Kubernetes on Azure: Part 2 - Running a local Kubernetes cluster
Thwani sithole
Posted on June 14, 2024
In the previous blog post, we went through the basics of Kubernetes and the Kubernetes architecture. In this blog post, we will explore how to run a local Kubernetes cluster on our machines.
Table of Contents
- Installing Kubernetes
- Deploying a Pod
- Replication Controllers and ReplicaSets
- Creating a Deployment
- Creating a Service
- Conclusion
Installing Kubernetes
The easiest way to run a Kubernetes cluster is to install Docker Desktop and enable Kubernetes. On Docker Desktop, we can enable Kubernetes by going to the Docker Desktop settings, clicking on the Kubernetes tab on the left side, and checking the box to enable Kubernetes. Click on the Apply & Restart button to apply the changes.
Another way to run a Kubernetes cluster is to use Minikube. Minikube is a tool that allows you to run a single-node Kubernetes cluster on your local machine. Minikube can be installed on Windows, macOS, and Linux. To install Minikube, follow the instructions here. In this blog post, we will be using Docker Desktop to run our Kubernetes cluster.
On Windows and macOS, Docker Desktop comes with kubectl
, a command-line tool we use to interact with the Kubernetes cluster. If you prefer installing kubectl
on your own, instructions on how to do that can be found here.
To verify that Kubernetes is running, we can run the following command:
kubectl cluster-info
This command will display the address of the Kubernetes control plane. The output should look something like this:
# Kubernetes control plane is running at https://kubernetes.docker.internal:6443
# CoreDNS is running at https://kubernetes.docker.internal:6443/api/v1/namespaces/kube-system/services/kube-dns:dns/proxy
# To further debug and diagnose cluster problems, use 'kubectl cluster-info dump'.
When running Kubernetes locally, the cluster is run on a single node, which means the control (master) node and worker node are the same.
Let's see how we can deploy resources to our cluster. I have created a simple distributed calculator app that we will use to deploy resources to our Kubernetes cluster. The calculator app consists of the following components:
- calculator - A React application which is the front end of the app.
- go-subtractor - A Golang API that exposes an endpoint to subtract 2 numbers
- csharp-adder - A .NET API that exposes an endpoint to add 2 numbers
- python-multiplier - A Flask API that exposes an endpoint to multiply 2 numbers
- nestjs-divider - A NestJS API that exposes an endpoint to divide 2 numbers
The source code for the calculator app can be found here.
Deploying a Pod
In the previous post, we mentioned that Kubernetes Pods are the smallest unit of deployment. Kubernetes does not run containers directly, but groups one (or more) containers into a single atomic unit called a Pod. We can run a Pod in Kubernetes using the kubectl run
command. The below command runs the calculator
image in a Pod
kubectl run calculator --image=ghcr.io/thwani47/calculator:v1
# pod/calculator created
We can check that our Pod is running by using the kubectl get
command as follows
kubectl get pods
# NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
# calculator 0/1 CrashLoopBackOff 3 (25s ago) 62s
The status of the Pod is CrashLoopBack because the **calculator* container needs the other containers to be running for it to work correctly, so it will keep on crashing. We'll fix that a bit later*😀
We can also use kubectl describe
to get more information about the Pod such as the image used, the status, and the events that have occurred
kubectl describe pod calculator
# Name: calculator
# Namespace: default
# Priority: 0
# Service Account: default
# Node: docker-desktop/192.168.65.3
# Start Time: Sat, 01 Jun 2024 11:23:21 +0200
# Labels: run=calculator
# Annotations: <none>
# Status: Running
# IP: 10.1.0.126
# ... other information
we can get the logs of the Pod using the kubectl logs
command
kubectl logs calculator
# ... other logs
# 2024/05/31 20:06:44 [emerg] 1#1: host not found in upstream "csharp-adder" in /etc/nginx/conf.d/default.conf:10
# nginx: [emerg] host not found in upstream "csharp-adder" in /etc/nginx/conf.d/default.conf:10
We can delete our Pod using the kubectl delete
command
kubectl delete pod calculator
# pod "calculator" deleted
We can also make use of manifest files, which are either JSON or YAML files, which allow us to use a declarative approach instead of the imperative approach we used above to deploy resources to our cluster. Below is an example of a manifest file that deploys the calculator
Pod
# calculator-pod.yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: calculator
labels:
app: calculator
spec:
containers:
- name: calculator
image: ghcr.io/thwani47/calculator:v1
We can deploy the Pod using the kubectl apply
command
kubectl apply -f calculator-pod.yaml
# pod/calculator created
We can use the commands we used above to check the status of the Pod, get the logs, and delete the Pod.
