title | author |
---|---|
Simple RKE2, Longhorn, NeuVector and Rancher Install |
Andy Clemenko, @clemenko, [email protected] |
Throughout my career there has always been a disconnect between the documentation and the practical implementation. The Kubernetes (k8s) ecosystem is no stranger to this problem. This guide is a simple approach to installing Kubernetes and some REALLY useful tools. We will walk through installing all the following.
- RKE2 - Security focused Kubernetes
- Rancher - Multi-Cluster Kubernetes Management
- Longhorn - Unified storage layer
- NeuVector - Full Lifecycle Container Security
We will need a few tools for this guide. We will walk through how to install helm
and kubectl
.
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Table of Contents:
Just a geek - Andy Clemenko - @clemenko - [email protected]
The prerequisites are fairly simple. We need 3 linux servers with access to the internet. They can be bare metal, or in the cloud provider of your choice. I prefer Digital Ocean. For this guide we are going to use Harvester. We need an ssh
client to connect to the servers. For the purpose of this guide let's use https://sslip.io/. We will need to know the IP of the first server of the cluster.
For the sake of this guide we are going to use Ubuntu. Our goal is a simple deployment. The recommended size of each node is 4 Cores and 8GB of memory with at least 60GB of storage. One of the nice things about Longhorn is that we do not need to attach additional storage. Here is an example list of servers. Please keep in mind that your server names can be anything. Just keep in mind which ones are the "server" and "agents".
name | core | memory | ip | disk | os |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
rancher-01 | 4 | 8Gi | 192.168.1.12 | 60 | Ubuntu 22.04 x64 |
rancher-02 | 4 | 8Gi | 192.168.1.74 | 60 | Ubuntu 22.04 x64 |
rancher-03 | 4 | 8Gi | 192.168.1.247 | 60 | Ubuntu 22.04 x64 |
For Kubernetes we will need to "set" one of the nodes as the control plane. Rancher-01 looks like a winner for this. First we need to ssh
into all three nodes and make sure we have all the updates and add a few things. For the record I am not a fan of software firewalls. Please feel free to reach to me to discuss. :D
We need to run the following commands on each of your nodes. Make sure you pick the OS of choice.
Ubuntu:
# Ubuntu instructions
# stop the software firewall
systemctl disable --now ufw
# get updates, install nfs, and apply
apt update
apt install nfs-common -y
apt upgrade -y
# clean up
apt autoremove -y
Rocky / Centos / RHEL:
# Rocky instructions
# stop the software firewall
systemctl disable --now firewalld
# get updates, install nfs, and apply
yum install -y nfs-utils cryptsetup iscsi-initiator-utils
# enable iscsi for Longhorn
systemctl enable --now iscsid.service
# update all the things
yum update -y
# clean up
yum clean all
Cool, lets move on to the RKE2.
Now that we have all the nodes up to date, let's focus on rancher-01
. While this might seem controversial, curl | bash
does work nicely. The install script will use the tarball install for Ubuntu and the RPM install for Rocky/Centos. Please be patient, the start command can take a minute. Here are the rke2 docs and install options for reference.
# On rancher-01
curl -sfL https://get.rke2.io | INSTALL_RKE2_TYPE=server sh -
# we can set the token - create config dir/file
mkdir -p /etc/rancher/rke2/
echo "token: bootstrapAllTheThings" > /etc/rancher/rke2/config.yaml
# start and enable for restarts -
systemctl enable --now rke2-server.service
Here is what the Ubuntu version should look like:
Let's validate everything worked as expected. Run a systemctl status rke2-server
and make sure it is active
.
Perfect! Now we can start talking Kubernetes. We need to symlink the kubectl
cli on rancher-01
that gets installed from RKE2.
# symlink all the things - kubectl
ln -s $(find /var/lib/rancher/rke2/data/ -name kubectl) /usr/local/bin/kubectl
# add kubectl conf with persistence, as per Duane
echo "export KUBECONFIG=/etc/rancher/rke2/rke2.yaml PATH=$PATH:/usr/local/bin/:/var/lib/rancher/rke2/bin/" >> ~/.bashrc
source ~/.bashrc
# check node status
kubectl get node
Hopefully everything looks good! Here is an example.
