Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
81 lines (57 loc) · 2.14 KB

vsphere.md

File metadata and controls

81 lines (57 loc) · 2.14 KB

Getting started with vSphere

Prerequisites

  1. You need administrator credentials to an ESXi machine or vCenter instance.

  2. You must have Go (version 1.2 or later) installed: www.golang.org.

  3. You must have your GOPATH set up and include $GOPATH/bin in your PATH.

    export GOPATH=$HOME/src/go
    mkdir -p $GOPATH
    export PATH=$PATH:$GOPATH/bin
  4. Install the govc tool to interact with ESXi/vCenter:

    go get github.com/vmware/govmomi/govc
  5. Install godep (optional, only required when modifying package dependencies). Instructions here

  6. Get the Kubernetes source:

    mkdir -p $GOPATH/src/github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform
    git clone https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/kubernetes.git
    cd kubernetes

Setup

Download a prebuilt Debian VMDK to be used as base image:

wget https://storage.googleapis.com/govmomi/vmdk/kube.vmdk.gz{,.md5}
md5sum -c kube.vmdk.gz.md5
gzip -d kube.vmdk.gz

Upload this VMDK to your vSphere instance:

export GOVC_URL='https://user:pass@hostname/sdk'
export GOVC_INSECURE=1 # If the host above uses a self-signed cert
export GOVC_DATASTORE='target datastore'
export GOVC_RESOURCE_POOL='resource pool or cluster with access to datastore'

govc import.vmdk kube.vmdk ./kube/

Verify that the VMDK was correctly uploaded and expanded to 10GiB:

govc datastore.ls ./kube/

Take a look at the file cluster/vsphere/config-common.sh fill in the required parameters. The guest login for the image that you imported is kube:kube.

Now, let's continue with deploying Kubernetes:

cd kubernetes

# Build source
hack/build-go.sh

# Build a release (argument is the instance prefix)
release/build-release.sh kubernetes

# Deploy Kubernetes (takes ~5 minutes, provided everything works out)
export KUBERNETES_PROVIDER=vsphere
cluster/kube-up.sh

Refer to the top level README and the getting started guide for Google Compute Engine. Once you have successfully reached this point, your vSphere Kubernetes deployment works just as any other one!

Enjoy!