Todos:
- check labels and selectors if they all are correct
- configure NGINX from yml
- configure Let's Encrypt cert-manager from yml
- configure ingress from yml
- configure persistent & shared storage between nodes
- reproduce setup locally
There are many Kubernetes distributions, but if you're just getting started, Minikube is a tool that you can use to get your feet wet.
Open minikube dashboard:
$ minikube dashboard
This will give you an overview. Some of the steps below need some timing to make ressources available to other dependent deployments. Keeping an eye on the dashboard is a great way to check that.
Follow the installation instruction below.
If all the pods and services have settled and everything looks green in your
minikube dashboard, expose the nitro-web
service on your host system with:
$ minikube service nitro-web --namespace=human-connection
-
At first, create a cluster on Digital Ocean.
-
Download the config.yaml if the process has finished.
-
Put the config file where you can find it later (preferable in your home directory under
~/.kube/
) -
In the open terminal you can set the current config for the active session:
export KUBECONFIG=~/.kube/THE-NAME-OF-YOUR-CLUSTER-kubeconfig.yaml
. You could make this change permanent by adding the line to your.bashrc
or~/.config/fish/config.fish
depending on your shell.Otherwise you would have to always add
--kubeconfig ~/.kube/THE-NAME-OF-YOUR-CLUSTER-kubeconfig.yaml
on everykubectl
command that you are running. -
Now check if you can connect to the cluster and if its your newly created one by running:
kubectl get nodes
If you got the steps right above and see your nodes you can continue.
First, install kubernetes dashboard:
$ kubectl apply -f dashboard/
$ kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/dashboard/master/aio/deploy/recommended/kubernetes-dashboard.yaml
Get your token on the command line:
$ kubectl -n kube-system describe secret $(kubectl -n kube-system get secret | grep admin-user | awk '{print $1}')
It should print something like:
Name: admin-user-token-6gl6l
Namespace: kube-system
Labels: <none>
Annotations: kubernetes.io/service-account.name=admin-user
kubernetes.io/service-account.uid=b16afba9-dfec-11e7-bbb9-901b0e532516
Type: kubernetes.io/service-account-token
Data
====
ca.crt: 1025 bytes
namespace: 11 bytes
token: eyJhbGciOiJSUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJpc3MiOiJrdWJlcm5ldGVzL3NlcnZpY2VhY2NvdW50Iiwia3ViZXJuZXRlcy5pby9zZXJ2aWNlYWNjb3VudC9uYW1lc3BhY2UiOiJrdWJlLXN5c3RlbSIsImt1YmVybmV0ZXMuaW8vc2VydmljZWFjY291bnQvc2VjcmV0Lm5hbWUiOiJhZG1pbi11c2VyLXRva2VuLTZnbDZsIiwia3ViZXJuZXRlcy5pby9zZXJ2aWNlYWNjb3VudC9zZXJ2aWNlLWFjY291bnQubmFtZSI6ImFkbWluLXVzZXIiLCJrdWJlcm5ldGVzLmlvL3NlcnZpY2VhY2NvdW50L3NlcnZpY2UtYWNjb3VudC51aWQiOiJiMTZhZmJhOS1kZmVjLTExZTctYmJiOS05MDFiMGU1MzI1MTYiLCJzdWIiOiJzeXN0ZW06c2VydmljZWFjY291bnQ6a3ViZS1zeXN0ZW06YWRtaW4tdXNlciJ9.M70CU3lbu3PP4OjhFms8PVL5pQKj-jj4RNSLA4YmQfTXpPUuxqXjiTf094_Rzr0fgN_IVX6gC4fiNUL5ynx9KU-lkPfk0HnX8scxfJNzypL039mpGt0bbe1IXKSIRaq_9VW59Xz-yBUhycYcKPO9RM2Qa1Ax29nqNVko4vLn1_1wPqJ6XSq3GYI8anTzV8Fku4jasUwjrws6Cn6_sPEGmL54sq5R4Z5afUtv-mItTmqZZdxnkRqcJLlg2Y8WbCPogErbsaCDJoABQ7ppaqHetwfM_0yMun6ABOQbIwwl8pspJhpplKwyo700OSpvTT9zlBsu-b35lzXGBRHzv5g_RA
Proxy localhost to the remote kubernetes dashboard:
$ kubectl proxy
Grab the token from above and paste it into the login screen at http://localhost:8001/api/v1/namespaces/kube-system/services/https:kubernetes-dashboard:/proxy/
You have to do some prerequisites e.g. change some secrets according to your own setup.
