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Kubernetes: Difference between revisions

Line 36: Line 36:
=== minikube ===
=== minikube ===
Do the same thing for minicube<br>
Do the same thing for minicube<br>
LINUX
 
LINUX<br>
<code>
<code>
curl -Lo minikube https://storage.googleapis.com/minikube/releases/latest/minikube-darwin-amd64 && chmod +x minikube
curl -Lo minikube https://storage.googleapis.com/minikube/releases/latest/minikube-darwin-amd64 && chmod +x minikube
</code><br>
</code><br>
OSX
 
OSX<br>
<code>
<code>
curl -Lo minikube https://storage.googleapis.com/minikube/releases/latest/minikube-darwin-amd64 \
curl -Lo minikube https://storage.googleapis.com/minikube/releases/latest/minikube-darwin-amd64 \

Revision as of 21:00, 18 June 2020

K8S on Minikube

I have started to setup a Kubernetes environment locally. For this setup i am using a 2009 Macbook Pro as this is the only option i have to do something local. I do have a server running for backups and other tasks but it does not seem not to support virtualization.

The machine will just be doing some testing with small images, just finger practice and getting things to work.

Taking my notes here, based on information from Kubernetes.io The setup is described for a Linux environment, ofcourse. The instruction apply to MacOs as well, just download the installers for OSX.

Pre check and dependencies

First you need to be sure your machine is supporting Virtualization, otherwise all effort is lost.
VMX or SVM should be highlighted, provided you run Linux.
grep -E --color 'vmx|svm' /proc/cpuinfo

Next, make sure Virtualbox is installed, find it here for your OS: https://www.virtualbox.org/wiki/Downloads.

Kubectl

Get the installer and make it executable, commands a run as root user

LINUX
curl -LO https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/`curl -s https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/stable.txt`/bin/linux/amd64/kubectl && chmod + x kubectl

OSX
curl -LO "https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/$(curl -s https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/stable.txt)/bin/darwin/amd64/kubectl"

Move it to the right dir in your path
mv kubectl /usr/local/bin

minikube

Do the same thing for minicube

LINUX
curl -Lo minikube https://storage.googleapis.com/minikube/releases/latest/minikube-darwin-amd64 && chmod +x minikube

OSX
curl -Lo minikube https://storage.googleapis.com/minikube/releases/latest/minikube-darwin-amd64 \

 && chmod +x minikube


Now move it into your path
mv minicube /usr/local/bin

Check Setup

Now switch back to your login user and try if things are working

This will download some images and install them using Virtualbox.

Start Minikube
minikube start

Check the status
minikube status

which will provide you with info:

minikube
type: Control Plane
host: Running
kubelet: Running
apiserver: Running
kubeconfig: Configured


Check if kubectl can access the cluster
kubectl cluster-info

Kubernetes master is running at https://192.168.99.100:8443
KubeDNS is running at https://192.168.99.100:8443/api/v1/namespaces/kube-system/services/kube-dns:dns/proxy

To further debug and diagnose cluster problems, use 'kubectl cluster-info dump'


So, you are good to go from here and make a deployment

Hello World

Just a small hello world kind of test and exposing to local port 8888

Create the deployment kubectl create deployment hello-minikube --image=k8s.gcr.io/echoserver:1.10

Expose the deployment to local port 8888 kubectl expose deployment hello-minikube --type=NodePort --port=8888

Now, we can check for the deployment which is a pod
kubectl get pod
This will produce you with some info:

NAME                              READY   STATUS              RESTARTS   AGE
hello-minikube-64b64df8c9-krr6p   0/1     ContainerCreating   0          37s

To see where is running
minikube service hello-minikube --url

Shows you the url:

http://192.168.99.100:32463

When you have stopped enjoying the magic:
minikube stop

To delete all the good work

Removing just the deployment of hello-minikube
kubectl delete services hello-minikube

To remove the minikube cluster


Some more good info to start with: http://bit.ly/do-k8s-tut