--- --- This guide explains how we can manage multiple kubernetes clusters using federation. [Federation proposal](https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/blob/{{page.githubbranch}}/docs/proposals/federation.md) details the use cases motivating cluster federation. * TOC {:toc} ## Setup To be able to federate multiple clusters, we first need to setup a federation control plane. Follow the [setup guide](/docs/admin/federation/) to setup the federation control plane. ## Hybrid cloud capabilities Federations of Kubernetes Clusters can include clusters running in different cloud providers (e.g. Google Cloud, AWS), and on-premises (e.g. on OpenStack). Simply create all of the clusters that you require, in the appropriate cloud providers and/or locations, and register each cluster's API endpoint and credentials with your Federation API Server (See the [federation admin guide](/docs/admin/federation/) for details). Thereafter, your API resources can span different clusters and cloud providers. ## API resources Once we have the control plane setup, we can start creating federation API resources. The following guides explain some of the resources in detail: * [Events](/docs/user-guide/federation/events/) * [Ingress](/docs/user-guide/federation/federated-ingress/) * [Namespaces](/docs/user-guide/federation/namespaces/) * [ReplicaSets](/docs/user-guide/federation/replicasets/) * [Secrets](/docs/user-guide/federation/secrets/) * [Services](/docs/user-guide/federation/federated-services/) [API reference docs](/federation/docs/api-reference/readme/) lists all the resources supported by federation apiserver.