93 lines
3.1 KiB
Markdown
93 lines
3.1 KiB
Markdown
# TuDatTr IaC
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**I do not recommend this project being used for ones own infrastructure, as
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this project is heavily attuned to my specific host/network setup**
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The Ansible Project to provision fresh Debian VMs for my Proxmox instances.
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## Configuration
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The configuration of this project is done via files in the `./vars` directory.
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The inventory is composed of `.ini` files in the `./vars` directory. Each `.ini` file represents an inventory and can be used with the `-i` flag when running playbooks.
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The variables for the hosts and groups are defined in the `./vars/group_vars` directory. The structure of this directory is as follows:
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```
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vars/
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├── group_vars/
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│ ├── all/
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│ │ ├── secrets.yml
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│ │ └── vars.yml
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│ ├── <group_name>/
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│ │ ├── *.yml
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├── docker.ini
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├── k3s.ini
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├── kubernetes.ini
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├── proxmox.ini
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└── vps.ini
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```
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The `all` group contains variables that are common to all hosts. Each other directory in `group_vars` corresponds to a group defined in the inventory files and contains variables specific to that group.
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## Run Playbook
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To run a playbook, you need to specify the inventory file and the playbook file. For example, to run the `k3s-servers.yml` playbook with the `k3s.ini` inventory, you can use the following command:
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```sh
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ansible-playbook -i vars/k3s.ini playbooks/k3s-servers.yml
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```
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## After successful k3s installation
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To access our Kubernetes cluster from our host machine to work on it via
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flux and such we need to manually copy a k3s config from one of our server nodes to our host machine.
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Then we need to install `kubectl` on our host machine and optionally `kubectx` if we're already
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managing other Kubernetes instances.
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Then we replace the localhost address inside of the config with the IP of our load balancer.
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Finally we'll need to set the KUBECONFIG variable.
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```sh
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mkdir ~/.kube/
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scp k3s-server00:/etc/rancher/k3s/k3s.yaml ~/.kube/config
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chown $USER ~/.kube/config
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sed -i "s/127.0.0.1/192.168.20.22/" ~/.kube/config
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export KUBECONFIG=~/.kube/config
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```
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Install flux and continue in the flux repository.
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## Longhorn Nodes
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To create longhorn nodes from existing kubernetes nodes we want to increase
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their storage capacity. Since we're using VMs for our k3s nodes we can
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resize the root-disk of the VMs in the proxmox GUI.
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Then we have to resize the partitions inside of the VM so the root partition
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uses the newly available space.
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When we have LVM-based root partition we can do the following:
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```sh
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# Create a new partition from the free space.
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sudo fdisk /dev/sda
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# echo "n\n\n\n\n\nw\n"
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# n > 5x\n > w > \n
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# Create a LVM volume on the new partition
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sudo pvcreate /dev/sda3
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sudo vgextend k3s-vg /dev/sda3
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# Use the newly available storage in the root volume
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sudo lvresize -l +100%FREE -r /dev/k3s-vg/root
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```
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## Cloud Init VMs
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```sh
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# On Hypervisor Host
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qm resize <vmid> scsi0 +32G
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# On VM
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sudo fdisk -l /dev/sda # To check
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echo 1 | sudo tee /sys/class/block/sda/device/rescan
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sudo fdisk -l /dev/sda # To check
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# sudo apt-get install cloud-guest-utils
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sudo growpart /dev/sda 1
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```
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