- Important: RKE add-on install is only supported up to Rancher v2.0.8
- Installation Outline
- 1. Provision Linux Hosts
- 2. Configure Load Balancer
- 3. Configure DNS
- 4. Install RKE
- 5. Download RKE Config File Template
- 6. Configure Nodes
- 7. Configure Certificates
- 8. Configure FQDN
- 9. Configure Rancher version
- 10. Back Up Your RKE Config File
- 11. Run RKE
- 12. Back Up Auto-Generated Config File
- What’s Next?
- FAQ and Troubleshooting
Important: RKE add-on install is only supported up to Rancher v2.0.8
Please use the Rancher helm chart to install Rancher on a Kubernetes cluster. For details, see the Kubernetes Install.
If you are currently using the RKE add-on install method, see Migrating from a Kubernetes Install with an RKE Add-on for details on how to move to using the helm chart.
This procedure walks you through setting up a 3-node cluster using the Rancher Kubernetes Engine (RKE). The cluster’s sole purpose is running pods for Rancher. The setup is based on:
- Layer 4 load balancer (TCP)
- NGINX ingress controller with SSL termination (HTTPS)
In an HA setup that uses a layer 4 load balancer, the load balancer accepts Rancher client connections over the TCP/UDP protocols (i.e., the transport level). The load balancer then forwards these connections to individual cluster nodes without reading the request itself. Because the load balancer cannot read the packets it’s forwarding, the routing decisions it can make are limited.
Rancher installed on a Kubernetes cluster with layer 4 load balancer, depicting SSL termination at ingress controllers
Installation Outline
Installation of Rancher in a high-availability configuration involves multiple procedures. Review this outline to learn about each procedure you need to complete.
- 1. Provision Linux Hosts
- 2. Configure Load Balancer
- 3. Configure DNS
- 4. Install RKE
- 5. Download RKE Config File Template
- 6. Configure Nodes
- 7. Configure Certificates
- 8. Configure FQDN
- 9. Configure Rancher version
- 10. Back Up Your RKE Config File
- 11. Run RKE
- 12. Back Up Auto-Generated Config File
1. Provision Linux Hosts
Provision three Linux hosts according to our Requirements.
2. Configure Load Balancer
We will be using NGINX as our Layer 4 Load Balancer (TCP). NGINX will forward all connections to one of your Rancher nodes. If you want to use Amazon NLB, you can skip this step and use Amazon NLB configuration
Note: In this configuration, the load balancer is positioned in front of your Linux hosts. The load balancer can be any host that you have available that’s capable of running NGINX.
One caveat: do not use one of your Rancher nodes as the load balancer.
A. Install NGINX
Start by installing NGINX on your load balancer host. NGINX has packages available for all known operating systems. For help installing NGINX, refer to their install documentation.
The stream
module is required, which is present when using the official NGINX packages. Please refer to your OS documentation how to install and enable the NGINX stream
module on your operating system.
B. Create NGINX Configuration
After installing NGINX, you need to update the NGINX config file, nginx.conf
, with the IP addresses for your nodes.
Copy and paste the code sample below into your favorite text editor. Save it as
nginx.conf
.From
nginx.conf
, replaceIP_NODE_1
,IP_NODE_2
, andIP_NODE_3
with the IPs of your Linux hosts.Note: This Nginx configuration is only an example and may not suit your environment. For complete documentation, see NGINX Load Balancing - TCP and UDP Load Balancer.
Example NGINX config:
worker_processes 4;
worker_rlimit_nofile 40000;
events {
worker_connections 8192;
}
http {
server {
listen 80;
return 301 https://$host$request_uri;
}
}
stream {
upstream rancher_servers {
least_conn;
server IP_NODE_1:443 max_fails=3 fail_timeout=5s;
server IP_NODE_2:443 max_fails=3 fail_timeout=5s;
server IP_NODE_3:443 max_fails=3 fail_timeout=5s;
}
server {
listen 443;
proxy_pass rancher_servers;
}
}
Save
nginx.conf
to your load balancer at the following path:/etc/nginx/nginx.conf
.Load the updates to your NGINX configuration by running the following command:
# nginx -s reload
Option - Run NGINX as Docker container
Instead of installing NGINX as a package on the operating system, you can rather run it as a Docker container. Save the edited Example NGINX config as /etc/nginx.conf
and run the following command to launch the NGINX container:
docker run -d --restart=unless-stopped \
-p 80:80 -p 443:443 \
-v /etc/nginx.conf:/etc/nginx/nginx.conf \
nginx:1.14
3. Configure DNS
Choose a fully qualified domain name (FQDN) that you want to use to access Rancher (e.g., rancher.yourdomain.com
).
