From fa093ee60991c972f40e868811c2ced5b03b1f25 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Kevin Huang Date: Sat, 24 Sep 2022 22:00:04 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] feat(docs/openstack.md): Put Additional step needed when using calico or kube-router in own section (#9320) --- docs/openstack.md | 92 +++++++++++++++++++++++------------------------ 1 file changed, 46 insertions(+), 46 deletions(-) diff --git a/docs/openstack.md b/docs/openstack.md index f17632924..189592e51 100644 --- a/docs/openstack.md +++ b/docs/openstack.md @@ -34,52 +34,6 @@ Otherwise [cinder](https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/Cinder) won't work as expecte Unless you are using calico or kube-router you can now run the playbook. -**Additional step needed when using calico or kube-router:** - -Being L3 CNI, calico and kube-router do not encapsulate all packages with the hosts' ip addresses. Instead the packets will be routed with the PODs ip addresses directly. - -OpenStack will filter and drop all packets from ips it does not know to prevent spoofing. - -In order to make L3 CNIs work on OpenStack you will need to tell OpenStack to allow pods packets by allowing the network they use. - -First you will need the ids of your OpenStack instances that will run kubernetes: - - ```bash - openstack server list --project YOUR_PROJECT - +--------------------------------------+--------+----------------------------------+--------+-------------+ - | ID | Name | Tenant ID | Status | Power State | - +--------------------------------------+--------+----------------------------------+--------+-------------+ - | e1f48aad-df96-4bce-bf61-62ae12bf3f95 | k8s-1 | fba478440cb2444a9e5cf03717eb5d6f | ACTIVE | Running | - | 725cd548-6ea3-426b-baaa-e7306d3c8052 | k8s-2 | fba478440cb2444a9e5cf03717eb5d6f | ACTIVE | Running | - ``` - -Then you can use the instance ids to find the connected [neutron](https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/Neutron) ports (though they are now configured through using OpenStack): - - ```bash - openstack port list -c id -c device_id --project YOUR_PROJECT - +--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ - | id | device_id | - +--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ - | 5662a4e0-e646-47f0-bf88-d80fbd2d99ef | e1f48aad-df96-4bce-bf61-62ae12bf3f95 | - | e5ae2045-a1e1-4e99-9aac-4353889449a7 | 725cd548-6ea3-426b-baaa-e7306d3c8052 | - ``` - -Given the port ids on the left, you can set the two `allowed-address`(es) in OpenStack. Note that you have to allow both `kube_service_addresses` (default `10.233.0.0/18`) and `kube_pods_subnet` (default `10.233.64.0/18`.) - - ```bash - # allow kube_service_addresses and kube_pods_subnet network - openstack port set 5662a4e0-e646-47f0-bf88-d80fbd2d99ef --allowed-address ip-address=10.233.0.0/18 --allowed-address ip-address=10.233.64.0/18 - openstack port set e5ae2045-a1e1-4e99-9aac-4353889449a7 --allowed-address ip-address=10.233.0.0/18 --allowed-address ip-address=10.233.64.0/18 - ``` - -If all the VMs in the tenant correspond to Kubespray deployment, you can "sweep run" above with: - - ```bash - openstack port list --device-owner=compute:nova -c ID -f value | xargs -tI@ openstack port set @ --allowed-address ip-address=10.233.0.0/18 --allowed-address ip-address=10.233.64.0/18 - ``` - -Now you can finally run the playbook. - ## The external cloud provider The in-tree cloud provider is deprecated and will be removed in a future version of Kubernetes. The target release for removing all remaining in-tree cloud providers is set to 1.21. @@ -156,3 +110,49 @@ The new cloud provider is configured to have Octavia by default in Kubespray. - Run `source path/to/your/openstack-rc` to read your OpenStack credentials like `OS_AUTH_URL`, `OS_USERNAME`, `OS_PASSWORD`, etc. Those variables are used for accessing OpenStack from the external cloud provider. - Run the `cluster.yml` playbook + +## Additional step needed when using calico or kube-router + +Being L3 CNI, calico and kube-router do not encapsulate all packages with the hosts' ip addresses. Instead the packets will be routed with the PODs ip addresses directly. + +OpenStack will filter and drop all packets from ips it does not know to prevent spoofing. + +In order to make L3 CNIs work on OpenStack you will need to tell OpenStack to allow pods packets by allowing the network they use. + +First you will need the ids of your OpenStack instances that will run kubernetes: + + ```bash + openstack server list --project YOUR_PROJECT + +--------------------------------------+--------+----------------------------------+--------+-------------+ + | ID | Name | Tenant ID | Status | Power State | + +--------------------------------------+--------+----------------------------------+--------+-------------+ + | e1f48aad-df96-4bce-bf61-62ae12bf3f95 | k8s-1 | fba478440cb2444a9e5cf03717eb5d6f | ACTIVE | Running | + | 725cd548-6ea3-426b-baaa-e7306d3c8052 | k8s-2 | fba478440cb2444a9e5cf03717eb5d6f | ACTIVE | Running | + ``` + +Then you can use the instance ids to find the connected [neutron](https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/Neutron) ports (though they are now configured through using OpenStack): + + ```bash + openstack port list -c id -c device_id --project YOUR_PROJECT + +--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ + | id | device_id | + +--------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+ + | 5662a4e0-e646-47f0-bf88-d80fbd2d99ef | e1f48aad-df96-4bce-bf61-62ae12bf3f95 | + | e5ae2045-a1e1-4e99-9aac-4353889449a7 | 725cd548-6ea3-426b-baaa-e7306d3c8052 | + ``` + +Given the port ids on the left, you can set the two `allowed-address`(es) in OpenStack. Note that you have to allow both `kube_service_addresses` (default `10.233.0.0/18`) and `kube_pods_subnet` (default `10.233.64.0/18`.) + + ```bash + # allow kube_service_addresses and kube_pods_subnet network + openstack port set 5662a4e0-e646-47f0-bf88-d80fbd2d99ef --allowed-address ip-address=10.233.0.0/18 --allowed-address ip-address=10.233.64.0/18 + openstack port set e5ae2045-a1e1-4e99-9aac-4353889449a7 --allowed-address ip-address=10.233.0.0/18 --allowed-address ip-address=10.233.64.0/18 + ``` + +If all the VMs in the tenant correspond to Kubespray deployment, you can "sweep run" above with: + + ```bash + openstack port list --device-owner=compute:nova -c ID -f value | xargs -tI@ openstack port set @ --allowed-address ip-address=10.233.0.0/18 --allowed-address ip-address=10.233.64.0/18 + ``` + +Now you can finally run the playbook.