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Markdown
---
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title: "VMware Tanzu Community Edition Kubernetes Platform in a Homelab" # Title of the blog post.
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date: 2022-01-12 # Date of post creation.
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# lastmod: 2022-01-06T09:42:51-06:00 # Date when last modified
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description: "Gaining familiarity with VMware Tanzu Community Edition by deploying phpIPAM on Kubernetes in my homelab" # Description used for search engine.
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featured: false # Sets if post is a featured post, making appear on the home page side bar.
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draft: false # Sets whether to render this page. Draft of true will not be rendered.
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toc: true # Controls if a table of contents should be generated for first-level links automatically.
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usePageBundles: true
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# menu: main
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# featureImage: "file.png" # Sets featured image on blog post.
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# featureImageAlt: 'Description of image' # Alternative text for featured image.
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# featureImageCap: 'This is the featured image.' # Caption (optional).
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thumbnail: "tanzu_community_edition.png" # Sets thumbnail image appearing inside card on homepage.
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# shareImage: "share.png" # Designate a separate image for social media sharing.
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codeLineNumbers: false # Override global value for showing of line numbers within code block.
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series: K8s on vSphere
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tags:
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- vmware
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- linux
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- kubernetes
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- docker
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- containers
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- tanzu
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- homelab
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comment: true # Disable comment if false.
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---
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Back in October, VMware [announced](https://tanzu.vmware.com/content/blog/vmware-tanzu-community-edition-announcement) [Tanzu Community Edition](https://tanzucommunityedition.io/) as way to provide "a full-featured, easy-to-manage Kubernetes platform that’s perfect for users and learners alike." TCE bundles a bunch of open-source components together in a modular, "batteries included but swappable" way:
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![Tanzu Community Edition components](tanzu_community_edition.png)
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I've been meaning to brush up on my Kubernetes skills so I thought deploying and using TCE in my self-contained [homelab](/vmware-home-lab-on-intel-nuc-9/) would be a fun and rewarding learning exercise - and it was!
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Here's how I did it.
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### Planning
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TCE supports several different deployment scenarios and targets. It can be configured as separate Management and Workload Clusters or as a single integrated Standalone Cluster, and deployed to cloud providers like AWS and Azure, on-premise vSphere, or even a local Docker environment[^yo_dawg]. I'll be using the standard Management + Workload Cluster setup in my on-prem vSphere, so I start by reviewing the [Prepare to Deploy a Cluster to vSphere](https://tanzucommunityedition.io/docs/latest/vsphere/) documentation to get an idea of what I'll need.
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Looking ahead, part of the installation process creates a local [KIND](https://kind.sigs.k8s.io/) cluster for bootstrapping the Management and Workload clusters. I do most of my home computing (and homelab work) by using the [Linux environment available on my Chromebook](/setting-up-linux-on-a-new-lenovo-chromebook-duet-bonus-arm64-complications/). Unfortunately I know from past experience that KIND will not work within this environment so I'll be using a Debian 10 VM to do the deployment.
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[^yo_dawg]: Yo dawg, I heard you like containers...
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#### Networking
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The Kubernetes node VMs will need to be attached to a network with a DHCP server to assign their addresses, and that network will need to be able to talk to vSphere. My router handles DHCP for the range `192.168.1.101-250` so I'll plan on using that.
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I'll also need to set aside a few static IPs for this project. These will need to be routable and within the same subnet as the DHCP range, but excluded from that DHCP range.
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| IP Address | Purpose |
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| --- | --- |
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| `192.168.1.60` | Control plane for Management cluster |
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| `192.168.1.61` | Control plane for Workload cluster |
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| `192.168.1.64 - 192.168.1.80` | IP range for Workload load balancer |
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### Prerequisites
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Moving on to the [Getting Started](https://tanzucommunityedition.io/docs/latest/getting-started/), I'll need to grab some software before I can actually Get Started.
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#### Kubernetes control plane image
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I need to download a VMware OVA which can be used for deploying my Kubernetes nodes from the VMWare Customer Connect portal [here](https://customerconnect.vmware.com/downloads/get-download?downloadGroup=TCE-090)[^register]. There are a few different options available. I'll get the Photon release with the highest Kubernetes version currently available, `photon-3-kube-v1.21.2+vmware.1-tkg.2-12816990095845873721.ova`.
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Once the file is downloaded, I'll log into my vCenter and use the **Deploy OVF Template** action to deploy a new VM using the OVA. I won't bother booting the machine once deployed but will rename it to `k8s-node` to make it easier to identify later on and then convert it to a template.
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![New k8s-node template](k8s-node_template.png)
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[^register]: Register [here](https://customerconnect.vmware.com/account-registration) if you don't yet have an account.
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#### Docker
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I've already got Docker installed on this machine, but if I didn't I would follow the instructions [here](https://docs.docker.com/engine/install/debian/) to get it installed and then follow [these instructions](https://docs.docker.com/engine/install/linux-postinstall/#manage-docker-as-a-non-root-user) to enable management of Docker without root.
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I also verify that my install is using `cgroup` version 1 as version 2 is not currently supported:
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```command-session
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docker info | grep -i cgroup
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Cgroup Driver: cgroupfs
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Cgroup Version: 1
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```
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#### `kubectl` binary
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Next up, I'll install `kubectl` [as described here](https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/tools/install-kubectl-linux/) - though the latest version is currently `1.23` and that won't work with the `1.21` control plane node image I downloaded from VMware (`kubectl` needs to be within one minor version of the control plane). Instead I need to find the latest `1.22` release.