For those that are not TOO familiar with k8s, the config file is what kubectl
uses to authenticate to the api service. If you want to use a workstation, jump box, or any other machine you will want to copy /etc/rancher/rke2/rke2.yaml
. You will want to modify the file to change the ip address.
The agent install is VERY similar to the server install. Except that we need an agent config file before starting. We will start with rancher-02
. We need to install the agent and setup the configuration file.
# we can export the rancher-01 IP from the first server.
export RANCHER1_IP=192.168.1.12 # <-- change this!
# we add INSTALL_RKE2_TYPE=agent
curl -sfL https://get.rke2.io | INSTALL_RKE2_TYPE=agent sh -
# create config dir/file
mkdir -p /etc/rancher/rke2/
# change the ip to reflect your rancher-01 ip
cat << EOF >> /etc/rancher/rke2/config.yaml
server: https://$RANCHER1_IP:9345
token: bootstrapAllTheThings
EOF
# enable and start
systemctl enable --now rke2-agent.service
What should this look like:
Rinse and repeat. Run the same install commands on rancher-03
. Next we can validate all the nodes are playing nice by running kubectl get node -o wide
on rancher-01
.
Huzzah! RKE2 is fully installed. From here on out we will only need to talk to the kubernetes api. Meaning we will only need to remain ssh'ed into rancher-01
.
Now let's install Rancher.
For more information about the Rancher versions, please refer to the Support Matrix. We are going to use the latest version. For additional reading take a look at the Rancher docs.
For Rancher we will need Helm. We are going to live on the edge! Here are the install docs for reference.
# on the server rancher-01
# add helm
curl -#L https://raw.githubusercontent.com/helm/helm/main/scripts/get-helm-3 | bash
# add needed helm charts
helm repo add rancher-latest https://releases.rancher.com/server-charts/latest --force-update
helm repo add jetstack https://charts.jetstack.io --force-update
Quick note about Rancher. Rancher needs jetstack/cert-manager to create the self signed TLS certificates. We need to install it with the Custom Resource Definition (CRD). Please pay attention to the helm
install for Rancher. The URLrancher.192.168.1.12.sslip.io
will need to be changed to for your IP. Also notice I am setting the bootstrapPassword
and replicas. This allows us to skip a step later. :D
# still on rancher-01
# helm install jetstack
helm upgrade -i cert-manager jetstack/cert-manager -n cert-manager --create-namespace --set crds.enabled=true
# helm install rancher
# CHANGE the IP to the one for rancher-01
export RANCHER1_IP=192.168.1.12
helm upgrade -i rancher rancher-latest/rancher --create-namespace --namespace cattle-system --set hostname=rancher.$RANCHER1_IP.sslip.io --set bootstrapPassword=bootStrapAllTheThings --set replicas=1
Now we can validate everything installed with a helm list -A
or kubectl get pod -A
. Keep in mind it may take a minute or so for all the pods to come up. GUI time...
We should now able to get to the GUI at https://rancher.192.168.1.12.sslip.io. The good news is that be default rke2 installs with the nginx
ingress controller. Keep in mind that the browser may show an error for the self signed certificate.
Once past that you should see the following screen asking about the password. Remember the helm install? bootStrapAllTheThings
is the password.
We need to validate the Server URL and accept the terms and conditions.
AND we are in! Switching to light mode.
Let's take a second and talk about Ranchers Multi-cluster design. Bottom line, Rancher can operate in a Spoke and Hub model. Meaning one k8s cluster for Rancher and then "downstream" clusters for all the workloads. Personally I prefer the decoupled model where there is only one cluster per Rancher install. This allows for continued manageability during networks outages. For the purpose of the is guide we are concentrate on the single cluster deployment. There is good documentation on "importing" downstream clusters.
Now let's install Longhorn.
There are two methods for installing. Rancher has Chart built in.
Now for the good news, Longhorn docs show two easy install methods. Helm and kubectl
. Let's stick with Helm for this guide.
# get charts
helm repo add longhorn https://charts.longhorn.io --force-update
# install
helm upgrade -i longhorn longhorn/longhorn --namespace longhorn-system --create-namespace
Fairly easy right?
