This project aims to provide single dependency Kubernetes clusters for local testing, experimenting and development purposes.
Moving pictures are worth more than thousand words, so here is a short demo:
Have you ever heard about Nix, the functional package manager?
In case you haven't, don’t worry – the important thing is that it provides all the third-party dependencies needed for this project, pinned to a dedicated version. This guarantees stable, reproducible installations.
KuberNix itself is a Rusty helper program, which takes care of bootstrapping the Kubernetes cluster, passing the right configuration parameters around and keeping track of the running processes.
The following technology stack is currently being used:
Application | Version |
---|---|
cfssl | v1.5.0 |
cni-plugins | v0.9.0 |
conmon | v2.0.25 |
conntrack-tools | v1.4.6 |
cri-o-wrapper | v1.20.0 |
cri-tools | v1.20.0 |
etcd | v3.3.25 |
iproute2 | v5.10.0 |
iptables | v1.8.6 |
kmod | v27 |
kubectl | v1.19.5 |
kubernetes | v1.19.5 |
nss-cacert | v3.60 |
podman-wrapper | v2.2.1 |
runc | v1.0.0-rc92 |
socat | v1.7.4.1 |
sysctl | v1003.1.2008 |
util-linux | v2.36.1 |
Some other tools are not explicitly mentioned here, because they are no first-level dependencies.
As already mentioned, there is only one single dependency needed to run this project: Nix. To setup Nix, simply run:
$ curl https://nixos.org/nix/install | sh
Please make sure to follow the instructions output by the script.
It is also possible to run KuberNix in the container runtime of your choice. To
do this, simply grab the latest image from saschagrunert/kubernix
.
Please note that running KuberNix inside a container image requires to run
privileged
mode and host
networking. For example, we can run KuberNix with
podman like this:
$ sudo podman run \
--net=host \
--privileged \
-it docker.io/saschagrunert/kubernix:latest
To bootstrap your first cluster, download one of the latest release binaries or build the application via:
$ make build-release
The binary should now be available in the target/release/kubernix
directory of
the project. Alternatively, install the application via cargo install kubernix
.
After the successful binary retrieval, start KuberNix by running it as root
:
$ sudo kubernix
KuberNix will now take care that the Nix environment gets correctly setup,
downloads the needed binaries and starts the cluster. Per default it will create
a directory called kubernix-run
in the current path which contains all necessary
data for the cluster.
If everything went fine, you should be dropped into a new shell session, like this:
[INFO ] Everything is up and running
[INFO ] Spawning interactive shell
[INFO ] Please be aware that the cluster stops if you exit the shell
>
Now you can access your cluster via tools like kubectl
:
> kubectl get pods --all-namespaces
NAMESPACE NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
kube-system coredns-85d84dd694-xz997 1/1 Running 0 102s
All configuration files have been written to the target directory, which is now the current one:
> ls -1
apiserver/
controllermanager/
coredns/
crio/
encryptionconfig/
etcd/
kubeconfig/
kubelet/
kubernix.env
kubernix.toml
nix/
pki/
policy.json
proxy/
scheduler/
For example, the log files for the different running components are now available within their corresponding directory:
> ls -1 **.log
apiserver/kube-apiserver.log
controllermanager/kube-controller-manager.log
crio/crio.log
etcd/etcd.log
kubelet/kubelet.log
proxy/kube-proxy.log
scheduler/kube-scheduler.log
If you want to spawn an additional shell session, simply run kubernix shell
in
the same directory as where the initial bootstrap happened.
$ sudo kubernix shell
[INFO kubernix] Spawning new kubernix shell in 'kubernix-run'
> kubectl run --generator=run-pod/v1 --image=alpine -it alpine sh
If you don't see a command prompt, try pressing enter.
/ #
This means that you can spawn as many shells as you want to.
The whole cluster gets automatically destroyed if you exit the shell session from the initial process:
> exit
[INFO ] Cleaning up
Please note that the directory where all the data is stored is not being removed after the exit of KuberNix. This means that you’re still able to access the log and configuration files for further processing. If you start the cluster again, then the cluster files will be reused. This is especially handy if you want to test configuration changes.
