Bare Metal Deployment Guide for kolla-kubernetes

Warning

This documentation is under construction and may not work perfectly. If you run into trouble, please join #openstack-kolla and we can learn together how to solve whatever issues faced. Likely others in the community face the same issues.

Note

This document was tested only against CentOS 7.3 Host OS and AIO environments.

Introduction

There are many ways to deploy Kubernetes. This guide has been tested only with kubeadm. The documentation for Kubeadm is here:

https://kubernetes.io/docs/getting-started-guides/kubeadm/

Here is a video shown at a Kubernetes specific meetup on February 15th, 2017: https://youtu.be/rHCCUP2odd8

There are two steps to deploying kolla-kubernetes. The first step involves deploying Kubernetes. The second step involves deploying Kolla that is compatible with Kubernetes.

Dependencies:

docker == 1.12.6
helm >= 2.2.3
kubectl >= 1.6.1
kubeadm >= 1.6.1
kubelet >= 1.6.1
kubernetes-cni >= 0.5.1

Note

When working with Kubernetes it is considered a useful practice to open a unique terminal window and run the command that watches all kubernetes’s processes. This operation will show changes as they occur within Kubernetes and also shows the PODs IP addresses:

watch -n 5 -c kubectl get pods --all-namespaces

Step 1: Deploy Kubernetes

Note

This document recommends Kubernetes 1.6.1 or later.

Warning

This documentation assumes a POD CIDR of 10.1.0.0/16 and a service CIDR of 10.3.3.0/24. Two rules must be followed when reading this guide.

  1. The service and pod cidr cannot overlap
  2. The address spaces cannot already be allocated by your organization

If the POD and CIDR addresses overlap in this documentation with your organizations’s IP address ranges, they may be changed. Simply subtitute anywhere these addresses are used with the custom cidrs you hae chosen.

Note

If you fail to turn off SELinux, kubernetes will fail.

Turn off SELinux:

sudo setenforce 0
sudo sed -i 's/enforcing/permissive/g' /etc/selinux/config

Turn off firewalld:

sudo systemctl stop firewalld
sudo systemctl disable firewalld

Note

This operation configures the Kubernetes YUM repository. This step only needs to be done one time.

Warning

gpgcheck=0 is set below because the currently signed RPMs don’t match the yum-key.gpg key distributed by Kubernetes. YMMV.

Write the kubernetes repository file:

cat <<EOF > kubernetes.repo
[kubernetes]
name=Kubernetes
baseurl=http://yum.kubernetes.io/repos/kubernetes-el7-x86_64
enabled=1
gpgcheck=0
repo_gpgcheck=1
gpgkey=https://packages.cloud.google.com/yum/doc/yum-key.gpg
https://packages.cloud.google.com/yum/doc/rpm-package-key.gpg
EOF
sudo cp -a kubernetes.repo /etc/yum.repos.d

Install Kubernetes 1.6.1 or later:

sudo yum install -y docker ebtables kubeadm kubectl kubelet kubernetes-cni

To enable the proper cgroup driver, start Docker and disable CRI:

sudo systemctl enable docker
sudo systemctl start docker
CGROUP_DRIVER=$(sudo docker info | grep "Cgroup Driver" | awk '{print $3}')
sudo sed -i "s|KUBELET_KUBECONFIG_ARGS=|KUBELET_KUBECONFIG_ARGS=--cgroup-driver=$CGROUP_DRIVER --enable-cri=false |g" /etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d/10-kubeadm.conf

Setup the DNS server with the service CIDR:

sudo sed -i 's/10.96.0.10/10.3.3.10/g' /etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d/10-kubeadm.conf

Note

Kubernetes uses x.x.x.10 as the DNS server. The Kolla developers don’t know precisely why this is the case, however, current speculation is that that 1..9 are reserved for future expansion of Kubernetes infrastructure services.