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I can look at the [releases page on GithHub](https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/releases) to see that the latest release for me is `1.22.5`. With this newfound knowledge I can follow the [Install kubectl binary with curl on Linux](https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/tools/install-kubectl-linux/#install-kubectl-binary-with-curl-on-linux) instructions to grab that specific version:
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```command-session
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curl -LO https://dl.k8s.io/release/v1.22.5/bin/linux/amd64/kubectl
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% Total % Received % Xferd Average Speed Time Time Time Current
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Dload Upload Total Spent Left Speed
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100 154 100 154 0 0 2298 0 --:--:-- --:--:-- --:--:-- 2298
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100 44.7M 100 44.7M 0 0 56.9M 0 --:--:-- --:--:-- --:--:-- 56.9M
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```
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```command-session
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sudo install -o root -g root -m 0755 kubectl /usr/local/bin/kubectl
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[sudo] password for john:
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```
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```command-session
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kubectl version --client
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Client Version: version.Info{Major:"1", Minor:"22", GitVersion:"v1.22.5", GitCommit:"5c99e2ac2ff9a3c549d9ca665e7bc05a3e18f07e", GitTreeState:"clean", BuildDate:"2021-12-16T08:38:33Z", GoVersion:"go1.16.12", Compiler:"gc", Platform:"linux/amd64"}
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```
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#### `kind` binary
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It's not strictly a requirement, but having the `kind` executable available will be handy for troubleshooting during the bootstrap process in case anything goes sideways. It can be installed in basically the same was as `kubectl`:
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```command-session
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curl -Lo ./kind https://kind.sigs.k8s.io/dl/v0.11.1/kind-linux-amd64
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% Total % Received % Xferd Average Speed Time Time Time Current
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Dload Upload Total Spent Left Speed
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100 98 100 98 0 0 513 0 --:--:-- --:--:-- --:--:-- 513
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100 655 100 655 0 0 2212 0 --:--:-- --:--:-- --:--:-- 10076
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100 6660k 100 6660k 0 0 11.8M 0 --:--:-- --:--:-- --:--:-- 11.8M
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```
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```command
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sudo install -o root -g root -m 0755 kind /usr/local/bin/kind
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```
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```command-session
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kind version
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kind v0.11.1 go1.16.5 linux/amd64
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```
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#### Tanzu CLI
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The final bit of required software is the Tanzu CLI, which can be downloaded from the [project on GitHub](https://github.com/vmware-tanzu/community-edition/releases).
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```command-session
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curl -H "Accept: application/vnd.github.v3.raw" \
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-L https://api.github.com/repos/vmware-tanzu/community-edition/contents/hack/get-tce-release.sh | \
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bash -s v0.9.1 linux
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```
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And then unpack it and run the installer:
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```command
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tar xf tce-linux-amd64-v0.9.1.tar.gz
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cd tce-linux-amd64-v0.9.1
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./install.sh
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```
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I can then verify the installation is working correctly:
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```command-session
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tanzu version
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version: v0.2.1
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buildDate: 2021-09-29
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sha: ceaa474
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```
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### Cluster creation
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Okay, now it's time for the good stuff - creating some shiny new Tanzu clusters! The Tanzu CLI really does make this very easy to accomplish.
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#### Management cluster
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I need to create a Management cluster first and I'd like to do that with the UI, so that's as simple as:
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```command
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tanzu management-cluster create --ui
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```
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I should then be able to access the UI by pointing a web browser at `http://127.0.0.1:8080`... but I'm running this on a VM without a GUI, so I'll need to back up and tell it to bind on `0.0.0.0:8080` so the web installer will be accessible across the network. I can also include `--browser none` so that the installer doesn't bother with trying to launch a browser locally.
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```command-session
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tanzu management-cluster create --ui --bind 0.0.0.0:8080 --browser none
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Validating the pre-requisites...
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Serving kickstart UI at http://[::]:8080
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```
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*Now* I can point my local browser to my VM and see the UI:
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![The Tanzu Installer UI](installer_ui.png)
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And then I can click the button at the bottom left to save my eyes[^dark_mode] before selecting the option to deploy on vSphere.
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![Configuring the IaaS Provider](installer_iaas_provider.png)
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I'll plug in the FQDN of my vCenter and provide a username and password to use to connect to it, then hit the **Connect** button. That will prompt me to accept the vCenter's certificate thumbprint, and then I'll be able to select the virtual datacenter that I want to use. Finally, I'll paste in the SSH public key[^gen_key] I'll use for interacting with the cluster.
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I click **Next** and move on to the Management Cluster Settings.
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![Configuring the Management Cluster](installer_management_cluster.png)
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This is for a lab environment that's fairly memory-constrained, so I'll pick the single-node *Development* setup with a *small* instance type. I'll name the cluster `tce-mgmt` and stick with the default `kube-vip` control plane endpoint provider. I plug in the control plane endpoint IP that I'll use for connecting to the cluster and select the *small* instance type for the worker node type.
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I don't have an NSX Advanced Load Balancer or any Metadata to configure so I'll skip past those steps and move on to configuring the Resources.
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![Configuring Resources](installer_resources.png)
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Here I pick to place the Tanzu-related resources in a VM folder named `Tanzu`, to store their data on my single host's single datastore, and to deploy to the one-host `physical-cluster` cluster.
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Now for the Kubernetes Networking Settings:
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![Configuring Kubernetes Networking](installer_k8s_networking.png)
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This bit is actually pretty easy. For Network Name, I select the vSphere network where the `192.168.1.0/24` network I identified earlier lives, `d-Home-Mgmt`. I leave the service and pod CIDR ranges as default.
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I disable the Identity Management option and then pick the `k8s-node` template I had imported to vSphere earlier.
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![Configuring the OS Image](installer_image.png)
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I skip the Tanzu Mission Control piece (since I'm still waiting on access to [TMC Starter](https://tanzu.vmware.com/tmc-starter)) and click the **Review Configuration** button at the bottom of the screen to review my selections.
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![Reviewing the configuration](installer_review.png)
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See the option at the bottom to copy the CLI command? I'll need to use that since clicking the friendly **Deploy** button doesn't seem to work while connected to the web server remotely.
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```command
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tanzu management-cluster create --file /home/john/.config/tanzu/tkg/clusterconfigs/dr94t3m2on.yaml -v 6
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```
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In fact, I'm going to copy that file into my working directory and give it a more descriptive name so that I can re-use it in the future.