Log into your DNS server a create a
DNS A
record that points to the IP address of your load balancer.Validate that the
DNS A
is working correctly. Run the following command from any terminal, replacingHOSTNAME.DOMAIN.COM
with your chosen FQDN:nslookup HOSTNAME.DOMAIN.COM
Step Result: Terminal displays output similar to the following:
$ nslookup rancher.yourdomain.com
Server: YOUR_HOSTNAME_IP_ADDRESS
Address: YOUR_HOSTNAME_IP_ADDRESS#53
Non-authoritative answer:
Name: rancher.yourdomain.com
Address: HOSTNAME.DOMAIN.COM
4. Install RKE
RKE (Rancher Kubernetes Engine) is a fast, versatile Kubernetes installer that you can use to install Kubernetes on your Linux hosts. We will use RKE to setup our cluster and run Rancher.
Follow the RKE Install instructions.
Confirm that RKE is now executable by running the following command:
rke --version
5. Download RKE Config File Template
RKE uses a .yml
config file to install and configure your Kubernetes cluster. There are 2 templates to choose from, depending on the SSL certificate you want to use.
Download one of following templates, depending on the SSL certificate you’re using.
- Rename the file to
rancher-cluster.yml
.
6. Configure Nodes
Once you have the rancher-cluster.yml
config file template, edit the nodes section to point toward your Linux hosts.
Open
rancher-cluster.yml
in your favorite text editor.Update the
nodes
section with the information of your Linux hosts.For each node in your cluster, update the following placeholders:
IP_ADDRESS_X
andUSER
. The specified user should be able to access the Docker socket, you can test this by logging in with the specified user and rundocker ps
.Note: When using RHEL/CentOS, the SSH user can’t be root due to https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1527565. See Operating System Requirements >for RHEL/CentOS specific requirements.
nodes:
# The IP address or hostname of the node
- address: IP_ADDRESS_1
# User that can login to the node and has access to the Docker socket (i.e. can execute `docker ps` on the node)
# When using RHEL/CentOS, this can't be root due to https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1527565
user: USER
role: [controlplane,etcd,worker]
# Path the SSH key that can be used to access to node with the specified user
ssh_key_path: ~/.ssh/id_rsa
- address: IP_ADDRESS_2
user: USER
role: [controlplane,etcd,worker]
ssh_key_path: ~/.ssh/id_rsa
- address: IP_ADDRESS_3
user: USER
role: [controlplane,etcd,worker]
ssh_key_path: ~/.ssh/id_rsa
Optional: By default,
rancher-cluster.yml
is configured to take backup snapshots of your data. To disable these snapshots, change thebackup
directive setting tofalse
, as depicted below.services:
etcd:
backup: false
7. Configure Certificates
For security purposes, SSL (Secure Sockets Layer) is required when using Rancher. SSL secures all Rancher network communication, like when you login or interact with a cluster.
Choose from the following options:
Option A—Bring Your Own Certificate: Self-Signed
Prerequisites: Create a self-signed certificate.
- The certificate files must be in PEM format.
- The certificate files must be encoded in base64.
- In your certificate file, include all intermediate certificates in the chain. Order your certificates with your certificate first, followed by the intermediates. For an example, see Certificate Troubleshooting.