$ cp secrets.template.yaml human-connection/secrets.yaml
Change all secrets as needed.
If you want to edit secrets, you have to base64
encode them. See kubernetes
documentation.
# example how to base64 a string:
$ echo -n 'admin' | base64
YWRtaW4=
Those secrets get base64
decoded in a kubernetes pod.
$ kubectl apply -f namespace-human-connection.yaml
Switch to the namespace human-connection
in your kubernetes dashboard.
$ kubectl apply -f human-connection/
This can take a while because kubernetes will download the docker images.
Sit back and relax and have a look into your kubernetes dashboard.
Wait until all pods turn green and they don't show a warning
Waiting: ContainerCreating
anymore.
Follow this quick start guide and install certmanager via helm and tiller:
$ kubectl create serviceaccount tiller --namespace=kube-system
$ kubectl create clusterrolebinding tiller-admin --serviceaccount=kube-system:tiller --clusterrole=cluster-admin
$ helm init --service-account=tiller
$ helm repo update
$ helm install stable/nginx-ingress
$ kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/jetstack/cert-manager/release-0.6/deploy/manifests/00-crds.yaml
$ helm install --name cert-manager --namespace cert-manager stable/cert-manager
Create letsencrypt issuers. Change the email address in these files before running this command.
$ kubectl apply -f human-connection/https/
Create an ingress service in namespace human-connection
. Change the domain
name according to your needs:
$ kubectl apply -f human-connection/ingress/
Check the ingress server is working correctly:
$ curl -kivL -H 'Host: <DOMAIN_NAME>' 'https://<IP_ADDRESS>'
If the response looks good, configure your domain registrar for the new IP address and the domain.
Now let's get a valid HTTPS certificate. According to the tutorial above, check your tls certificate for staging:
$ kubectl describe --namespace=human-connection certificate tls
$ kubectl describe --namespace=human-connection secret tls
If everything looks good, update the issuer of your ingress. Change the
annotation certmanager.k8s.io/issuer
from letsencrypt-staging
to
letsencrypt-prod
in your ingress configuration in
human-connection/ingress/ingress.yaml
.
$ kubectl apply -f human-connection/ingress/ingress.yaml
Delete the former secret to force a refresh:
$ kubectl --namespace=human-connection delete secret tls
Now, HTTPS should be configured on your domain. Congrats.
This setup is completely optional and only required if you have data on a server which is running our legacy code and you want to import that data. It will import the uploads folder and migrate a dump of mongodb into neo4j.
Create a configmap with the specific connection data of your legacy server:
$ kubectl create configmap db-migration-worker \
--namespace=human-connection \
--from-literal=SSH_USERNAME=someuser \
--from-literal=SSH_HOST=yourhost \
--from-literal=MONGODB_USERNAME=hc-api \
--from-literal=MONGODB_PASSWORD=secretpassword \
--from-literal=MONGODB_AUTH_DB=hc_api \
--from-literal=MONGODB_DATABASE=hc_api \
--from-literal=UPLOADS_DIRECTORY=/var/www/api/uploads \
--from-literal=NEO4J_URI=bolt://localhost:7687
Create a secret with your public and private ssh keys. As the
kubernetes documentation
points out, you should be careful with your ssh keys. Anyone with access to your
cluster will have access to your ssh keys. Better create a new pair with
ssh-keygen
and copy the public key to your legacy server with ssh-copy-id
:
$ kubectl create secret generic ssh-keys \
--namespace=human-connection \
--from-file=id_rsa=/path/to/.ssh/id_rsa \
--from-file=id_rsa.pub=/path/to/.ssh/id_rsa.pub \
--from-file=known_hosts=/path/to/.ssh/known_hosts
Patch the existing deployments to use a multi-container setup:
cd legacy-migration
kubectl apply -f volume-claim-mongo-export.yaml
kubectl patch --namespace=human-connection deployment nitro-backend --patch "$(cat deployment-backend.yaml)"
kubectl patch --namespace=human-connection deployment nitro-neo4j --patch "$(cat deployment-neo4j.yaml)"
cd ..
Run the migration:
$ kubectl --namespace=human-connection get pods
# change <POD_IDs> below
$ kubectl --namespace=human-connection exec -it nitro-neo4j-65bbdb597c-nc2lv migrate
$ kubectl --namespace=human-connection exec -it nitro-backend-c6cc5ff69-8h96z sync_uploads