If you start KuberNix again in the same run directory, then it will re-use the
configuration during the cluster bootstrapping process. This means that you
can modify all data inside the run root for testing and debugging purposes. The
startup of the individual components will be initiated by YAML files called
run.yml
, which are available inside the directories of the corresponding
components. For example, etc gets started via:
> cat kubernix-run/etcd/run.yml
---
command: /nix/store/qlbsv0hvi0j5qj3631dzl9srl75finlk-etcd-3.3.13-bin/bin/etcd
args:
- "--advertise-client-urls=https://127.0.0.1:2379"
- "--client-cert-auth"
- "--data-dir=/…/kubernix-run/etcd/run"
- "--initial-advertise-peer-urls=https://127.0.0.1:2380"
- "--initial-cluster-state=new"
- "--initial-cluster-token=etcd-cluster"
- "--initial-cluster=etcd=https://127.0.0.1:2380"
- "--listen-client-urls=https://127.0.0.1:2379"
- "--listen-peer-urls=https://127.0.0.1:2380"
- "--name=etcd"
- "--peer-client-cert-auth"
- "--cert-file=/…/kubernix-run/pki/kubernetes.pem"
- "--key-file=/…/kubernix-run/pki/kubernetes-key.pem"
- "--peer-cert-file=/…/kubernix-run/pki/kubernetes.pem"
- "--peer-key-file=/…/kubernix-run/pki/kubernetes-key.pem"
- "--peer-trusted-ca-file=/…/kubernix-run/pki/ca.pem"
- "--trusted-ca-file=/…/kubernix-run/pki/ca.pem"
KuberNix has some configuration possibilities, which are currently:
CLI argument | Description | Default | Environment Variable |
---|---|---|---|
-r, --root |
Path where all the runtime data is stored | kubernix-run |
KUBERNIX_ROOT |
-l, --log-level |
Logging verbosity | info |
KUBERNIX_LOG_LEVEL |
-c, --cidr |
CIDR used for the cluster network | 10.10.0.0/16 |
KUBERNIX_CIDR |
-s, --shell |
The shell executable to be used | $SHELL /sh |
KUBERNIX_SHELL |
-e, --no-shell |
Do not spawn an interactive shell after bootstrap | false |
KUBERNIX_NO_SHELL |
-n, --nodes |
The number of nodes to be registered | 1 |
KUBERNIX_NODES |
-u, --container-runtime |
The container runtime to be used for the nodes, irrelevant if nodes equals to 1 |
podman |
KUBERNIX_CONTAINER_RUNTIME |
-o, --overlay |
Nix package overlay to be used | KUBERNIX_OVERLAY |
|
-p, --packages |
Additional Nix dependencies to be added to the environment | KUBERNIX_PACKAGES |
Please ensure that the CIDR is not overlapping with existing local networks and that your setup has access to the internet. The CIDR will be automatically split up over the necessary cluster components.
It is possible to spawn multiple worker nodes, too. To do this, simply adjust
the -n, --nodes
command line argument as well as your preferred container
runtime via -u, --container-runtime
. The default runtime is podman,
but every other Docker drop-in replacement should work out of the box.
Overlays provide a method to extend and change Nix derivations. This means, that
we’re able to change dependencies during the cluster bootstrapping process. For
example, we can exchange the used CRI-O version to use a local checkout by
writing this simple overlay.nix
:
self: super: {
cri-o = super.cri-o.overrideAttrs(old: {
src = ../path/to/go/src/github.com/cri-o/cri-o;
});
}
Now we can run KuberNix with the --overlay, -o
command line argument:
$ sudo kubernix --overlay overlay.nix
[INFO kubernix] Nix environment not found, bootstrapping one
[INFO kubernix] Using custom overlay 'overlay.nix'
these derivations will be built:
/nix/store/9jb43i2mqjc94mbx30d9nrx529w6lngw-cri-o-1.15.2.drv
building '/nix/store/9jb43i2mqjc94mbx30d9nrx529w6lngw-cri-o-1.15.2.drv'...
Using this technique makes it easy for daily development of Kubernetes components, by simply changing it to local paths or trying out new versions.
It is also possible to add additional packages to the KuberNix environment by
specifying them via the --packages, -p
command line parameter. This way you
can easily utilize additional tools in a reproducible way. For example, when to
comes to using always the same Helm version, you could simply run:
$ sudo kubernix -p kubernetes-helm
[INFO ] Nix environment not found, bootstrapping one
[INFO ] Bootstrapping cluster inside nix environment
…
> helm init
> helm version
Client: &version.Version{SemVer:"v2.14.3", GitCommit:"", GitTreeState:"clean"}
Server: &version.Version{SemVer:"v2.14.3", GitCommit:"0e7f3b6637f7af8fcfddb3d2941fcc7cbebb0085", GitTreeState:"clean"}
All available packages are listed on the official Nix index.
You want to contribute to this project? Wow, thanks! So please just fork it and send me a pull request.