Installing Kubernetes with Ansible on AWS
This article explains how to install Kubernetes using Ansible on AWS's Ubuntu 20.04 computing clusters.
Set up at least two machines on AWS
The first task is to create two EC2 instances that matches Kubernetes Cluster minimal configuration:
The master node must have at least 2 CPU cores, 2 Gb of memory. The worker node (slave) should have at least 1 CPU core and 2 Gb of memory.
Set the right Security Groups
{{#lst:Input/K8s Installation/Security Groups|Security Groups}}
Ideally, one could first create a Security Group, and name it K8s Sec Grp
, then, just create two or more instances of EC2, and select the said security group during the creation cycle.
Use the same Signature File
When creating these instances, make sure that you create or select the same Identity file (.pem
file) for all instances of the same cluster. This will significantly reduce the complexity of installation.
Make sure Ansible is installed
Install Ansible on the machine that will run Ansible to install the cluster. You may follow this procedure: Installing Ansible. If you already installed Python 3.0
and pip3
, launch the following instruction in your terminal should work:
pip3 install ansible
Set up Ansible Hosts and Inventory file
It is necessary to set up the hosts
and inventory
files for Ansible.
See the following examples:
For hosts
file:
m1.xlp.pub
w1.xlp.pub
For inventory
file, one should provide a list of machines, and a list of variables that applies to all these machines. In our case, we want to access all these machines using the same ansible_user
: ubuntu
.
m1.xlp.pub
w1.xlp.pub
[all:vars]
ansible_user=ubuntu
Test to see if Ansible can access the machines
One must supply the following data points to enable Ansible to access the machines:
all
for all the machines listed in theinventory
file in the current working directory.-i
for input file, in this case, theinventory
file in the current working directory.--key-file
for the secret key file, in this case, the~/.ssh/ansible.pem
is the one that is shared with all the nodes.-u
for user name, in this case,ubuntu
is the user associated with the key file.-m
for module name, in this case,ping
is the module to be executed.
ansible all -i inventory --key-file ~/.ssh/ansible.pem -u ubuntu -m ping