mirror of
https://github.com/jbowdre/runtimeterror.git
synced 2024-12-11 14:42:18 +00:00
117 lines
7.3 KiB
Markdown
117 lines
7.3 KiB
Markdown
---
|
||
title: "Logging in to a Tanzu Community Edition Kubernetes Cluster from a new device" # Title of the blog post.
|
||
date: 2022-02-01T22:07:18-06:00 # Date of post creation.
|
||
# lastmod: 2022-02-01T10:58:57-06:00 # Date when last modified
|
||
description: "The Tanzu Community Edition documentation does a great job of explaining how to authenticate to a newly-deployed cluster at the tail end of the installation steps, but how do you log in from another system once it's set up?" # Description used for search engine.
|
||
featured: false # Sets if post is a featured post, making appear on the home page side bar.
|
||
draft: false # Sets whether to render this page. Draft of true will not be rendered.
|
||
toc: false # Controls if a table of contents should be generated for first-level links automatically.
|
||
usePageBundles: true
|
||
# menu: main
|
||
featureImage: "tanzu.png" # Sets featured image on blog post.
|
||
# featureImageAlt: 'Description of image' # Alternative text for featured image.
|
||
# featureImageCap: 'This is the featured image.' # Caption (optional).
|
||
thumbnail: "tanzu.png" # Sets thumbnail image appearing inside card on homepage.
|
||
# shareImage: "share.png" # Designate a separate image for social media sharing.
|
||
codeLineNumbers: false # Override global value for showing of line numbers within code block.
|
||
categories: VMware
|
||
tags:
|
||
- vmware
|
||
- kubernetes
|
||
- tanzu
|
||
comments: true # Disable comment if false.
|
||
---
|
||
When I [set up my Tanzu Community Edition environment](/tanzu-community-edition-k8s-homelab/), I did so from a Linux VM since the containerized Linux environment on my Chromebook doesn't support the `kind` bootstrap cluster used for the deployment. But now that the Kubernetes cluster is up and running, I'd like to be able to connect to it directly without the aid of a jumpbox. How do I get the appropriate cluster configuration over to my Chromebook?
|
||
|
||
The Tanzu CLI actually makes that pretty easy - once I figured out the appropriate incantation. I just needed to use the `tanzu management-cluster kubeconfig get` command on my Linux VM to export the `kubeconfig` of my management (`tce-mgmt`) cluster to a file:
|
||
```shell
|
||
tanzu management-cluster kubeconfig get --admin --export-file tce-mgmt-kubeconfig.yaml # [tl! .cmd]
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
I then used `scp` to pull the file from the VM into my local Linux environment, and proceeded to [install `kubectl`](/tanzu-community-edition-k8s-homelab/#kubectl-binary) and the [`tanzu` CLI](/tanzu-community-edition-k8s-homelab/#tanzu-cli) (making sure to also [enable shell auto-completion](/enable-tanzu-cli-auto-completion-bash-zsh/) along the way!).
|
||
|
||
Now I'm ready to import the configuration locally with `tanzu login` on my Chromebook:
|
||
|
||
```shell
|
||
tanzu login --kubeconfig ~/projects/tanzu-homelab/tanzu-setup/tce-mgmt-kubeconfig.yaml \ # [tl! .cmd]
|
||
--context tce-mgmt-admin@tce-mgmt --name tce-mgmt
|
||
✔ successfully logged in to management cluster using the kubeconfig tce-mgmt # [tl! .nocopy]
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
{{% notice tip "Use the absolute path" %}}
|
||
Pass in the full path to the exported kubeconfig file. This will help the Tanzu CLI to load the correct config across future terminal sessions.
