Sherlock
Published on:2021-01-21    The number of views: 1

Adding Master Nodes to Achieve HA: One of the Best Practices for Using KubeKey

As demonstrated in my last article, you can use KubeKey to easily scale in and out your cluster. As I only had one master node in the example, the cluster did not feature high availability. In this post, I will continue to demonstrate how to scale out your cluster while by adding master nodes this time to achieve high availability.

The steps are listed as follows:

  1. Download KubeKey.
  2. Use KubeKey to retrieve cluster information with a configuration file created automatically.
  3. Add your node and load balancer information in the file and apply the configuration.

Prepare Hosts

Here is my node information of the existing Kubernetes cluster.

Host IP Host Name Role System
172.16.0.2 master1 master, etcd CentOS 7.5, 8 Cores, 8 G Memory, 50 G Disk
172.16.0.3 worker1 worker CentOS 7.5, 8 Cores, 8 G Memory, 50 G Disk
172.16.0.4 worker2 worker CentOS 7.5, 8 Cores, 8 G Memory, 50 G Disk
$ kubectl get nodes NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION master1 Ready master 2m15s v1.17.9 worker1 Ready worker 86s v1.17.9 worker2 Ready worker 86s v1.17.9

Here are the nodes that will be added to the cluster to achieve high availability. Note that the number of your etcd nodes in total must be odd.

Host IP Host Name Role System
172.16.0.5 master2 master, etcd CentOS 7.5, 8 Cores, 8 G Memory, 50 G Disk
172.16.0.6 master3 master, etcd CentOS 7.5, 8 Cores, 8 G Memory, 50 G Disk
172.16.0.7 worker3 worker CentOS 7.5, 8 Cores, 8 G Memory, 50 G Disk

node-info

For more information about requirements for nodes, network, and dependencies, see this article.

Prepare Load Balancers

You can use any cloud load balancers or hardware load balancers (e.g. F5). In addition, Keepalived and HAproxy, or Nginx is also an alternative for creating high-availability clusters. In this example, I have an internal load balancer with a listener that listens on port 6443 (api-server) and an external load balancer with a listener that listens on the port of the Kubernetes dashboard.

Download KubeKey

  1. Download KubeKey from its GitHub Release Page or use the following command to download KubeKey version 1.0.1. You only need to download KubeKey to one of your machines that serves as the taskbox for scaling.

    curl -sfL https://get-kk.kubesphere.io | VERSION=v2.0.0 sh -
  2. The above command downloads KubeKey and unzips the file. Your folder now contains a file called kk. Make it executable:

    chmod +x kk

Add Master Nodes

  1. Create a configuration file using KubeKey. If your cluster is installed through KubeKey, you may still have that configuration file on your machine. In this case, you can edit it directly. Otherwise, execute the following command to retrieve your cluster information.

    ./kk create config --from-cluster
  2. The above command creates a configuration file, which is sample.yaml by default. Open the file and you can see some fields are pre-populated with values. Add the information of new nodes and your load balancer to the file.

    vi sample.yaml

    This is my configuration for your reference:

    apiVersion: kubekey.kubesphere.io/v1alpha1 kind: Cluster metadata: name: sample spec: hosts: # You should complete the ssh information of the hosts - {name: master1, address: 172.16.0.2, internalAddress: 172.16.0.2, user: root, password: Testing123} - {name: master2, address: 172.16.0.5, internalAddress: 172.16.0.5, user: root, password: Testing123} - {name: master3, address: 172.16.0.6, internalAddress: 172.16.0.6, user: root, password: Testing123} - {name: worker1, address: 172.16.0.3, internalAddress: 172.16.0.3, user: root, password: Testing123} - {name: worker2, address: 172.16.0.4, internalAddress: 172.16.0.4, user: root, password: Testing123} - {name: worker3, address: 172.16.0.7, internalAddress: 172.16.0.7, user: root, password: Testing123} roleGroups: etcd: - master1 - master2 - master3 master: - master1 - master2 - master3 worker: - worker1 - worker2 - worker3 controlPlaneEndpoint: # If loadbalancer is used, 'address' should be set to loadbalancer's ip. domain: lb.kubesphere.local address: 172.16.0.253 port: 6443 kubernetes: version: v1.17.9 imageRepo: kubesphere clusterName: cluster.local proxyMode: ipvs masqueradeAll: false maxPods: 110 nodeCidrMaskSize: 24 network: plugin: calico kubePodsCIDR: 10.233.64.0/18 kubeServiceCIDR: 10.233.0.0/18 registry: privateRegistry: ""

