Jenkins is now allowed to restart the Deployment named *kitchen* in the
*kitchen* namespace. It will do this after pushing a new container
image from a build of the *master* branch.
I decided to run the kitchen screen service in Kubernetes rather than on
the Raspberry Pi in the kitchen. This will hopefully make it a bit more
reliable and easier to update. It will also make it easier to rebuild
the OS on the Pi, if it ever becomes necessary, since it really only
needs Firefox (and MQTTDPMS) now.
By default, the Kubernetes metrics endpoints are restricted. I don't
think they're worth protecting with authentication, so I've added a
cluster role/binding to allow anonymous access to them.
I originally added the `du5t1n.me/storage` label to the x86_64 nodes and
configured Longhorn to only run on nodes with those labels because I
thought that was the correct way to control where volume replicas are
stored. It turns out that this was incorrect, as it prevented Longhorn
from running on non-matching nodes entirely. Thus, any machine that was
not so labeled could not access any Longhorn storage volumes.
The correct way to limit where Longhorn stores volume replicas is to
enable the `create-default-disk-labeled-nodes` setting. With this
setting enabled, Longhorn will run on all nodes, but will not create
"disks" on them unless they have the
`node.longhorn.io/create-default-disk` label set to `true`. Nodes that
do not have "disks" will not store volume replicas, but will run the
other Longhorn components and can therefore access Longhorn volumes.
Note that changing the "default settings" ConfigMap does not change the
setting once Longhorn has been deployed. To update the setting on an
existing installation, the setting has to be changed explicitly:
```sh
kubectl get setting -n longhorn-system -o json \
create-default-disk-labeled-nodes \
| jq '.value="true"' \
| kubectl apply -f -
```
The iSCSI initiator needs a unique name. It will generate one the first
time it starts if one does not already exist. Since it tries to write
it to a file under `/etc`, this will fail, since the root filesystem is
read-only. As such, we need to generate the name during installation,
when the filesystem is still writable.
Originally, I decided to use *btrfs* subvolumes to create writable
directories inside otherwise immutable locations, such as for
`/etc/cni/net.d`, etc. I figured this would be cleaner than
bind-mounting directories from `/var`, and would avoid the trouble of
determining an appropriate volume sizes necessary to make them each
their own filesystem.
Unfortunately, it turns out that *cri-o* may still have some issues with
its *btrfs* storage driver. One [blog post][0] hints at performance
issues in *containerd*, and it seems they may apply to *cri-o* as well.
I certainly encountered performance issues when attempting to run `npm`
in a Jenkins job running in a Kubernetes pod. There is definitely a
[performance issue with `npm`][1] when running in a container, which may
or may not have been exacerbated by the *btrfs* storage driver.
In any case, upstream [does not reecommend][2] using the *btrfs* driver,
performance notwithstanding. The *overlay* driver is much more widely
used and tested. Plus, it's easier to filter out container layers from
filesystem usage statistics simply by ignoring *overlay* filesystems.
[0]: https://blog.cubieserver.de/2022/dont-use-containerd-with-the-btrfs-snapshotter/
[1]: https://github.com/npm/cli/issues/3208#issuecomment-1002990902
[2]: https://github.com/containers/storage/issues/929
I was originally going to use GlusterFS to provide persistent storage
for pods, but [Heketi][0], the component that provides the API for
the Kubernetes StorageClass, is in "deep maintenance" status and looks
to be practically dead. I was a bit afraid to try to use it because of
that, and went looking for guidance on Reddit, which is how I discovered
Longhorn.
This manifest deploys the *ingress-nginx* controller, which is
responsible for handing traffic from clients outside the cluster and
routing it to the proper pods. I am using host network mode here to
avoid having to have another proxy in front of the ingress controller,
which would be required in NodePort mode.
I looked at MetalLB briefly, but decided to avoid it for now. As with
everything else in the Kubernetes world, it seems massively complex.
We're going to be using Longhorn for persistent storage. Longhorn
allocates space on worker nodes and exposes iSCSI LUNs to other worker
nodes. It creates sparse filesystem images under `/var/lib/longhorn`
for each volume. Thus, we need to mount a large filesystem at that
path on each worker node for Longhorn to use.
Using two different kickstart scripts, one for the control plane nodes,
and one for the worker nodes, we can properly mount the Longhorn data
directory only on machines that will be running the Longhorn manager.
Longhorn only supports *ext4* and *XFS* filesystem types.
* Correct example hostname
* Apply `base.yml` and `hostname.yml` separately, without
`bootstrap.yml`, to avoid deploying *firewalld*
* Correct host IP address
Kubernetes, or rather mostly Calico, does not play well on a machine
with an immutable root filesyste. Specifically, Calico needs write
access to a couple of paths on the root filesystem, such as
`/etc/cni/net.d`, `/opt/cni/bin`, and
`/usr/libexec/kubernetes/kubelet-plugins/volume`. Some of those paths
can be configured, but doing so is quite cumbersome. While these paths
could be made writable, e.g. using symlinks or bind mounts, it would add
a lot of complexity to the *kubelet* Ansible role. After considering
the options for a while, I decided that the best approach was probably
to mount specific filesystems at these paths. Instead of using small
LVM logical volumes for each one, I thought it would be better to use a
single *btrfs* filesystem for all the mutable storage locations. This
way, if I discover more paths that need to be writable, I can create
subvolumes for them, without having to try to move or resize the
existing volumes.
Now that the Kubernetes nodes need their own special kickstart file for
the disk layout, it also makes sense to handle the rest of the machine
setup there, too. This eliminates the need for the *kubelet* Ansible
role altogether. Any machine provisioned with this kickstart
configuration is immediately ready to become a Kubernetes control plane
or worker node.