|
||
{{% /notice %}}
|
||
|
||
Even though that's just importing the management cluster it actually grants access to both the management and workload clusters:
|
||
```shell
|
||
tanzu cluster list # [tl! .cmd]
|
||
NAME NAMESPACE STATUS CONTROLPLANE WORKERS KUBERNETES ROLES PLAN # [tl! .nocopy:2]
|
||
tce-work default running 1/1 1/1 v1.21.2+vmware.1 <none> dev
|
||
|
||
tanzu cluster get tce-work # [tl! .cmd]
|
||
NAME NAMESPACE STATUS CONTROLPLANE WORKERS KUBERNETES ROLES # [tl! .nocopy:start]
|
||
tce-work default running 1/1 1/1 v1.21.2+vmware.1 <none>
|
||
ℹ
|
||
|
||
Details:
|
||
|
||
NAME READY SEVERITY REASON SINCE MESSAGE
|
||
/tce-work True 24h
|
||
├─ClusterInfrastructure - VSphereCluster/tce-work True 24h
|
||
├─ControlPlane - KubeadmControlPlane/tce-work-control-plane True 24h
|
||
│ └─Machine/tce-work-control-plane-vc2pb True 24h
|
||
└─Workers
|
||
└─MachineDeployment/tce-work-md-0
|
||
└─Machine/tce-work-md-0-687444b744-crc9q True 24h
|
||
# [tl! .nocopy:end]
|
||
tanzu management-cluster get # [tl! .cmd]
|
||
NAME NAMESPACE STATUS CONTROLPLANE WORKERS KUBERNETES ROLES # [tl! .nocopy:start]
|
||
tce-mgmt tkg-system running 1/1 1/1 v1.21.2+vmware.1 management
|
||
|
||
|
||
Details:
|
||
|
||
NAME READY SEVERITY REASON SINCE MESSAGE
|
||
/tce-mgmt True 23h
|
||
├─ClusterInfrastructure - VSphereCluster/tce-mgmt True 23h
|
||
├─ControlPlane - KubeadmControlPlane/tce-mgmt-control-plane True 23h
|
||
│ └─Machine/tce-mgmt-control-plane-7pwz7 True 23h
|
||
└─Workers
|
||
└─MachineDeployment/tce-mgmt-md-0
|
||
└─Machine/tce-mgmt-md-0-745b858d44-5llk5 True 23h
|
||
|
||
|
||
Providers:
|
||
|
||
NAMESPACE NAME TYPE PROVIDERNAME VERSION WATCHNAMESPACE
|
||
capi-kubeadm-bootstrap-system bootstrap-kubeadm BootstrapProvider kubeadm v0.3.23
|
||
capi-kubeadm-control-plane-system control-plane-kubeadm ControlPlaneProvider kubeadm v0.3.23
|
||
capi-system cluster-api CoreProvider cluster-api v0.3.23
|
||
capv-system infrastructure-vsphere InfrastructureProvider vsphere v0.7.10 # [tl! .nocopy:end]
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
And I can then tell `kubectl` about the two clusters:
|
||
```shell
|
||
tanzu management-cluster kubeconfig get tce-mgmt --admin # [tl! .cmd]
|
||
Credentials of cluster 'tce-mgmt' have been saved # [tl! .nocopy:2]
|
||
You can now access the cluster by running 'kubectl config use-context tce-mgmt-admin@tce-mgmt'
|
||
|
||
tanzu cluster kubeconfig get tce-work --admin # [tl! .cmd]
|
||
Credentials of cluster 'tce-work' have been saved # [tl! .nocopy:1]
|
||
You can now access the cluster by running 'kubectl config use-context tce-work-admin@tce-work'
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
And sure enough, there are my contexts:
|
||
```shell
|
||
kubectl config get-contexts # [tl! .cmd]
|
||
CURRENT NAME CLUSTER AUTHINFO NAMESPACE # [tl! .nocopy:3]
|
||
tce-mgmt-admin@tce-mgmt tce-mgmt tce-mgmt-admin
|
||
* tce-work-admin@tce-work tce-work tce-work-admin
|
||
|
||
kubectl get nodes -o wide # [tl! .cmd]
|
||
NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION INTERNAL-IP EXTERNAL-IP OS-IMAGE KERNEL-VERSION CONTAINER-RUNTIME # [tl! .nocopy:2]
|
||
tce-work-control-plane-vc2pb Ready control-plane,master 23h v1.21.2+vmware.1 192.168.1.132 192.168.1.132 VMware Photon OS/Linux 4.19.198-1.ph3 containerd://1.4.6
|
||
tce-work-md-0-687444b744-crc9q Ready <none> 23h v1.21.2+vmware.1 192.168.1.133 192.168.1.133 VMware Photon OS/Linux 4.19.198-1.ph3 containerd://1.4.6
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
Perfect, now I can get back to Tanzuing from my Chromebook without having to jump through a VM. (And, [thanks to Tailscale](/secure-networking-made-simple-with-tailscale/), I can even access my TCE resources remotely!)
|