To configure Kubernetes with CentOS, you’ll need a machine to act as a master, and one or more CentOS 7 hosts to act as cluster nodes.
This is a getting started guide for CentOS. It is a manual configuration so you understand all the underlying packages / services / ports, etc…
The Kubernetes package provides a few services: kube-apiserver, kube-scheduler, kube-controller-manager, kubelet, kube-proxy. These services are managed by systemd and the configuration resides in a central location: /etc/kubernetes. We will break the services up between the hosts. The first host, centos-master, will be the Kubernetes master. This host will run the kube-apiserver, kube-controller-manager and kube-scheduler. In addition, the master will also run etcd. The remaining hosts, centos-minion-n will be the nodes and run kubelet, proxy, cadvisor and docker.
All of then run flanneld as networking overlay.
System Information:
Hosts:
Please replace host IP with your environment.
centos-master = 192.168.121.9
centos-minion-1 = 192.168.121.65
centos-minion-2 = 192.168.121.66
centos-minion-3 = 192.168.121.67
Prepare the hosts:
[virt7-docker-common-release]
name=virt7-docker-common-release
baseurl=http://cbs.centos.org/repos/virt7-docker-common-release/x86_64/os/
gpgcheck=0
yum -y install --enablerepo=virt7-docker-common-release kubernetes etcd flannel
echo "192.168.121.9 centos-master
192.168.121.65 centos-minion-1
192.168.121.66 centos-minion-2
192.168.121.67 centos-minion-3" >> /etc/hosts
# Comma separated list of nodes in the etcd cluster
KUBE_ETCD_SERVERS="--etcd-servers=http://centos-master:2379"
# logging to stderr means we get it in the systemd journal
KUBE_LOGTOSTDERR="--logtostderr=true"
# journal message level, 0 is debug
KUBE_LOG_LEVEL="--v=0"
# Should this cluster be allowed to run privileged docker containers
KUBE_ALLOW_PRIV="--allow-privileged=false"
# How the replication controller and scheduler find the kube-apiserver
KUBE_MASTER="--master=http://centos-master:8080"
systemctl disable iptables-services firewalld
systemctl stop iptables-services firewalld
Configure the Kubernetes services on the master.
# [member]
ETCD_NAME=default
ETCD_DATA_DIR="/var/lib/etcd/default.etcd"
ETCD_LISTEN_CLIENT_URLS="http://0.0.0.0:2379"
#[cluster]
ETCD_ADVERTISE_CLIENT_URLS="http://0.0.0.0:2379"
# The address on the local server to listen to.
KUBE_API_ADDRESS="--address=0.0.0.0"
# The port on the local server to listen on.
KUBE_API_PORT="--port=8080"
# Port kubelets listen on
KUBELET_PORT="--kubelet-port=10250"
# Address range to use for services
KUBE_SERVICE_ADDRESSES="--service-cluster-ip-range=10.254.0.0/16"
# Add your own!
KUBE_API_ARGS=""
172.30.0.0/16
is free in our network.$ etcdctl mkdir /kube-centos/network
$ etcdctl mk /kube-centos/network/config "{ \"Network\": \"172.30.0.0/16\", \"SubnetLen\": 24, \"Backend\": { \"Type\": \"vxlan\" } }"
# etcd url location. Point this to the server where etcd runs
FLANNEL_ETCD="http://centos-master:2379"
# etcd config key. This is the configuration key that flannel queries
# For address range assignment
FLANNEL_ETCD_KEY="/kube-centos/network"
# Any additional options that you want to pass
FLANNEL_OPTIONS=""
for SERVICES in etcd kube-apiserver kube-controller-manager kube-scheduler flanneld; do
systemctl restart $SERVICES
systemctl enable $SERVICES
systemctl status $SERVICES
done
Configure the Kubernetes services on the nodes.
We need to configure the kubelet and start the kubelet and proxy
# The address for the info server to serve on
KUBELET_ADDRESS="--address=0.0.0.0"
# The port for the info server to serve on
KUBELET_PORT="--port=10250"
# You may leave this blank to use the actual hostname
KUBELET_HOSTNAME="--hostname-override=centos-minion-n" # Check the node number!
# Location of the api-server
KUBELET_API_SERVER="--api-servers=http://centos-master:8080"
# Add your own!
KUBELET_ARGS=""
# etcd url location. Point this to the server where etcd runs
FLANNEL_ETCD="http://centos-master:2379"
# etcd config key. This is the configuration key that flannel queries
# For address range assignment
FLANNEL_ETCD_KEY="/kube-centos/network"
# Any additional options that you want to pass
FLANNEL_OPTIONS=""
for SERVICES in kube-proxy kubelet flanneld docker; do
systemctl restart $SERVICES
systemctl enable $SERVICES
systemctl status $SERVICES
done
kubectl config set-cluster default-cluster --server=http://centos-master:8080
kubectl config set-context default-context --cluster=default-cluster --user=default-admin
kubectl config use-context default-context
You should be finished!
$ kubectl get nodes
NAME LABELS STATUS
centos-minion-1 <none> Ready
centos-minion-2 <none> Ready
centos-minion-3 <none> Ready
The cluster should be running! Launch a test pod.
You should have a functional cluster, check out 101!
IaaS Provider | Config. Mgmt | OS | Networking | Docs | Conforms | Support Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bare-metal | custom | CentOS | flannel | docs | Community (@coolsvap) |
For support level information on all solutions, see the Table of solutions chart.
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