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```command
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cp ~/.config/tanzu/tkg/clusterconfigs/dr94t3m2on.yaml ~/projects/tanzu-homelab/tce-mgmt.yaml
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```
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Now I can run the install command:
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```command
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tanzu management-cluster create --file ./tce-mgmt.yaml -v 6
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```
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After a moment or two of verifying prerequisites, I'm met with a polite offer to enable Tanzu Kubernetes Grid Service in vSphere:
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```
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vSphere 7.0 Environment Detected.
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You have connected to a vSphere 7.0 environment which does not have vSphere with Tanzu enabled. vSphere with Tanzu includes
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an integrated Tanzu Kubernetes Grid Service which turns a vSphere cluster into a platform for running Kubernetes workloads in dedicated
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resource pools. Configuring Tanzu Kubernetes Grid Service is done through vSphere HTML5 client.
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Tanzu Kubernetes Grid Service is the preferred way to consume Tanzu Kubernetes Grid in vSphere 7.0 environments. Alternatively you may
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deploy a non-integrated Tanzu Kubernetes Grid instance on vSphere 7.0.
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Note: To skip the prompts and directly deploy a non-integrated Tanzu Kubernetes Grid instance on vSphere 7.0, you can set the 'DEPLOY_TKG_ON_VSPHERE7' configuration variable to 'true'
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Do you want to configure vSphere with Tanzu? [y/N]: n
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Would you like to deploy a non-integrated Tanzu Kubernetes Grid management cluster on vSphere 7.0? [y/N]: y
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```
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That's not what I'm after in this case, though, so I'll answer with a `n` and a `y` to confirm that I want the non-integrated TKG deployment.
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And now I go get coffee as it'll take 10-15 minutes for the deployment to complete.
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![Coffee break!](coffee_break.gif)
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Okay, I'm back - and so is my shell prompt! The deployment completed successfully:
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```
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Waiting for additional components to be up and running...
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Waiting for packages to be up and running...
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Context set for management cluster tce-mgmt as 'tce-mgmt-admin@tce-mgmt'.
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Management cluster created!
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You can now create your first workload cluster by running the following:
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tanzu cluster create [name] -f [file]
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Some addons might be getting installed! Check their status by running the following:
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kubectl get apps -A
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```
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I can run that last command to go ahead and verify that the addon installation has completed:
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```command-session
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kubectl get apps -A
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NAMESPACE NAME DESCRIPTION SINCE-DEPLOY AGE
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tkg-system antrea Reconcile succeeded 26s 6m49s
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tkg-system metrics-server Reconcile succeeded 36s 6m49s
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tkg-system tanzu-addons-manager Reconcile succeeded 22s 8m54s
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tkg-system vsphere-cpi Reconcile succeeded 19s 6m50s
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tkg-system vsphere-csi Reconcile succeeded 36s 6m50s
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```
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And I can use the Tanzu CLI to get some other details about the new management cluster:
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```command-session
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tanzu management-cluster get tce-mgmt
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NAME NAMESPACE STATUS CONTROLPLANE WORKERS KUBERNETES ROLES
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tce-mgmt tkg-system running 1/1 1/1 v1.21.2+vmware.1 management
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Details:
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NAME READY SEVERITY REASON SINCE MESSAGE
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/tce-mgmt True 40m
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├─ClusterInfrastructure - VSphereCluster/tce-mgmt True 41m
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├─ControlPlane - KubeadmControlPlane/tce-mgmt-control-plane True 40m
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│ └─Machine/tce-mgmt-control-plane-xtdnx True 40m
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└─Workers
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└─MachineDeployment/tce-mgmt-md-0
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└─Machine/tce-mgmt-md-0-745b858d44-4c9vv True 40m
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Providers:
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NAMESPACE NAME TYPE PROVIDERNAME VERSION WATCHNAMESPACE
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capi-kubeadm-bootstrap-system bootstrap-kubeadm BootstrapProvider kubeadm v0.3.23
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capi-kubeadm-control-plane-system control-plane-kubeadm ControlPlaneProvider kubeadm v0.3.23
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capi-system cluster-api CoreProvider cluster-api v0.3.23
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capv-system infrastructure-vsphere InfrastructureProvider vsphere v0.7.10
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```
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Excellent! Things are looking good so I can move on to create the cluster which will actually run my workloads.
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[^dark_mode]: Enabling dark mode is probably the most important part of this process.
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[^gen_key]: If I didn't already have a key pair to use I would generate one with `ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 4096 -C "email@example.com"` and add it to my client with `ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa`.
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#### Workload cluster
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I won't use the UI for this but will instead take a copy of my `tce-mgmt.yaml` file and adapt it to suit the workload needs (as described [here](https://tanzucommunityedition.io/docs/latest/workload-clusters/)).
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```command
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cp tce-mgmt.yaml tce-work.yaml
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vi tce-work.yaml
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```
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I only need to change 2 of the parameters in this file:
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- `CLUSTER_NAME`: from `tce-mgmt` to `tce-work`
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- `VSPHERE_CONTROL_PLANE_ENDPOINT`: from `192.168.1.60` to `192.168.1.61`
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I *could* change a few others if I wanted to[^i_wont]:
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- (Optional) `CLUSTER_PLAN` to change between `dev`/`prod` plans independently
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- (Optional) `CONTROL_PLANE_MACHINE_COUNT` to deploy an increased number of control plane nodes (must but an odd integer)
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- (Optional) `WORKER_MACHINE_COUNT` to add worker nodes
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- (Optional) `NAMESPACE` to deploy the cluster in a specific Kubernetes namespace
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- (Optional) `OS_NAME` and `OS_VERSION` to use a different machine image for the workload cluster
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After saving my changes to the `tce-work.yaml` file, I'm ready to deploy the cluster:
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```command-session
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tanzu cluster create --file tce-work.yaml
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Validating configuration...
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Warning: Pinniped configuration not found. Skipping pinniped configuration in workload cluster. Please refer to the documentation to check if you can configure pinniped on workload cluster manually
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Creating workload cluster 'tce-work'...
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Waiting for cluster to be initialized...
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Waiting for cluster nodes to be available...
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Waiting for addons installation...
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Waiting for packages to be up and running...