In
kind: Secret
withname: cattle-keys-ingress
:- Replace
<BASE64_CRT>
with the base64 encoded string of the Certificate file (usually calledcert.pem
ordomain.crt
) - Replace
<BASE64_KEY>
with the base64 encoded string of the Certificate Key file (usually calledkey.pem
ordomain.key
)
Note: The base64 encoded string should be on the same line as
tls.crt
ortls.key
, without any newline at the beginning, in between or at the end.Step Result: After replacing the values, the file should look like the example below (the base64 encoded strings should be different):
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: cattle-keys-ingress
namespace: cattle-system
type: Opaque
data:
tls.crt: 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
tls.key: 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
- Replace
In
kind: Secret
withname: cattle-keys-server
, replace<BASE64_CA>
with the base64 encoded string of the CA Certificate file (usually calledca.pem
orca.crt
).Note: The base64 encoded string should be on the same line as
cacerts.pem
, without any newline at the beginning, in between or at the end.Step Result: The file should look like the example below (the base64 encoded string should be different):
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: cattle-keys-server
namespace: cattle-system
type: Opaque
data:
cacerts.pem: 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
Option B—Bring Your Own Certificate: Signed by Recognized CA
If you are using a Certificate Signed By A Recognized Certificate Authority, you will need to generate a base64 encoded string for the Certificate file and the Certificate Key file. Make sure that your certificate file includes all the intermediate certificates in the chain, the order of certificates in this case is first your own certificate, followed by the intermediates. Please refer to the documentation of your CSP (Certificate Service Provider) to see what intermediate certificate(s) need to be included.
In the kind: Secret
with name: cattle-keys-ingress
:
- Replace
<BASE64_CRT>
with the base64 encoded string of the Certificate file (usually calledcert.pem
ordomain.crt
) - Replace
<BASE64_KEY>
with the base64 encoded string of the Certificate Key file (usually calledkey.pem
ordomain.key
)
After replacing the values, the file should look like the example below (the base64 encoded strings should be different):
Note: The base64 encoded string should be on the same line as
tls.crt
ortls.key
, without any newline at the beginning, in between or at the end.
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: cattle-keys-ingress
namespace: cattle-system
type: Opaque
data:
tls.crt: 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
