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kubeadm init and kubeadm join together provides a nice user experience for creating a best-practice but bare Kubernetes cluster from scratch.
However, it might not be obvious how kubeadm does that.
This document provides additional details on what happen under the hood, with the aim of sharing knowledge on Kubernetes cluster best practices. {{% /capture %}}
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Core design principles
The cluster that kubeadm init and kubeadm join set up should be:
- Secure: It should adopt latest best-practices like:
- enforcing RBAC
- using the Node Authorizer
- using secure communication between the control plane components
- using secure communication between the API server and the kubelets
- lock-down the kubelet API
- locking down access to the API for system components like the kube-proxy and CoreDNS
- locking down what a Bootstrap Token can access
- Easy to use: The user should not have to run anything more than a couple of commands:
kubeadm initexport KUBECONFIG=/etc/kubernetes/admin.confkubectl apply -f <network-of-choice.yaml>kubeadm join --token <token> <master-ip>:<master-port>
- Extendable:
- It should not favor any particular network provider. Configuring the cluster network is out-of-scope
- It should provide the possibility to use a config file for customizing various parameters
Constants and well-known values and paths
In order to reduce complexity and to simplify development of higher level tools that build on top of kubeadm, it uses a limited set of constant values for well-known paths and file names.
The Kubernetes directory /etc/kubernetes is a constant in the application, since it is clearly the given path
in a majority of cases, and the most intuitive location; other constants paths and file names are:
/etc/kubernetes/manifestsas the path where kubelet should look for static Pod manifests. Names of static Pod manifests are:etcd.yamlkube-apiserver.yamlkube-controller-manager.yamlkube-scheduler.yaml
/etc/kubernetes/as the path where kubeconfig files with identities for control plane components are stored. Names of kubeconfig files are:kubelet.conf(bootstrap-kubelet.confduring TLS bootstrap)controller-manager.confscheduler.confadmin.conffor the cluster admin and kubeadm itself
- Names of certificates and key files :
ca.crt,ca.keyfor the Kubernetes certificate authorityapiserver.crt,apiserver.keyfor the API server certificateapiserver-kubelet-client.crt,apiserver-kubelet-client.keyfor the client certificate used by the API server to connect to the kubelets securelysa.pub,sa.keyfor the key used by the controller manager when signing ServiceAccountfront-proxy-ca.crt,front-proxy-ca.keyfor the front proxy certificate authorityfront-proxy-client.crt,front-proxy-client.keyfor the front proxy client
kubeadm init workflow internal design
The kubeadm init internal workflow consists of a sequence of atomic work tasks to perform,
as described in kubeadm init.
The kubeadm init phase command allows users to invoke each task individually, and ultimately offers a reusable and composable
API/toolbox that can be used by other Kubernetes bootstrap tools, by any IT automation tool or by an advanced user
for creating custom clusters.
Preflight checks
Kubeadm executes a set of preflight checks before starting the init, with the aim to verify preconditions and avoid common cluster startup problems.
The user can skip specific preflight checks or all of them with the --ignore-preflight-errors option.
- [warning] If the Kubernetes version to use (specified with the
--kubernetes-versionflag) is at least one minor version higher than the kubeadm CLI version. - Kubernetes system requirements:
- if running on linux:
- [error] if Kernel is older than the minimum required version
- [error] if required cgroups subsystem aren't in set up
- if using docker:
- [warning/error] if Docker service does not exist, if it is disabled, if it is not active.