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Workload cluster 'tce-work' created
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```
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Right on! I'll use `tanzu cluster get` to check out the workload cluster:
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```command-session
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tanzu cluster get tce-work
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NAME NAMESPACE STATUS CONTROLPLANE WORKERS KUBERNETES ROLES
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tce-work default running 1/1 1/1 v1.21.2+vmware.1 <none>
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ℹ
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Details:
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NAME READY SEVERITY REASON SINCE MESSAGE
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/tce-work True 9m31s
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├─ClusterInfrastructure - VSphereCluster/tce-work True 10m
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├─ControlPlane - KubeadmControlPlane/tce-work-control-plane True 9m31s
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│ └─Machine/tce-work-control-plane-8km9m True 9m31s
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└─Workers
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└─MachineDeployment/tce-work-md-0
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└─Machine/tce-work-md-0-687444b744-cck4x True 8m31s
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```
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I can also go into vCenter and take a look at the VMs which constitute the two clusters:
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![Cluster VMs](clusters_in_vsphere.png)
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I've highlighted the two Control Plane nodes. They got their IP addresses assigned by DHCP, but [VMware says](https://tanzucommunityedition.io/docs/latest/verify-deployment/#configure-dhcp-reservations-for-the-control-plane-nodes-vsphere-only) that I need to create reservations for them to make sure they don't change. So I'll do just that.
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![DHCP reservations on Google Wifi](dhcp_reservations.png)
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Excellent, I've got a Tanzu management cluster and a Tanzu workload cluster. What now?
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[^i_wont]: I'm not going to, but I totally could.
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### Working with Tanzu
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If I run `kubectl get nodes` right now, I'll only get information about the management cluster:
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```command-session
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kubectl get nodes
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NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION
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tce-mgmt-control-plane-xtdnx Ready control-plane,master 18h v1.21.2+vmware.1
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tce-mgmt-md-0-745b858d44-4c9vv Ready <none> 17h v1.21.2+vmware.1
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||
```
|
||
|
||
#### Setting the right context
|
||
To be able to deploy stuff to the workload cluster, I need to tell `kubectl` how to talk to it. And to do that, I'll first need to use `tanzu` to capture the cluster's kubeconfig:
|
||
|
||
```command-session
|
||
tanzu cluster kubeconfig get tce-work --admin
|
||
Credentials of cluster 'tce-work' have been saved
|
||
You can now access the cluster by running 'kubectl config use-context tce-work-admin@tce-work'
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
I can now run `kubectl config get-contexts` and see that I have access to contexts on both management and workload clusters:
|
||
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl config get-contexts
|
||
CURRENT NAME CLUSTER AUTHINFO NAMESPACE
|
||
* tce-mgmt-admin@tce-mgmt tce-mgmt tce-mgmt-admin
|
||
tce-work-admin@tce-work tce-work tce-work-admin
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
And I can switch to the `tce-work` cluster like so:
|
||
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl config use-context tce-work-admin@tce-work
|
||
Switched to context "tce-work-admin@tce-work".
|
||
```
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl get nodes
|
||
NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION
|
||
tce-work-control-plane-8km9m Ready control-plane,master 17h v1.21.2+vmware.1
|
||
tce-work-md-0-687444b744-cck4x Ready <none> 17h v1.21.2+vmware.1
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
There they are!
|
||
|
||
#### Deploying the `yelb` demo app
|
||
Before I move on to deploying actually *useful* workloads, I'll start with deploying a quick demo application as described in William Lam's post on [Interesting Kubernetes application demos](https://williamlam.com/2020/06/interesting-kubernetes-application-demos.html). `yelb` is a web app which consists of a UI front end, application server, database server, and Redis caching service so it's a great little demo to make sure Kubernetes is working correctly.
|
||
|
||
I can check out the sample deployment that William put together [here](https://github.com/lamw/vmware-k8s-app-demo/blob/master/yelb.yaml), and then deploy it with:
|
||
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl create ns yelb
|
||
namespace/yelb created
|
||
```
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/lamw/vmware-k8s-app-demo/master/yelb.yaml
|
||
service/redis-server created
|
||
service/yelb-db created
|
||
service/yelb-appserver created
|
||
service/yelb-ui created
|
||
deployment.apps/yelb-ui created
|
||
deployment.apps/redis-server created
|
||
deployment.apps/yelb-db created
|
||
deployment.apps/yelb-appserver created
|
||
```
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl -n yelb get pods
|
||
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
|
||
redis-server-74556bbcb7-r9jqc 1/1 Running 0 10s
|
||
yelb-appserver-d584bb889-2jspg 1/1 Running 0 10s
|
||
yelb-db-694586cd78-wb8tt 1/1 Running 0 10s
|
||
yelb-ui-8f54fd88c-k2dw9 1/1 Running 0 10s
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
Once the app is running, I can point my web browser at it to see it in action. But what IP do I use?
|
||
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl -n yelb get svc/yelb-ui
|
||
NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
|
||
yelb-ui NodePort 100.71.228.116 <none> 80:30001/TCP 84s
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
This demo is using a `NodePort` type service to expose the front end, which means it will be accessible on port `30001` on the node it's running on. I can find that IP by:
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl -n yelb describe pod $(kubectl -n yelb get pods | grep yelb-ui | awk '{print $1}') | grep "Node:"
|
||
Node: tce-work-md-0-687444b744-cck4x/192.168.1.145
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
So I can point my browser at `http://192.168.1.145:30001` and see the demo:
|
||
![yelb demo page](yelb_nodeport_demo.png)
|
||
|
||
After marveling at my own magnificence[^magnificence] for a few minutes, I'm ready to move on to something more interesting - but first, I'll just delete the `yelb` namespace to clean up the work I just did:
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl delete ns yelb
|
||
namespace "yelb" deleted
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
Now let's move on and try to deploy `yelb` behind a `LoadBalancer` service so it will get its own IP. William has a [deployment spec](https://github.com/lamw/vmware-k8s-app-demo/blob/master/yelb-lb.yaml) for that too.
|
||
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl create ns yelb
|
||
namespace/yelb created
|
||
```
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/lamw/vmware-k8s-app-demo/master/yelb-lb.yaml
|
||
service/redis-server created
|
||
service/yelb-db created
|
||
service/yelb-appserver created
|
||
service/yelb-ui created
|
||
deployment.apps/yelb-ui created
|
||
deployment.apps/redis-server created
|
||
deployment.apps/yelb-db created
|
||
deployment.apps/yelb-appserver created
|
||
```
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl -n yelb get pods
|
||
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
|
||
redis-server-74556bbcb7-q6l62 1/1 Running 0 7s
|
||
yelb-appserver-d584bb889-p5qgd 1/1 Running 0 7s
|
||
yelb-db-694586cd78-hjtn4 1/1 Running 0 7s
|
||
yelb-ui-8f54fd88c-pm9qw 1/1 Running 0 7s
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
And I can take a look at that service...