Then reload the hand-modified service files:

sudo systemctl daemon-reload

Then stop kubelet if it is running:

sudo systemctl stop kubelet

Then enable and start docker and kubelet:

sudo systemctl enable kubelet
sudo systemctl start kubelet

Deploy Kubernetes with kubeadm:

sudo kubeadm init --pod-network-cidr=10.1.0.0/16 --service-cidr=10.3.3.0/24

Note

pod-network-cidr is a network private to Kubernetes that the PODs within Kubernetes communicate on. The service-cidr is where IP addresses for Kubernetes services are allocated. There is no recommendation that the pod network should be /16 network in upstream documentation however, the Kolla developers have found through experience that each node consumes an entire /24 network, so this configuration would permit 255 Kubernetes nodes.

Load the kubedm credentials into the system:

mkdir -p $HOME/.kube
sudo -H cp /etc/kubernetes/admin.conf $HOME/.kube/config
sudo -H chown $(id -u):$(id -g) $HOME/.kube/config

The CNI driver is the networking driver that Kubernetes uses. Kolla uses canal currently in the gate and tests with it hundreds of times per day via extensive gating mechanisms. Kolla recommends the use of canal although other CNI drivers may be used if they are properly configured.

Deploy the canal CNI driver:

curl -L https://raw.githubusercontent.com/projectcalico/canal/master/k8s-install/kubeadm/1.6/canal.yaml -o canal.yaml
sed -i "s@192.168.0.0/16@10.1.0.0/16@" canal.yaml
sed -i "s@10.96.232.136@10.3.3.100@" canal.yaml
kubectl apply -f canal.yaml

Finally untaint the node so that PODs can be scheduled to this AIO deployment:

kubectl taint nodes --all=true  node-role.kubernetes.io/master:NoSchedule-

Step 2: Validate Kubernetes

After executing Step 2, a working Kubernetes deployment should be achieved.

Launch a busybox container:

kubectl run -i -t $(uuidgen) --image=busybox --restart=Never

Verify DNS works properly by running within the container:

nslookup kubernetes

This should return a nslookup result without error:

[sdake@kolla ~]$ kubectl run -i -t $(uuidgen) --image=busybox --restart=Never
Waiting for pod default/33c30c3b-8130-408a-b32f-83172bca19d0 to be running, status is Pending, pod ready: false
# nslookup kubernetes
Server:    10.3.3.10
Address 1: 10.3.3.10 kube-dns.kube-system.svc.cluster.local

Name:      kubernetes
Address 1: 10.3.3.1 kubernetes.default.svc.cluster.local

Warning

If nslookup kubernetes fails, kolla-kubernetes will not deploy correctly. If this occurs check that all preceding steps have been applied correctly, and that the range of IP addresses chosen make sense to your particular environment. Running in a VM can cause nested virtualization and or performance issues. If still stuck seek further assistance from the Kubernetes or Kolla communities.

Step 3: Deploying kolla-kubernetes

Override default RBAC settings:

kubectl update -f <(cat <<EOF
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1alpha1
kind: ClusterRoleBinding
metadata:
  name: cluster-admin
roleRef:
  apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
  kind: ClusterRole
  name: cluster-admin
subjects:
- kind: Group
  name: system:masters
- kind: Group
  name: system:authenticated
- kind: Group
  name: system:unauthenticated
EOF
)

Install and deploy Helm:

curl -L https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/helm/master/scripts/get > get_helm.sh
chmod 700 get_helm.sh
./get_helm.sh
helm init
watch "kubectl get pods -n kube-system | grep tiller"

Verify both the client and server version of Helm are consistent:

helm version

Install repositories necessary to install packaging:

sudo yum install -y epel-release
sudo yum install -y ansible python-pip python-devel

Note

You may find it helpful to create a directory to contain the files downloaded during the installaiton of kolla-Kubernetes. To do that:

mkdir kolla-bringup
cd kolla-bringup

Clone kolla-ansible:

git clone http://github.com/openstack/kolla-ansible

Clone kolla-kubernetes:

git clone http://github.com/openstack/kolla-kubernetes

Install kolla-kubernetes:

sudo pip install -U kolla-ansible/ kolla-kubernetes/

Copy default kolla configuration to etc:

sudo cp -aR /usr/share/kolla-ansible/etc_examples/kolla /etc

Copy default kolla-kubernetes configuration to /etc:

sudo cp -aR kolla-kubernetes/etc/kolla-kubernetes /etc

Generate default passwords via SPRNG:

sudo kolla-kubernetes-genpwd

Create a kubernetes namespace to isolate this kolla deployment:

kubectl create namespace kolla

Label the AIO node as the compute and controller node:

kubectl label node $(hostname) kolla_compute=true
kubectl label node $(hostname) kolla_controller=true

