Installation Overview
Prerequisites
Karmada kubectl plugin
kubectl-karmada
is the Karmada command-line tool that lets you control the Karmada control plane, it presents as the kubectl plugin. For installation instructions see installing kubectl-karmada.
Karmadactl
karmadactl
is also the command-line tool that lets you control the Karmada control plane. Compared with kubectl-karmada, it is a complete CLI tool exclusive to Karmada. For installation instructions see installing karmadactl.
note
Although the above two tools have different forms, the related commands and options are exactly the same. The following takes kubectl-karmada as an example. Replacing it with karmadactl also works fine.
In actual use, you can choose a CLI tool according to your needs.
Install Karmada by Karmada command-line tool
Install Karmada on your own cluster
Assume you have put your cluster’s kubeconfig
file to $HOME/.kube/config
or specify the path with KUBECONFIG
environment variable. Otherwise, you should specify the configuration file by setting --kubeconfig
flag to the following commands.
Note: The
init
command is available from v1.0. Runninginit
command requires escalated privileges for it to store public configurations (certs, crds) for multiple users under default location/etc/karmada
, you can override this location via flags--karmada-data
and--karmada-pki
. Refer to CLI for more details or usage information.
Run the following command to install:
kubectl karmada init
It might take about 5 minutes and if everything goes well, you will see outputs similar to:
I1121 19:33:10.270959 2127786 tlsbootstrap.go:61] [bootstrap-token] configured RBAC rules to allow certificate rotation for all agent client certificates in the member cluster
I1121 19:33:10.275041 2127786 deploy.go:127] Initialize karmada bootstrap token
I1121 19:33:10.281426 2127786 deploy.go:397] create karmada kube controller manager Deployment
I1121 19:33:10.288232 2127786 idempotency.go:276] Service karmada-system/kube-controller-manager has been created or updated.
...
...
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Karmada is installed successfully.
Register Kubernetes cluster to Karmada control plane.
Register cluster with 'Push' mode
Step 1: Use "kubectl karmada join" command to register the cluster to Karmada control plane. --cluster-kubeconfig is kubeconfig of the member cluster.
(In karmada)~# MEMBER_CLUSTER_NAME=$(cat ~/.kube/config | grep current-context | sed 's/: /\n/g'| sed '1d')
(In karmada)~# kubectl karmada --kubeconfig /etc/karmada/karmada-apiserver.config join ${MEMBER_CLUSTER_NAME} --cluster-kubeconfig=$HOME/.kube/config
Step 2: Show members of karmada
(In karmada)~# kubectl --kubeconfig /etc/karmada/karmada-apiserver.config get clusters
Register cluster with 'Pull' mode
Step 1: Use "kubectl karmada register" command to register the cluster to Karmada control plane. "--cluster-name" is set to cluster of current-context by default.
(In member cluster)~# kubectl karmada register 172.18.0.3:32443 --token lm6cdu.lcm4wafod2jmjvty --discovery-token-ca-cert-hash sha256:9bf5aa53d2716fd9b5568c85db9461de6429ba50ef7ade217f55275d89e955e4
Step 2: Show members of karmada
(In karmada)~# kubectl --kubeconfig /etc/karmada/karmada-apiserver.config get clusters
The components of Karmada are installed in karmada-system
namespace by default, you can get them by:
kubectl get deployments -n karmada-system
NAME READY UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE
karmada-aggregated-apiserver 1/1 1 1 102s
karmada-apiserver 1/1 1 1 2m34s
karmada-controller-manager 1/1 1 1 116s
karmada-scheduler 1/1 1 1 119s
karmada-webhook 1/1 1 1 113s
kube-controller-manager 1/1 1 1 2m3s
And the karmada-etcd
is installed as the StatefulSet
, get it by:
kubectl get statefulsets -n karmada-system
NAME READY AGE
etcd 1/1 28m
The configuration file of Karmada will be created to /etc/karmada/karmada-apiserver.config
by default.
Offline installation
When installing Karmada, the kubectl karmada init
will download the APIs(CRD) from the Karmada official release page (e.g. https://github.com/karmada-io/karmada/releases/tag/v0.10.1
) and load images from the official registry by default.