tls.key: LS0tLS1CRUdJTiBSU0EgUFJJVkFURSBLRVktLS0tLQpNSUlFb3dJQkFBS0NBUUVBdEY3WEN6TVZHaDF1aU5oWTBJZW50RVlpSVFmUUlLQkMvYUFzU3gxQUlsOWI0OUQ5ClhmanEzdWI3c3RCNnRsYTlqV09keDZkZzBnZDBCSVNCSWFlcHJWdkZNZzRTRXpjRE51aW0xZnh3aVkwZCtFRlUKTXVCc3NYZEV6V0k3ZEVvdUFjcVJjamZWL0J5WTZ4ZDdTRWhjSE5PZVdEZWI5TDFiK3hLd2k2M21uZ0lKQjdBeQpLSmRlYzhnbWlaNk4wcTV3ZXFEWDJ6QVgrbDVPTldTcG1mWUVhVHBDSnFMVTNtZFpCWWx5cnhMTytvemx0MGdLCktLbG81cGgzc05CcDFMUG5LOUMxc3MvbWZRek9EMDNzck1Xa21oTDcwQ0IxZmIydCtOWnRITW5BYmYwYkJETnoKTlNRcXU4T2cwaUxnOUVhd3l1dEF4U3BGdmhHUGMvd0dHMExWaXdJREFRQUJBb0lCQUJKYUErOHp4MVhjNEw0egpwUFd5bDdHVDRTMFRLbTNuWUdtRnZudjJBZXg5WDFBU2wzVFVPckZyTnZpK2xYMnYzYUZoSFZDUEN4N1RlMDVxClhPa2JzZnZkZG5iZFQ2RjgyMnJleVByRXNINk9TUnBWSzBmeDVaMDQwVnRFUDJCWm04eTYyNG1QZk1vbDdya2MKcm9Kd09rOEVpUHZZekpsZUd0bTAwUm1sRysyL2c0aWJsOTVmQXpyc1MvcGUyS3ZoN2NBVEtIcVh6MjlpUmZpbApiTGhBamQwcEVSMjNYU0hHR1ZqRmF3amNJK1c2L2RtbDZURDhrSzFGaUtldmJKTlREeVNXQnpPbXRTYUp1K01JCm9iUnVWWG4yZVNoamVGM1BYcHZRMWRhNXdBa0dJQWxOWjRHTG5QU2ZwVmJyU0plU3RrTGNzdEJheVlJS3BWZVgKSVVTTHM0RUNnWUVBMmNnZUE2WHh0TXdFNU5QWlNWdGhzbXRiYi9YYmtsSTdrWHlsdk5zZjFPdXRYVzkybVJneQpHcEhUQ0VubDB0Z1p3T081T1FLNjdFT3JUdDBRWStxMDJzZndwcmgwNFZEVGZhcW5QNTBxa3BmZEJLQWpmanEyCjFoZDZMd2hLeDRxSm9aelp2VkowV0lvR1ZLcjhJSjJOWGRTUVlUanZUZHhGczRTamdqNFFiaEVDZ1lFQTFBWUUKSEo3eVlza2EvS2V2OVVYbmVrSTRvMm5aYjJ1UVZXazRXSHlaY2NRN3VMQVhGY3lJcW5SZnoxczVzN3RMTzJCagozTFZNUVBzazFNY25oTTl4WE4vQ3ZDTys5b2t0RnNaMGJqWFh6NEJ5V2lFNHJPS1lhVEFwcDVsWlpUT3ZVMWNyCm05R3NwMWJoVDVZb2RaZ3IwUHQyYzR4U2krUVlEWnNFb2lFdzNkc0NnWUVBcVJLYWNweWZKSXlMZEJjZ0JycGkKQTRFalVLMWZsSjR3enNjbGFKUDVoM1NjZUFCejQzRU1YT0kvSXAwMFJsY3N6em83N3cyMmpud09mOEJSM0RBMwp6ZTRSWDIydWw4b0hGdldvdUZOTTNOZjNaNExuYXpVc0F0UGhNS2hRWGMrcEFBWGthUDJkZzZ0TU5PazFxaUNHCndvU212a1BVVE84b1ViRTB1NFZ4ZmZFQ2dZQUpPdDNROVNadUlIMFpSSitIV095enlOQTRaUEkvUkhwN0RXS1QKajVFS2Y5VnR1OVMxY1RyOTJLVVhITXlOUTNrSjg2OUZPMnMvWk85OGg5THptQ2hDTjhkOWN6enI5SnJPNUFMTApqWEtBcVFIUlpLTFgrK0ZRcXZVVlE3cTlpaHQyMEZPb3E5OE5SZDMzSGYxUzZUWDNHZ3RWQ21YSml6dDAxQ3ZHCmR4VnVnd0tCZ0M2Mlp0b0RLb3JyT2hvdTBPelprK2YwQS9rNDJBOENiL29VMGpwSzZtdmxEWmNYdUF1QVZTVXIKNXJCZjRVYmdVYndqa1ZWSFR6LzdDb1BWSjUvVUxJWk1Db1RUNFprNTZXWDk4ZE93Q3VTVFpZYnlBbDZNS1BBZApTZEpuVVIraEpnSVFDVGJ4K1dzYnh2d0FkbWErWUhtaVlPRzZhSklXMXdSd1VGOURLUEhHCi0tLS0tRU5EIFJTQSBQUklWQVRFIEtFWS0tLS0tCg==
8. Configure FQDN
There are two references to <FQDN>
in the config file (one in this step and one in the next). Both need to be replaced with the FQDN chosen in Configure DNS.
In the kind: Ingress
with name: cattle-ingress-http
:
- Replace
<FQDN>
with the FQDN chosen in Configure DNS.
After replacing <FQDN>
with the FQDN chosen in Configure DNS, the file should look like the example below (rancher.yourdomain.com
is the FQDN used in this example):
---
apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
namespace: cattle-system
name: cattle-ingress-http
annotations:
nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/proxy-connect-timeout: "30"
nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/proxy-read-timeout: "1800" # Max time in seconds for ws to remain shell window open
nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/proxy-send-timeout: "1800" # Max time in seconds for ws to remain shell window open
spec:
rules:
- host: rancher.yourdomain.com
http:
paths:
- backend:
serviceName: cattle-service
servicePort: 80
tls:
- secretName: cattle-keys-ingress
hosts:
- rancher.yourdomain.com
Save the .yml
file and close it.