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl -n yelb get svc/yelb-ui
|
||
NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
|
||
yelb-ui LoadBalancer 100.67.177.185 <pending> 80:32339/TCP 15s
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
Wait a minute. That external IP is *still* `<pending>`. What gives? Oh yeah I need to actually deploy and configure a load balancer before I can balance anything. That's up next.
|
||
|
||
[^magnificence]: Mr. Anderson.
|
||
|
||
#### Deploying `kube-vip` as a load balancer
|
||
Fortunately, William Lam [wrote up some tips](https://williamlam.com/2021/10/quick-tip-install-kube-vip-as-service-load-balancer-with-tanzu-community-edition-tce.html) for handling that too. It's [based on work by Scott Rosenberg](https://github.com/vrabbi/tkgm-customizations). The quick-and-dirty steps needed to make this work are:
|
||
|
||
```command
|
||
git clone https://github.com/vrabbi/tkgm-customizations.git
|
||
cd tkgm-customizations/carvel-packages/kube-vip-package
|
||
kubectl apply -n tanzu-package-repo-global -f metadata.yml
|
||
kubectl apply -n tanzu-package-repo-global -f package.yaml
|
||
```
|
||
```command-session
|
||
cat << EOF > values.yaml
|
||
vip_range: 192.168.1.64-192.168.1.80
|
||
EOF
|
||
```
|
||
```command
|
||
tanzu package install kubevip -p kubevip.terasky.com -v 0.3.9 -f values.yaml
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
Now I can check out the `yelb-ui` service again:
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl -n yelb get svc/yelb-ui
|
||
NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
|
||
yelb-ui LoadBalancer 100.67.177.185 192.168.1.65 80:32339/TCP 4h35m
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
And it's got an IP! I can point my browser to `http://192.168.1.65` now and see:
|
||
![Successful LoadBalancer test!](yelb_loadbalancer_demo.png)
|
||
|
||
I'll keep the `kube-vip` load balancer since it'll come in handy, but I have no further use for `yelb`:
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl delete ns yelb
|
||
namespace "yelb" deleted
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
#### Persistent Volume Claims, Storage Classes, and Storage Policies
|
||
At some point, I'm going to want to make sure that data from my Tanzu workloads stick around persistently - and for that, I'll need to [define some storage stuff](https://tanzucommunityedition.io/docs/latest/vsphere-cns/).
|
||
|
||
First up, I'll add a new tag called `tkg-storage-local` to the `nuchost-local` vSphere datastore that I want to use for storing Tanzu volumes:
|
||
![Tag (and corresponding category) applied ](storage_tag.png)
|
||
|
||
Then I create a new vSphere Storage Policy called `tkg-storage-policy` which states that data covered by the policy should be placed on the datastore(s) tagged with `tkg-storage-local`:
|
||
![My Tanzu storage policy](storage_policy.png)
|
||
|
||
So that's the vSphere side of things sorted; now to map that back to the Kubernetes side. For that, I'll need to define a Storage Class tied to the vSphere Storage profile so I drop these details into a new file called `vsphere-sc.yaml`:
|
||
```yaml {linenos=true}
|
||
kind: StorageClass
|
||
apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1
|
||
metadata:
|
||
name: vsphere
|
||
provisioner: csi.vsphere.vmware.com
|
||
parameters:
|
||
storagePolicyName: tkg-storage-policy
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
And then apply it with :
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl apply -f vsphere-sc.yaml
|
||
storageclass.storage.k8s.io/vsphere created
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
I can test that I can create a Persistent Volume Claim against the new `vsphere` Storage Class by putting this in a new file called `vsphere-pvc.yaml`:
|
||
```yaml {linenos=true}
|
||
apiVersion: v1
|
||
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
|
||
metadata:
|
||
labels:
|
||
name: vsphere-demo-1
|
||
name: vsphere-demo-1
|
||
spec:
|
||
accessModes:
|
||
- ReadWriteOnce
|
||
storageClassName: vsphere
|
||
resources:
|
||
requests:
|
||
storage: 5Gi
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
And applying it:
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl apply -f demo-pvc.yaml
|
||
persistentvolumeclaim/vsphere-demo-1 created
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
I can see the new claim, and confirm that its status is `Bound`:
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl get pvc
|
||
NAME STATUS VOLUME CAPACITY ACCESS MODES STORAGECLASS AGE
|
||
vsphere-demo-1 Bound pvc-36cc7c01-a1b3-4c1c-ba0d-dff3fd47f93b 5Gi RWO vsphere 4m25s
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
And for bonus points, I can see that the container volume was created on the vSphere side:
|
||
![Container Volume in vSphere](container_volume_in_vsphere.png)
|
||
|
||
So that's storage sorted. I'll clean up my test volume before moving on:
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl delete -f demo-pvc.yaml
|
||
persistentvolumeclaim "vsphere-demo-1" deleted
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
### A real workload - phpIPAM
|
||
Demos are all well and good, but how about a real-world deployment to tie it all together? I've been using a [phpIPAM instance for assigning static IP addresses for my vRealize Automation deployments](/integrating-phpipam-with-vrealize-automation-8/), but have *only* been using it to monitor IP usage within the network ranges to which vRA will provision machines. I recently decided that I'd like to expand phpIPAM's scope so it can keep an eye on *all* the network ranges within the environment. That's not a big ask in [my little self-contained homelab](/vmware-home-lab-on-intel-nuc-9/), but having a single system scanning all the ranges of a large production network probably wouldn't scale too well.
