Creating additional user clusters

This page explains how to create additional user clusters. To create additional user clusters, you make a copy of the GKE on-prem configuration file used to deploy your clusters. You modify the copied file to meet your expectations for the new user clusters, and then you use the file to create the cluster.

You need to copy and modify a GKE on-prem configuration file for each additional user cluster you want to create.

Before you begin

  • Be sure that an admin cluster is running. You created an admin cluster when you installed GKE on-prem.
  • Locate the config.yaml file that was generated by gkectl during installation. This file defines specifications for the admin cluster and user clusters. You'll copy and modify this file to create an additional user clusters.
  • Locate the admin cluster's kubeconfig file. You reference this file when you copy and modify config.yaml.

Limitations

Limitation Description
Maximum and minimum limits for clusters and nodes

See Quotas and limits. Your environment's performance might impact these limits.

Uniqueness for user cluster names

All user clusters registered to the same Google Cloud project must have unique names.

Cannot deploy to more than one vCenter and/or vSphere datacenter

Currently, you can only deploy an admin cluster and a set of associated user clusters to a single vCenter and/or vSphere datacenter. You cannot deploy the same admin and user clusters to more than one vCenter and/or vSphere datacenter.

Cannot declaratively change cluster configurations after creation While you can create additional clusters and resize existing clusters, you cannot change an existing cluster through its configuration file.

Verify that enough IP addresses are available

Be sure that you have enough IP addresses allocated for the new user cluster. Verifying that you have enough IP addresses depends on whether you're using a DHCP server or static IPs.

DHCP

Check that the DHCP server in the network in which the cluster will be created has enough IP addresses. There should be more IP addresses than there will be nodes running in the user cluster.

Static IPs

Check that you've allocated enough IP addresses on your load balancer, and be sure to specify these IP addresses during cluster creation.

Copy configuration file

Copy the GKE on-prem configuration file that you generated using gkectl create-config and modified to be appropriate for your environment. Rename the copy to use another filename:

cp [CONFIG_FILE] [NEW_USER_CLUSTER_CONFIG]

where [NEW_USER_CLUSTER_CONFIG] is the name you choose for the copy of the configuration file. For the purpose of these instructions, we'll call this file create-user-cluster.yaml.

In create-user-cluster.yaml, you need to change the following fields:

  • admincluster, the specification for the admin cluster. You completely remove the admincluster specification from the file.
  • usercluster, the specification for a user cluster.

In the following sections, you modify the admincluster and usercluster fields of create-user-cluster.yaml, then use the file to create additional user clusters.

Delete the admincluster specification

If you want to create additonal user clusters from the existing admin cluster, you need to delete the entire admincluster specification.

To do so, simply delete the specification and all of its subfields.

Be sure not to delete the usercluster specification, nor any of its subfields.

Modify the usercluster specification

Make changes to the usercluster fields as described in the following sections.

Change the user cluster's name

Change the user cluster name from the usercluster.clustername field. New user clusters should have names different from existing user clusters.

Reserve IP addresses for the user cluster's nodes

If you're using DHCP, make sure that you have enough IPs for the nodes to be created.

For static IP, you should modify the file provided to usercluster.ipblockfilepath that contains the predefined IP addresses for the user cluster, or provide a different static IP YAML file with the IPs you want.

Reserve IP addresses for the load balancer

If you're using F5 BIG-IP load balancer, be sure to reserve two IP addresses for the user cluster's load balancer control plane and ingress. The corresponding fields are usercluster.vips.controlplanevip and usercluster.vips.ingressvip.

Change the machine requirements (optional)

If you need this user cluster's control plane or worker nodes to use a different amount of CPU or memory, or if you need the cluster to run additional or fewer nodes, set values for the following fields:

usercluster.masternode

  • usercluster.masternode.cpus: Number of CPU cores to use.
  • usercluster.masternode.memorymb: Number of MB of memory to use
  • usercluster.masternode.replicas: Number of nodes of this type to run. Value must be 1 or 3.

usercluster.workernode

  • usercluster.workernode.cpus: Number of CPU cores to use.
  • usercluster.workernode.memorymd: Number of MB of memory to use.
  • usercluster.workernode.replicas: Number of nodes of this type to run.

Update the vcenter specification

If you want to change certain aspects of your vSphere environment for your new cluster, you can modify any of the following fields under vcenter:

  • credentials.username
  • credentials.password
  • datastore
  • network
  • resourcepool

Do not modify the following fields:

  • credentials.address
  • datacenter
  • cluster

Create the user cluster

Now that you've populated a create-user-cluster.yaml file, you're ready to use that file to create an additional user cluster.

Run the following command:

gkectl create cluster --config create-user-cluster.yaml --kubeconfig [ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG]

where:

  • create-user-cluster.yaml is the configuration file you just created. You might have chosen a different name for this file.
  • [ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG] points to the existing admin cluster's kubeconfig.

Known issues

Version 1.1: Creating a second user cluster fails when using a vSAN datastore

Refer to GKE on-prem release notes.

Troubleshooting

For more information, refer to Troubleshooting.

Diagnosing cluster issues using gkectl

Use gkectl diagnosecommands to identify cluster issues and share cluster information with Google. See Diagnosing cluster issues.

Running gkectl commands verbosely

-v5

Logging gkectl errors to stderr

--alsologtostderr

Locating gkectl logs in the admin workstation

Even if you don't pass in its debugging flags, you can view gkectl logs in the following admin workstation directory:

/home/ubuntu/.config/gke-on-prem/logs

Locating Cluster API logs in the admin cluster

If a VM fails to start after the admin control plane has started, you can try debugging this by inspecting the Cluster API controllers' logs in the admin cluster:

  1. Find the name of the Cluster API controllers Pod in the kube-system namespace, where [ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG] is the path to the admin cluster's kubeconfig file:

    kubectl --kubeconfig [ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG] -n kube-system get pods | grep clusterapi-controllers
  2. Open the Pod's logs, where [POD_NAME] is the name of the Pod. Optionally, use grep or a similar tool to search for errors:

    kubectl --kubeconfig [ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG] -n kube-system logs [POD_NAME] vsphere-controller-manager