This document shows how to create an admin workstation, for Google Distributed Cloud, that you can use to create clusters.
The steps in this document use the gkeadm
command-line tool, which is
available for 64-bit Linux, Windows 10, Windows Server 2019, and macOS 10.15
and higher.
The instructions here are complete. For a shorter introduction to creating an admin workstation, see Create an admin workstation (quickstart).
Before you begin
Know your vCenter server address.
Create one or more Google Cloud projects as described in Using multiple Google Cloud projects.
Planning your service accounts
When you use gkeadm
to create an admin workstation, you have the option of
letting gkeadm
create some of your service accounts and keys for you. In that
case, gkeadm
also grants the appropriate Identity and Access Management roles to the service
accounts.
As an alternative, you can create your service accounts and keys manually. In that case, you must manually grant IAM roles to your service accounts.
Creating service accounts manually gives you more flexibility than having
gkeadm
create them for you:
Automatically created service accounts all have the same parent Google Cloud project as your component access service account. When you create a service account manually, you can choose the parent Google Cloud project.
Automatically created service accounts are all granted IAM roles on the parent Google Cloud project of your component access service account. This is fine if that is the only Google Cloud project associated with your clusters. But if you want to associate your clusters with multiple Google Cloud projects, then you need the flexibility to grant roles to a service account on a Google Cloud project of your choice.
If you decide to create your own service accounts, follow the instructions in Service accounts and keys.
Regardless of whether you have gkeadm
create service accounts
for you automatically, there is one service account that you must create
manually: your component access service account. For instructions on how to create
your component access service account and grant it the appropriate
IAM roles, see
Component access service account.
Generating templates for your configuration files
Download gkeadm
to your current directory.
Generate templates:
./gkeadm create config
The preceding command created these files in your current directory:
credential.yaml
admin-ws-config.yaml
Filling in credential.yaml
In credential.yaml
, fill in your vCenter username and password. For example:
kind: CredentialFile items: - name: vCenter username: "my-account-name" password: "AadmpqGPqq!a"
Filling in admin-ws-config.yaml
Several fields in admin-ws-config.yaml
are already filled in with default
or generated values. You can keep the populated values or make changes as you
prefer.
Fields that you must fill in
Fill in the following required fields. For information on how to fill in the fields, Admin workstation configuration file.
gcp: componentAccessServiceAccountKeyPath: "Fill in" vCenter: credentials: address: "Fill in" datacenter: "Fill in" datastore: "Fill in" cluster: "Fill in" network: "Fill in" resourcePool: "Fill in" caCertPath: "Fill in"
If your admin workstation will be behind a proxy server, fill in the
proxyURL
field:
adminWorkstation: proxyURL: "Fill in"
If you want your admin workstation to get its IP address from a DHCP server,
set ipAllocationMode
to "dhcp"
, and remove the hostconfig
section:
adminWorkstation: network: ipAllocationMode: "dhcp"
If you want to specify a static IP address for your admin workstation, set
ipAllocationMode
to "static"
, and fill in the
hostconfig
section:
adminWorkstation: network: ipAllocationMode: "static" hostconfig: ip: "Fill in" gateway: "Fill in" netmask: "Fill in" dns: - "Fill in"
Logging in
The Google Account that is set as your SDK account
property
is called your SDK account. The gkeadm
command-line tool uses your SDK
account to download the admin workstation OVA and enable services in your
Google Cloud project.
If you choose to have gkeadm
automatically create service accounts for you,
then gkeadm
also uses your SDK account to create service accounts and keys,
and to grant roles to service accounts.
So it is important that you set your SDK account
property before you run
gkeadm
to create an admin workstation.
Log in with any Google Account. This sets your SDK account
property:
gcloud auth login
Verify that your SDK account
property is set correctly:
gcloud config list
The output shows the values of your SDK account
property.
For example:
[core] account = my-name@google.com disable_usage_reporting = False Your active configuration is: [default]
Grant roles to your SDK account
Your SDK account must have the following
IAM role
on the parent Google Cloud project of your component access service account.
