In this lab you will generate a kubeconfig file for the kubectl
command line utility based on the admin
user credentials.
Run the commands in this lab from the same directory used to generate the admin client certificates.
Each kubeconfig requires a Kubernetes API Server to connect to. To support high availability the IP address assigned to the external load balancer fronting the Kubernetes API Servers will be used.
Generate a kubeconfig file suitable for authenticating as the admin
user:
{
KUBERNETES_LB_ADDRESS=192.168.5.30
kubectl config set-cluster kubernetes-the-hard-way \
--certificate-authority=ca.crt \
--embed-certs=true \
--server=https://${KUBERNETES_LB_ADDRESS}:6443
kubectl config set-credentials admin \
--client-certificate=admin.crt \
--client-key=admin.key
kubectl config set-context kubernetes-the-hard-way \
--cluster=kubernetes-the-hard-way \
--user=admin
kubectl config use-context kubernetes-the-hard-way
}
Reference doc for kubectl config [here](https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/access-application-cluster/configure-access-multiple-clusters/)
Check the health of the remote Kubernetes cluster:
kubectl get componentstatuses
output
NAME STATUS MESSAGE ERROR
controller-manager Healthy ok
scheduler Healthy ok
etcd-1 Healthy {"health":"true"}
etcd-0 Healthy {"health":"true"}
List the nodes in the remote Kubernetes cluster:
kubectl get nodes
output
NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION
worker-1 NotReady <none> 118s v1.13.0
worker-2 NotReady <none> 118s v1.13.0
Note: It is OK for the worker node to be in a NotReady
state. Worker nodes will come into Ready
state once networking is configured.
Next: Deploy Pod Networking