- [error] if Docker endpoint does not exist or does not work
- [warning] if docker version is not in the list of validated docker versions
- If using other cri engine:
- [error] if crictl socket does not answer
- if running on linux:
- [error] if user is not root
- [error] if the machine hostname is not a valid DNS subdomain
- [warning] if the host name cannot be reached via network lookup
- [error] if kubelet version is lower that the minimum kubelet version supported by kubeadm (current minor -1)
- [error] if kubelet version is at least one minor higher than the required controlplane version (unsupported version skew)
- [warning] if kubelet service does not exist or if it is disabled
- [warning] if firewalld is active
- [error] if API server bindPort or ports 10250/10251/10252 are used
- [Error] if
/etc/kubernetes/manifestfolder already exists and it is not empty - [Error] if
/proc/sys/net/bridge/bridge-nf-call-iptablesfile does not exist/does not contain 1 - [Error] if advertise address is ipv6 and
/proc/sys/net/bridge/bridge-nf-call-ip6tablesdoes not exist/does not contain 1. - [Error] if swap is on
- [Error] if
conntrack,ip,iptables,mount,nsentercommands are not present in the command path - [warning] if
ebtables,ethtool,socat,tc,touch,crictlcommands are not present in the command path - [warning] if extra arg flags for API server, controller manager, scheduler contains some invalid options
- [warning] if connection to https://API.AdvertiseAddress:API.BindPort goes through proxy
- [warning] if connection to services subnet goes through proxy (only first address checked)
- [warning] if connection to Pods subnet goes through proxy (only first address checked)
- If external etcd is provided:
- [Error] if etcd version is older than the minimum required version
- [Error] if etcd certificates or keys are specified, but not provided
- If external etcd is NOT provided (and thus local etcd will be installed):
- [Error] if ports 2379 is used
- [Error] if Etcd.DataDir folder already exists and it is not empty
- If authorization mode is ABAC:
- [Error] if abac_policy.json does not exist
- If authorization mode is WebHook
- [Error] if webhook_authz.conf does not exist
Please note that:
- Preflight checks can be invoked individually with the
kubeadm init phase preflightcommand
Generate the necessary certificates
Kubeadm generates certificate and private key pairs for different purposes:
- A self signed certificate authority for the Kubernetes cluster saved into
ca.crtfile andca.keyprivate key file - A serving certificate for the API server, generated using
ca.crtas the CA, and saved intoapiserver.crtfile with its private keyapiserver.key. This certificate should contain following alternative names:- The Kubernetes service's internal clusterIP (the first address in the services CIDR, e.g.
10.96.0.1if service subnet is10.96.0.0/12) - Kubernetes DNS names, e.g.
kubernetes.default.svc.cluster.localif--service-dns-domainflag value iscluster.local, plus default DNS nameskubernetes.default.svc,kubernetes.default,kubernetes - The node-name
- The
--apiserver-advertise-address - Additional alternative names specified by the user
- The Kubernetes service's internal clusterIP (the first address in the services CIDR, e.g.
- A client certificate for the API server to connect to the kubelets securely, generated using
ca.crtas the CA and saved intoapiserver-kubelet-client.crtfile with its private keyapiserver-kubelet-client.key. This certificate should be in thesystem:mastersorganization - A private key for signing ServiceAccount Tokens saved into
sa.keyfile along with its public keysa.pub - A certificate authority for the front proxy saved into
front-proxy-ca.crtfile with its keyfront-proxy-ca.key - A client cert for the front proxy client, generate using
front-proxy-ca.crtas the CA and saved intofront-proxy-client.crtfile with its private keyfront-proxy-client.key
Certificates are stored by default in /etc/kubernetes/pki, but this directory is configurable using the --cert-dir flag.
Please note that:
- If a given certificate and private key pair both exist, and its content is evaluated compliant with the above specs, the existing files will
be used and the generation phase for the given certificate skipped. This means the user can, for example, copy an existing CA to
/etc/kubernetes/pki/ca.{crt,key}, and then kubeadm will use those files for signing the rest of the certs. See also using custom certificates - Only for the CA, it is possible to provide the
ca.crtfile but not theca.keyfile, if all other certificates and kubeconfig files already are in place kubeadm recognize this condition and activates the ExternalCA , which also implies thecsrsignercontroller in controller-manager won't be started - If kubeadm is running in external CA mode; all the certificates must be provided by the user, because kubeadm cannot generate them by itself
- In case of kubeadm is executed in the
--dry-runmode, certificates files are written in a temporary folder - Certificate generation can be invoked individually with the
kubeadm init phase certs allcommand
Generate kubeconfig files for control plane components
Kubeadm generates kubeconfig files with identities for control plane components:
- A kubeconfig file for the kubelet to use during TLS bootstrap - /etc/kubernetes/bootstrap-kubelet.conf. Inside this file there is a bootstrap-token or embedded client certificates for authenticating this node with the cluster.
