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Calico ===========
Check if the calico-node container is running
``` docker ps | grep calico ```
The **calicoctl** command allows to check the status of the network workloads. * Check the status of Calico nodes
``` calicoctl node status ```
or for versions prior *v1.0.0*:
``` calicoctl status ```
* Show the configured network subnet for containers
``` calicoctl get ippool -o wide ```
or for versions prior *v1.0.0*:
``` calicoctl pool show ```
* Show the workloads (ip addresses of containers and their located)
``` calicoctl get workloadEndpoint -o wide ```
and
``` calicoctl get hostEndpoint -o wide ```
or for versions prior *v1.0.0*:
``` calicoctl endpoint show --detail ```
##### Optional : Define network backend
In some cases you may want to define Calico network backend. Allowed values are 'bird', 'gobgp' or 'none'. Bird is a default value.
To re-define you need to edit the inventory and add a group variable `calico_network_backend`
``` calico_network_backend: none ```
##### Optional : BGP Peering with border routers
In some cases you may want to route the pods subnet and so NAT is not needed on the nodes. For instance if you have a cluster spread on different locations and you want your pods to talk each other no matter where they are located. The following variables need to be set: `peer_with_router` to enable the peering with the datacenter's border router (default value: false). you'll need to edit the inventory and add a and a hostvar `local_as` by node.
``` node1 ansible_ssh_host=95.54.0.12 local_as=xxxxxx ```
##### Optional : Define global AS number
Optional parameter `global_as_num` defines Calico global AS number (`/calico/bgp/v1/global/as_num` etcd key). It defaults to "64512".
##### Optional : BGP Peering with route reflectors
At large scale you may want to disable full node-to-node mesh in order to optimize your BGP topology and improve `calico-node` containers' start times.
To do so you can deploy BGP route reflectors and peer `calico-node` with them as recommended here:
* https://hub.docker.com/r/calico/routereflector/ * http://docs.projectcalico.org/v2.0/reference/private-cloud/l3-interconnect-fabric
You need to edit your inventory and add:
* `calico-rr` group with nodes in it. At the moment it's incompatible with `kube-node` due to BGP port conflict with `calico-node` container. So you should not have nodes in both `calico-rr` and `kube-node` groups. * `cluster_id` by route reflector node/group (see details [here](https://hub.docker.com/r/calico/routereflector/))
Here's an example of Kargo inventory with route reflectors:
``` [all] rr0 ansible_ssh_host=10.210.1.10 ip=10.210.1.10 rr1 ansible_ssh_host=10.210.1.11 ip=10.210.1.11 node2 ansible_ssh_host=10.210.1.12 ip=10.210.1.12 node3 ansible_ssh_host=10.210.1.13 ip=10.210.1.13 node4 ansible_ssh_host=10.210.1.14 ip=10.210.1.14 node5 ansible_ssh_host=10.210.1.15 ip=10.210.1.15
[kube-master] node2 node3
[etcd] node2 node3 node4
[kube-node] node2 node3 node4 node5
[k8s-cluster:children] kube-node kube-master
[calico-rr] rr0 rr1
[rack0] rr0 rr1 node2 node3 node4 node5
[rack0:vars] cluster_id="1.0.0.1" ```
The inventory above will deploy the following topology assuming that calico's `global_as_num` is set to `65400`:
![Image](figures/kargo-calico-rr.png?raw=true)
Cloud providers configuration =============================
Please refer to the official documentation, for example [GCE configuration](http://docs.projectcalico.org/v1.5/getting-started/docker/installation/gce) requires a security rule for calico ip-ip tunnels. Note, calico is always configured with ``ipip: true`` if the cloud provider was defined.
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