This is so that gkeadm
can enable services on the Google Cloud project.
serviceUsage.serviceUsageAdmin
If you choose to have gkeadm
automatically create service accounts for you,
then your SDK account must also have the following roles on the parent
project of your component access service account. This is so that gkeadm
can
create service accounts and keys.
resourcemanager.projectIamAdmin
iam.serviceAccountCreator
iam.serviceAccountKeyAdmin
To grant roles on a Google Cloud project, you must have certain permissions on the Google Cloud project. For details, see Granting, changing, and revoking access to resources.
If you have the required permissions, you can grant the roles yourself. Otherwise, someone else in your organization must grant the roles for you.
To grant the required role to your SDK account:
Linux and macOS
gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding PROJECT_ID \ --member="user:ACCOUNT" \ --role="roles/serviceusage.serviceUsageAdmin"
Windows
gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding PROJECT_ID ^ --member="user:ACCOUNT" ^ --role="roles/serviceusage.serviceUsageAdmin"
Replace the following:
PROJECT_ID
: the ID of the parent Google Cloud project of your component access service accountACCOUNT
: your SDK account
To grant additional roles in case you want gkeadm
to automatically create
service accounts"
Linux and macOS
gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding PROJECT_ID \ --member="user:ACCOUNT" \ --role="roles/resourcemanager.projectIamAdmin" gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding PROJECT_ID \ --member="user:ACCOUNT" \ --role="roles/iam.serviceAccountCreator" gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding PROJECT_ID \ --member="user:ACCOUNT" \ --role="roles/iam.serviceAccountKeyAdmin"
Windows
gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding PROJECT_ID ^ --member="user:ACCOUNT" ^ --role="roles/resourcemanager.projectIamAdmin" gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding PROJECT_ID ^ --member="user:ACCOUNT" ^ --role="roles/iam.serviceAccountCreator" gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding PROJECT_ID ^ --member="user:ACCOUNT" ^ --role="roles/iam.serviceAccountKeyAdmin"
Replace the following:
PROJECT_ID
: the ID of the parent project of your component access service accountACCOUNT
: your SDK account
Creating your admin workstation
Enter this command to create your admin workstation. If you want
gkeadm
to create service accounts for you, include the
--auto-create-service-accounts
flag. If you want to manually create
your own service accounts, omit the flag.
./gkeadm create admin-workstation [--auto-create-service-accounts]
The output gives detailed information about the creation of your admin workstation:
... Getting ... service account... ... ******************************************************************** Admin workstation is ready to use. Admin workstation information saved to /usr/local/google/home/me/my-admin-workstation This file is required for future upgrades SSH into the admin workstation with the following command: ssh -i /usr/local/google/home/me/.ssh/gke-admin-workstation ubuntu@172.16.5.1 ********************************************************************
Getting an SSH connection to your admin workstation
Near the end of the preceding output there is a command you can use to get an SSH connection to your admin workstation. Enter that command now. For example:
ssh -i /usr/local/google/home/me/.ssh/gke-admin-workstation ubuntu@172.16.5.1
List the files on your admin workstation:
ls -1
In the output, you can see two cluster configuration files, your CA
certificate file, and the JSON key file for your component access service
account. If gkeadm
created service accounts for you, you can also
see the JSON key files for those service accounts. For example:
admin-cluster.yaml user-cluster.yaml vcenter-ca-cert.pem component-access-key.json
Verify that gkeadm
activated your component access service account on your
admin workstation:
gcloud config get-value account
Copying JSON key file to your admin workstation
Before you create a cluster, the JSON key files for your service accounts must be on your admin workstation in the home directory.
The key for your component access service account is already on your admin workstation.
If you included the --auto-create-service-accounts
flag when you ran
gkeadm create admin-workstation
, then then the keys for the following service
accounts are already on your admin workstation in the home directory. Otherwise
you must manually copy the keys to the home directory of your admin workstation:
- Connect-register service account
- Logging-monitoring service account
If you created any of the following service accounts, you must manually copy the keys for those service accounts to the home directory of your admin workstation:
- Usage metering service account
- Audit logging service account
- Binary authorization service account