This is a fork of awesome Kubernetes The Hard Way by Kelsey Hightower and is geared towards using it on AWS. Also thanks to @slawekzachcial for his work that made this easier. I have made some changes along the way:
- Provided an alternative to busybox for testing DNS resolution. This fixes issue#356
- Upgraded kubernetes to v1.11.2
- Upgraded cri-tools to v1.11.1
- Upgraded containerd to v1.2.0-beta.2
- Upgraded CNI plugins to v0.7.1
- Upgraded etcd to 3.3.9
- Added section on critools
This tutorial walks you through setting up Kubernetes the hard way. This guide is not for people looking for a fully automated command to bring up a Kubernetes cluster. If that's you then check out Google Kubernetes Engine, AWS Elastic Container Service for Kubernetes or the Getting Started Guides.
Kubernetes The Hard Way is optimized for learning, which means taking the long route to ensure you understand each task required to bootstrap a Kubernetes cluster.
The results of this tutorial should not be viewed as production ready, and may receive limited support from the community, but don't let that stop you from learning!
The target audience for this tutorial is someone planning to support a production Kubernetes cluster and wants to understand how everything fits together.
Kubernetes The Hard Way guides you through bootstrapping a highly available Kubernetes cluster with end-to-end encryption between components and RBAC authentication.
- Kubernetes 1.11.2
- containerd Container Runtime 1.2.0-beta.2
- gVisor 08879266fef3a67fac1a77f1ea133c3ac75759dd
- CNI Container Networking 0.7.1
- etcd 3.3.9
This tutorial assumes you have access to the Amazon Web Service. If you are looking for GCP version of this guide then look at : https://github.com/kelseyhightower/kubernetes-the-hard-way.
- Prerequisites
- Installing the Client Tools
- Provisioning Compute Resources
- Provisioning the CA and Generating TLS Certificates
- Generating Kubernetes Configuration Files for Authentication
- Generating the Data Encryption Config and Key
- Bootstrapping the etcd Cluster
- Bootstrapping the Kubernetes Control Plane
- Bootstrapping the Kubernetes Worker Nodes
- Configuring kubectl for Remote Access
- Provisioning Pod Network Routes
- Deploying the DNS Cluster Add-on
- Smoke Test
- Cleaning Up