Creating admin and user clusters

Learn how to create an admin cluster and user cluster with basic configuration.

The steps in this topic assume that you used gkeadm to create your admin workstation. If you did not use gkeadm and instead followed the advanced topic Creating an admin workstation with a static IP address, you might need to make adjustments as explained in each individual step. For a DHCP admin workstation, you must use the corresponding DHCP installation guide.

If you are behind a proxy, all gkectl commands automatically use the same proxy that you set in your configuration file for internet requests from the admin workstation. If your admin workstation is not located behind the same proxy, refer to the "Manual proxy options" in the advanced Creating an admin workstation topics: Static IP | DHCP.

SSH into your admin workstation

SSH into your admin workstation by following the instructions in Getting an SSH connection to your admin workstation.

Your allowlisted service account is activated on your admin workstation. Do all the remaining steps in this topic on your admin workstation.

Configuring static IPs for your admin cluster

To specify the static IP addresses that you want to use for your admin cluster, create a host configuration file named admin-hostconfig.yaml. For this exercise, you need to specify five IP addresses to be used by the admin cluster.

The following is an example of a host configuration file with five hosts:

hostconfig:
  dns: 172.16.255.1
  tod: 216.239.35.0
  otherdns:
  - 8.8.8.8
  - 8.8.4.4
  othertod:
  - ntp.ubuntu.com
  searchdomainsfordns:
  - "my.local.com"
blocks:
  - netmask: 255.255.252.0
    gateway: 172.16.23.254
    ips:
    - ip: 172.16.20.10
      hostname: admin-host1
    - ip: 172.16.20.11
      hostname: admin-host2
    - ip: 172.16.20.12
      hostname: admin-host3
    - ip: 172.16.20.13
      hostname: admin-host4
    - ip: 172.16.20.14
      hostname: admin-host5

The ips field is an array of IP addresses and hostnames. These are the IP addresses and hostnames that GKE on-prem will assign to your admin cluster nodes.

In the host configuration file, you also specify the addresses of the DNS servers, time servers, and default gateway that the admin cluster nodes will use.

The searchdomainsfordns field is an array of DNS search domains to use in the cluster. These domains are used as part of a domain search list.

Configuring static IPs for your user cluster

To specify the static IP addresses that you want to use for your user cluster, create a host configuration file named user-hostconfig.yaml.

The following is an example of a host configuration file with three hosts:

hostconfig:
  dns: 172.16.255.1
  tod: 216.239.35.0
  otherdns:
  - 8.8.8.8
  - 8.8.4.4
  othertod:
  - ntp.ubuntu.com
  searchdomainsfordns:
  - "my.local.com"
blocks:
  - netmask: 255.255.252.0
    gateway: 172.16.23.254
    ips:
    - ip: 172.16.20.15
      hostname: user-host1
    - ip: 172.16.20.16
      hostname: user-host2
    - ip: 172.16.20.17
      hostname: user-host3

The ips field is an array of IP addresses and hostnames. These are the IP addresses and hostnames that GKE on-prem will assign to your user cluster nodes.

In the host configuration file, you also specify the addresses of the DNS servers, time servers, and default gateway that the user cluster nodes will use.

The searchdomainsfordns field is an array of DNS search domains to use in the cluster. These domains are used as part of a domain search list.

Populated fields in your GKE on-prem configuration file

Recall that when you created your admin workstation, you filled in a configuration file named admin-ws-config.yaml. The gkeadm command-line tool used your admin-ws-config.yaml file to create the admin workstation.

When gkeadm created your admin workstation, it generated a second configuration file namedconfig.yaml. This configuration file, which is on your admin workstation, is for creating GKE on-prem clusters.

The admin-ws-config.yaml and config.yaml files have several fields in common. The values for those common fields are already populated in your config.yaml file.

These are the fields that are already populated with values that you provided when you created your admin workstation:

vcenter:
  credentials:
    address:
    username:
    password:
  datacenter:
  datastore:
  cluster:
  network:
  resourcepool:
  cacertpath:
gkeconnect:
  projectid:
  registerserviceaccountkeypath:
  agentserviceaccountkeypath:
stackdriver:
  projectid:
  serviceaccountkeypath:
gcrkeypath:

Filling in the rest of your GKE on-prem configuration file

Next you need to fill in the remaining fields in your config.yaml file.

bundlepath

The GKE on-prem bundle file contains all of the components in a particular release of GKE on-prem. Set the value of bundlepath to the path of the admin workstation's bundle file.

