typhoon/google-cloud/fedora-atomic/kubernetes
Dalton Hubble 1feefbe9c6 Update Calico from v3.5.2 to v3.6.0
* Add calico-ipam CRDs and RBAC permissions
* Switch IPAM from host-local to calico-ipam
  * `calico-ipam` subnets `ippools` (defaults to pod CIDR) into
`ipamblocks` (defaults to /26, but set to /24 in Typhoon)
  * `host-local` subnets the pod CIDR based on the node PodCIDR
field (set via kube-controller-manager as /24's)
* Create a custom default IPv4 IPPool to ensure the block size
is kept at /24 to allow 110 pods per node (Kubernetes default)
* Retaining host-local was slightly preferred, but Calico v3.6
is migrating all usage to calico-ipam. The codepath that skipped
calico-ipam for KDD was removed
*  https://docs.projectcalico.org/v3.6/release-notes/
2019-03-19 22:49:56 -07:00
..
cloudinit Update Kubernetes from v1.13.3 to v1.13.4 2019-02-28 22:47:43 -08:00
workers Fix implicit map assignments to be explicit 2019-03-12 01:19:54 -07:00
LICENSE Add Google Cloud fedora-atomic module 2018-04-21 18:46:56 -07:00
README.md Update Kubernetes from v1.13.3 to v1.13.4 2019-02-28 22:47:43 -08:00
apiserver.tf Increase GCP TCP proxy apiserver backend timeout to 5 minutes 2018-12-15 17:34:18 -08:00
bootkube.tf Update Calico from v3.5.2 to v3.6.0 2019-03-19 22:49:56 -07:00
controllers.tf Fix implicit map assignments to be explicit 2019-03-12 01:19:54 -07:00
ingress.tf Add an IPv6 address and forwarding rules on Google Cloud 2018-10-28 14:30:58 -07:00
network.tf Fix typo in descriptive firewall name (#359) 2018-12-15 11:34:32 -08:00
outputs.tf Use a single format of the admin kubeconfig 2019-01-05 14:57:18 -08:00
require.tf Upgrade to support terraform-provider-google v2.0+ 2019-02-20 02:33:32 -08:00
ssh.tf Use bootkube system container on fedora-atomic 2018-04-21 18:46:56 -07:00
variables.tf Fix Calico Felix reporting usage data, require opt-in 2018-11-20 01:03:00 -08:00
workers.tf Use a lower-privilege Kubelet kubeconfig in system:nodes 2019-01-05 13:08:56 -08:00

README.md

Typhoon

Typhoon is a minimal and free Kubernetes distribution.

  • Minimal, stable base Kubernetes distribution
  • Declarative infrastructure and configuration
  • Free (freedom and cost) and privacy-respecting
  • Practical for labs, datacenters, and clouds

Typhoon distributes upstream Kubernetes, architectural conventions, and cluster addons, much like a GNU/Linux distribution provides the Linux kernel and userspace components.

Features

Docs

Please see the official docs and the Google Cloud tutorial.