Commit Graph

13 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jordan Pittier
3f844e3c57
google: Add controller_disk_type and worker_disk_type variables (#1513)
* Add controller_disk_type and worker_disk_type variables
* Properly pass disk_type to worker nodes
2024-09-20 14:31:17 -07:00
Dalton Hubble
6e2daded02
Remove some seldom used variables and set reasonable
* Set reasonable values and remove some variable clutter
* enable_reporting is only used with Calico and we can just default
to false, I doubt anyone uses Calico and cares much about reporting
metrics to upstream Calico
2024-08-02 20:45:37 -07:00
Dalton Hubble
0120b9f38d
Remove the cluster_domain_suffix variable
* Drop support for `cluster_domain_suffix` customization and
always use `cluster.local`. Many components in the Kubernetes
ecosystem assume this default suffix and its very rare to be
setting a special value here these days
* Cleanup a few variables that are seldom used
2024-08-02 15:05:25 -07:00
Dalton Hubble
516786d7bb
google: Configure controller and worker disk sizes
* Add `controller_disk_size` and `worker_disk_size` variables
* Remove `disk_size` variable
2024-08-02 13:07:41 -07:00
Dalton Hubble
b3c384fbc0 Introduce the component system for managing pre-installed addons
* Previously: Typhoon provisions clusters with kube-system components
like CoreDNS, kube-proxy, and a chosen CNI provider (among flannel,
Calico, or Cilium) pre-installed. This is convenient since clusters
come with "batteries included". But it also means upgrading these
components is generally done in lock-step, by upgrading to a new
Typhoon / Kubernetes release
* It can be valuable to manage these components with a separate
plan/apply process or through automations and deploy systems. For
example, this allows managing CoreDNS separately from the cluster's
lifecycle.
* These "components" will continue to be pre-installed by default,
but a new `components` variable allows them to be disabled and
managed as "addons", components you apply after cluster creation
and manage on a rolling basis. For some of these, we may provide
Terraform modules to aide in managing these components.

```
module "cluster" {
  # defaults
  components = {
    enable = true
    coredns = {
      enable = true
    }
    kube_proxy = {
      enable = true
    }
    # Only the CNI set in var.networking will be installed
    flannel = {
      enable = true
    }
    calico = {
      enable = true
    }
    cilium = {
      enable = true
    }
  }
}
```

An earlier variable `install_container_networking = true/false` has
been removed, since it can now be achieved with this more extensible
and general components mechanism by setting the chosen networking
provider enable field to false.
2024-05-19 16:33:57 -07:00
Dalton Hubble
d08cd317d9 Allow CoreDNS and kube-proxy to be optional components
* Allow for more minimal base cluster setups, that manage CoreDNS or
kube-proxy as applications, with rolling updates, or deploy systems.
Or in the case of kube-proxy, its becoming more common to not install
it and instead use Cilium
* Add a `components` pass-through variable to configure pre-installed
components like kube-proxy and CoreDNS. These components can be
disabled (individually or together) to allow for managing components
with separate plan/apply processes or automations
* terraform-render-bootstrap manifest assets are now structured as
manifests/{coredns,kube-proxy,network} so adapt the controller
layout scripts accordingly
* This is similar to some changes in v1.29.2 that allowed for the
container networking provider manifests to be skipped

Related: https://github.com/poseidon/typhoon/pull/1419, https://github.com/poseidon/typhoon/pull/1421
2024-05-12 21:20:27 -07:00
Dalton Hubble
2325a503e1 Add an install_container_networking variable (default true)
* When `true`, the chosen container `networking` provider is installed during cluster bootstrap
* Set `false` to self-manage the container networking provider. This allows flannel, Calico, or Cilium
to be managed via Terraform (like any other Kubernetes resources). Nodes will be NotReady until you
apply the self-managed container networking provider. This may become the default in future.
2024-02-24 18:49:38 -08:00
Dalton Hubble
cf4beeba34 Change default CNI provider from Calico to Cilium
* Cilium (v1.8) was added to Typhoon in v1.18.5 in June 2020
and its become more impressive since then. Its currently the
leading CNI provider choice.
* Calico has grown complex, has lots of CRDs, masks its
management complexity with an operator (which we won't use),
doesn't provide multi-arch images, and hasn't been compatible
with Kubernetes v1.23 (with ipvs) for several releases.
* Both have CNCF conformance quirks (flannel used for conformance),
but that's not the main factor in choosing the default
2022-02-07 08:07:00 -08:00
Dalton Hubble
e06ee042ee Switch to using Flatcar Linux images on Google Cloud
* Use the official Kinvolk Flatcar Linux image on Google Cloud
* Change `os_image` from a custom image name to `flatcar-stable`
(default), `flatcar-beta`, or `flatcar-alpha` (**action required**)
* Change `os_image` from a required to an optional variable
* Promote Typhoon on Flatcar Linux / Google Cloud to stable
* Remove docs about needing to upload a Flatcar Linux image
manually on Google Cloud and drop support for custom images
2022-01-28 21:04:10 -08:00
Dalton Hubble
e97c1cc9e5 Enable Kubernetes aggregation by default
* Change `enable_aggregation` default from false to true
* These days, Kubernetes control plane components emit annoying
messages related to assumptions baked into the Kubernetes API
Aggregation Layer if you don't enable it. Further the conformance
tests force you to remember to enable it if you care about passing
those
* This change is motivated by eliminating annoyances, rather than
any enthusiasm for Kubernetes' aggregation features

Rel: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/extend-kubernetes/api-extension/apiserver-aggregation/
2021-12-09 17:30:35 -08:00
Dalton Hubble
b152b9f973 Reduce the default disk_size from 40GB to 30GB
* We're typically reducing the `disk_size` in real clusters
since the space is under used. The default should be lower.
2021-04-26 11:43:26 -07:00
Dalton Hubble
084e8bea49 Allow custom initial node taints on worker pool nodes
* Add `node_taints` variable to worker modules to set custom
initial node taints on cloud platforms that support auto-scaling
worker pools of heterogeneous nodes (i.e. AWS, Azure, GCP)
* Worker pools could use custom `node_labels` to allowed workloads
to select among differentiated nodes, while custom `node_taints`
allows a worker pool's nodes to be tainted as special to prevent
scheduling, except by workloads that explicitly tolerate the
taint
* Expose `daemonset_tolerations` in AWS, Azure, and GCP kubernetes
cluster modules, to determine whether `kube-system` components
should tolerate the custom taint (advanced use covered in docs)

Rel: #550, #663
Closes #429
2021-04-11 15:00:11 -07:00
Dalton Hubble
7c3f3ab6d0 Rename container-linux modules to flatcar-linux
* CoreOS Container Linux was deprecated in v1.18.3
* Continue transitioning docs and modules from supporting
both CoreOS and Flatcar "variants" of Container Linux to
now supporting Flatcar Linux and equivalents

Action Required: Update the Flatcar Linux modules `source`
to replace `s/container-linux/flatcar-linux`. See docs for
examples
2020-10-20 22:47:19 -07:00