typhoon/bare-metal/container-linux/kubernetes
Dalton Hubble 9493ed3b1d Change default iPXE kernel/initrd download from HTTP to HTTPS
* Require an iPXE-enabled network boot environment with support for
TLS downloads. PXE clients must chainload to iPXE firmware compiled
with `DOWNLOAD_PROTO_HTTPS` enabled ([crypto](https://ipxe.org/crypto))
* iPXE's pre-compiled firmware binaries do _not_ enable HTTPS. Admins
should build iPXE from source with support enabled
* Affects the Container Linux and Flatcar Linux install profiles that
pull from public downloads. No effect when cached_install=true
or using Fedora Atomic, as those download from Matchbox
* Add `download_protocol` variable. Recognizing boot firmware TLS
support is difficult in some environments, set the protocol to "http"
for the old behavior (discouraged)
2019-03-09 23:23:40 -08:00
..
cl Update Kubernetes from v1.13.3 to v1.13.4 2019-02-28 22:47:43 -08:00
LICENSE Add LICENSE to top-level of each module 2017-09-28 20:41:19 -07:00
README.md Update Kubernetes from v1.13.3 to v1.13.4 2019-02-28 22:47:43 -08:00
bootkube.tf Resolve in-addr.arpa and ip6.arpa zones with CoreDNS kubernetes plugin 2019-03-04 23:03:00 -08:00
groups.tf Add support for Flatcar Linux bare-metal cached_install 2018-10-16 21:15:24 -07:00
outputs.tf Use a single format of the admin kubeconfig 2019-01-05 14:57:18 -08:00
profiles.tf Change default iPXE kernel/initrd download from HTTP to HTTPS 2019-03-09 23:23:40 -08:00
require.tf Require Terraform v0.11.x, drop v0.10.x support 2018-05-10 02:20:46 -07:00
ssh.tf Use a lower-privilege Kubelet kubeconfig in system:nodes 2019-01-05 13:08:56 -08:00
variables.tf Change default iPXE kernel/initrd download from HTTP to HTTPS 2019-03-09 23:23:40 -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 bare-metal tutorial.