Modify kolla configuration:

set network_interface in /etc/kolla/globals.yaml to the management interface name.
set neutron_external_interface in /etc/kolla/globals.yml to the Neutron interface name.
This is the external interface that neutron will use.  It must not have an IP
address assigned to it.

Add required configuration to the end of /etc/kolla/globals.yml:

cat <<EOF > add-to-globals.yml
install_type: "source"
tempest_image_alt_id: "{{ tempest_image_id }}"
tempest_flavor_ref_alt_id: "{{ tempest_flavor_ref_id }}"

neutron_plugin_agent: "openvswitch"
api_interface_address: 0.0.0.0
tunnel_interface_address: 0.0.0.0
orchestration_engine: KUBERNETES
memcached_servers: "memcached"
keystone_admin_url: "http://keystone-admin:35357/v3"
keystone_internal_url: "http://keystone-internal:5000/v3"
keystone_public_url: "http://keystone-public:5000/v3"
glance_registry_host: "glance-registry"
neutron_host: "neutron"
keystone_database_address: "mariadb"
glance_database_address: "mariadb"
nova_database_address: "mariadb"
nova_api_database_address: "mariadb"
neutron_database_address: "mariadb"
cinder_database_address: "mariadb"
ironic_database_address: "mariadb"
placement_database_address: "mariadb"
rabbitmq_servers: "rabbitmq"
openstack_logging_debug: "True"
enable_haproxy: "no"
enable_heat: "no"
enable_cinder: "yes"
enable_cinder_backend_lvm: "yes"
enable_cinder_backend_iscsi: "yes"
enable_cinder_backend_rbd: "no"
enable_ceph: "no"
enable_elasticsearch: "no"
enable_kibana: "no"
glance_backend_ceph: "no"
cinder_backend_ceph: "no"
nova_backend_ceph: "no"
EOF
cat ./add-to-globals.yml | sudo tee -a /etc/kolla/globals.yml

For operators using virtualization for evaluation purposes please enable QEMU libvirt functionality and enable a workaround for a bug in libvirt:

cat <<EOF > nova.conf
[libvirt]
virt_type=qemu
cpu_mode=none
EOF

sudo mkdir /etc/kolla/config
sudo cp -a nova.conf /etc/kolla/config

Note

libvirt in RDO currently contains a bug that requires cpu_mode=none to be specified only for virtualized deployments. For more information reference: https://www.redhat.com/archives/rdo-list/2016-December/msg00029.html

Generate the default configuration:

sudo kolla-ansible genconfig

Generate the Kubernetes secrets and register them with Kubernetes:

kolla-kubernetes/tools/secret-generator.py create

Create and register the Kolla config maps:

kollakube res create configmap \
    mariadb keystone horizon rabbitmq memcached nova-api nova-conductor \
    nova-scheduler glance-api-haproxy glance-registry-haproxy glance-api \
    glance-registry neutron-server neutron-dhcp-agent neutron-l3-agent \
    neutron-metadata-agent neutron-openvswitch-agent openvswitch-db-server \
    openvswitch-vswitchd nova-libvirt nova-compute nova-consoleauth \
    nova-novncproxy nova-novncproxy-haproxy neutron-server-haproxy \
    nova-api-haproxy cinder-api cinder-api-haproxy cinder-backup \
    cinder-scheduler cinder-volume iscsid tgtd keepalived \
    placement-api placement-api-haproxy

Enable resolv.conf workaround:

kolla-kubernetes/tools/setup-resolv-conf.sh kolla

Build all helm microcharts, service charts, and metacharts:

kolla-kubernetes/tools/helm_build_all.sh .