9. Configure Rancher version
The last reference that needs to be replaced is <RANCHER_VERSION>
. This needs to be replaced with a Rancher version which is marked as stable. The latest stable release of Rancher can be found in the GitHub README. Make sure the version is an actual version number, and not a named tag like stable
or latest
. The example below shows the version configured to v2.0.6
.
spec:
serviceAccountName: cattle-admin
containers:
- image: rancher/rancher:v2.0.6
imagePullPolicy: Always
10. Back Up Your RKE Config File
After you close your .yml
file, back it up to a secure location. You can use this file again when it’s time to upgrade Rancher.
11. Run RKE
With all configuration in place, use RKE to launch Rancher. You can complete this action by running the rke up
command and using the --config
parameter to point toward your config file.
From your workstation, make sure
rancher-cluster.yml
and the downloadedrke
binary are in the same directory.Open a Terminal instance. Change to the directory that contains your config file and
rke
.Enter one of the
rke up
commands listen below.
rke up --config rancher-cluster.yml
Step Result: The output should be similar to the snippet below:
INFO[0000] Building Kubernetes cluster
INFO[0000] [dialer] Setup tunnel for host [1.1.1.1]
INFO[0000] [network] Deploying port listener containers
INFO[0000] [network] Pulling image [alpine:latest] on host [1.1.1.1]
...
INFO[0101] Finished building Kubernetes cluster successfully
12. Back Up Auto-Generated Config File
During installation, RKE automatically generates a config file named kube_config_rancher-cluster.yml
in the same directory as the RKE binary. Copy this file and back it up to a safe location. You’ll use this file later when upgrading Rancher Server.
What’s Next?
You have a couple of options:
- Create a backup of your Rancher Server in case of a disaster scenario: High Availability Back Up and Restore.
- Create a Kubernetes cluster: Provisioning Kubernetes Clusters.
FAQ and Troubleshooting
How Do I Know if My Certificates are in PEM Format?
You can recognize the PEM format by the following traits:
- The file begins with the following header:
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
- The header is followed by a long string of characters. Like, really long.
- The file ends with a footer:
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
PEM Certificate Example:
----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
MIIGVDCCBDygAwIBAgIJAMiIrEm29kRLMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBCwUAMHkxCzAJBgNV
... more lines
VWQqljhfacYPgp8KJUJENQ9h5hZ2nSCrI+W00Jcw4QcEdCI8HL5wmg==
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
How Can I Encode My PEM Files in base64?
To encode your certificates in base64:
- Change directory to where the PEM file resides.
Run one of the following commands. Replace
FILENAME
with the name of your certificate.# MacOS
cat FILENAME | base64
# Linux
cat FILENAME | base64 -w0
# Windows
certutil -encode FILENAME FILENAME.base64
How Can I Verify My Generated base64 String For The Certificates?
To decode your certificates in base64:
- Copy the generated base64 string.
Run one of the following commands. Replace
YOUR_BASE64_STRING
with the previously copied base64 string.# MacOS
echo YOUR_BASE64_STRING | base64 -D
# Linux
echo YOUR_BASE64_STRING | base64 -d
# Windows
certutil -decode FILENAME.base64 FILENAME.verify
What is the Order of Certificates if I Want to Add My Intermediate(s)?
The order of adding certificates is as follows:
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
%YOUR_CERTIFICATE%
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
%YOUR_INTERMEDIATE_CERTIFICATE%
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
How Do I Validate My Certificate Chain?
You can validate the certificate chain by using the openssl
binary. If the output of the command (see the command example below) ends with Verify return code: 0 (ok)
, your certificate chain is valid. The ca.pem
file must be the same as you added to the rancher/rancher
container. When using a certificate signed by a recognized Certificate Authority, you can omit the -CAfile
parameter.
Command:
openssl s_client -CAfile ca.pem -connect rancher.yourdomain.com:443 -servername rancher.yourdomain.com
...
Verify return code: 0 (ok)