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kubeadm join | templates/concept | 30 |
{{% capture overview %}} This command initializes a Kubernetes worker node and joins it to the cluster. {{% /capture %}}
{{% capture body %}} {{< include "generated/kubeadm_join.md" >}}
The join workflow
kubeadm join
bootstraps a Kubernetes worker node or a control-plane node and adds it to the cluster.
This action consists of the following steps for worker nodes:
-
kubeadm downloads necessary cluster information from the API server. By default, it uses the bootstrap token and the CA key hash to verify the authenticity of that data. The root CA can also be discovered directly via a file or URL.
-
Once the cluster information is known, kubelet can start the TLS bootstrapping process.
The TLS bootstrap uses the shared token to temporarily authenticate with the Kubernetes API server to submit a certificate signing request (CSR); by default the control plane signs this CSR request automatically.
-
Finally, kubeadm configures the local kubelet to connect to the API server with the definitive identity assigned to the node.
For control-plane nodes additional steps are performed:
-
Downloading certificates shared among control-plane nodes from the cluster (if explicitly requested by the user).
-
Generating control-plane component manifests, certificates and kubeconfig.
-
Adding new local etcd member.
-
Adding this node to the ClusterStatus of the kubeadm cluster.
Using join phases with kubeadm
Kubeadm allows you join a node to the cluster in phases using kubeadm join phase
.
To view the ordered list of phases and sub-phases you can call kubeadm join --help
. The list will be located
at the top of the help screen and each phase will have a description next to it.
Note that by calling kubeadm join
all of the phases and sub-phases will be executed in this exact order.
Some phases have unique flags, so if you want to have a look at the list of available options add --help
, for example:
kubeadm join phase kubelet-start --help
Similar to the kubeadm init phase
command, kubadm join phase
allows you to skip a list of phases using the --skip-phases
flag.
For example:
sudo kubeadm join --skip-phases=preflight --config=config.yaml
Discovering what cluster CA to trust
The kubeadm discovery has several options, each with security tradeoffs. The right method for your environment depends on how you provision nodes and the security expectations you have about your network and node lifecycles.
Token-based discovery with CA pinning
This is the default mode in kubeadm. In this mode, kubeadm downloads the cluster configuration (including root CA) and validates it using the token as well as validating that the root CA public key matches the provided hash and that the API server certificate is valid under the root CA.
The CA key hash has the format sha256:<hex_encoded_hash>
. By default, the hash value is returned in the kubeadm join
command printed at the end of kubeadm init
or in the output of kubeadm token create --print-join-command
. It is in a standard format (see RFC7469) and can also be calculated by 3rd party tools or provisioning systems. For example, using the OpenSSL CLI:
openssl x509 -pubkey -in /etc/kubernetes/pki/ca.crt | openssl rsa -pubin -outform der 2>/dev/null | openssl dgst -sha256 -hex | sed 's/^.* //'
Example kubeadm join
commands:
For worker nodes:
kubeadm join --discovery-token abcdef.1234567890abcdef --discovery-token-ca-cert-hash sha256:1234..cdef 1.2.3.4:6443
For control-plane nodes:
kubeadm join --discovery-token abcdef.1234567890abcdef --discovery-token-ca-cert-hash sha256:1234..cdef --control-plane 1.2.3.4:6443
You can also call join
for a control-plane node with --certificate-key
to copy certificates to this node,
if the kubeadm init
command was called with --upload-certs
.
Advantages:
-
Allows bootstrapping nodes to securely discover a root of trust for the control-plane node even if other worker nodes or the network are compromised.
-
Convenient to execute manually since all of the information required fits into a single
kubeadm join
command that is easy to copy and paste.
Disadvantages:
- The CA hash is not normally known until the control-plane node has been provisioned, which can make it more difficult to build automated provisioning tools that use kubeadm. By generating your CA in beforehand, you may workaround this limitation.
Token-based discovery without CA pinning
This mode relies only on the symmetric token to sign
(HMAC-SHA256) the discovery information that establishes the root of trust for
the control-plane. To use the mode the joining nodes must skip the hash validation of the
CA public key, using --discovery-token-unsafe-skip-ca-verification
. You should consider
using one of the other modes if possible.
Example kubeadm join
command:
kubeadm join --token abcdef.1234567890abcdef --discovery-token-unsafe-skip-ca-verification 1.2.3.4:6443
Advantages:
-
Still protects against many network-level attacks.
-
The token can be generated ahead of time and shared with the control-plane node and worker nodes, which can then bootstrap in parallel without coordination. This allows it to be used in many provisioning scenarios.
