andrew
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2Y

I’m also running arch. Unfortunately I’ve been running mine long enough that it’s just my own bespoke Ansible playbooks for configs that have morphed only as required by breaking changes or features/security I want to add. I think the best way to start from scratch these days is kubeadm, and I think it should be fairly straightforward on arch or whatever distro you like.

Fundamentally my setup is just kubelet and kubeproxy on every node, the oci runtime (CRIO for me), etcd (set up manually but certs are automated now) and then some k8s manifests templated and dropped into the k8s manifest folder for the control plane on 3 nodes for HA. The more I think about it, the more I remember how complicated it is unless you want a private CA. Which I have and love the convenience and privacy it affords me (no CTL exposing domain names unless I need public certs and they’re public anyway).

I have expanded to 6 nodes (5 of which remain, RIP laptop SSD) and just run arch on all of them because it kinda just works and I like the consistency. I also got quite good at the arch install in the process.

John Richard
creator
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-22Y

That’s rad… I have a set of Ansible playbooks/roles/collections already for most system-wide settings. I have a love-hate relationship with Ansible though, but it gets the job done. I may try for cloud-init first until I reach its limitations. I’ve gotten pretty good at the Arch install too, although setting up the disks with LUKS was the most challenging part. Fortunately, the few times I’ve broke things I’ve been able to boot the installer ISO and mount my LUKS volumes from memory, but I couldn’t tell you how I set them up in the first place. 🤣 However I do it, I really just want to automate the process so that I can add new nodes and expand should I decide to rent out colocation space someday.

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