k3s/contrib/ansible
Matthias Riegler 5c870d18da CentOS/RHEL compatibility for Ansible roles
- Setting IPv4 & IPv6 forwarding
- Setting `sysctl:net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-iptables` and `bridge-nf-call-ip6tables` to enabled since it is disabled by default on some CentOS systems
2019-09-29 00:19:18 +02:00
..
group_vars Update k3s v0.8.0 to v0.8.1 2019-08-20 17:32:49 -07:00
roles CentOS/RHEL compatibility for Ansible roles 2019-09-29 00:19:18 +02:00
ansible.cfg Ansible provisionning (#217) 2019-04-26 21:10:27 +02:00
hosts.ini Ansible provisionning (#217) 2019-04-26 21:10:27 +02:00
README.md CentOS/RHEL compatibility for Ansible roles 2019-09-29 00:19:18 +02:00
site.yml CentOS/RHEL compatibility for Ansible roles 2019-09-29 00:19:18 +02:00

Build a Kubernetes cluster using k3s via Ansible.

Author: https://github.com/itwars

K3s Ansible Playbook

Build a Kubernetes cluster using Ansible with k3s. The goal is easily install a Kubernetes cluster on machines running:

  • Debian
  • [ ] Ubuntu
  • CentOS

on processor architecture:

  • x64
  • arm64
  • armhf

System requirements:

Deployment environment must have Ansible 2.4.0+ Master and nodes must have passwordless SSH access

Usage

Add the system information gathered above into a file called hosts.ini. For example:

[master]
192.16.35.12

[node]
192.16.35.[10:11]

[k3s-cluster:children]
master
node

Start provisioning of the cluster using the following command:

ansible-playbook site.yml

Kubeconfig

To get access to your Kubernetes cluster just scp debian@master_pi:~/kube/config ~/.kube/config