In most cases, we will want to have multiple Pods running in our cluster, and we would like the assurance that the desired number of Pods are running at all times and if a Pod was to crash, it would be restarted. This is where Replication Controllers and ReplicaSets come in.
Replication Controllers and ReplicaSets
Controllers are the brains behind Kubernetes. They are responsible for ensuring that the desired state of the cluster matches the actual state. Controllers are responsible for creating, updating, and deleting resources in the cluster. The Replication Controller
helps us run multiple Pods and ensures that the desired number of Pods are running at all times. The Replication Controller
is an old technology which is being replaced by ReplicaSets
. We can define a ReplicationControler
for our calculator Pod as follows
# calculator-replication-controller.yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: ReplicationController
metadata:
name: calculator-replication-controller
labels:
app: calculator
spec:
replicas: 2 # the number of Pods we want to be always running
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: calculator
spec:
containers:
- name: calculator
image: ghcr.io/thwani47/calculator:v1
We add the Pod definition in the template
section of the Replication Controller. The replicas
field specifies the number of Pods we want to be running at all times. In this case, we want 2 Pods of the calculator app running at all times.
We can deploy the ReplicationController
using the kubectl apply
command
kubectl apply -f calculator-replication-controller.yaml
# replicationcontroller/calculator-replication-controller created
We can check the status of the Replication Controller using the kubectl get
command
kubectl get replicationcontroller
# NAME DESIRED CURRENT READY AGE
# calculator-replication-controller 2 2 0 41s
We can also view the Pods that are running using the kubectl get
command
kubectl get pods
# NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
# calculator-replication-controller-7n9fw 0/1 CrashLoopBackOff 4 (30s ago) 113s
# calculator-replication-controller-z4gbj 0/1 CrashLoopBackOff 4 (17s ago) 113s
The Pods controlled by a ReplicationController
are named using the format: <controller-name>-<random-string>
.
We can delete one Pod and a new Pod will be created to replace it
kubectl delete pod calculator-replication-controller-7n9fw
If we run the kubectl get pods
command, we will see that a new Pod has been created to replace the one we deleted.
kubectl get pods
# NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
# calculator-replication-controller-76hpd 0/1 CrashLoopBackOff 2 (18s ago) 35s
# calculator-replication-controller-z4gbj 0/1 CrashLoopBackOff 5 (74s ago) 4m12s
We can also use ReplicaSets
to manage Pods. ReplicaSets
are the next generation of ReplicationControllers
. ReplicaSets
are more powerful and flexible than ReplicationControllers
. We can define a ReplicaSet
for our calculator Pod as follows
# calculator-replicaset.yaml
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: ReplicaSet
metadata:
name: calculator-replicaset
labels:
app: calculator
spec:
replicas: 2
selector:
matchLabels:
app: calculator
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: calculator
spec:
containers:
- name: calculator
image: ghcr.io/thwani47/calculator:v1
The selector
field helps the ReplicaSet identify the Pods that fall under it. It is a required field for the ReplicaSet but not for the Replication Controller. The ReplicaSet can also manage Pods that were created outside of it.
We can deploy the ReplicaSet
using the kubectl apply
command
kubectl apply -f calculator-replicaset.yaml
# replicaset.apps/calculator-replicaset created
We can check the status of the ReplicaSet using the kubectl get
command
kubectl get replicaset
# NAME DESIRED CURRENT READY AGE
# calculator-replicaset 2 2 0 22s
We can also view the Pods that are running using the kubectl get
command
kubectl get pods
# NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
# pod/calculator-replicaset-d4p57 0/1 CrashLoopBackOff 3 (20s ago) 61s
# pod/calculator-replicaset-x2wkb 0/1 CrashLoopBackOff 3 (20s ago) 61s
Kubernetes Deployments
allow us to upgrade our application instances, roll back to a previous version, and scale our application instances. Deployments are the recommended way to manage Pods and ReplicaSets. In the next section, we will go through how to create a Deployment for our calculator.
Creating a Deployment
A Deployment
is a higher-level abstraction that manages ReplicaSets and Pods. Deployments allow us to define the desired state of our application and Kubernetes will ensure that the actual state matches the desired state. We can define a Deployment for our calculator Pod as follows
# calculator-deployment.yaml
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: calculator-deployment
labels:
app: calculator
spec:
replicas: 2
selector:
matchLabels:
app: calculator
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: calculator
spec:
containers:
- name: calculator
image: ghcr.io/thwani47/calculator:v1
A Deployment automatically creates a ReplicaSet. It also creates a rollout history that allows us to roll back to a previous version of the application. We can deploy the Deployment using the kubectl apply
command
kubectl apply -f calculator-deployment.yaml
# deployment.apps/calculator-deployment created
We can run kubectl get all
to get all the resources that have been created
kubectl get all
# NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
# pod/calculator-deployment-6c6cbff8bb-tp4f6 0/1 Error 3 (28s ago) 44s
# pod/calculator-deployment-6c6cbff8bb-tqcfd 0/1 Error 3 (30s ago) 44s
# NAME READY UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE
# deployment.apps/calculator-deployment 0/2 2 0 44s
# NAME DESIRED CURRENT READY AGE
# replicaset.apps/calculator-deployment-6c6cbff8bb 2 2 0 44s
This created a Deployment, a ReplicaSet, and 2 Pods. We can check the status of the Deployment using the kubectl get
command
kubectl get deployment calculator-deployment
We can also check the rollout history using the kubectl rollout
command
kubectl rollout history deployment calculator-deployment
# REVISION CHANGE-CAUSE
# 1 <none>
In Kubernetes, each Pod gets its own IP internal IP address. A Kubernetes cluster has its network with an address range, and the Pods are assigned IP addresses within this range. Pods can communicate with each other using these IP addresses. The only downside is that Pods are very volatile and can be created and destroyed at any time. This means that the IP address of a Pod can change at any time. To solve this problem, Kubernetes has a concept called Services
. Services provide a stable IP address and DNS name for a set of Pods. In the next section, we will go through how to create a Service for our calculator app.
Creating a Service
A Service
is an abstraction that defines a logical set of Pods and a policy by which to access them. Services allow us to expose our application to the outside world. Kubernetes allows us to create 3 types of Services:
- ClusterIP: This is the default type of Service. It exposes the Service on a cluster-internal IP. This means that the Service is only accessible within the cluster. This Service spans across all the Pods assigned to it.
- NodePort: This type of Service exposes the Service on each Node's IP address at a static port. This means that the Service is accessible from outside the cluster using the Node's IP address and the NodePort. This Service spans across multiple nodes in the setting of a multi-node cluster.
- LoadBalancer: This type of Service exposes the Service externally using a cloud provider's load balancer. This Service creates a load balancer that can distribute traffic to the Pods assigned to it.
We can define a Service for our calculator app as follows
# calculator-service.yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: calculator-service
labels:
app: calculator
spec:
selector:
app: calculator
ports:
- protocol: TCP
port: 3000 # the port the Service will be exposed on
targetPort: 80 # the port the Service will forward traffic to on the Pods
type: LoadBalancer
We create a LoadBalancer
Service because we want to expose our calculator app to the outside world. The Service will be exposed on port 3000
and will forward traffic to port 80
of the Pods. We can deploy the Service using the kubectl apply
command
kubectl apply -f calculator-service.yaml
# service/calculator-service created
We can check the status of the Service using the kubectl get
command
kubectl get service
# NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
# service/calculator-service LoadBalancer 10.107.255.80 localhost 3000:32092/TCP 4s
The Service has been created and is accessible on localhost:3000
. We can access the calculator app by navigating to localhost:3000
in our browser.