Check that all helm images have been built by verifying the number is > 150:

ls | grep ".tgz" | wc -l

Create a cloud.yaml file for the deployment of the charts:

global:
   kolla:
     all:
       image_tag: "4.0.0"
       kube_logger: false
       external_vip: "192.168.7.105"
       base_distro: "centos"
       install_type: "source"
       tunnel_interface: "docker0"
       resolve_conf_net_host_workaround: true
     keystone:
       all:
         admin_port_external: "true"
         dns_name: "192.168.7.105"
       public:
         all:
           port_external: "true"
     rabbitmq:
       all:
         cookie: 67
     glance:
       api:
         all:
           port_external: "true"
     cinder:
       api:
         all:
           port_external: "true"
       volume_lvm:
         all:
           element_name: cinder-volume
         daemonset:
           lvm_backends:
           - '192.168.7.105': 'cinder-volumes'
     ironic:
       conductor:
         daemonset:
           selector_key: "kolla_conductor"
     nova:
       placement_api:
         all:
           port_external: true
       novncproxy:
         all:
           port: 6080
           port_external: true
     openvwswitch:
       all:
         add_port: true
         ext_bridge_name: br-ex
         ext_interface_name: enp1s0f1
         setup_bridge: true
     horizon:
       all:
         port_external: true

Note

The next operation is not a simple copy and paste as the rest of this document is structured. You should determmine your mangement interface which is the value of /etc/kolla/globals.yml and replace the contents of YOUR_NETWORK_INTERFACE_FROM_GLOBALS.YML in the follwoing sed operation.

Replace all occurances of 192.168.7.105 with your management interface nic (e.g. eth0):

sed -i "s@192.168.7.105@YOUR_NETWORK_INTERFACE_FROM_GLOBALS.YML@" ./cloud.yaml

Replace all occurances of enp1s0f1 with your neutron interface name (e.g. enp1s0f1):

sed -i "s@1enp1s0f1@YOUR_NEUTRON_NETWORK_INTERFACE_FROM_GLOBALS.YML@" ./cloud.yaml

Note

Some of the variables in the cloud.yaml file that may need to be customized are:

set ‘external_vip’: to the IP address of your management interface set ‘dns_name’ to the IP address of your management network set ‘tunnel_interface’: to the IP address of your management interface interface name used for connectivity between nodes in kubernetes cluster, in most of cases it matches the name of the kubernetes host management interface. To determine this, grep network_interface /etc/kolla/globals.yml. set ext_interface_name: to the interface name used for your Neutron network.

Start mariadb first and wait for it to enter the RUNNING state:

helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/service/mariadb --namespace kolla --name mariadb --values ./cloud.yaml

Start many of the remaining service level charts:

helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/service/rabbitmq --namespace kolla --name rabbitmq --values ./cloud.yaml
helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/service/memcached --namespace kolla --name memcached --values ./cloud.yaml
helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/service/keystone --namespace kolla --name keystone --values ./cloud.yaml
helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/service/glance --namespace kolla --name glance --values ./cloud.yaml
helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/service/cinder-control --namespace kolla --name cinder-control --values ./cloud.yaml
helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/service/horizon --namespace kolla --name horizon --values ./cloud.yaml
helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/service/openvswitch --namespace kolla --name openvswitch --values ./cloud.yaml
helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/service/neutron --namespace kolla --name neutron --values ./cloud.yaml
helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/service/nova-control --namespace kolla --name nova-control --values ./cloud.yaml
helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/service/nova-compute --namespace kolla --name nova-compute --values ./cloud.yaml

