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Ansible

Installing Ansible

Kubespray supports multiple ansible versions and ships different requirements.txt files for them. Depending on your available python version you may be limited in choosing which ansible version to use.

It is recommended to deploy the ansible version used by kubespray into a python virtual environment.

VENVDIR=kubespray-venv
KUBESPRAYDIR=kubespray
python3 -m venv $VENVDIR
source $VENVDIR/bin/activate
cd $KUBESPRAYDIR
pip install -U -r requirements.txt

In case you have a similar message when installing the requirements:

ERROR: Could not find a version that satisfies the requirement ansible==7.6.0 (from -r requirements.txt (line 1)) (from versions: [...], 6.7.0)
ERROR: No matching distribution found for ansible==7.6.0 (from -r requirements.txt (line 1))

It means that the version of Python you are running is not compatible with the version of Ansible that Kubespray supports. If the latest version supported according to pip is 6.7.0 it means you are running Python 3.8 or lower while you need at least Python 3.9 (see the table below).

Ansible Python Compatibility

Based on the table below and the available python version for your ansible host you should choose the appropriate ansible version to use with kubespray.

Ansible Version Python Version
>= 2.16.4 3.10-3.12

Inventory

The inventory is composed of 3 groups:

  • kube_node : list of kubernetes nodes where the pods will run.
  • kube_control_plane : list of servers where kubernetes control plane components (apiserver, scheduler, controller) will run.
  • etcd: list of servers to compose the etcd server. You should have at least 3 servers for failover purpose.

Note: do not modify the children of k8s_cluster, like putting the etcd group into the k8s_cluster, unless you are certain to do that and you have it fully contained in the latter:

etcd ⊂ k8s_cluster => kube_node ∩ etcd = etcd

When kube_node contains etcd, you define your etcd cluster to be as well schedulable for Kubernetes workloads. If you want it a standalone, make sure those groups do not intersect. If you want the server to act both as control-plane and node, the server must be defined on both groups kube_control_plane and kube_node. If you want a standalone and unschedulable control plane, the server must be defined only in the kube_control_plane and not kube_node.

There are also two special groups:

Below is a complete inventory example:

## Configure 'ip' variable to bind kubernetes services on a
## different ip than the default iface
node1 ansible_host=95.54.0.12 ip=10.3.0.1
node2 ansible_host=95.54.0.13 ip=10.3.0.2
node3 ansible_host=95.54.0.14 ip=10.3.0.3
node4 ansible_host=95.54.0.15 ip=10.3.0.4
node5 ansible_host=95.54.0.16 ip=10.3.0.5
node6 ansible_host=95.54.0.17 ip=10.3.0.6

[kube_control_plane]
node1
node2

[etcd]
node1
node2
node3

[kube_node]
node2
node3
node4
node5
node6

[k8s_cluster:children]
kube_node
kube_control_plane

Group vars and overriding variables precedence

The group variables to control main deployment options are located in the directory inventory/sample/group_vars. Optional variables are located in the inventory/sample/group_vars/all.yml. Mandatory variables that are common for at least one role (or a node group) can be found in the inventory/sample/group_vars/k8s_cluster.yml. There are also role vars for docker, kubernetes preinstall and control plane roles. According to the ansible docs, those cannot be overridden from the group vars. In order to override, one should use the -e runtime flags (most simple way) or other layers described in the docs.

Kubespray uses only a few layers to override things (or expect them to be overridden for roles):

Layer Comment
role defaults provides best UX to override things for Kubespray deployments
inventory vars Unused
inventory group_vars Expects users to use all.yml,k8s_cluster.yml etc. to override things
inventory host_vars Unused
playbook group_vars Unused
playbook host_vars Unused
host facts Kubespray overrides for internal roles' logic, like state flags
play vars Unused
play vars_prompt Unused
play vars_files Unused
registered vars Unused
set_facts Kubespray overrides those, for some places
role and include vars Provides bad UX to override things! Use extra vars to enforce
block vars (only for tasks in block) Kubespray overrides for internal roles' logic
task vars (only for the task) Unused for roles, but only for helper scripts
extra vars (always win precedence) override with ansible-playbook -e @foo.yml

Ansible tags

The following tags are defined in playbooks:

