openstack-helm/tools/kubeadm-aio
Curtis Collicutt 6ffd10403c Add sudo to docker log command
There are two spots where docker log is run without sudo, and
without sudo the command will usually fail and the loop will
never be exited. This would only be hit on an error.

Change-Id: I4335783478ad2583b581bd9264b029e929bfc8c3
2017-06-07 11:51:39 -06:00
..
assets KubeADM-AIO: Update Image to support Multinode Operation Natively 2017-06-05 18:09:16 -05:00
Dockerfile KubeADM-AIO: Update Image to support Multinode Operation Natively 2017-06-05 18:09:16 -05:00
kubeadm-aio-launcher.sh Add sudo to docker log command 2017-06-07 11:51:39 -06:00
README.rst KubeADM-AIO: Update Image to support Multinode Operation Natively 2017-06-05 18:09:16 -05:00

Kubeadm AIO Container

This container builds a small AIO Kubeadm based Kubernetes deployment for Development and Gating use.

Instructions

OS Specific Host setup:

Ubuntu:

From a freshly provisioned Ubuntu 16.04 LTS host run:

sudo apt-get update -y
sudo apt-get install -y \
        docker.io \
        nfs-common \
        git \
        make

OS Independent Host setup:

You should install the kubectl and helm binaries:

KUBE_VERSION=v1.6.4
HELM_VERSION=v2.3.0

TMP_DIR=$(mktemp -d)
curl -sSL https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/${KUBE_VERSION}/bin/linux/amd64/kubectl -o ${TMP_DIR}/kubectl
chmod +x ${TMP_DIR}/kubectl
sudo mv ${TMP_DIR}/kubectl /usr/local/bin/kubectl
curl -sSL https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-helm/helm-${HELM_VERSION}-linux-amd64.tar.gz | tar -zxv --strip-components=1 -C ${TMP_DIR}
sudo mv ${TMP_DIR}/helm /usr/local/bin/helm
rm -rf ${TMP_DIR}

And clone the OpenStack-Helm repo:

git clone https://git.openstack.org/openstack/openstack-helm

Build the AIO environment (optional)

A known good image is published to dockerhub on a fairly regular basis, but if you wish to build your own image, from the root directory of the OpenStack-Helm repo run:

export KUBEADM_IMAGE=openstackhelm/kubeadm-aio:v1.6.4
sudo docker build --pull -t ${KUBEADM_IMAGE} tools/kubeadm-aio

Deploy the AIO environment

To launch the environment then run:

export KUBEADM_IMAGE=openstackhelm/kubeadm-aio:v1.6.4
export KUBE_VERSION=v1.6.4
./tools/kubeadm-aio/kubeadm-aio-launcher.sh
export KUBECONFIG=${HOME}/.kubeadm-aio/admin.conf

One this has run, you should hopefully have a Kubernetes single node environment running, with Helm, Calico, a NFS PVC provisioner and appropriate RBAC rules and node labels to get developing.

If you wish to use this environment at the primary Kubernetes environment on your host you may run the following, but note that this will wipe any previous client configuration you may have.

mkdir -p  ${HOME}/.kube
cat ${HOME}/.kubeadm-aio/admin.conf > ${HOME}/.kube/config

If you wish to create dummy network devices for Neutron to manage there is a helper script that can set them up for you:

sudo docker exec kubelet /usr/bin/openstack-helm-aio-network-prep

Logs

You can get the logs from your kubeadm-aio container by running:

sudo docker logs -f kubeadm-aio