Configuring Kubernetes on Fedora via Ansible offers a simple way to quickly create a clustered environment with little effort.
* TOC
{:toc}
## Prerequisites
1. Host able to run ansible and able to clone the following repo: [kubernetes](https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes.git)
2. A Fedora 21+ host to act as cluster master
3. As many Fedora 21+ hosts as you would like, that act as cluster nodes
The hosts can be virtual or bare metal. Ansible will take care of the rest of the configuration for you - configuring networking, installing packages, handling the firewall, etc. This example will use one master and two nodes.
## Architecture of the cluster
A Kubernetes cluster requires etcd, a master, and n nodes, so we will create a cluster with three hosts, for example:
If you already are running on a machine which has passwordless ssh access to the kube-master and kube-node-{01,02} nodes, and 'sudo' privileges, simply set the value of `ansible_ssh_user` in `~/contrib/ansible/group_vars/all.yml` to the username which you use to ssh to the nodes (i.e. `fedora`), and proceed to the next step...
*Otherwise* setup ssh on the machines like so (you will need to know the root password to all machines in the cluster).
edit: ~/contrib/ansible/group_vars/all.yml
```yaml
ansible_ssh_user: root
```
**Configuring ssh access to the cluster**
If you already have ssh access to every machine using ssh public keys you may skip to [setting up the cluster](#setting-up-the-cluster)
Make sure your local machine (root) has an ssh key pair if not
```shell
ssh-keygen
```
Copy the ssh public key to **all** nodes in the cluster
```shell
for node in kube-master.example.com kube-node-01.example.com kube-node-02.example.com; do
ssh-copy-id ${node}
done
```
## Setting up the cluster
Although the default value of variables in `~/contrib/ansible/group_vars/all.yml` should be good enough, if not, change them as needed.
```conf
edit: ~/contrib/ansible/group_vars/all.yml
```
**Configure access to kubernetes packages**
Modify `source_type` as below to access kubernetes packages through the package manager.
```yaml
source_type: packageManager
```
**Configure the IP addresses used for services**
Each Kubernetes service gets its own IP address. These are not real IPs. You need only select a range of IPs which are not in use elsewhere in your environment.
```yaml
kube_service_addresses: 10.254.0.0/16
```
**Managing flannel**
Modify `flannel_subnet`, `flannel_prefix` and `flannel_host_prefix` only if defaults are not appropriate for your cluster.
**Managing add on services in your cluster**
Set `cluster_logging` to false or true (default) to disable or enable logging with elasticsearch.
```yaml
cluster_logging: true
```
Turn `cluster_monitoring` to true (default) or false to enable or disable cluster monitoring with heapster and influxdb.
```yaml
cluster_monitoring: true
```
Turn `dns_setup` to true (recommended) or false to enable or disable whole DNS configuration.
```yaml
dns_setup: true
```
**Tell ansible to get to work!**
This will finally setup your whole Kubernetes cluster for you.
```shell
cd ~/contrib/ansible/
./setup.sh
```
## Testing and using your new cluster
That's all there is to it. It's really that easy. At this point you should have a functioning Kubernetes cluster.