This playbook will build an HA Kubernetes cluster with k3s, kube-vip and MetalLB via ansible.
This is based on the work from this fork which is based on the work from k3s-io/k3s-ansible. It uses kube-vip to create a load balancer for control plane, and metal-lb for its service LoadBalancer.
If you want more context on how this works, see:
📄 Documentation (including example commands)
📺 Video
Build a Kubernetes cluster using Ansible with k3s. The goal is easily install a HA Kubernetes cluster on machines running:
- Debian
- Ubuntu
- CentOS
on processor architecture:
- x64
- arm64
- armhf
- Deployment environment must have Ansible 2.4.0+
serverandagentnodes should have passwordless SSH access, if not you can supply arguments to provide credentials-ask-pass --ask-become-passto ach command.
First create a new directory based on the sample directory within the inventory directory:
cp -R inventory/sample inventory/my-clusterSecond, edit inventory/my-cluster/hosts.ini to match the system information gathered above.
For example:
[master]
192.168.30.38
192.168.30.39
192.168.30.40
[node]
192.168.30.41
192.168.30.42
[k3s_cluster:children]
master
nodeIf multiple hosts are in the master group, the playbook will automatically set up k3s in HA mode with etcd.
This requires at least k3s version 1.19.1 however the version is configurable by using the k3s_version variable.
If needed, you can also edit inventory/my-cluster/group_vars/all.yml to match your environment.
Start provisioning of the cluster using the following command:
ansible-playbook site.yml -i inventory/my-cluster/hosts.iniAfter deployment control plane will be accessible via virtual ip-address which is defined in inventory/group_vars/all.yml as apiserver_endpoint
ansible-playbook reset.yml -i inventory/my-cluster/hosts.iniTo copy your kube config locally so that you can access your Kubernetes cluster run:
scp debian@master_ip:~/.kube/config ~/.kube/configThis repo is really standing on the shoulders of giants. Thank you!
Thanks to these repos for code and ideas:
