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A Ruby gem (and Docker image) to install and manage Kubernetes clusters in Hetzner Cloud using the lightweight distribution k3s by Rancher.

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Create production grade Kubernetes clusters in Hetzner Cloud in a couple of minutes or less

This is a CLI tool - based on a Ruby gem - to quickly create and manage Kubernetes clusters in Hetzner Cloud using the lightweight Kubernetes distribution k3s from Rancher.

Hetzner Cloud is an awesome cloud provider which offers a truly great service with the best performance/cost ratio in the market. With Hetzner's Cloud Controller Manager and CSI driver you can provision load balancers and persistent volumes very easily.

k3s is my favorite Kubernetes distribution now because it uses much less memory and CPU, leaving more resources to workloads. It is also super quick to deploy because it's a single binary.

Using this tool, creating a highly available k3s cluster with 3 masters for the control plane and 3 worker nodes takes about a couple of minutes only. This includes

  • creating the infra resources (servers, private network, firewall, load balancer for the API server for HA clusters)
  • deploying k3s to the nodes
  • installing the Hetzner Cloud Controller Manager to provision load balancers right away
  • installing the Hetzner CSI Driver to provision persistent volumes using Hetzner's block storage
  • installing the Rancher System Upgrade Controller to make upgrades to a newer version of k3s easy and quick

See roadmap here for the features planned or in progress.

Also see this wiki page for a tutorial on how to set up a cluster with the most common setup to get you started.

Requirements

All that is needed to use this tool is

  • an Hetzner Cloud account
  • an Hetzner Cloud token: for this you need to create a project from the cloud console, and then an API token with both read and write permissions (sidebar > Security > API Tokens); you will see the token only once, so ensure you take note of it somewhere safe
  • a recent Ruby runtime installed (see this page for instructions if you are not familiar with Ruby). I am also going to try and create single binaries for this tool that will include the Ruby runtime, for easier installation.

Installation

Once you have the Ruby runtime up and running (3.1.2 or newer), you just need to install the gem:

gem install hetzner-k3s

This will install the hetzner-k3s executable in your PATH.

With Docker

Alternatively, if you don't want to set up a Ruby runtime but have Docker installed, you can use a container. Run the following from inside the directory where you have the config file for the cluster (described in the next section):

docker run --rm -it \
  -v ${PWD}:/cluster \
  -v ${HOME}/.ssh:/tmp/.ssh \
  vitobotta/hetzner-k3s:v0.5.7 \
  create-cluster \
  --config-file /cluster/test.yaml

Replace test.yaml with the name of your config file.

Creating a cluster

The tool requires a simple configuration file in order to create/upgrade/delete clusters, in the YAML format like in the example below:

---
hetzner_token: <your token>
cluster_name: test
kubeconfig_path: "./kubeconfig"
k3s_version: v1.21.3+k3s1
public_ssh_key_path: "~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub"
private_ssh_key_path: "~/.ssh/id_rsa"
ssh_allowed_networks:
  - 0.0.0.0/0
verify_host_key: false
location: nbg1
schedule_workloads_on_masters: false
masters:
  instance_type: cpx21
  instance_count: 3
worker_node_pools:
- name: small
  instance_type: cpx21
  instance_count: 4
- name: big
  instance_type: cpx31
  instance_count: 2
additional_packages:
- somepackage
post_create_commands:
- apt update
- apt upgrade -y
- apt autoremove -y
- shutdown -r now
enable_encryption: true
# kube_api_server_args:
# - arg1
# - ...
# kube_scheduler_args:
# - arg1
# - ...
# kube_controller_manager_args:
# - arg1
# - ...
# kube_cloud_controller_manager_args:
# - arg1
# - ...
# kubelet_args:
# - arg1
# - ...
# kube_proxy_args:
# - arg1
# - ...

It should hopefully be self explanatory; you can run hetzner-k3s releases to see a list of the available releases from the most recent to the oldest available.

If you are using Docker, then set kubeconfig_path to /cluster/kubeconfig so that the kubeconfig is created in the same directory where your config file is. Also set the config file path to /cluster/<filename>.

If you don't want to specify the Hetzner token in the config file (for example if you want to use the tool with CI), then you can use the HCLOUD_TOKEN environment variable instead, which has predecence.

Important: The tool assignes the label cluster to each server it creates, with the cluster name you specify in the config file, as the value. So please ensure you don't create unrelated servers in the same project having the label cluster=<cluster name>, because otherwise they will be deleted if you delete the cluster. I recommend you create a separate Hetzner project for each cluster, see note at the end of this README for more details.

