terraform-provider-kops
brings kOps
into terraform in a fully managed way, enabling idempotency through direct
integration with the kOps api:
- No
local_exec
- No yaml templating
- No CLI invocations
... just pure go code.
Currently using kOps v1.26.4
and compatible with terraform 0.15
and higher.
NOTES
- For now, provisioning the network is not supported. The network must
be created separately and given to the provider through cluster attribute
network_id
and subnets attributesprovider_id
. - The provider has only been tested with AWS, Calico and Cilium networking. If you use it with another cloud or networking provider, please let us know so that we can help troubleshooting if necessary and update the docs.
kOps is an amazing tool but it can be challenging to integrate in an IAC (infrastructure as code) stack.
Typical solutions usually involve running kOps CLI in shell scripts or generating kOps templates manually and force syncing them with the kOps store.
In most cases, getting something idempotent is difficult because you need to somewhat keep the state of the cluster and are responsible for deleting obsolete instange groups for example.
This is where terraform
shines in, state management. This provider takes care
of creating, updating and deleting instance groups as they evolve over time.
Even if kOps provides kops update cluster --target terraform
to create the
terraform configuration for a kOps cluster, it is still necessary to run
kops rolling-update cluster
to recycle instance groups when something changes
in the cluster.
With this provider, this is all taken care of and you should never need to invoke
kOps manually.
The provider declares resources to declare the state of the cluster:
- kops_cluster defines the desired state of a cluster
- kops_instance_group defines the desired state of a cluster instance group
The provider also declares data sources to fetch the state of the cluster and use it in your terraform code:
- kops_cluster fetches the current state of a cluster
- kops_instance_group fetches the current state of a cluster instance group
- kops_cluster_status fetches the current status of a cluster
- kops_kube_config fetches the kube config infos of a cluster
Finally, a special resource takes care of the cluster lifecyle:
- kops_cluster_updater manages cluster updates and/or rolling updates
Provider configuration holds cloud provider authentication settings, currently only AWS is supported.
The full documentation is available in the docs folder or on the terraform registry provider page.
To install the provider, add it in the terraform required_providers
set.
terraform {
required_providers {
kops = {
source = "eddycharly/kops"
}
}
}
To build the provider, clone this repository and run the following command:
make all
If you want to install the built provider after building it, run the following command instead (working on linux and macos):
make install
To use the provider you will need to register it in your terraform code:
terraform {
required_providers {
kops = {
source = "github/eddycharly/kops"
versions = ["0.0.1"]
}
}
}
provider "kops" {
state_store = "s3://cluster.example.com"
// optionally set up your cloud provider access config
aws {
profile = "example_profile"
}
}
locals {
masterType = "t3.medium"
nodeType = "t3.medium"
clusterName = "cluster.example.com"
dnsZone = "example.com"
vpcId = "vpc-id"
privateSubnets = [
{ subnetId = "private-subnet-0", zone = "zone-0" },
{ subnetId = "private-subnet-1", zone = "zone-1" },
{ subnetId = "private-subnet-2", zone = "zone-2" }
]
utilitySubnets = [
{ subnetId = "utility-subnet-0", zone = "zone-0" },
{ subnetId = "utility-subnet-1", zone = "zone-1" },
{ subnetId = "utility-subnet-2", zone = "zone-2" }
]
}
resource "kops_cluster" "cluster" {
name = local.clusterName
admin_ssh_key = file("${path.module}/../dummy_ssh.pub")
kubernetes_version = "stable"
dns_zone = local.dnsZone
network_id = local.vpcId
cloud_provider {
aws {}
}
iam {
allow_container_registry = true
}
networking {
calico {}
}
topology {
masters = "private"
nodes = "private"
dns {
type = "Private"
}
}
# private subnets
subnet {
name = "private-0"
type = "Private"
provider_id = local.privateSubnets[0].subnetId
zone = local.privateSubnets[0].zone
}
subnet {
name = "private-1"
type = "Private"
provider_id = local.privateSubnets[1].subnetId
zone = local.privateSubnets[1].zone
}
subnet {
name = "private-2"
type = "Private"
provider_id = local.privateSubnets[2].subnetId
zone = local.privateSubnets[2].zone
}
subnet {
name = "utility-0"
type = "Utility"
provider_id = local.utilitySubnets[0].subnetId
zone = local.utilitySubnets[0].zone
}
subnet {
name = "utility-1"
type = "Utility"
provider_id = local.utilitySubnets[1].subnetId
zone = local.utilitySubnets[1].zone
}
subnet {
name = "utility-2"
type = "Utility"
provider_id = local.utilitySubnets[2].subnetId
zone = local.utilitySubnets[2].zone
}
# etcd clusters
etcd_cluster {
name = "main"
member {
name = "master-0"
instance_group = "master-0"
}
member {
name = "master-1"
instance_group = "master-1"
}
member {
name = "master-2"
instance_group = "master-2"
}
}
etcd_cluster {
name = "events"
member {
name = "master-0"
instance_group = "master-0"
}
member {
name = "master-1"
instance_group = "master-1"
}
member {
name = "master-2"
instance_group = "master-2"
}
}
}
resource "kops_instance_group" "master-0" {
cluster_name = kops_cluster.cluster.id
name = "master-0"
role = "Master"
min_size = 1
max_size = 1
machine_type = local.masterType
subnets = ["private-0"]
}
resource "kops_instance_group" "master-1" {
cluster_name = kops_cluster.cluster.id
name = "master-1"
role = "Master"
min_size = 1
max_size = 1
machine_type = local.masterType
subnets = ["private-1"]
}
resource "kops_instance_group" "master-2" {
cluster_name = kops_cluster.cluster.id
name = "master-2"
role = "Master"
min_size = 1
max_size = 1
machine_type = local.masterType
subnets = ["private-2"]
}
resource "kops_instance_group" "node-0" {
cluster_name = kops_cluster.cluster.id
name = "node-0"
role = "Node"
min_size = 1
max_size = 2
machine_type = local.nodeType
subnets = ["private-0"]
}
resource "kops_instance_group" "node-1" {
cluster_name = kops_cluster.cluster.id
name = "node-1"
role = "Node"
min_size = 1
max_size = 2
machine_type = local.nodeType
subnets = ["private-1"]
}
resource "kops_instance_group" "node-2" {
cluster_name = kops_cluster.cluster.id
name = "node-2"
role = "Node"
min_size = 1
max_size = 2
machine_type = local.nodeType
subnets = ["private-2"]
}
resource "kops_cluster_updater" "updater" {
cluster_name = kops_cluster.cluster.id
keepers = {
cluster = kops_cluster.cluster.revision
master-0 = kops_instance_group.master-0.revision
master-1 = kops_instance_group.master-1.revision
master-2 = kops_instance_group.master-2.revision
node-0 = kops_instance_group.node-0.revision
node-1 = kops_instance_group.node-1.revision
node-2 = kops_instance_group.node-2.revision
}
}
More examples are available in the /examples
folder:
You can import an existing cluster by creating a kops_cluster
configuration
and running the terraform import
command:
-
Create a terraform configuration:
provider "kops" { state_store = "s3://cluster.example.com" } resource "kops_cluster" "cluster" { name = "cluster.example.com" // .... }
-
Run
terraform import
:terraform import kops_cluster.cluster cluster.example.com
You can import an existing cluster by creating a kops_instance_group
configuration
and running the terraform import
command:
-
Create a terraform configuration:
provider "kops" { state_store = "s3://cluster.example.com" } resource "kops_instance_group" "ig-0" { cluster_name = "cluster.example.com" name = "ig-0" // .... }
-
Run
terraform import
:terraform import kops_instance_group.ig-0 cluster.example.com/ig-0
NOTE: the id of the instance group to be imported must be given in the
cluster name/instance group name
format.
To retrieve the kubeconfig
file for the cluster, run the following command:
kops export kubecfg --admin --name cluster.example.com --state s3://cluster.example.com