bundlepath: /var/lib/gke/bundles/gke-onprem-vsphere-1.4.3-gke.3-full.tgz

vcenter.datadisk

GKE on-prem creates a virtual machine disk (VMDK) to hold the Kubernetes object data for the admin cluster. The installer creates the VMDK for you, but you must provide a name for the VMDK in the vcenter.datadisk field. For example:

vcenter:
  ...
  datadisk: "my-disk.vmdk"
vSAN datastore: Creating a folder for the VMDK

If you are using a vSAN datastore, you need to put the VMDK in a folder. You must manually create the folder ahead of time. To do so, you could use govc to create a folder:

govc datastore.mkdir -namespace=true my-gke-on-prem-folder

Then set vcenter.datadisk to the path of the VMDK, including the folder. For example:

vcenter:
...
datadisk: "my-gke-on-prem-folder/my-disk.vmdk"

In version 1.1.1, a known issue requires that you provide the folder's universally unique identifier (UUID) instead of its path.

proxy

If your network is behind a proxy server, you must specify the proxy address and any addresses that should not go through the proxy server.

Set proxy.url to specify the HTTP address of your proxy server. You must include the port number even if it's the same as the scheme's default port. The proxy server you specify here is used by your GKE on-prem clusters. Also, your admin workstation is automatically configured to use this same proxy server unless you set the HTTPS_PROXY environment variable on your admin workstation.

Set proxy.noproxy to define a list of IP addresses, IP address ranges, host names, and domain names that should not go through the proxy server. When GKE on-prem sends a request to one of these addresses, hosts, or domains, that request is sent directly.

Example:

proxy:
  url: "http://my-proxy.example.local:80"
  noproxy: "10.151.222.0/24, my-host.example.local,10.151.2.1"

admincluster.ipblockfilepath

Because you are using static IP addresses, you must have a host configuration file as described in Configuring static IPs. Provide the path to your host configuration file in the admincluster.ipblockfilepath field. For example:

admincluster:
  ipblockfilepath: "/my-config-directory/admin-hostconfig.yaml"

admincluster.bigip.credentials

GKE on-prem needs to know the IP address or hostname, username, and password of your F5 BIG-IP load balancer. Set the values under admincluster.bigip to provide this information. Put an anchor, &bigip-credentials, after credentials so you don't have to repeat this information in the usercluster section. For example:

admincluster:
  ...
  bigip:
    credentials: &bigip-credentials
      address: "203.0.113.2"
      username: "my-admin-f5-name"
      password: "rJDlm^%7aOzw"

admincluster.bigip.partition

Previously, you created a BIG-IP partition for your admin cluster. Set admincluster.bigip.partition to the name of your partition. For example:

admincluster:
  ...
  bigip:
    partition: "my-admin-f5-partition"

admincluster.vips

Set the value of admincluster.vips.controlplanevip to the IP address that you have chosen to configure on the load balancer for the Kubernetes API server of the admin cluster. Set the value of ingressvip to the IP address you have chosen to configure on the load balancer for the admin cluster's ingress service. For example:

admincluster:
  ...
  vips:
    controlplanevip: 203.0.113.3
    ingressvip: 203.0.113.4

admincluster.serviceiprange and admincluster.podiprange

The admin cluster must have a range of IP addresses to use for Services and a range of IP addresses to use for Pods. These ranges are specified by the admincluster.serviceiprange and admincluster.podiprange fields. These fields are populated when you run gkectl create-config. If you like, you can change the populated values to values of your choice.

The Service and Pod ranges must not overlap. Also, the Service and Pod ranges must not overlap with IP addresses that are used for nodes in any cluster.

Example:

admincluster:
  ...
  serviceiprange: 10.96.232.0/24
  podiprange: 192.168.0.0/16

usercluster.ipblockfilepath

Because you are using static IP addresses, you must have a host configuration file as described in Configuring static IPs. Provide the path to your host configuration file in the usercluster.ipblockfilepath field. For example:

usercluster:
  ipblockfilepath: "/my-config-directory/user-hostconfig.yaml"

usercluster.bigip.credentials

Put a reference, *bigip-credentials, after usercluster.bigip.credentials to use the same address, username, and password that you specified in admincluster.bigip.credentials. For example:

usercluster:
  ...
  bigip:
    credentials: *bigip-credentials

usercluster.bigip.partition

Previously, you created a BIG-IP partition for your user cluster. Set usercluster.bigip.partition to the name of your partition. For example:

usercluster:
  ...
  bigip:
    partition: "my-user-f5-partition"
  ...