    Note

    • You are not allowed to modify the host name of existing nodes (e.g. master1) when adding new nodes.
    • For more information about different parameters in the configuration file, see this article.
  3. Pay attention to the controlPlaneEndpoint field in the above example.

    controlPlaneEndpoint: # If loadbalancer is used, 'address' should be set to loadbalancer's ip. domain: lb.kubesphere.local address: 172.16.0.253 port: 6443
    • The domain name of the load balancer is lb.kubesphere.local by default for internal access. You can change it based on your needs.
    • In most cases, you need to provide the private IP address of the load balancer for the field address. However, different cloud providers may have different configurations for load balancers. For example, if you configure a Server Load Balancer (SLB) on Alibaba Cloud, the platform assigns a public IP address to the SLB, which means you need to specify the public IP address for the field address.
    • The field port indicates the port of api-server.
  4. Save the file and execute the following command to apply the configuration:

    ./kk add nodes -f sample.yaml
  5. You can see the output as below when scaling finishes.

    Congratulations! Scaling cluster is successful.
  6. Execute the following command to check the status of namespaces.

    kubectl get pod --all-namespaces
    NAMESPACE NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE kube-system calico-kube-controllers-59d85c5c84-tnk8s 1/1 Running 0 36m kube-system calico-node-87gtw 1/1 Running 0 75s kube-system calico-node-8dj8n 1/1 Running 0 76s kube-system calico-node-k2bjr 1/1 Running 0 35m kube-system calico-node-lpl78 1/1 Running 0 36m kube-system calico-node-scfld 1/1 Running 0 75s kube-system calico-node-t27vn 1/1 Running 0 35m kube-system coredns-74d59cc5c6-87qkr 1/1 Running 0 36m kube-system coredns-74d59cc5c6-qm7kb 1/1 Running 0 36m kube-system kube-apiserver-master1 1/1 Running 0 36m kube-system kube-apiserver-master2 1/1 Running 0 73s kube-system kube-apiserver-master3 1/1 Running 0 74s kube-system kube-controller-manager-master1 1/1 Running 0 36m kube-system kube-controller-manager-master2 1/1 Running 0 74s kube-system kube-controller-manager-master3 1/1 Running 0 74s kube-system kube-proxy-48h9q 1/1 Running 0 35m kube-system kube-proxy-72cv7 1/1 Running 0 76s kube-system kube-proxy-gjzk2 1/1 Running 0 36m kube-system kube-proxy-nkkv8 1/1 Running 0 75s kube-system kube-proxy-swh67 1/1 Running 0 35m kube-system kube-proxy-xn7g9 1/1 Running 0 75s kube-system kube-scheduler-master1 1/1 Running 0 36m kube-system kube-scheduler-master2 1/1 Running 0 73s kube-system kube-scheduler-master3 1/1 Running 0 74s kube-system nodelocaldns-47bgw 1/1 Running 0 35m kube-system nodelocaldns-4bp5b 1/1 Running 0 75s kube-system nodelocaldns-5f9g8 1/1 Running 0 36m kube-system nodelocaldns-h4xzk 1/1 Running 0 35m kube-system nodelocaldns-jz86j 1/1 Running 0 75s kube-system nodelocaldns-xcjt6 1/1 Running 0 76s
  7. Execute the following command to check your nodes.

    kubectl get nodes
    NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION master1 Ready master 37m v1.17.9 master2 Ready master 2m17s v1.17.9 master3 Ready master 2m17s v1.17.9 worker1 Ready worker 36m v1.17.9 worker2 Ready worker 36m v1.17.9 worker3 Ready worker 2m18s v1.17.9

    As you can see above, all the nodes are up and running.

Summary

The steps of adding more master nodes so that your cluster is highly available is basically the same as demonstrated in my last post. The major difference is that you must configure your load balancer correctly.

Reference

KubeKey

Multi-node Installation

KubeKey: A Lightweight Installer for Kubernetes and Cloud Native Addons

Scaling a Kubernetes Cluster: One of the Best Practices for Using KubeKey

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