Kubernetes LEMP Stack is a distributed LEMP stack built on top of a Kubernetes cluster. It enables anyone to deploy multiple CMSs (currently WordPress) for any number of websites. We built it to be secure and very fast by default.
Currently this supports Google Compute Engine as a cloud provider. Other providers haven't been tested (things like PersistentVolume
and Ingress
depend on your cloud provider).
There are already stable turn-key deployments for various CMSs via Kubernetes Helm Charts, but Kubernetes LEMP Stack is designed more or less in the traditional LEMP fashion where you get a bucket for all of your HTML at /var/www/html
and you may or may not use a CMS.
Actually, k8s LEMP Stack should be able to serve as your own personal web server farm! Use it as a backend to your own cloud hosting company! We also want extra customisation in terms of our web server and security hardening measures. In addition, future improvements aim to make this software scalable and highly-available.
-
WordPress
- Each WordPress CMS is based on the wordpress:php7.3-fpm image with extra required PHP extensions such as
redis
. WordPress is contained in oneDeployment
controller along with an NGINX container with FastCGI caching and the NAXSI web application firewall. - Each WordPress
Deployment
gets it's ownPersistentVolume
as well asSecret
objects for storing sensitive information such as passwords for their DBs. ConfigMap
s are used to inject variousphp.ini
settings for PHP 7.3.
- Each WordPress CMS is based on the wordpress:php7.3-fpm image with extra required PHP extensions such as
-
NGINX
- The NGINX container has multiple handy configurations for multi-site and caching, all easily deployed using
ConfigMap
objects. - We build NGINX with the
nginx-naxsi
image, which comes with:- NBS System's NAXSI module. NAXSI means NGINX Anti-XSS & SQL Injection.
- Handy configurations for NGINX and the NAXSI web application firewall are also included via
ConfigMap
s.
- The NGINX container has multiple handy configurations for multi-site and caching, all easily deployed using
-
MariaDB
- Initially, the WordPress pods all interface with one
mariadb
StatefulSet
. This is so anyone can start off with a full-fledged web farm and bring up any number of websites using onemariadb
instance with a databse for each site. Future improvements will allow for HA and scalable clustered RDBMSs. mariadb
also gets aPersistentVolume
andSecret
objects.- Updating
StatefulSet
objects in Kubernetes is currently a manual process, meaning we have to execute MySQL commands in themariadb
pod to add new databases and users.
- Initially, the WordPress pods all interface with one
-
Redis
- To reduce hits to the DB we build the WP image with the
redis
PHP extension and include a RedisDeployment
. - WP must be configured to use Redis upon initialising a new WP site by installing and configuring the WP Redis Object Cache plugin.
- To reduce hits to the DB we build the WP image with the
-
Ingress/Kube Lego
- Websites are reached externally via an
nginx
Ingress
controller. See Kubernetes documentation regardingIngress
in the official docs and on GitHub. - All TLS is terminated at
Ingress
via free Let's Encrypt certificates good for all domains on your cluster. Better yet, certificate issuance is handled automatically with the awesome cert-manager.
- Websites are reached externally via an
-
See Installation and Usage for instructions on getting up and running.
- Add diagram detailing the general structure of the cluster
- High availability
- Ceph distributed storage
- (Optional) HA MySQL via sharding, clustering, etc.
- Add shared and distributed storage to WordPress deployments so they can then be replicated
- PHP socket
- New annotation
kubernetes.io/ingress.global-static-ip-name: "wpclust-ingress"
- Migrate to certmanager (with Helm installation)
Visit USAGE.md.
This project was inspired by the official Kubernetes WordPress + MySQL sample and builds on it with the various other official Docker images and Kubernetes applications mentioned previously.