Minimal and free Kubernetes distribution with Terraform
Go to file
Dalton Hubble 3664dfafc2 Update docs with video meetings and referral links
* Use our DigitalOcean referral code for new DigitalOcean
users. This gives new accounts free cloud credits and
provides a smaller cloud credit back to the project
* Link to the new video meeting via one-time Github Sponsor
feature that we're trying out
* List Fedora CoreOS ARM64 as a supported platform (alpha).
Before this was only mentioned in docs and on the blog.
2021-04-17 19:15:51 -07:00
.github Add sponsorship badge to Github repo 2021-04-11 16:00:16 -07:00
addons Update Grafana from v7.5.3 to v7.5.4 2021-04-17 11:38:14 -07:00
aws Update Terraform version to allow v0.15.0 2021-04-16 09:46:01 -07:00
azure Update Terraform version to allow v0.15.0 2021-04-16 09:46:01 -07:00
bare-metal Update Terraform version to allow v0.15.0 2021-04-16 09:46:01 -07:00
digital-ocean Update Terraform version to allow v0.15.0 2021-04-16 09:46:01 -07:00
docs Update docs with video meetings and referral links 2021-04-17 19:15:51 -07:00
google-cloud Update Terraform version to allow v0.15.0 2021-04-16 09:46:01 -07:00
CHANGES.md Update Grafana from v7.5.3 to v7.5.4 2021-04-17 11:38:14 -07:00
CONTRIBUTING.md Fix typos in docs and CONTRIBUTING.md 2017-12-09 19:58:09 -08:00
DCO Add CONTRIBUTING.md and DCO agreement 2017-08-13 12:27:17 -07:00
LICENSE Rename project and organization 2017-08-14 19:24:04 -07:00
README.md Update docs with video meetings and referral links 2021-04-17 19:15:51 -07:00
mkdocs.yml Allow custom initial node taints on worker pool nodes 2021-04-11 15:00:11 -07:00
requirements.txt Bump mkdocs-material from 7.1.0 to 7.1.1 2021-04-12 20:29:01 -07:00

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

Modules

Typhoon provides a Terraform Module for each supported operating system and platform.

Typhoon is available for Fedora CoreOS.

Platform Operating System Terraform Module Status
AWS Fedora CoreOS aws/fedora-coreos/kubernetes stable
Azure Fedora CoreOS azure/fedora-coreos/kubernetes alpha
Bare-Metal Fedora CoreOS bare-metal/fedora-coreos/kubernetes stable
DigitalOcean Fedora CoreOS digital-ocean/fedora-coreos/kubernetes beta
Google Cloud Fedora CoreOS google-cloud/fedora-coreos/kubernetes stable
Platform Operating System Terraform Module Status
AWS Fedora CoreOS (ARM64) aws/fedora-coreos/kubernetes alpha

Typhoon is available for Flatcar Linux.

Platform Operating System Terraform Module Status
AWS Flatcar Linux aws/flatcar-linux/kubernetes stable
Azure Flatcar Linux azure/flatcar-linux/kubernetes alpha
Bare-Metal Flatcar Linux bare-metal/flatcar-linux/kubernetes stable
DigitalOcean Flatcar Linux digital-ocean/flatcar-linux/kubernetes beta
Google Cloud Flatcar Linux google-cloud/flatcar-linux/kubernetes beta

Documentation

Usage

Define a Kubernetes cluster by using the Terraform module for your chosen platform and operating system. Here's a minimal example:

module "yavin" {
  source = "git::https://github.com/poseidon/typhoon//google-cloud/fedora-coreos/kubernetes?ref=v1.21.0"

  # Google Cloud
  cluster_name  = "yavin"
  region        = "us-central1"
  dns_zone      = "example.com"
  dns_zone_name = "example-zone"

  # configuration
  ssh_authorized_key = "ssh-rsa AAAAB3Nz..."

  # optional
  worker_count = 2
  worker_preemptible = true
}

# Obtain cluster kubeconfig
resource "local_file" "kubeconfig-yavin" {
  content  = module.yavin.kubeconfig-admin
  filename = "/home/user/.kube/configs/yavin-config"
}

Initialize modules, plan the changes to be made, and apply the changes.

$ terraform init
$ terraform plan
Plan: 62 to add, 0 to change, 0 to destroy.
$ terraform apply
Apply complete! Resources: 62 added, 0 changed, 0 destroyed.

In 4-8 minutes (varies by platform), the cluster will be ready. This Google Cloud example creates a yavin.example.com DNS record to resolve to a network load balancer across controller nodes.

$ export KUBECONFIG=/home/user/.kube/configs/yavin-config
$ kubectl get nodes
NAME                                       ROLES    STATUS  AGE  VERSION
yavin-controller-0.c.example-com.internal  <none>   Ready   6m   v1.21.0
yavin-worker-jrbf.c.example-com.internal   <none>   Ready   5m   v1.21.0
yavin-worker-mzdm.c.example-com.internal   <none>   Ready   5m   v1.21.0

List the pods.

$ kubectl get pods --all-namespaces
NAMESPACE     NAME                                      READY  STATUS    RESTARTS  AGE
kube-system   calico-node-1cs8z                         2/2    Running   0         6m
kube-system   calico-node-d1l5b                         2/2    Running   0         6m
kube-system   calico-node-sp9ps                         2/2    Running   0         6m
kube-system   coredns-1187388186-zj5dl                  1/1    Running   0         6m
kube-system   coredns-1187388186-dkh3o                  1/1    Running   0         6m
kube-system   kube-apiserver-controller-0               1/1    Running   0         6m
kube-system   kube-controller-manager-controller-0      1/1    Running   0         6m
kube-system   kube-proxy-117v6                          1/1    Running   0         6m
kube-system   kube-proxy-9886n                          1/1    Running   0         6m
kube-system   kube-proxy-njn47                          1/1    Running   0         6m
kube-system   kube-scheduler-controller-0               1/1    Running   0         6m

Non-Goals

Typhoon is strict about minimalism, maturity, and scope. These are not in scope:

  • In-place Kubernetes Upgrades
  • Adding every possible option
  • Openstack or Mesos platforms

Help

Schedule a meeting via Github Sponsors to discuss your use case. You can also ask questions on the IRC #typhoon channel on freenode.net (unmonitored).

Motivation

Typhoon powers the author's cloud and colocation clusters. The project has evolved through operational experience and Kubernetes changes. Typhoon is shared under a free license to allow others to use the work freely and contribute to its upkeep.

Typhoon addresses real world needs, which you may share. It is honest about limitations or areas that aren't mature yet. It avoids buzzword bingo and hype. It does not aim to be the one-solution-fits-all distro. An ecosystem of Kubernetes distributions is healthy.

Social Contract

Typhoon is not a product, trial, or free-tier. Typhoon does not offer support, services, or charge money. And Typhoon is independent of operating system or platform vendors.

Typhoon clusters will contain only free components. Cluster components will not collect data on users without their permission.

Sponsors

Poseidon's Github Sponsors support the infrastructure and operational costs of providing Typhoon.


If you'd like your company here, please contact dghubble at psdn.io.