|
||
|
||
Fortunately the phpIPAM project provides a [remote scanning agent](https://github.com/phpipam/phpipam-agent) which can be used for keeping an eye on networks and reporting back to the main phpIPAM server. With this, I could deploy an agent to each region (or multiple agents to a region!) and divide up the network into chunks that each agent would be responsible for scanning. But that's a pretty lightweight task for a single server to manage, and who wants to deal with configuring multiple instances of the same thing? Not this guy.
|
||
|
||
So I set to work exploring some containerization options, and I found [phpipam-docker](https://github.com/phpipam-docker/phpipam-docker). That would easily replicate my existing setup in a trio of containers (one for the web front-end, one for the database back-end, and one with `cron` jobs to run scans at regular intervals)... but doesn't provide a remote scan capability. I also found a [dockerized phpipam-agent](https://github.com/pierrecdn/phpipam-agent), but this one didn't quite meet my needs. It did provide me a base to work off of though so a few days of [tinkering](https://github.com/jbowdre/phpipam-agent-docker) resulted in me publishing my first [Docker image](https://github.com/jbowdre/phpipam-agent-docker/pkgs/container/phpipam-agent). I've still some work to do before this application stack is fully ready for production but it's at a point where I think it's worth doing a test deploy.
|
||
|
||
To start, I'll create a new namespace to keep things tidy:
|
||
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl create ns ipam
|
||
namespace/ipam created
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
I'm going to wind up with four pods:
|
||
- `phpipam-db` for the database back-end
|
||
- `phpipam-www` for the web front-end
|
||
- `phpipam-cron` for the local cron jobs, which will be largely but not completely[^dns_scans] replaced by:
|
||
- `phpipam-agent` for my remote scan agent
|
||
|
||
I'll use each container's original `docker-compose` configuration and adapt that into something I can deploy on Kubernetes.
|
||
|
||
[^dns_scans]: My `phpipam-agent` image won't (yet?) do the DNS lookups that `phpipam-cron` can.
|
||
|
||
#### phpipam-db
|
||
The phpIPAM database will live inside a MariaDB container. Here's the relevant bit from `docker-compose`:
|
||
```yaml {linenos=true}
|
||
services:
|
||
phpipam-db:
|
||
image: mariadb:latest
|
||
ports:
|
||
- "3306:3306"
|
||
environment:
|
||
- MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=VMware1!VMWare1!
|
||
volumes:
|
||
- phpipam-db-data:/var/lib/mysql
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
So it will need a `Service` exposing the container's port `3306` so that other pods can connect to the database. For my immediate demo, using `type: ClusterIP` will be sufficient since all the connections will be coming from within the cluster. When I do this for real, it will need to be `type: LoadBalancer` so that the agent running on a different cluster can connect. And it will need a `PersistentVolumeClaim` so it can store the database data at `/var/lib/mysql`. It will also get passed an environment variable to set the initial `root` password on the database instance (which will be used later during the phpIPAM install to create the initial `phpipam` database).
|
||
|
||
It might look like this on the Kubernetes side:
|
||
```yaml {linenos=true}
|
||
# phpipam-db.yaml
|
||
apiVersion: v1
|
||
kind: Service
|
||
metadata:
|
||
name: phpipam-db
|
||
labels:
|
||
app: phpipam-db
|
||
namespace: ipam
|
||
spec:
|
||
type: ClusterIP
|
||
ports:
|
||
- name: mysql
|
||
port: 3306
|
||
protocol: TCP
|
||
targetPort: 3306
|
||
selector:
|
||
app: phpipam-db
|
||
---
|
||
apiVersion: v1
|
||
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
|
||
metadata:
|
||
labels:
|
||
name: phpipam-db
|
||
name: phpipam-db-pvc
|
||
namespace: ipam
|
||
spec:
|
||
accessModes:
|
||
- ReadWriteOnce
|
||
storageClassName: vsphere
|
||
resources:
|
||
requests:
|
||
storage: 5Gi
|
||
---
|
||
apiVersion: apps/v1
|
||
kind: Deployment
|
||
metadata:
|
||
name: phpipam-db
|
||
namespace: ipam
|
||
spec:
|
||
selector:
|
||
matchLabels:
|
||
app: phpipam-db
|
||
replicas: 1
|
||
template:
|
||
metadata:
|
||
labels:
|
||
app: phpipam-db
|
||
spec:
|
||
containers:
|
||
- name: phpipam-db
|
||
image: mariadb:latest
|
||
env:
|
||
- name: MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD
|
||
value: "VMware1!VMware1!"
|
||
ports:
|
||
- name: mysql
|
||
containerPort: 3306
|
||
volumeMounts:
|
||
- name: phpipam-db-vol
|
||
mountPath: /var/lib/mysql
|
||
volumes:
|
||
- name: phpipam-db-vol
|
||
persistentVolumeClaim:
|
||
claimName: phpipam-db-pvc
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
Moving on:
|
||
|
||
#### phpipam-www
|
||
This is the `docker-compose` excerpt for the web component:
|
||
```yaml {linenos=true}
|
||
services:
|
||
phpipam-web:
|
||
image: phpipam/phpipam-www:1.5x
|
||
ports:
|
||
- "80:80"
|
||
environment:
|
||
- TZ=UTC
|
||
- IPAM_DATABASE_HOST=phpipam-db
|
||
- IPAM_DATABASE_PASS=VMware1!
|
||
- IPAM_DATABASE_WEBHOST=%
|
||
volumes:
|
||
- phpipam-logo:/phpipam/css/images/logo
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
Based on that, I can see that my `phpipam-www` pod will need a container running the `phpipam/phpipam-www:1.5x` image, a `Service` of type `LoadBalancer` to expose the web interface on port `80`, a `PersistentVolumeClaim` mounted to `/phpipam/css/images/logo`, and some environment variables passed in to configure the thing. Note that the `IPAM_DATABASE_PASS` variable defines the password used for the `phpipam` user on the database (not the `root` user referenced earlier), and the `IPAM_DATABASE_WEBHOST=%` variable will define which hosts that `phpipam` database user will be able to connect from; setting it to `%` will make sure that my remote agent can connect to the database even if I don't know where the agent will be running.
