cri-o/vendor/k8s.io/kubernetes/examples/sharing-clusters/README.md

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# Sharing Clusters
This example demonstrates how to access one kubernetes cluster from another. It only works if both clusters are running on the same network, on a cloud provider that provides a private ip range per network (eg: GCE, GKE, AWS).
## Setup
Create a cluster in US (you don't need to do this if you already have a running kubernetes cluster)
```shell
$ cluster/kube-up.sh
```
Before creating our second cluster, lets have a look at the kubectl config:
```yaml
apiVersion: v1
clusters:
- cluster:
certificate-authority-data: REDACTED
server: https://104.197.84.16
name: <clustername_us>
...
current-context: <clustername_us>
...
```
Now spin up the second cluster in Europe
```shell
$ ./cluster/kube-up.sh
$ KUBE_GCE_ZONE=europe-west1-b KUBE_GCE_INSTANCE_PREFIX=eu ./cluster/kube-up.sh
```
Your kubectl config should contain both clusters:
```yaml
apiVersion: v1
clusters:
- cluster:
certificate-authority-data: REDACTED
server: https://146.148.25.221
name: <clustername_eu>
- cluster:
certificate-authority-data: REDACTED
server: https://104.197.84.16
name: <clustername_us>
...
current-context: kubernetesdev_eu
...
```
And kubectl get nodes should agree:
```
$ kubectl get nodes
NAME LABELS STATUS
eu-node-0n61 kubernetes.io/hostname=eu-node-0n61 Ready
eu-node-79ua kubernetes.io/hostname=eu-node-79ua Ready
eu-node-7wz7 kubernetes.io/hostname=eu-node-7wz7 Ready
eu-node-loh2 kubernetes.io/hostname=eu-node-loh2 Ready
$ kubectl config use-context <clustername_us>
$ kubectl get nodes
NAME LABELS STATUS
kubernetes-node-5jtd kubernetes.io/hostname=kubernetes-node-5jtd Ready
kubernetes-node-lqfc kubernetes.io/hostname=kubernetes-node-lqfc Ready
kubernetes-node-sjra kubernetes.io/hostname=kubernetes-node-sjra Ready
kubernetes-node-wul8 kubernetes.io/hostname=kubernetes-node-wul8 Ready
```
## Testing reachability
For this test to work we'll need to create a service in europe:
```
$ kubectl config use-context <clustername_eu>
$ kubectl create -f /tmp/secret.json
$ kubectl create -f examples/https-nginx/nginx-app.yaml
$ kubectl exec -it my-nginx-luiln -- echo "Europe nginx" >> /usr/share/nginx/html/index.html
$ kubectl get ep
NAME ENDPOINTS
kubernetes 10.240.249.92:443
nginxsvc 10.244.0.4:80,10.244.0.4:443
```
Just to test reachability, we'll try hitting the Europe nginx from our initial US central cluster. Create a basic curl pod in the US cluster:
```yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: curlpod
spec:
containers:
- image: radial/busyboxplus:curl
command:
- sleep
- "360000000"
imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
name: curlcontainer
restartPolicy: Always
```
And test that you can actually reach the test nginx service across continents
```
$ kubectl config use-context <clustername_us>
$ kubectl -it exec curlpod -- /bin/sh
[ root@curlpod:/ ]$ curl http://10.244.0.4:80
Europe nginx
```
## Granting access to the remote cluster
We will grant the US cluster access to the Europe cluster. Basically we're going to setup a secret that allows kubectl to function in a pod running in the US cluster, just like it did on our local machine in the previous step. First create a secret with the contents of the current .kube/config:
```shell
$ kubectl config use-context <clustername_eu>
$ go run ./make_secret.go --kubeconfig=$HOME/.kube/config > /tmp/secret.json
$ kubectl config use-context <clustername_us>
$ kubectl create -f /tmp/secret.json
```
Create a kubectl pod that uses the secret, in the US cluster.
```json
{
"kind": "Pod",
"apiVersion": "v1",
"metadata": {
"name": "kubectl-tester"
},
"spec": {
"volumes": [
{
"name": "secret-volume",
"secret": {
"secretName": "kubeconfig"
}
}
],
"containers": [
{
"name": "kubectl",
"image": "bprashanth/kubectl:0.0",
"imagePullPolicy": "Always",
"env": [
{
"name": "KUBECONFIG",
"value": "/.kube/config"
}
],
"args": [
"proxy", "-p", "8001"
],
"volumeMounts": [
{
"name": "secret-volume",
"mountPath": "/.kube"
}
]
}
]
}
}
```
And check that you can access the remote cluster
```shell
$ kubectl config use-context <clustername_us>
$ kubectl exec -it kubectl-tester bash
kubectl-tester $ kubectl get nodes
NAME LABELS STATUS
eu-node-0n61 kubernetes.io/hostname=eu-node-0n61 Ready
eu-node-79ua kubernetes.io/hostname=eu-node-79ua Ready
eu-node-7wz7 kubernetes.io/hostname=eu-node-7wz7 Ready
eu-node-loh2 kubernetes.io/hostname=eu-node-loh2 Ready
```
For a more advanced example of sharing clusters, see the [service-loadbalancer](https://github.com/kubernetes/contrib/tree/master/service-loadbalancer/README.md)
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