One of the benefits of Rancher is its ability to adjust to what's installed. Meaning the Rancher GUI will see Longhorn is installed and provide a link. We can find it by navigating to the local
cluster from the dashboard. Or clicking on the bull with horns icon on the left nav bar under the home. From there look
This brings up the Longhorn GUI.
One of the other benefits of this integration is that rke2 also knows it is installed. Run kubectl get sc
to show the storage classes.
root@rancher-01:~# kubectl get sc
NAME PROVISIONER RECLAIMPOLICY VOLUMEBINDINGMODE ALLOWVOLUMEEXPANSION AGE
longhorn (default) driver.longhorn.io Delete Immediate true 3m58s
Now we have a default storage class for the cluster. This allows for the automatic creation of Physical Volumes (PVs) based on a Physical Volume Claim (PVC). The best part is that "it just works" using the existing, unused storage, on the three nodes. Take a look around in the gui. Notice the Volumes on the Nodes. For fun, here is a demo flask app that uses a PVC for Redis. kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/clemenko/k8s_yaml/master/flask_simple_nginx.yml
Now let's install NeuVector.
Similar to Longhorn we are going to use helm
for the install. We do have a choice to use Single Sign On (SSO) with Rancher's credentials. For this guide we are going to stick with independent username and password. The helm options for SSO are below if you want experiment.
# helm repo add
helm repo add neuvector https://neuvector.github.io/neuvector-helm/ --force-update
# helm install
export RANCHER1_IP=192.168.1.12
helm upgrade -i neuvector --namespace cattle-neuvector-system neuvector/core --create-namespace --set manager.svc.type=ClusterIP --set controller.pvc.enabled=true --set controller.pvc.capacity=500Mi --set manager.ingress.enabled=true --set manager.ingress.host=neuvector.$RANCHER1_IP.sslip.io --set manager.ingress.tls=true
# add for single sign-on
# --set controller.ranchersso.enabled=true --set global.cattle.url=https://rancher.$RANCHER1_IP.sslip.io
We should wait a few seconds for the pods to deploy.
kubectl get pod -n cattle-neuvector-system
It will take a minute for everything to become running.
root@rancher-01:~# kubectl get pod -n cattle-neuvector-system
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
neuvector-controller-pod-657599c5fd-2zfhh 1/1 Running 0 109s
neuvector-controller-pod-657599c5fd-qd2jx 1/1 Running 0 109s
neuvector-controller-pod-657599c5fd-qv5nv 1/1 Running 0 109s
neuvector-enforcer-pod-2dczs 1/1 Running 0 109s
neuvector-enforcer-pod-47r2q 1/1 Running 0 109s
neuvector-enforcer-pod-bg7rd 1/1 Running 0 109s
neuvector-manager-pod-66cfdb8779-f8qtj 1/1 Running 0 109s
neuvector-scanner-pod-fc48d77fc-b8hb9 1/1 Running 0 109s
neuvector-scanner-pod-fc48d77fc-h8lwd 1/1 Running 0 109s
neuvector-scanner-pod-fc48d77fc-mmmpx 1/1 Running 0 109s
Let's take a look at the GUI.
Similar to Longhorn, Rancher see that the application is installed and created a NavLink for it. We are going to click it or navigate to http://neuvector.192.168.1.12.sslip.io. The login is admin/admin
. Make sure to check the EULA box.
Before taking a look around we should turn on "Auto Scan". This will automatically scan all images on the cluster. Navigate to Assets --> Containers. In the upper right there is a a toggle for Auto Scan.
Hopefully you made it this far!
Yes we can automate all the things. Here is the repo I use automating the complete stack https://github.com/clemenko/rke2. This repo is for entertainment purposes only. There I use tools like pdsh to run parallel ssh into the nodes to complete a few tasks. Ansible would be a good choice for this. But I am old and like bash. Sorry the script is a beast. I need to clean it up.
As we can see, setting up RKE2, Rancher, NeuVector and Longhorn is not that complicated. We can get deploy Kubernetes, a storage layer, and a management gui in a few minutes. Simple, right? One of the added benefits of using the Suse / Rancher stack is that all the pieces are modular. Use only what you need, when you need it. Hope this was helpful. Please feel free reach out, or open any issues at https://github.com/clemenko/rke_install_blog.
thanks!
For more fun check out my list of other content and videos at https://rfed.io/links.