In this lab you will setup the necessary authentication configs to enable Kubernetes clients to bootstrap and authenticate using RBAC (Role-Based Access Control).
The kubectl client will be used to generate kubeconfig files which will be consumed by the kubelet and kube-proxy services.
wget https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/v1.6.1/bin/darwin/amd64/kubectl
chmod +x kubectl
sudo mv kubectl /usr/local/bin
wget https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/v1.6.1/bin/linux/amd64/kubectl
chmod +x kubectl
sudo mv kubectl /usr/local/bin
The following components will leverage Kubernetes RBAC:
- kubelet (client)
- kube-proxy (client)
- kubectl (client)
The other components, mainly the scheduler
and controller manager
, access the Kubernetes API server locally over the insecure API port which does not require authentication. The insecure port is only enabled for local access.
This section will walk you through the creation of a TLS bootstrap token that will be used to bootstrap TLS client certificates for kubelets.
Generate a token:
BOOTSTRAP_TOKEN=$(head -c 16 /dev/urandom | od -An -t x | tr -d ' ')
Generate a token file:
cat > token.csv <<EOF
${BOOTSTRAP_TOKEN},kubelet-bootstrap,10001,"system:kubelet-bootstrap"
EOF
Distribute the bootstrap token file to each controller node:
for host in controller0 controller1 controller2; do
gcloud compute scp token.csv ${host}:~/
done
This section will walk you through creating kubeconfig files that will be used to bootstrap kubelets, which will then generate their own kubeconfigs based on dynamically generated certificates, and a kubeconfig for authenticating kube-proxy clients.
Each kubeconfig requires a Kubernetes master to connect to. To support H/A the IP address assigned to the load balancer sitting in front of the Kubernetes API servers will be used.
KUBERNETES_PUBLIC_ADDRESS=$(gcloud compute addresses describe kubernetes-the-hard-way \
--region us-central1 \
--format 'value(address)')
kubectl config set-cluster kubernetes-the-hard-way \
--certificate-authority=ca.pem \
--embed-certs=true \
--server=https://${KUBERNETES_PUBLIC_ADDRESS}:6443 \
--kubeconfig=bootstrap.kubeconfig
kubectl config set-credentials kubelet-bootstrap \
--token=${BOOTSTRAP_TOKEN} \
--kubeconfig=bootstrap.kubeconfig
kubectl config set-context default \
--cluster=kubernetes-the-hard-way \
--user=kubelet-bootstrap \
--kubeconfig=bootstrap.kubeconfig
kubectl config use-context default --kubeconfig=bootstrap.kubeconfig
kubectl config set-cluster kubernetes-the-hard-way \
--certificate-authority=ca.pem \
--embed-certs=true \
--server=https://${KUBERNETES_PUBLIC_ADDRESS}:6443 \
--kubeconfig=kube-proxy.kubeconfig
kubectl config set-credentials kube-proxy \
--client-certificate=kube-proxy.pem \
--client-key=kube-proxy-key.pem \
--embed-certs=true \
--kubeconfig=kube-proxy.kubeconfig
kubectl config set-context default \
--cluster=kubernetes-the-hard-way \
--user=kube-proxy \
--kubeconfig=kube-proxy.kubeconfig
kubectl config use-context default --kubeconfig=kube-proxy.kubeconfig
for host in worker0 worker1 worker2; do
gcloud compute scp bootstrap.kubeconfig kube-proxy.kubeconfig ${host}:~/
done