[[TOC(Documentation/f*, depth=3)]] == Tutorial: Kubernetes Multi Node Setup== Requirements: 1. [https://www.orbit-lab.org/wiki/Documentation/CGettingStarted Setup/Practice] of Orbit Nodes. 2. Any available Orbit Sandbox Node 3. Ubuntu 20.04.5 LTS == Kubernetes Multi Node lab setup using the kubeadm utility == Let’s take a look at this Kubernetes Multi-Node lab setup step-by-step and see how it is put together. In this tutorial, we will be using one of the sb9 nodes for setting up Kubernetes. Any sb(1-10) should also be capable of Kubernetes setup. Make sure you have Ubuntu 20.04.5 (**baseline20.04.ndz**) or 22.04.2 (**ubuntu2204-beta.ndz**) LTS. To get the Ubuntu Version, follow these steps after ssh into your console. Substitute for the image and node you want. The below steps illustrate loading Ubuntu 20.04.5 LTS for node1-5 of sb1. For the sb1 console, {{{#!shell username@console:~$ omf tell -t node1-5 -a offh }}} {{{#!shell username@console:~$ omf load -t node1-5 -i baseline20.04.ndz }}} {{{#!shell username@console:~$ omf tell -t node1-5 -a on }}} To verify if you have loaded your Ubuntu version properly, use this command after ssh into the node1-5 {{{#!shell root@node1-5:~# lsb_release -a }}} This will list the current version of Ubuntu loaded. === Set up a Kubernetes Cluster === After loading your version of Ubuntu, you can follow the below steps to install Kubernetes 1. Update and Upgrade Packages: {{{#!shell root@node1-5:~# sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get upgrade }}} 2. Install Docker: {{{#!shell root@node1-5:~# sudo apt install docker.io }}} 3. Configure Docker to use systemd for the management of the container’s cgroups: {{{#!shell root@node1-5:~# cat </dev/null }}} {{{#!shell root@node1-5:~# echo "deb [signed-by=/usr/share/keyrings/kubernetes-archive-keyring.gpg] https://apt.kubernetes.io/ kubernetes-xenial main" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/kubernetes.list }}} 9. Install Kubernetes: {{{#!shell root@node1-5:~# sudo apt-get update }}} {{{#!shell root@node1-5:~# sudo apt-get install -y kubelet kubeadm kubectl }}} {{{#!shell root@node1-5:~# sudo apt-mark hold kubelet kubeadm kubectl }}} 10. Initialize the Kubernetes Cluster: This command outputs kubeadm join command; make sure you copy this as this will be helpful for joining worker nodes to the master node {{{#!shell root@node1-5:~# kubeadm init --pod-network-cidr=10.19.0.0/16 }}} You should see an output which includes a `kubeadm join` command, save this command for use on the worker nodes. 11. Set KUBECONFIG environment variable: {{{#!shell root@node1-5:~# export KUBECONFIG=/etc/kubernetes/admin.conf }}} 12. Apply Flannel network overlay: {{{#!shell root@node1-5:~# kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/coreos/flannel/master/Documentation/kube-flannel.yml }}} === Joining Worker Nodes to the Cluster === Make sure you follow till step 9[including] on the worker nodes, and then To join worker nodes to the Kubernetes cluster, run the `kubeadm join` command on the worker nodes that was outputted by the above `kubeadm init` command. Example of kubeadm join command generated by kubeadm init, lets say we want to add node1-6 as the worker node: {{{#!shell root@node1-6:~# kubeadm join 10.19.1.5:6443 --token o1cttx.z9al8w8ljqcmqb4y --discovery-token-ca-cert-hash sha256:6ecd74d7eca0299b80499cf2e2e1c87c4079c3d234282be5822761880998853e }}} To get the current status of nodes {{{#!shell root@node1-5:~# kubectl get nodes }}}