|
||
|
||
Here's how I'd adapt that into a structure that Kubernetes will understand:
|
||
```yaml {linenos=true}
|
||
# phpipam-www.yaml
|
||
apiVersion: v1
|
||
kind: Service
|
||
metadata:
|
||
name: phpipam-www
|
||
labels:
|
||
app: phpipam-www
|
||
namespace: ipam
|
||
spec:
|
||
type: LoadBalancer
|
||
ports:
|
||
- name: http
|
||
port: 80
|
||
protocol: TCP
|
||
targetPort: 80
|
||
selector:
|
||
app: phpipam-www
|
||
---
|
||
apiVersion: v1
|
||
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
|
||
metadata:
|
||
labels:
|
||
name: phpipam-www
|
||
name: phpipam-www-pvc
|
||
namespace: ipam
|
||
spec:
|
||
accessModes:
|
||
- ReadWriteOnce
|
||
storageClassName: vsphere
|
||
resources:
|
||
requests:
|
||
storage: 100Mi
|
||
---
|
||
apiVersion: apps/v1
|
||
kind: Deployment
|
||
metadata:
|
||
name: phpipam-www
|
||
namespace: ipam
|
||
spec:
|
||
selector:
|
||
matchLabels:
|
||
app: phpipam-www
|
||
replicas: 1
|
||
template:
|
||
metadata:
|
||
labels:
|
||
app: phpipam-www
|
||
spec:
|
||
containers:
|
||
- name: phpipam-www
|
||
image: phpipam/phpipam-www:1.5x
|
||
env:
|
||
- name: TZ
|
||
value: "UTC"
|
||
- name: IPAM_DATABASE_HOST
|
||
value: "phpipam-db"
|
||
- name: IPAM_DATABASE_PASS
|
||
value: "VMware1!"
|
||
- name: IPAM_DATABASE_WEBHOST
|
||
value: "%"
|
||
ports:
|
||
- containerPort: 80
|
||
volumeMounts:
|
||
- name: phpipam-www-vol
|
||
mountPath: /phpipam/css/images/logo
|
||
volumes:
|
||
- name: phpipam-www-vol
|
||
persistentVolumeClaim:
|
||
claimName: phpipam-www-pvc
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
#### phpipam-cron
|
||
This container has a pretty simple configuration in `docker-compose`:
|
||
```yaml {linenos=true}
|
||
services:
|
||
phpipam-cron:
|
||
image: phpipam/phpipam-cron:1.5x
|
||
environment:
|
||
- TZ=UTC
|
||
- IPAM_DATABASE_HOST=phpipam-db
|
||
- IPAM_DATABASE_PASS=VMware1!
|
||
- SCAN_INTERVAL=1h
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
No exposed ports, no need for persistence - just a base image and a few variables to tell it how to connect to the database and how often to run the scans:
|
||
|
||
```yaml {linenos=true}
|
||
# phpipam-cron.yaml
|
||
apiVersion: apps/v1
|
||
kind: Deployment
|
||
metadata:
|
||
name: phpipam-cron
|
||
namespace: ipam
|
||
spec:
|
||
selector:
|
||
matchLabels:
|
||
app: phpipam-cron
|
||
replicas: 1
|
||
template:
|
||
metadata:
|
||
labels:
|
||
app: phpipam-cron
|
||
spec:
|
||
containers:
|
||
- name: phpipam-cron
|
||
image: phpipam/phpipam-cron:1.5x
|
||
env:
|
||
- name: IPAM_DATABASE_HOST
|
||
value: "phpipam-db"
|
||
- name: IPAM_DATABASE_PASS
|
||
value: "VMWare1!"
|
||
- name: SCAN_INTERVAL
|
||
value: "1h"
|
||
- name: TZ
|
||
value: "UTC"
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
#### phpipam-agent
|
||
And finally, my remote scan agent. Here's the `docker-compose`:
|
||
```yaml {linenos=true}
|
||
services:
|
||
phpipam-agent:
|
||
container_name: phpipam-agent
|
||
restart: unless-stopped
|
||
image: ghcr.io/jbowdre/phpipam-agent:latest
|
||
environment:
|
||
- IPAM_DATABASE_HOST=phpipam-db
|
||
- IPAM_DATABASE_NAME=phpipam
|
||
- IPAM_DATABASE_USER=phpipam
|
||
- IPAM_DATABASE_PASS=VMware1!
|
||
- IPAM_DATABASE_PORT=3306
|
||
- IPAM_AGENT_KEY=
|
||
- IPAM_SCAN_INTERVAL=5m
|
||
- IPAM_RESET_AUTODISCOVER=true
|
||
- IPAM_REMOVE_DHCP=true
|
||
- TZ=UTC
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
It's got a few additional variables to make it extra-configurable, but still no need for persistence or network exposure. That `IPAM_AGENT_KEY` variable will need to get populated the appropriate key generated within the new phpIPAM deployment, but we can deal with that later.
|
||
|
||
For now, here's how I'd tell Kubernetes about it:
|
||
```yaml {linenos=true}
|
||
# phpipam-agent.yaml
|
||
apiVersion: apps/v1
|
||
kind: Deployment
|
||
metadata:
|
||
name: phpipam-agent
|
||
namespace: ipam
|
||
spec:
|
||
selector:
|
||
matchLabels:
|
||
app: phpipam-agent
|
||
replicas: 1
|
||
template:
|
||
metadata:
|
||
labels:
|
||
app: phpipam-agent
|
||
spec:
|
||
containers:
|
||
- name: phpipam-agent
|
||
image: ghcr.io/jbowdre/phpipam-agent:latest
|
||
env:
|
||
- name: IPAM_DATABASE_HOST
|
||
value: "phpipam-db"
|
||
- name: IPAM_DATABASE_NAME
|
||
value: "phpipam"
|
||
- name: IPAM_DATABASE_USER
|
||
value: "phpipam"
|
||
- name: IPAM_DATABASE_PASS
|
||
value: "VMware1!"