Now that we have covered the major Kubernetes objects we need to run our calculator app, let us run the whole thing to see it in action. In the application source code, we have a manifests
folder, which contains YAML files with the definitions of the Deployments and Services of the distributed calculator app. The manifest files define ClusterIP Services for the APIs and a LoadBalancer Service for the calculator app.
We can run the distributed calculator app using the following commands
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Thwani47/distributed-calculator/master/src/manifests/nestjs-divider-deployment.yaml
# deployment.apps/nestjs-divider-deployment created
# service/nestjs-divider created
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Thwani47/distributed-calculator/master/src/manifests/go-subtractor-deployment.yaml
# deployment.apps/go-subtractor-deployment created
# service/go-subtractor created
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Thwani47/distributed-calculator/master/src/manifests/csharp-adder-deployment.yaml
# deployment.apps/csharp-adder-deployment created
# service/csharp-adder created
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Thwani47/distributed-calculator/master/src/manifests/flask-multiplier-deployment.yaml
# deployment.apps/flask-multiplier-deployment created
# service/flask-multiplier created
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Thwani47/distributed-calculator/master/src/manifests/calculator-deployment.yaml
# deployment.apps/calculator-deployment created
# service/calculator-service created
Now if we run kubectl get all
, we will see all the resources that have been created.
kubectl get all
# NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
# pod/calculator-deployment-6dfddc9c56-rmsk4 1/1 Running 0 101s
# pod/csharp-adder-deployment-5945454df8-fhmf8 1/1 Running 0 2m25s
# pod/flask-multiplier-deployment-756d96c7fd-5b9sx 1/1 Running 0 2m4s
# pod/go-subtractor-deployment-5ff5d997db-cvvvt 1/1 Running 0 2m41s
# pod/nestjs-divider-deployment-c8dd85b56-bcqqc 1/1 Running 0 3m14s
# NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
# services/calculator-service LoadBalancer 10.109.13.40 localhost 3000:32277/TCP 101s
# services/csharp-adder ClusterIP 10.99.71.195 <none> 8080/TCP 2m25s
# services/flask-multiplier ClusterIP 10.111.134.130 <none> 5000/TCP 2m4s
# services/go-subtractor ClusterIP 10.109.25.228 <none> 8000/TCP 2m41s
# services/nestjs-divider ClusterIP 10.97.164.61 <none> 3000/TCP 3m14s
# NAME READY UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE
# deployment.apps/calculator-deployment 1/1 1 1 101s
# deployment.apps/csharp-adder-deployment 1/1 1 1 2m25s
# deployment.apps/flask-multiplier-deployment 1/1 1 1 2m4s
# deployment.apps/go-subtractor-deployment 1/1 1 1 2m41s
# deployment.apps/nestjs-divider-deployment 1/1 1 1 3m14s
# NAME DESIRED CURRENT READY AGE
# replciaset.apps/calculator-deployment-6dfddc9c56 1 1 1 101s
# replciaset.apps/csharp-adder-deployment-5945454df8 1 1 1 2m25s
# replciaset.apps/flask-multiplier-deployment-756d96c7fd 1 1 1 2m4s
# replciaset.apps/go-subtractor-deployment-5ff5d997db 1 1 1 2m41s
# replciaset.apps/nestjs-divider-deployment-c8dd85b56 1 1 1 3m14s
We can see that our calculator-service
is the only service that has an EXTERNAL-IP
, which is localhost
in this case. We can access the calculator app by navigating to localhost:3000
in our browser, and we should see the calculator app running:
Conclusion
In this blog post, we covered how to run a local Kubernetes cluster on our machines. We went through how to deploy Pods, Replication Controllers, ReplicaSets, Deployments, and Services. We also ran a distributed calculator app on our local Kubernetes cluster. In the next blog post, we will be going through how to deploy the calculator app on an Azure Kubernetes cluster using the Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS).
Posted on June 14, 2024
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