docker.sh
- Revise list of servers:
cat maintenance_workspace/early_preparation_for_ansible/prepare_nodes_for_ansible/list_of_servers.txt
cat maintenance_workspace/early_preparation_for_ansible/prepare_nodes_for_ansible/former_list_of_servers.txt
- Prepare ssh access and nopasswd sudo
cd maintenance_workspace/early_preparation_for_ansible/prepare_nodes_for_ansible
./01_clear_ssh_keys.sh
./02_copy_keys.sh
./03_nopasswd.sh
- Restore sops age keys or generate new ones
Clone the repo to you local workstation and cd
into it.
📍 All of the below commands are run on your local workstation, not on any of your cluster nodes.
📍 Here we will create a Age Private and Public key. Using SOPS with Age allows us to encrypt and decrypt secrets.
- Create a Age Private / Public Key
age-keygen -o age.agekey
- Set up the directory for the Age key and move the Age file to it
mkdir -p ~/.config/sops/age
mv age.agekey ~/.config/sops/age/keys.txt
- Export the
SOPS_AGE_KEY_FILE
variable in yourbashrc
,zshrc
orconfig.fish
and source it, e.g.
export SOPS_AGE_KEY_FILE=~/.config/sops/age/keys.txt
source ~/.bashrc
- Fill out the Age public key in the
.config.env
underBOOTSTRAP_AGE_PUBLIC_KEY
, note the public key should start withage
...
In order to use Terraform and cert-manager
with the Cloudflare DNS challenge you will need to create a API key.
-
Head over to Cloudflare and create a API key by going here.
-
Under the
API Keys
section, create a global API Key. -
Use the API Key in the configuration section below.
📍 You may wish to update this later on to a Cloudflare API Token which can be scoped to certain resources. I do not recommend using a Cloudflare API Key, but for the purposes of this template it is easier getting started without having to define which scopes and resources are needed. For more information see the Cloudflare docs on API Keys and Tokens.
📍 The .config.env
file contains necessary configuration that is needed by Ansible, Terraform and Flux.
📍 It is suggested to use three control plane nodes. If you only need a single control plane node, make sure you update ./provision/ansible/inventory/group_vars/kubernetes/k3s.yml
and set k3s_use_unsupported_config
to true
-
Copy the
.config.sample.env
to.config.env
and start filling out all the environment variables. All are required and read the comments they will explain further what is required. -
Once that is done, verify the configuration is correct by running
./configure.sh --verify
-
If you do not encounter any errors run
./configure.sh
to start having the script wire up the templated files and place them where they need to be.
📍 Here we will be running a Ansible Playbook to prepare Ubuntu for running a Kubernetes cluster.
📍 Nodes are not security hardened by default, you can do this with dev-sec/ansible-collection-hardening or something similar.
-
Ensure you are able to SSH into you nodes from your workstation with using your private ssh key. This is how Ansible is able to connect to your remote nodes.
-
Install the deps by running
task ansible:deps
-
Verify Ansible can view your config by running
task ansible:list
-
Verify Ansible can ping your nodes by running
task ansible:adhoc:ping
-
Finally, run the Ubuntu Prepare playbook by running
task ansible:playbook:ubuntu-prepare
-
If everything goes as planned you should see Ansible running the Ubuntu Prepare Playbook against your nodes.
📍 Here we will be running a Ansible Playbook to install k3s with this wonderful k3s Ansible galaxy role. After completion, Ansible will drop a kubeconfig
in ./provision/kubeconfig
for use with interacting with your cluster with kubectl
.
📍 Once more over, it is suggested to use three control plane nodes. If you only need a single control plane node, make sure you update ./provision/ansible/inventory/group_vars/kubernetes/k3s.yml
and set k3s_use_unsupported_config
to true
-
Verify Ansible can view your config by running
task ansible:list
-
Verify Ansible can ping your nodes by running
task ansible:adhoc:ping
-
Run the k3s install playbook by running
task ansible:playbook:k3s-install
-
If everything goes as planned you should see Ansible running the k3s install Playbook against your nodes.
-
Verify the nodes are online
kubectl --kubeconfig=./provision/kubeconfig get nodes
# NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION
# k8s-0 Ready control-plane,master 4d20h v1.21.5+k3s1
# k8s-1 Ready worker 4d20h v1.21.5+k3s1
📍 Review the Terraform scripts under ./provision/terraform/cloudflare/
and make sure you understand what it's doing (no really review it). If your domain already has existing DNS records be sure to export those DNS settings before you continue. Ideally you can update the terraform script to manage DNS for all records if you so choose to.
