# Cluster Federation Kubernetes Cluster Federation enables users to federate multiple Kubernetes clusters. Please see the [user guide](http://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/federation/federated-services/) and the [admin guide](http://kubernetes.io/docs/admin/federation/) for more details about setting up and using the Cluster Federation. # Building Kubernetes Cluster Federation Please see the [Kubernetes Development Guide](https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/blob/master/docs/devel/development.md) for initial setup. Once you have the development environment setup as explained in that guide, you also need to install [`jq`](https://stedolan.github.io/jq/download/) Building cluster federation artifacts should be as simple as running: ```shell make build ``` You can specify the docker registry to tag the image using the KUBE_REGISTRY environment variable. Please make sure that you use the same value in all the subsequent commands. To push the built docker images to the registry, run: ```shell make push ``` To initialize the deployment run: (This pulls the installer images) ```shell make init ``` To deploy the clusters and install the federation components, edit the `${KUBE_ROOT}/_output/federation/config.json` file to describe your clusters and run: ```shell make deploy ``` To turn down the federation components and tear down the clusters run: ```shell make destroy ``` # Ideas for improvement 1. Continue with `destroy` phase even in the face of errors. The bash script sets `set -e errexit` which causes the script to exit at the very first error. This should be the default mode for deploying components but not for destroying/cleanup. [![Analytics](https://kubernetes-site.appspot.com/UA-36037335-10/GitHub/federation/README.md?pixel)]()