205 lines
6.7 KiB
Markdown
205 lines
6.7 KiB
Markdown
<!-- BEGIN MUNGE: UNVERSIONED_WARNING -->
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<!-- BEGIN STRIP_FOR_RELEASE -->
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<img src="http://kubernetes.io/img/warning.png" alt="WARNING"
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width="25" height="25">
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<img src="http://kubernetes.io/img/warning.png" alt="WARNING"
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width="25" height="25">
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<img src="http://kubernetes.io/img/warning.png" alt="WARNING"
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width="25" height="25">
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<img src="http://kubernetes.io/img/warning.png" alt="WARNING"
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width="25" height="25">
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<img src="http://kubernetes.io/img/warning.png" alt="WARNING"
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width="25" height="25">
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<h2>PLEASE NOTE: This document applies to the HEAD of the source tree</h2>
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If you are using a released version of Kubernetes, you should
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refer to the docs that go with that version.
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<strong>
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The latest 1.0.x release of this document can be found
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[here](http://releases.k8s.io/release-1.0/docs/getting-started-guides/docker-multinode/master.md).
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Documentation for other releases can be found at
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[releases.k8s.io](http://releases.k8s.io).
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</strong>
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--
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<!-- END STRIP_FOR_RELEASE -->
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<!-- END MUNGE: UNVERSIONED_WARNING -->
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## Installing a Kubernetes Master Node via Docker
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We'll begin by setting up the master node. For the purposes of illustration, we'll assume that the IP of this machine is ```${MASTER_IP}```
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There are two main phases to installing the master:
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* [Setting up ```flanneld``` and ```etcd```](#setting-up-flanneld-and-etcd)
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* [Starting the Kubernetes master components](#starting-the-kubernetes-master)
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## Setting up flanneld and etcd
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_Note_:
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There is a [bug](https://github.com/docker/docker/issues/14106) in Docker 1.7.0 that prevents this from working correctly.
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Please install Docker 1.6.2 or wait for Docker 1.7.1.
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### Setup Docker-Bootstrap
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We're going to use ```flannel``` to set up networking between Docker daemons. Flannel itself (and etcd on which it relies) will run inside of
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Docker containers themselves. To achieve this, we need a separate "bootstrap" instance of the Docker daemon. This daemon will be started with
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```--iptables=false``` so that it can only run containers with ```--net=host```. That's sufficient to bootstrap our system.
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Run:
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```sh
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sudo sh -c 'docker -d -H unix:///var/run/docker-bootstrap.sock -p /var/run/docker-bootstrap.pid --iptables=false --ip-masq=false --bridge=none --graph=/var/lib/docker-bootstrap 2> /var/log/docker-bootstrap.log 1> /dev/null &'
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```
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_Important Note_:
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If you are running this on a long running system, rather than experimenting, you should run the bootstrap Docker instance under something like SysV init, upstart or systemd so that it is restarted
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across reboots and failures.
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### Startup etcd for flannel and the API server to use
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Run:
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```
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sudo docker -H unix:///var/run/docker-bootstrap.sock run --net=host -d gcr.io/google_containers/etcd:2.0.12 /usr/local/bin/etcd --addr=127.0.0.1:4001 --bind-addr=0.0.0.0:4001 --data-dir=/var/etcd/data
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```
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Next, you need to set a CIDR range for flannel. This CIDR should be chosen to be non-overlapping with any existing network you are using:
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```sh
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sudo docker -H unix:///var/run/docker-bootstrap.sock run --net=host gcr.io/google_containers/etcd:2.0.12 etcdctl set /coreos.com/network/config '{ "Network": "10.1.0.0/16" }'
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```
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### Set up Flannel on the master node
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Flannel is a network abstraction layer build by CoreOS, we will use it to provide simplified networking between our Pods of containers.
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Flannel re-configures the bridge that Docker uses for networking. As a result we need to stop Docker, reconfigure its networking, and then restart Docker.
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#### Bring down Docker
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To re-configure Docker to use flannel, we need to take docker down, run flannel and then restart Docker.
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Turning down Docker is system dependent, it may be:
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```sh
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sudo /etc/init.d/docker stop
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```
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or
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```sh
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sudo systemctl stop docker
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```
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or it may be something else.
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#### Run flannel
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Now run flanneld itself:
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```sh
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sudo docker -H unix:///var/run/docker-bootstrap.sock run -d --net=host --privileged -v /dev/net:/dev/net quay.io/coreos/flannel:0.5.0
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```
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The previous command should have printed a really long hash, copy this hash.
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Now get the subnet settings from flannel:
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```
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sudo docker -H unix:///var/run/docker-bootstrap.sock exec <really-long-hash-from-above-here> cat /run/flannel/subnet.env
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```
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#### Edit the docker configuration
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You now need to edit the docker configuration to activate new flags. Again, this is system specific.
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This may be in ```/etc/default/docker``` or ```/etc/systemd/service/docker.service``` or it may be elsewhere.
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Regardless, you need to add the following to the docker command line:
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```sh
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--bip=${FLANNEL_SUBNET} --mtu=${FLANNEL_MTU}
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```
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#### Remove the existing Docker bridge
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Docker creates a bridge named ```docker0``` by default. You need to remove this:
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```sh
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sudo /sbin/ifconfig docker0 down
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sudo brctl delbr docker0
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```
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You may need to install the ```bridge-utils``` package for the ```brctl``` binary.
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#### Restart Docker
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Again this is system dependent, it may be:
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```sh
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sudo /etc/init.d/docker start
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```
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it may be:
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```sh
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systemctl start docker
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```
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## Starting the Kubernetes Master
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Ok, now that your networking is set up, you can startup Kubernetes, this is the same as the single-node case, we will use the "main" instance of the Docker daemon for the Kubernetes components.
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```sh
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sudo docker run --net=host -d -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock gcr.io/google_containers/hyperkube:v0.21.2 /hyperkube kubelet --api_servers=http://localhost:8080 --v=2 --address=0.0.0.0 --enable_server --hostname_override=127.0.0.1 --config=/etc/kubernetes/manifests-multi
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```
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### Also run the service proxy
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```sh
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sudo docker run -d --net=host --privileged gcr.io/google_containers/hyperkube:v0.21.2 /hyperkube proxy --master=http://127.0.0.1:8080 --v=2
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```
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### Test it out
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At this point, you should have a functioning 1-node cluster. Let's test it out!
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Download the kubectl binary
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([OS X](http://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/v0.21.2/bin/darwin/amd64/kubectl))
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([linux](http://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/v0.21.2/bin/linux/amd64/kubectl))
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List the nodes
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```sh
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kubectl get nodes
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```
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This should print:
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```
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NAME LABELS STATUS
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127.0.0.1 kubernetes.io/hostname=127.0.0.1 Ready
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```
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If the status of the node is ```NotReady``` or ```Unknown``` please check that all of the containers you created are successfully running.
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If all else fails, ask questions on IRC at [#google-containers](http://webchat.freenode.net/?channels=google-containers).
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### Next steps
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Move on to [adding one or more workers](worker.md)
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<!-- BEGIN MUNGE: GENERATED_ANALYTICS -->
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[]()
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<!-- END MUNGE: GENERATED_ANALYTICS -->
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