Start some 4.0.0 charts related to the placement API required that are not yet in service charts:

helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/microservice/nova-placement-deployment --namespace kolla --name nova-placement-deployment --values ./cloud.yaml
helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/microservice/nova-placement-create-keystone-user-job --namespace kolla --name nova-placement-create-keystone-user-job --values ./cloud.yaml
helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/microservice/nova-placement-create-keystone-service-job --namespace kolla --name nova-placement-create-keystone-service-job --values ./cloud.yaml
helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/microservice/nova-placement-svc --namespace kolla --name nova-placement-svc --values ./cloud.yaml
helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/microservice/nova-placement-create-keystone-endpoint-internal-job --namespace kolla --name nova-placement-create-keystone-endpoint-internal --values ./cloud.yaml
helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/microservice/nova-placement-create-keystone-endpoint-admin-job --namespace kolla --name nova-placement-create-keystone-endpoint-admin --values ./cloud.yaml
helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/microservice/nova-placement-create-keystone-endpoint-public-job --namespace kolla --name nova-placement-create-keystone-endpoint-public --values ./cloud.yaml

Wait for nova-compute the enter the running state before creating the cell0 database:

helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/microservice/nova-cell0-create-db-job --namespace kolla --name nova-cell0-create-db-job --values ./cloud.yaml
helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/microservice/nova-api-create-simple-cell-job --namespace kolla --name nova-api-create-simple-cell --values ./cloud.yaml

Deploy iSCSI support with Cinder LVM (Optional)

The Cinder LVM implementation requires a volume group to be set up. This can either be a real physical volume or a loopback mounted file for development. Use pvcreate and vgcreate to create the volume group. For example with the devices /dev/sdb and /dev/sdc:

<WARNING ALL DATA ON /dev/sdb and /dev/sdc will be LOST!>

pvcreate /dev/sdb /dev/sdc
vgcreate cinder-volumes /dev/sdb /dev/sdc

During development, it may be desirable to use file backed block storage. It is possible to use a file and mount it as a block device via the loopback system.

mknod /dev/loop2 b 7 2
dd if=/dev/zero of=/var/lib/cinder_data.img bs=1G count=20
losetup /dev/loop2 /var/lib/cinder_data.img
pvcreate /dev/loop2
vgcreate cinder-volumes /dev/loop2

Note that in the event where iSCSI daemon is active on the host, there is a need to perform the following steps before executing the cinder-volume-lvm helm chart to avoid the iscsd container from going into crash loops:

sudo systemctl stop iscsid
sudo systemctl stop iscsid.socket

Execute the cinder-volume-lvm helm chart:

helm install --debug kolla-kubernetes/helm/service/cinder-volume-lvm --namespace kolla --name cinder-volume-lvm --values ./cloud.yaml

Observe the previously running watch command in a different terminal. Wait for all pods to to enter the running state. If you didn’t run watch in a different terminal, you can run it now:

watch -d -n 5 -c kubectl get pods --all-namespaces

Generate openrc file:

kolla-kubernetes/tools/build_local_admin_keystonerc.sh ext
source ~/keystonerc_admin

Note

The ext option to create the keystonerc creates a keystonerc file that is compatible with this guide.

Install OpenStack Clients:

sudo pip install "python-openstackclient"
sudo pip install "python-neutronclient"
sudo pip install "python-cinderclient"

Bootstrap the cloud envrionment and create a VM as requested:

kolla-ansible/tools/init-runonce

Create a floating IP address and add to the VM:

openstack server add floating ip demo1 $(openstack floating ip create public1 -f value -c floating_ip_address)

Troubleshooting

Warning

Some of these steps are dangerous. Be warned.

To cleanup the database entry for a specific service such as nova:

helm install –debug /opt/kolla-kubernetes//helm/service/nova-cleanup –namespace kolla –name nova-cleanup –values cloud.yaml

To delete a helm chart:

helm delete --purge mariadb

To delete all helm charts:

helm delete mariadb --purge
helm delete rabbitmq --purge
helm delete memcached --purge
helm delete keystone --purge
helm delete glance --purge
helm delete cinder-control --purge
helm delete horizon --purge
helm delete openvswitch --purge
helm delete neutron --purge
helm delete nova-control --purge
helm delete nova-compute --purge
helm delete nova-cell0-create-db-job --purge
helm delete nova-placement-deployment --purge
helm delete cinder-volume-lvm --purge

To clean up the host volumes between runs:

sudo rm -rf /var/lib/kolla/volumes/*

To clean up Kubernetes and all docker containers entirely, run this command, reboot, and run these commands again:

sudo kubeadm reset