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Overview

Kubernetes on CentOS 7 based on kubeadm. Default setup is a single master with three nodes

To setup type:

$ ./up.sh
$ vagrant ssh master
[vagrant@master]$ kubectl get nodes

Works in Vagrant/Ansible on Linux with libvirt/KVM or on Mac OS X on Virtualbox

Versions

Currently it uses Kubernetes v1.7.8

Features

CACHING: This vagrant/ansible environment allows for caching of the yum cache. This allows you to reuse those caches on subsequent provisioning of the VMs, and it is intended to help situations where one is developing in an environment where they would rather not have to redownload many megabytes repeatedly, e.g. hotel WiFi. :) It stores the cache as a tgz file in your VAGRANT_HOME directory, ~/.vagrant.d by default. To enable this, either specify VAGRANT_CACHE=1 on the command line or change the CACHE variable near the top of the Vagrantfile from false to true.

CUSTOM REGISTRY: Similar to the caching feature, this environment supports interaction with a custom Docker registry. The idea is that a registry would be running in a local environment somewhere that could be used as a primary source for pulling container images into the VMs. Just specify the variable custom_registry in the global_vars.yml file to configure it. The following scripts are available to facilitate this feature:

  • docker-registry-run.sh: A simple script to run a Docker registry in a container on your local machine, listening on port 5000. NOTE: You may need to open up the relevant firewall port on your local machine.
  • docker-cache.sh: This script will detect all current images on a given VM (default 'master') and push each image to the custom registry. Usage:
    ./docker-cache.sh 192.168.121.1:5000 master
    

GCR.IO PROXY: An addition to the custom registry, this environment allows you to set up an nginx proxy on the master node VM that can redirect gcr.io traffic to your custom registry. This allows you to store any images from gcr.io in your custom registry and then have things like kubeadm pull from there instead of the actual gcr.io. Just specify custom_registry_gcr=true in global_vars.yml. The gcr-proxy-state.sh script is available to set the proxy redirect on or off at runtime.

A typical workflow to start using this would look like:

  1. Run docker-registry-run.sh.
  2. Enable the custom registry in global_vars.yml.
    • NOTE: Since the registry is currently empty, any search for container images will proceed to the next registry (Docker Hub, by default).
  3. Start the vagrant environment: up.sh
  4. Run docker-cache.sh <host IP>:5000 master
  5. Run docker-cache.sh <host IP>:5000 node0
    • OPTIONAL: Run docker pull gcr.io/google_containers/nginx-slim:0.8 on node0 before caching, since it is used in testing.
  6. Tear down the vagrant environment: vagrant destroy
  7. Set custom_registry_gcr=true in global_vars.yml

Now Docker will pull gcr.io images and custom images from your custom registry, and check your custom registry before pulling from Docker Hub. You will want to periodically set custom_registry_add=false and custom_registry_gcr=false to pull updated images and then cache them with docker-cache.sh.

CUSTOM YUM REPOS: As an alternative or complementary tool to the rpm caching feature mentioned above, the custom_yum_repos variable can be enabled to supply custom yum repos to the VMs. These custom repos can be used to cache packages across multiple projects or inject custom RPMs into the VMs.

To configure it, uncomment or copy the custom_yum_repos variable in global_vars.yml. Supply key-value pairs, where the key is the name of the yum repository and the value is the repository's url. Example:

custom_yum_repos:
  kubernetes_el7: http://mypkgs/path/to/repo1
  epel_el7: http://mypkgs/path/to/repo2
  gluster_el7: http://mypkgs/another/repo/path/repo3

CUSTOM HOST ALIASES: If you want or need to use a name for the yum repository hosts or custom docker registry that does not resolve normally, you can define a custom_host_aliases in global_vars.yml. This value takes a list of items where each item is a mapping with the keys addr, an ip address, and names, a list of host names. Example:

custom_host_aliases:
  - addr: 192.168.122.164
    names:
      - myserver
      - myserver.localdomain
  - addr: 192.168.122.166
    names:
      - foo
      - foo.example.org