Disadvantages:
- If an attacker is able to steal a bootstrap token via some vulnerability, they can use that token (along with network-level access) to impersonate the control-plane node to other bootstrapping nodes. This may or may not be an appropriate tradeoff in your environment.
File or HTTPS-based discovery
This provides an out-of-band way to establish a root of trust between the control-plane node and bootstrapping nodes. Consider using this mode if you are building automated provisioning using kubeadm. The format of the discovery file is a regular Kubernetes kubeconfig file.
In case the discovery file does not contain credentials, the TLS discovery token will be used.
Example kubeadm join
commands:
-
kubeadm join --discovery-file path/to/file.conf
(local file) -
kubeadm join --discovery-file https://url/file.conf
(remote HTTPS URL)
Advantages:
- Allows bootstrapping nodes to securely discover a root of trust for the control-plane node even if the network or other worker nodes are compromised.
Disadvantages:
- Requires that you have some way to carry the discovery information from the control-plane node to the bootstrapping nodes. If the discovery file contains credentials you must keep it secret and transfer it over a secure channel. This might be possible with your cloud provider or provisioning tool.
Securing your installation even more
The defaults for kubeadm may not work for everyone. This section documents how to tighten up a kubeadm installation at the cost of some usability.
Turning off auto-approval of node client certificates
By default, there is a CSR auto-approver enabled that basically approves any client certificate request for a kubelet when a Bootstrap Token was used when authenticating. If you don't want the cluster to automatically approve kubelet client certs, you can turn it off by executing this command:
kubectl delete clusterrolebinding kubeadm:node-autoapprove-bootstrap
After that, kubeadm join
will block until the admin has manually approved the CSR in flight:
kubectl get csr
The output is similar to this:
NAME AGE REQUESTOR CONDITION
node-csr-c69HXe7aYcqkS1bKmH4faEnHAWxn6i2bHZ2mD04jZyQ 18s system:bootstrap:878f07 Pending
kubectl certificate approve node-csr-c69HXe7aYcqkS1bKmH4faEnHAWxn6i2bHZ2mD04jZyQ
The output is similar to this:
certificatesigningrequest "node-csr-c69HXe7aYcqkS1bKmH4faEnHAWxn6i2bHZ2mD04jZyQ" approved
kubectl get csr
The output is similar to this:
NAME AGE REQUESTOR CONDITION
node-csr-c69HXe7aYcqkS1bKmH4faEnHAWxn6i2bHZ2mD04jZyQ 1m system:bootstrap:878f07 Approved,Issued
This forces the workflow that kubeadm join
will only succeed if kubectl certificate approve
has been run.
Turning off public access to the cluster-info ConfigMap
In order to achieve the joining flow using the token as the only piece of validation information, a
ConfigMap with some data needed for validation of the control-plane node's identity is exposed publicly by
default. While there is no private data in this ConfigMap, some users might wish to turn
it off regardless. Doing so will disable the ability to use the --discovery-token
flag of the
kubeadm join
flow. Here are the steps to do so:
- Fetch the
cluster-info
file from the API Server:
kubectl -n kube-public get cm cluster-info -o yaml | grep "kubeconfig:" -A11 | grep "apiVersion" -A10 | sed "s/ //" | tee cluster-info.yaml
The output is similar to this:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Config
clusters:
- cluster:
certificate-authority-data: <ca-cert>
server: https://<ip>:<port>
name: ""
contexts: []
current-context: ""
preferences: {}
users: []
-
Use the
cluster-info.yaml
file as an argument tokubeadm join --discovery-file
. -
Turn off public access to the
cluster-info
ConfigMap:
kubectl -n kube-public delete rolebinding kubeadm:bootstrap-signer-clusterinfo
These commands should be run after kubeadm init
but before kubeadm join
.
Using kubeadm join with a configuration file
{{< caution >}} The config file is still considered beta and may change in future versions. {{< /caution >}}
It's possible to configure kubeadm join
with a configuration file instead of command
line flags, and some more advanced features may only be available as
configuration file options. This file is passed using the --config
flag and it must
contain a JoinConfiguration
structure.
To print the default values of JoinConfiguration
run the following command:
kubeadm config print join-defaults
For details on individual fields in JoinConfiguration
see the godoc.
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{{% capture whatsnext %}}
- kubeadm init to bootstrap a Kubernetes control-plane node
- kubeadm token to manage tokens for
kubeadm join
- kubeadm reset to revert any changes made to this host by
kubeadm init
orkubeadm join
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