How to use `kubeconfig` to experience OpenYurt capabilities
This document will describe how to experience the multi-domain workload manage capability of OpenYurt through kubeconfig provided by Experience Center.
Configure kubeconfig
locally
You need to configure kubeconfig
locally before you can manage the cluster via kubectl
.
- Copy
kubeconfig
information in “Connection Information” tab under “Cluster Information” page
- Save the copied
kubeconfig
information to the local~/.kube/config
file
- If the configuration has been all set, you can use
kubectl
to manage the cluster
Experience OpenYurt’s multi-domain workload manage capability
OpenYurt is designed for edge computing scenarios, allowing users to group workloads into different units distributed in different geographical locations. Here is a simple scenario to experience the multi-domain workload manage capability of OpenYurt.
Now that we have two edge-side nodes, node1 and node2, in different locations (e.g. node1 in Hangzhou and node2 in Shanghai). We want to deploy applications to the Hangzhou node but not to the Shanghai node. OpenYurt does this with two resources, NodePool and YurtAppSet (previous UnitedDeployment) to achieve this capability.
- Suppose we have two nodes, node1 and node2, connected to OpenYurt cluster (Don’t know how to join nodes? Please refer to the documentation: How to use web_console)
- Create a NodePool resource by
kubectl
on the local node wherekubeconfig
is configured, and add node1 to that NodePool
# create nodepool hangzhou
cat <<EOF | kubectl apply -f -
apiVersion: apps.openyurt.io/v1alpha1
kind: NodePool
metadata:
name: hangzhou
spec:
type: Edge
EOF
# add node1 to nodepool
kubectl label node node1 apps.openyurt.io/desired-nodepool=hangzhou
# display nodepool
kubectl get nodepool
The corresponding NodePool information can be seen in browser page.
- Create workload resources via
kubectl
and only deploy the application to hangzhou’s node pool via YurtAppSet
cat <<EOF | kubectl apply -f -
apiVersion: apps.openyurt.io/v1alpha1
kind: YurtAppSet
metadata:
labels:
controller-tools.k8s.io: "1.0"
name: yas-test
namespace: "183xxxxxxxx" # Notice: change this with your own namespace
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
app: yas-test
workloadTemplate:
deploymentTemplate:
metadata:
labels:
app: yas-test
namespace: "183xxxxxxxx" # Notice: change this with your own namespace
spec:
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: yas-test
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx
topology:
pools:
- name: hangzhou
nodeSelectorTerm:
matchExpressions:
- key: apps.openyurt.io/nodepool
operator: In
values:
- hangzhou
replicas: 1
revisionHistoryLimit: 5
EOF
# display the resources
kubectl get node
kubectl get pod -A
kubectl get nodepool
After successful creation, you can see on the browser page that the corresponding Pod is assigned to node1 in hangzhou node pool.