If you set masters.instance_count to 1 then the tool will create a non highly available control plane; for production clusters you may want to set it to a number greater than 1. This number must be odd to avoid split brain issues with etcd and the recommended number is 3.

You can specify any number of worker node pools for example to have mixed nodes with different specs for different workloads.

At the moment Hetzner Cloud has four locations: two in Germany (nbg1, Nuremberg and fsn1, Falkenstein), one in Finland (hel1, Helsinki) and one in the USA (ash, Ashburn, Virginia). Please note that the Ashburn, Virginia location has just been announced and it's limited to AMD instances for now.

For the available instance types and their specs, either check from inside a project when adding a server manually or run the following with your Hetzner token:

curl \
	-H "Authorization: Bearer $API_TOKEN" \
	'https://api.hetzner.cloud/v1/server_types'

By default, the image in use is Ubuntu 20.04, but you can specify an image to use with the image config option. This makes it also possible to use a snapshot that you have already created from and existing server (for example to preinstall some tools). If you want to use a custom snapshot you'll need to specify the ID of the snapshot/image, not the description you gave when you created the template server. To find the ID of your custom image/snapshot, run:

curl \
	-H "Authorization: Bearer $API_TOKEN" \
	'https://api.hetzner.cloud/v1/images'

Note that if you use a custom image, the creation of the servers may take longer than when using the default image.

Also note: the option verify_host_key is by default set to false to disable host key verification. This is because sometimes when creating new servers, Hetzner may assign IP addresses that were previously used by other servers you owned in the past. Therefore the host key verification would fail. If you set this option to true and this happens, the tool won't be able to continue creating the cluster until you resolve the issue with one of the suggestions it will give you.

Finally, to create the cluster run:

hetzner-k3s create-cluster --config-file cluster_config.yaml

This will take a couple of minutes or less depending on the number of masters and worker nodes.

If you are creating an HA cluster and see the following in the output you can safely ignore it - it happens when additional masters are joining the first one:

Job for k3s.service failed because the control process exited with error code.
See "systemctl status k3s.service" and "journalctl -xe" for details.

Idempotency

The create-cluster command can be run any number of times with the same configuration without causing any issue, since the process is idempotent. This means that if for some reason the create process gets stuck or throws errors (for example if the Hetzner API is unavailable or there are timeouts etc), you can just stop the current command, and re-run it with the same configuration to continue from where it left.

Adding nodes

To add one or more nodes to a node pool, just change the instance count in the configuration file for that node pool and re-run the create command.

Scaling down a node pool

To make a node pool smaller:

  • decrease the instance count for the node pool in the configuration file so that those extra nodes are not recreated in the future
  • delete the nodes from Kubernetes (kubectl delete node <name>)
  • delete the instances from the cloud console (make sure you delete the correct ones :p)

In a future relese I will add some automation for the cleanup.

Replacing a problematic node

  • delete the node from Kubernetes (kubectl delete node <name>)
  • delete the correct instance from the cloud console
  • re-run the create script. This will re-create the missing node and have it join to the cluster

Converting a non-HA cluster to HA

It's easy to convert a non-HA with a single master cluster to HA with multiple masters. Just change the masters instance count and re-run the create command. This will create a load balancer for the API server and update the kubeconfig so that all the API requests go through the load balancer.

Upgrading to a new version of k3s

If it's the first time you upgrade the cluster, all you need to do to upgrade it to a newer version of k3s is run the following command:

hetzner-k3s upgrade-cluster --config-file cluster_config.yaml --new-k3s-version v1.21.3+k3s1

So you just need to specify the new k3s version as an additional parameter and the configuration file will be updated with the new version automatically during the upgrade. To see the list of available k3s releases run the command hetzner-k3s releases.

Note that the API server will briefly be unavailable during the upgrade of the controlplane.

To check the upgrade progress, run watch kubectl get nodes -owide. You will see the masters being upgraded one per time, followed by the worker nodes.

What to do if the upgrade doesn't go smoothly

If the upgrade gets stuck for some reason, or it doesn't upgrade all the nodes:

  1. Clean up the existing upgrade plans and jobs, and restart the upgrade controller
kubectl -n system-upgrade delete job --all
kubectl -n system-upgrade delete plan --all

kubectl label node --all plan.upgrade.cattle.io/k3s-server- plan.upgrade.cattle.io/k3s-agent-

kubectl -n system-upgrade rollout restart deployment system-upgrade-controller
kubectl -n system-upgrade rollout status deployment system-upgrade-controller

I recommend running the above commands also when upgrading a cluster that has already been upgraded at least once previously, since the upgrade leaves some stuff behind that needs to be cleaned up.