If you want to install Karmada offline, maybe you have to specify the APIs tar file as well as the image.
Use --crds
flag to specify the CRD file. e.g.
kubectl karmada init --crds /$HOME/crds.tar.gz
The images of Karmada components could be specified, take karmada-controller-manager
as an example:
kubectl karmada init --karmada-controller-manager-image=example.registry.com/library/karmada-controller-manager:1.0
Deploy HA
Use --karmada-apiserver-replicas
and --etcd-replicas
flags to specify the number of the replicas (defaults to 1
).
kubectl karmada init --karmada-apiserver-replicas 3 --etcd-replicas 3
Install Karmada in Kind cluster
kind is a tool for running local Kubernetes clusters using Docker container “nodes”. It was primarily designed for testing Kubernetes itself, not for production.
Create a cluster named host
by hack/create-cluster.sh
:
hack/create-cluster.sh host $HOME/.kube/host.config
Install Karmada v1.2.0 by command kubectl karmada init
:
kubectl karmada init --crds https://github.com/karmada-io/karmada/releases/download/v1.2.0/crds.tar.gz --kubeconfig=$HOME/.kube/host.config
Check installed components:
kubectl get pods -n karmada-system --kubeconfig=$HOME/.kube/host.config
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
etcd-0 1/1 Running 0 2m55s
karmada-aggregated-apiserver-84b45bf9b-n5gnk 1/1 Running 0 109s
karmada-apiserver-6dc4cf6964-cz4jh 1/1 Running 0 2m40s
karmada-controller-manager-556cf896bc-79sxz 1/1 Running 0 2m3s
karmada-scheduler-7b9d8b5764-6n48j 1/1 Running 0 2m6s
karmada-webhook-7cf7986866-m75jw 1/1 Running 0 2m
kube-controller-manager-85c789dcfc-k89f8 1/1 Running 0 2m10s
Install Karmada by Helm Chart Deployment
Please refer to installing by Helm.
Install Karmada by Karmada Operator
Please refer to installing by Karmada Operator
Install Karmada by binary
Please refer to installing by binary.
Install Karmada from source
Please refer to installing from source.
Install Karmada for development environment
If you want to try Karmada, we recommend that build a development environment by hack/local-up-karmada.sh
which will do the following tasks for you:
- Start a Kubernetes cluster by kind to run the Karmada control plane, aka. the
host cluster
. - Build Karmada control plane components based on a current codebase.
- Deploy Karmada control plane components on the
host cluster
. - Create member clusters and join Karmada.
1. Clone Karmada repo to your machine:
git clone https://github.com/karmada-io/karmada
or use your fork repo by replacing your GitHub ID
:
git clone https://github.com/<GitHub ID>/karmada
2. Change to the karmada directory:
cd karmada
3. Deploy and run Karmada control plane:
run the following script:
hack/local-up-karmada.sh
This script will do the following tasks for you:
- Start a Kubernetes cluster to run the Karmada control plane, aka. the
host cluster
. - Build Karmada control plane components based on a current codebase.
- Deploy Karmada control plane components on the
host cluster
. - Create member clusters and join Karmada.
If everything goes well, at the end of the script output, you will see similar messages as follows:
Local Karmada is running.
To start using your Karmada environment, run:
export KUBECONFIG="$HOME/.kube/karmada.config"
Please use 'kubectl config use-context karmada-host/karmada-apiserver' to switch the host and control plane cluster.
To manage your member clusters, run:
export KUBECONFIG="$HOME/.kube/members.config"
Please use 'kubectl config use-context member1/member2/member3' to switch to the different member cluster.
4. Check registered cluster
kubectl get clusters --kubeconfig=/$HOME/.kube/karmada.config
You will get similar output as follows:
NAME VERSION MODE READY AGE
member1 v1.23.4 Push True 7m38s
member2 v1.23.4 Push True 7m35s
member3 v1.23.4 Pull True 7m27s
There are 3 clusters named member1
, member2
and member3
have registered with Push
or Pull
mode.