AWS Kubernetes is a Kubernetes cluster deployed using Kubeadm tool. It provides full integration with AWS. It is able to handle ELB load balancers, EBS disks, Route53 domains etc.
- 21.8.2022 Update Calico to v3.24
- 21.8.2022 Update to Kubernetes 1.24.4
- 01.8.2022 Update Calico
- 16.7.2022 Update to Kubernetes 1.24.3
- 27.6.2022 Update to Kubernetes 1.24.2
- 11.6.2022 Update to Kubernetes 1.24.1 + update addons + remove dependency on the template provider
- 8.5.2022 Update to Kubernetes 1.24.0 + update add-ons
- 23.3.2022 Update to Kubernetes 1.23.5 + update addons
- 19.2.2022 Update to Kubernetes 1.23.4
- 12.2.2022 Update to Kubernetes 1.23.2
- 29.12.2021 Update to Kubernetes 1.23.1
- 11.12.2021 Update to Kubernetes 1.23.0
- AWS Kubernetes deployes into existing VPC / public subnet. If you don't have your VPC / subnet yet, you can use this module to create one.
- The VPC / subnet should be properly linked with Internet Gateway (IGW) and should have DNS and DHCP enabled.
- Hosted DNS zone configured in Route53 (in case the zone is private you have to use IP address to copy kubeconfig and access the cluster).
- To deploy AWS Kubernetes there are no other dependencies apart from Terraform. Kubeadm is used only on the EC2 hosts and doesn't have to be installed locally.
Although it can be run on its own, the main value is that it can be included into another Terraform configuration.
module "kubernetes" {
source = "scholzj/kubernetes/aws"
aws_region = "eu-central-1"
cluster_name = "aws-kubernetes"
master_instance_type = "t2.medium"
worker_instance_type = "t2.medium"
ssh_public_key = "~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub"
ssh_access_cidr = ["0.0.0.0/0"]
api_access_cidr = ["0.0.0.0/0"]
min_worker_count = 3
max_worker_count = 6
hosted_zone = "my-domain.com"
hosted_zone_private = false
master_subnet_id = "subnet-8a3517f8"
worker_subnet_ids = [
"subnet-8a3517f8",
"subnet-9b7853f7",
"subnet-8g9sdfv8"
]
# Tags
tags = {
Application = "AWS-Kubernetes"
}
# Tags in a different format for Auto Scaling Group
tags2 = [
{
key = "Application"
value = "AWS-Kubernetes"
propagate_at_launch = true
}
]
addons = [
"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pczerkas/ubuntu-terraform-aws-kubernetes/master/addons/storage-class.yaml",
"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pczerkas/ubuntu-terraform-aws-kubernetes/master/addons/heapster.yaml",
"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pczerkas/ubuntu-terraform-aws-kubernetes/master/addons/dashboard.yaml",
"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pczerkas/ubuntu-terraform-aws-kubernetes/master/addons/external-dns.yaml",
"https://raw.githubusercontent.com/pczerkas/ubuntu-terraform-aws-kubernetes/master/addons/autoscaler.yaml"
]
}
An example of how to include this can be found in the examples dir.
Currently, following addons are supported:
- Kubernetes dashboard
- Heapster for resource monitoring
- Storage class and CSI driver for automatic provisioning of persistent volumes
- External DNS (Replaces Route53 mapper)
- Ingress
- Autoscaler
The addons will be installed automatically based on the Terraform variables.
Custom addons can be added if needed. For every URL in the addons
list, the initialization scripts will automatically call kubectl -f apply <Addon URL>
to deploy it. The cluster is using RBAC. So the custom addons have to be RBAC ready.
If you need to tag resources created by your Kubernetes cluster (EBS volumes, ELB load balancers etc.) check this AWS Lambda function which can do the tagging.