4.8 KiB
title | content_template |
---|---|
Set up CoreDNS as DNS provider for Cluster Federation | templates/tutorial |
{{% capture overview %}}
{{< include "federation-current-state.md" >}}
This page shows how to configure and deploy CoreDNS to be used as the DNS provider for Cluster Federation.
{{% /capture %}}
{{% capture objectives %}}
- Configure and deploy CoreDNS server
- Bring up federation with CoreDNS as dns provider
- Setup CoreDNS server in nameserver lookup chain
{{% /capture %}}
{{% capture prerequisites %}}
- You need to have a running Kubernetes cluster (which is referenced as host cluster). Please see one of the getting started guides for installation instructions for your platform.
- Support for
LoadBalancer
services in member clusters of federation is mandatory to enableCoreDNS
for service discovery across federated clusters.
{{% /capture %}}
{{% capture lessoncontent %}}
Deploying CoreDNS and etcd charts
CoreDNS can be deployed in various configurations. Explained below is a reference and can be tweaked to suit the needs of the platform and the cluster federation.
To deploy CoreDNS, we shall make use of helm charts. CoreDNS will be deployed with etcd as the backend and should be pre-installed. etcd can also be deployed using helm charts. Shown below are the instructions to deploy etcd.
helm install --namespace my-namespace --name etcd-operator stable/etcd-operator
helm upgrade --namespace my-namespace --set cluster.enabled=true etcd-operator stable/etcd-operator
Note: etcd default deployment configurations can be overridden, suiting the host cluster.
After deployment succeeds, etcd can be accessed with the http://etcd-cluster.my-namespace:2379 endpoint within the host cluster.
The CoreDNS default configuration should be customized to suit the federation. Shown below is the Values.yaml, which overrides the default configuration parameters on the CoreDNS chart.
{{< code file="Values.yaml" >}}
The above configuration file needs some explanation:
isClusterService
specifies whether CoreDNS should be deployed as a cluster-service, which is the default. You need to set it to false, so that CoreDNS is deployed as a Kubernetes application service.serviceType
specifies the type of Kubernetes service to be created for CoreDNS. You need to choose either "LoadBalancer" or "NodePort" to make the CoreDNS service accessible outside the Kubernetes cluster.- Disable
plugins.kubernetes
, which is enabled by default by settingplugins.kubernetes.enabled
to false. - Enable
plugins.etcd
by settingplugins.etcd.enabled
to true. - Configure the DNS zone (federation domain) for which CoreDNS is
authoritative by setting
plugins.etcd.zones
as shown above. - Configure the etcd endpoint which was deployed earlier by setting
plugins.etcd.endpoint
Now deploy CoreDNS by running
helm install --namespace my-namespace --name coredns -f Values.yaml stable/coredns
Verify that both etcd and CoreDNS pods are running as expected.
Deploying Federation with CoreDNS as DNS provider
The Federation control plane can be deployed using kubefed init
. CoreDNS
can be chosen as the DNS provider by specifying two additional parameters.
--dns-provider=coredns
--dns-provider-config=coredns-provider.conf
coredns-provider.conf has below format:
[Global]
etcd-endpoints = http://etcd-cluster.my-namespace:2379
zones = example.com.
coredns-endpoints = <coredns-server-ip>:<port>
etcd-endpoints
is the endpoint to access etcd.zones
is the federation domain for which CoreDNS is authoritative and is same as --dns-zone-name flag ofkubefed init
.coredns-endpoints
is the endpoint to access CoreDNS server. This is an optional parameter introduced from v1.7 onwards.
{{< note >}}Note: plugins.etcd.zones in CoreDNS configuration and --dns-zone-name flag to kubefed init should match.{{< /note >}}
Setup CoreDNS server in nameserver resolv.conf chain
Note: The following section applies only to versions prior to v1.7
and will be automatically taken care of if the coredns-endpoints
parameter is configured in coredns-provider.conf
as described in
section above.
Once the federation control plane is deployed and federated clusters
are joined to the federation, you need to add the CoreDNS server to the
pod's nameserver resolv.conf chain in all the federated clusters as this
self hosted CoreDNS server is not discoverable publicly. This can be
achieved by adding the below line to dnsmasq
container's arg in
kube-dns
deployment.
--server=/example.com./<CoreDNS endpoint>
Replace example.com
above with federation domain.
Now the federated cluster is ready for cross-cluster service discovery!
{{% /capture %}}