-
Pull in the Terraform deps by running
task terraform:init:cloudflare
-
Review the changes Terraform will make to your Cloudflare domain by running
task terraform:plan:cloudflare
-
Finally have Terraform execute the task by running
task terraform:apply:cloudflare
If Terraform was ran successfully you can log into Cloudflare and validate the DNS records are present.
📍 Here we will be installing flux after some quick bootstrap steps.
- Verify Flux can be installed
flux --kubeconfig=./provision/kubeconfig check --pre
# ► checking prerequisites
# ✔ kubectl 1.21.5 >=1.18.0-0
# ✔ Kubernetes 1.21.5+k3s1 >=1.16.0-0
# ✔ prerequisites checks passed
- Pre-create the
flux-system
namespace
kubectl --kubeconfig=./provision/kubeconfig create namespace flux-system --dry-run=client -o yaml | kubectl --kubeconfig=./provision/kubeconfig apply -f -
- Add the Age key in-order for Flux to decrypt SOPS secrets
cat ~/.config/sops/age/keys.txt |
kubectl --kubeconfig=./provision/kubeconfig \
-n flux-system create secret generic sops-age \
--from-file=age.agekey=/dev/stdin
📍 Variables defined in ./cluster/base/cluster-secrets.sops.yaml
and ./cluster/base/cluster-settings.yaml
will be usable anywhere in your YAML manifests under ./cluster
-
Verify the
./cluster/base/cluster-secrets.sops.yaml
and./cluster/core/cert-manager/secret.sops.yaml
files are encrypted with SOPS -
If you verified all the secrets are encrypted, you can delete the
tmpl
directory now -
Push you changes to git
git add -A
git commit -m "initial commit"
git push
- Install Flux
📍 Due to race conditions with the Flux CRDs you will have to run the below command twice. There should be no errors on this second run.
kubectl --kubeconfig=./provision/kubeconfig apply --kustomize=./cluster/base/flux-system
# namespace/flux-system configured
# customresourcedefinition.apiextensions.k8s.io/alerts.notification.toolkit.fluxcd.io created
# ...
# unable to recognize "./cluster/base/flux-system": no matches for kind "Kustomization" in version "kustomize.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta1"
# unable to recognize "./cluster/base/flux-system": no matches for kind "GitRepository" in version "source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta1"
# unable to recognize "./cluster/base/flux-system": no matches for kind "HelmRepository" in version "source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta1"
# unable to recognize "./cluster/base/flux-system": no matches for kind "HelmRepository" in version "source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta1"
# unable to recognize "./cluster/base/flux-system": no matches for kind "HelmRepository" in version "source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta1"
# unable to recognize "./cluster/base/flux-system": no matches for kind "HelmRepository" in version "source.toolkit.fluxcd.io/v1beta1"
- Verify Flux components are running in the cluster
kubectl --kubeconfig=./provision/kubeconfig get pods -n flux-system
# NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
# helm-controller-5bbd94c75-89sb4 1/1 Running 0 1h
# kustomize-controller-7b67b6b77d-nqc67 1/1 Running 0 1h
# notification-controller-7c46575844-k4bvr 1/1 Running 0 1h
# source-controller-7d6875bcb4-zqw9f 1/1 Running 0 1h
If all goes well and you have port forwarded 80
and 443
in your router to the ${BOOTSTRAP_METALLB_TRAEFIK_ADDR}
IP, in a few moments head over to your browser and you should be able to access https://hajimari.${BOOTSTRAP_CLOUDFLARE_DOMAIN}
🎉 Congratulations you have a Kubernetes cluster managed by Flux, your Git repository is driving the state of your cluster.
Our wiki is a good place to start troubleshooting issues. If that doesn't cover your issue, start a new thread in the #support channel on our Discord.
Our Check out our wiki (WIP) for more integrations!
The world is your cluster, first thing you might want to do is to have storage backed by something other than local disk. If you have some sort of NAS and want storage back by that check out the helm charts for nfs-subdir-external-provisioner, democratic-csi, or csi-driver-nfs.
Many people have shared their awesome repositories over at awesome-home-kubernetes, be sure to check this out and click the Search All Repos
icon if you are wondering how someone implemented or deployed an application.
Big shout out to all the authors and contributors to the projects that we are using in this repository.