|
||
- name: IPAM_DATABASE_PORT
|
||
value: "3306"
|
||
- name: IPAM_AGENT_KEY
|
||
value: ""
|
||
- name: IPAM_SCAN_INTERVAL
|
||
value: "5m"
|
||
- name: IPAM_RESET_AUTODISCOVER
|
||
value: "true"
|
||
- name: IPAM_REMOVE_DHCP
|
||
value: "true"
|
||
- name: TZ
|
||
value: "UTC"
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
#### Deployment and configuration of phpIPAM
|
||
I can now go ahead and start deploying these containers, starting with the database one (upon which all the others rely):
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl apply -f phpipam-db.yaml
|
||
service/phpipam-db created
|
||
persistentvolumeclaim/phpipam-db-pvc created
|
||
deployment.apps/phpipam-db created
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
And the web server:
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl apply -f phpipam-www.yaml
|
||
service/phpipam-www created
|
||
persistentvolumeclaim/phpipam-www-pvc created
|
||
deployment.apps/phpipam-www created
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
And the cron runner:
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl apply -f phpipam-cron.yaml
|
||
deployment.apps/phpipam-cron created
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
I'll hold off on the agent container for now since I'll need to adjust the configuration slightly after getting phpIPAM set up, but I will go ahead and check out my work so far:
|
||
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl -n ipam get all
|
||
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
|
||
pod/phpipam-cron-6c994897c4-6rsnp 1/1 Running 0 4m30s
|
||
pod/phpipam-db-5f4c47d4b9-sb5bd 1/1 Running 0 16m
|
||
pod/phpipam-www-769c95c68d-94klg 1/1 Running 0 5m59s
|
||
|
||
NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
|
||
service/phpipam-db ClusterIP 100.66.194.69 <none> 3306/TCP 16m
|
||
service/phpipam-www LoadBalancer 100.65.232.238 192.168.1.64 80:31400/TCP 5m59s
|
||
|
||
NAME READY UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE
|
||
deployment.apps/phpipam-cron 1/1 1 1 4m30s
|
||
deployment.apps/phpipam-db 1/1 1 1 16m
|
||
deployment.apps/phpipam-www 1/1 1 1 5m59s
|
||
|
||
NAME DESIRED CURRENT READY AGE
|
||
replicaset.apps/phpipam-cron-6c994897c4 1 1 1 4m30s
|
||
replicaset.apps/phpipam-db-5f4c47d4b9 1 1 1 16m
|
||
replicaset.apps/phpipam-www-769c95c68d 1 1 1 5m59s
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
And I can point my browser to the `EXTERNAL-IP` associated with the `phpipam-www` service to see the initial setup page:
|
||
![phpIPAM installation page](phpipam_install_page.png)
|
||
|
||
I'll click the **New phpipam installation** option to proceed to the next step:
|
||
![Database initialization options](phpipam_database_install_options.png)
|
||
|
||
I'm all for easy so I'll opt for **Automatic database installation**, which will prompt me for the credentials of an account with rights to create a new database within the MariaDB instance. I'll enter `root` and the password I used for the `MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD` variable above:
|
||
![Automatic database install](phpipam_automatic_database_install.png)
|
||
|
||
I click the **Install database** button and I'm then met with a happy success message saying that the `phpipam` database was successfully created.
|
||
|
||
And that eventually gets me to the post-install screen, where I set an admin password and proceed to log in:
|
||
![We made it to the post-install!](phpipam_post_install.png)
|
||
|
||
To create a new scan agent, I go to **Menu > Administration > Server management > Scan agents**.
|
||
![Scan agents screen](scan_agents.png)
|
||
|
||
And click the button to create a new one:
|
||
![Creating a new agent](create_new_agent.png)
|
||
|
||
I'll copy the agent code and plug it into my `phpipam-agent.yaml` file:
|
||
```yaml
|
||
- name: IPAM_AGENT_KEY
|
||
value: "4DC5GLo-F_35cy7BEPnGn7HivtjP_o-v"
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
And then deploy that:
|
||
```command-session
|
||
kubectl apply -f phpipam-agent.yaml
|
||
deployment.apps/phpipam-agent created
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
The scan agent isn't going to do anything until it's assigned to a subnet though, so now I head to **Administration > IP related management > Sections**. phpIPAM comes with a few default sections and ranges and such defined so I'll delete those and create a new one that I'll call `Lab`.
|
||
![Section management](section_management.png)
|
||
|
||
Now I can create a new subnet within the `Lab` section by clicking the **Subnets** menu, selecting the `Lab` section, and clicking **+ Add subnet**.
|
||
![Empty subnets menu](subnets_empty.png)
|
||
|
||
I'll define the new subnet as `192.168.1.0/24`. Once I enable the option to *Check hosts status*, I'll then be able to specify my new `remote-agent` as the scanner for this subnet.
|
||
![Creating a new subnet](creating_new_subnet.png)
|
||
![A new (but empty) subnet](new_subnet_pre_scan.png)
|
||
|
||
It shows the scanner associated with the subnet, but no data yet. I'll need to wait a few minutes for the first scan to kick off (at the five-minute interval I defined in the configuration).
|
||
![](five_minutes.gif)
|
||
![Newly discovered IPs!](newly-discovered_IPs.png)
|
||
|
||
Woah, it actually works!
|
||
|
||
### Conclusion
|
||
I still need to do more work to the containerized phpIPAM stack ready for production, but I'm feeling pretty good for having deployed a functional demo of it at this point! And working on this was a nice excuse to get a bit more familiar with Tanzu Community Edition specifically, Kubernetes in general, and Docker (I learned a ton while assembling the `phpipam-agent` image!). I find I always learn more about a new-to-me technology when I have an actual project to do rather than just going through the motions of a lab exercise. Maybe my notes will be useful to you, too. |