usercluster.vips

Set the value of usercluster.vips.controlplanevip to the IP address that you have chosen to configure on the load balancer for the Kubernetes API server of the user cluster. Set the value of ingressvip to the IP address you have chosen to configure on the load balancer for the user cluster's ingress service. For example:

usercluster:
  ...
  vips:
    controlplanevip: 203.0.113.6
    ingressvip: 203.0.113.7

usercluster.serviceiprange and usercluster.podiprange

The user cluster must have a range of IP addresses to use for Services and a range of IP addresses to use for Pods. These ranges are specified by the usercluster.serviceiprange and usercluster.podiprange fields. These fields are populated when you run gkectl create-config. If you prefer, you can change the populated values to values of your choice.

The Service and Pod ranges must not overlap. Also, the Service and Pod ranges must not overlap with IP addresses that are used for nodes in any cluster.

Example:

usercluster:
  ...
  serviceiprange: 10.96.233.0/24
  podiprange: 172.16.0.0/12

Disabling VMware DRS anti-affinity rules

GKE on-prem automatically creates VMware Distributed Resource Scheduler (DRS) anti-affinity rules for your user cluster's nodes, causing them to be spread across at least three physical hosts in your datacenter.

This feature requires that your vSphere environment meets the following conditions:

  • VMware DRS is enabled. VMware DRS requires vSphere Enterprise Plus license edition. To learn how to enable DRS, see Enabling VMware DRS in a cluster.
  • The vSphere user account provided in the vcenter field has the Host.Inventory.EditCluster permission.
  • There are at least three physical hosts available.

Recall that if you have a vSphere Standard license, you cannot enable VMware DRS.

If you do not have DRS enabled, or if you do not have at least three hosts to which vSphere VMs can be scheduled, add usercluster.antiaffinitygroups.enabled: false to your configuration file. For example:

usercluster:
  ...
  antiaffinitygroups:
    enabled: false

For more information, see the release notes for version 1.1.0-gke.6

lbmode

Set lbmode to "Integrated". For example:

lbmode: "Integrated"

stackdriver.clusterlocation

Set stackdriver.clusterlocation to a Google Cloud region where you want to store logs. It is a good idea to choose a region that is near your on-prem data center.

stackdriver.enablevpc

Set stackdriver.enablevpc to true if you have your cluster's network controlled by a VPC. This ensures that all telemetry flows through Google's restricted IP addresses.

Additional fields in the configuration file

The GKE on-prem configuration file has several fields in addition to the ones shown in this topic. For example, you can use the manuallbspec field to configure GKE on-prem to run in manual load balancing mode.

For a complete description of the fields in the configuration file, see Installing using DHCP and Installing using static IP addresses.

Validating the configuration file

After you've modified the configuration file, run gkectl check-config to verify that the file is valid and can be used for installation:

gkectl check-config --config config.yaml

If the command returns any FAILURE messages, fix the issues and validate the file again.

If you want to skip the more time-consuming validations, pass the --fast flag. To skip individual validations, use the --skip-validation-xxx flags. To learn more about the check-config command, see Running preflight checks.

Running gkectl prepare

Run gkectl prepare to initialize your vSphere environment:

gkectl prepare --config config.yaml --skip-validation-all

Creating the admin and user clusters

  1. Create the admin cluster and the user cluster by running the gkectl create cluster command.

    gkectl create cluster --config config.yaml --skip-validation-all

    The gkectl create cluster command creates kubeconfig files named [CLUSTER_NAME]-kubeconfig in the current directory where [CLUSTER_NAME] is the name that you set for cluster. Example: MY-CLUSTER-kubeconfig

    The GKE on-prem documentation uses the following placeholders to refer to these kubeconfig files:

    • Admin cluster: [ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG]
    • User cluster: [USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG]
  2. Verify that the cluster are created and running:

    1. To verify the admin cluster, run the following command:

      kubectl get nodes --kubeconfig [ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG]

      The output shows the admin cluster nodes.

    2. To verify the user cluster, run the following command:

      kubectl get nodes --kubeconfig [USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG]

      The output shows the user cluster nodes. For example:

      NAME                        STATUS   ROLES    AGE   VERSION
      xxxxxx-1234-ipam-15008527   Ready    <none>   12m   v1.14.7-gke.24
      xxxxxx-1234-ipam-1500852a   Ready    <none>   12m   v1.14.7-gke.24
      xxxxxx-1234-ipam-15008536   Ready    <none>   12m   v1.14.7-gke.24
      

Continue to the next section to learn how to deploy an application to your user cluster.