  1. Re-run the upgrade-cluster command with an additiona parameter --force true.

I have noticed that sometimes I need to re-run the upgrade command a couple of times to complete an upgrade successfully. Must be some bug in the system upgrade controller but I haven't investigated further.

You can also check the logs of the system upgrade controller's pod:

kubectl -n system-upgrade \
  logs -f $(kubectl -n system-upgrade get pod -l pod-template-hash -o jsonpath="{.items[0].metadata.name}")

A final note about upgrades is that if for some reason the upgrade gets stuck after upgrading the masters and before upgrading the worker nodes, just cleaning up the resources as described above might not be enough. In that case also try running the following to tell the upgrade job for the workers that the masters have already been upgraded, so the upgrade can continue for the workers:

kubectl label node <master1> <master2> <master2> plan.upgrade.cattle.io/k3s-server=upgraded

Upgrading the OS on nodes

  • consider adding a temporary node during the process if you don't have enough spare capacity in the cluster
  • drain one node
  • update etc
  • reboot
  • uncordon
  • proceed with the next node

Deleting a cluster

To delete a cluster, running

hetzner-k3s delete-cluster --config-file cluster_config.yaml

This will delete all the resources in the Hetzner Cloud project for the cluster being deleted.

Additional info

Load balancers

Once the cluster is ready, you can already provision services of type LoadBalancer for your workloads (such as the Nginx ingress controller for example) thanks to the Hetzner Cloud Controller Manager that is installed automatically.

There are some annotations that you can add to your services to configure the load balancers. I personally use the following:

  service:
    annotations:
      load-balancer.hetzner.cloud/hostname: <a valid fqdn>
      load-balancer.hetzner.cloud/http-redirect-https: 'false'
      load-balancer.hetzner.cloud/location: nbg1
      load-balancer.hetzner.cloud/name: <lb name>
      load-balancer.hetzner.cloud/uses-proxyprotocol: 'true'
      load-balancer.hetzner.cloud/use-private-ip: "true"

I set load-balancer.hetzner.cloud/hostname to a valid hostname that I configure (after creating the load balancer) with the IP of the load balancer; I use this together with the annotation load-balancer.hetzner.cloud/uses-proxyprotocol: 'true' to enable the proxy protocol. Reason: I enable the proxy protocol on the load balancers so that my ingress controller and applications can "see" the real IP address of the client. However when this is enabled, there is a problem where cert-manager fails http01 challenges; you can find an explanation of why here but the easy fix provided by some providers - including Hetzner - is to configure the load balancer so that it uses a hostname instead of an IP. Again, read the explanation for the reason but if you care about seeing the actual IP of the client then I recommend you use these two annotations.

The annotation load-balancer.hetzner.cloud/use-private-ip: "true" ensures that the communication between the load balancer and the nodes happens through the private network, so we don't have to open any ports on the nodes (other than the port 6443 for the Kubernetes API server).

The other annotations should be self explanatory. You can find a list of the available annotations here.

Persistent volumes

Once the cluster is ready you can create persistent volumes out of the box with the default storage class hcloud-volumes, since the Hetzner CSI driver is installed automatically. This will use Hetzner's block storage (based on Ceph so it's replicated and highly available) for your persistent volumes. Note that the minimum size of a volume is 10Gi. If you specify a smaller size for a volume, the volume will be created with a capacity of 10Gi anyway.

Keeping a project per cluster

I recommend that you create a separate Hetzner project for each cluster, because otherwise multiple clusters will attempt to create overlapping routes. I will make the pod cidr configurable in the future to avoid this, but I still recommend keeping clusters separated from each other. This way, if you want to delete a cluster with all the resources created for it, you can just delete the project.

Contributing and support

Please create a PR if you want to propose any changes, or open an issue if you are having trouble with the tool - I will do my best to help if I can.

Contributors:

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.

Code of Conduct

Everyone interacting in the hetzner-k3s project's codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms and mailing lists is expected to follow the code of conduct.

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A Ruby gem (and Docker image) to install and manage Kubernetes clusters in Hetzner Cloud using the lightweight distribution k3s by Rancher.

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