Tag name Used for
annotate Create kube-router annotation
apps K8s apps definitions
asserts Check tasks for download role
aws-ebs-csi-driver Configuring csi driver: aws-ebs
azure-csi-driver Configuring csi driver: azure
bastion Setup ssh config for bastion
bootstrap-os Anything related to host OS configuration
calico Network plugin Calico
calico_rr Configuring Calico route reflector
cephfs-provisioner Configuring CephFS
cert-manager Configuring certificate manager for K8s
cilium Network plugin Cilium
cinder-csi-driver Configuring csi driver: cinder
client Kubernetes clients role
cloud-provider Cloud-provider related tasks
cluster-roles Configuring cluster wide application (psp ...)
cni CNI plugins for Network Plugins
containerd Configuring containerd engine runtime for hosts
container_engine_accelerator Enable nvidia accelerator for runtimes
container-engine Configuring container engines
container-runtimes Configuring container runtimes
coredns Configuring coredns deployment
crio Configuring crio container engine for hosts
crun Configuring crun runtime
csi-driver Configuring csi driver
dashboard Installing and configuring the Kubernetes Dashboard
dns Remove dns entries when resetting
docker Configuring docker engine runtime for hosts
download Fetching container images to a delegate host
etcd Configuring etcd cluster
etcd-secrets Configuring etcd certs/keys
etchosts Configuring /etc/hosts entries for hosts
external-cloud-controller Configure cloud controllers
external-openstack Cloud controller : openstack
external-provisioner Configure external provisioners
external-vsphere Cloud controller : vsphere
facts Gathering facts and misc check results
files Remove files when resetting
flannel Network plugin flannel
gce Cloud-provider GCP
gcp-pd-csi-driver Configuring csi driver: gcp-pd
gvisor Configuring gvisor runtime
helm Installing and configuring Helm
ingress-controller Configure ingress controllers
ingress_alb AWS ALB Ingress Controller
init Windows kubernetes init nodes
iptables Flush and clear iptable when resetting
k8s-pre-upgrade Upgrading K8s cluster
k8s-secrets Configuring K8s certs/keys
k8s-gen-tokens Configuring K8s tokens
kata-containers Configuring kata-containers runtime
krew Install and manage krew
kubeadm Roles linked to kubeadm tasks
kube-apiserver Configuring static pod kube-apiserver
kube-controller-manager Configuring static pod kube-controller-manager
kube-vip Installing and configuring kube-vip
kubectl Installing kubectl and bash completion
kubelet Configuring kubelet service
kube-ovn Network plugin kube-ovn
kube-router Network plugin kube-router
kube-proxy Configuring static pod kube-proxy
localhost Special steps for the localhost (ansible runner)
local-path-provisioner Configure External provisioner: local-path
local-volume-provisioner Configure External provisioner: local-volume
macvlan Network plugin macvlan
master Configuring K8s master node role
metallb Installing and configuring metallb
metrics_server Configuring metrics_server
netchecker Installing netchecker K8s app
network Configuring networking plugins for K8s
mounts Umount kubelet dirs when reseting
multus Network plugin multus
nginx Configuring LB for kube-apiserver instances
node Configuring K8s minion (compute) node role
nodelocaldns Configuring nodelocaldns daemonset
node-label Tasks linked to labeling of nodes
node-webhook Tasks linked to webhook (grating access to resources)
nvidia_gpu Enable nvidia accelerator for runtimes
oci Cloud provider: oci
persistent_volumes Configure csi volumes
persistent_volumes_aws_ebs_csi Configuring csi driver: aws-ebs
persistent_volumes_cinder_csi Configuring csi driver: cinder
persistent_volumes_gcp_pd_csi Configuring csi driver: gcp-pd
persistent_volumes_openstack Configuring csi driver: openstack
policy-controller Configuring Calico policy controller
post-remove Tasks running post-remove operation
post-upgrade Tasks running post-upgrade operation
pre-remove Tasks running pre-remove operation
pre-upgrade Tasks running pre-upgrade operation
preinstall Preliminary configuration steps
registry Configuring local docker registry
reset Tasks running doing the node reset
resolvconf Configuring /etc/resolv.conf for hosts/apps
rbd-provisioner Configure External provisioner: rdb
services Remove services (etcd, kubelet etc...) when resetting
snapshot Enabling csi snapshot
snapshot-controller Configuring csi snapshot controller
system-packages Install packages using OS package manager
upgrade Upgrading, f.e. container images/binaries
upload Distributing images/binaries across hosts
vsphere-csi-driver Configuring csi driver: vsphere
weave Network plugin Weave
win_nodes Running windows specific tasks
youki Configuring youki runtime

Note: Use the bash scripts/gen_tags.sh command to generate a list of all tags found in the codebase. New tags will be listed with the empty "Used for" field.

Example commands

Example command to filter and apply only DNS configuration tasks and skip everything else related to host OS configuration and downloading images of containers:

ansible-playbook -i inventory/sample/hosts.ini cluster.yml --tags preinstall,facts --skip-tags=download,bootstrap-os

And this play only removes the K8s cluster DNS resolver IP from hosts' /etc/resolv.conf files:

ansible-playbook -i inventory/sample/hosts.ini -e dns_mode='none' cluster.yml --tags resolvconf

And this prepares all container images locally (at the ansible runner node) without installing or upgrading related stuff or trying to upload container to K8s cluster nodes:

ansible-playbook -i inventory/sample/hosts.ini cluster.yml \
    -e download_run_once=true -e download_localhost=true \
    --tags download --skip-tags upload,upgrade

Note: use --tags and --skip-tags wise and only if you're 100% sure what you're doing.

Bastion host

If you prefer to not make your nodes publicly accessible (nodes with private IPs only), you can use a so-called bastion host to connect to your nodes. To specify and use a bastion, simply add a line to your inventory, where you have to replace x.x.x.x with the public IP of the bastion host.

[bastion]
bastion ansible_host=x.x.x.x

For more information about Ansible and bastion hosts, read Running Ansible Through an SSH Bastion Host

Mitogen

Mitogen support is deprecated, please see mitogen related docs for usage and reasons for deprecation.

Beyond ansible 2.9

Ansible project has decided, in order to ease their maintenance burden, to split between two projects which are now joined under the Ansible umbrella.

Ansible-base (2.10.x branch) will contain just the ansible language implementation while ansible modules that were previously bundled into a single repository will be part of the ansible 3.x package. Please see this blog post that explains in detail the need and the evolution plan.

Note: this change means that ansible virtual envs cannot be upgraded with pip install -U. You first need to uninstall your old ansible (pre 2.10) version and install the new one.

pip uninstall ansible ansible-base ansible-core
cd kubespray/
pip install -U .