This client cert should:
- Be in the
system:nodesorganization, as required by the Node Authorization module - Have the Common Name (CN)
system:node:<hostname-lowercased>
- Be in the
- A kubeconfig file for controller-manager,
/etc/kubernetes/controller-manager.conf; inside this file is embedded a client certificate with controller-manager identity. This client cert should have the CNsystem:kube-controller-manager, as defined by default RBAC core components roles - A kubeconfig file for scheduler,
/etc/kubernetes/scheduler.conf; inside this file is embedded a client certificate with scheduler identity. This client cert should have the CNsystem:kube-scheduler, as defined by default RBAC core components roles
Additionally, a kubeconfig file for kubeadm itself and the admin is generated and saved into the /etc/kubernetes/admin.conf file.
The "admin" here is defined as the actual person(s) that is administering the cluster and wants to have full control (root) over the cluster.
The embedded client certificate for admin should be in the system:masters organization, as defined by default
RBAC user facing role bindings. It should also include a
CN. Kubeadm uses the kubernetes-admin CN.
Please note that:
ca.crtcertificate is embedded in all the kubeconfig files.- If a given kubeconfig file exists, and its content is evaluated compliant with the above specs, the existing file will be used and the generation phase for the given kubeconfig skipped
- If kubeadm is running in ExternalCA mode, all the required kubeconfig must be provided by the user as well, because kubeadm cannot generate any of them by itself
- In case of kubeadm is executed in the
--dry-runmode, kubeconfig files are written in a temporary folder - Kubeconfig files generation can be invoked individually with the
kubeadm init phase kubeconfig allcommand
Generate static Pod manifests for control plane components
Kubeadm writes static Pod manifest files for control plane components to /etc/kubernetes/manifests. The kubelet watches this directory for Pods to create on startup.
Static Pod manifest share a set of common properties:
- All static Pods are deployed on
kube-systemnamespace - All static Pods get
tier:control-planeandcomponent:{component-name}labels - All static Pods use the
system-node-criticalpriority class hostNetwork: trueis set on all static Pods to allow control plane startup before a network is configured; as a consequence:- The
addressthat the controller-manager and the scheduler use to refer the API server is127.0.0.1 - If using a local etcd server,
etcd-serversaddress will be set to127.0.0.1:2379
- The
- Leader election is enabled for both the controller-manager and the scheduler
- Controller-manager and the scheduler will reference kubeconfig files with their respective, unique identities
- All static Pods get any extra flags specified by the user as described in passing custom arguments to control plane components
- All static Pods get any extra Volumes specified by the user (Host path)
Please note that:
- All images will be pulled from k8s.gcr.io by default. See using custom images for customizing the image repository
- In case of kubeadm is executed in the
--dry-runmode, static Pods files are written in a temporary folder - Static Pod manifest generation for master components can be invoked individually with the
kubeadm init phase control-plane allcommand
API server
The static Pod manifest for the API server is affected by following parameters provided by the users:
- The
apiserver-advertise-addressandapiserver-bind-portto bind to; if not provided, those value defaults to the IP address of the default network interface on the machine and port 6443 - The
service-cluster-ip-rangeto use for services - If an external etcd server is specified, the
etcd-serversaddress and related TLS settings (etcd-cafile,etcd-certfile,etcd-keyfile); if an external etcd server is not be provided, a local etcd will be used (via host network) - If a cloud provider is specified, the corresponding
--cloud-provideris configured, together with the--cloud-configpath if such file exists (this is experimental, alpha and will be removed in a future version)
Other API server flags that are set unconditionally are:
--insecure-port=0to avoid insecure connections to the api server--enable-bootstrap-token-auth=trueto enable theBootstrapTokenAuthenticatorauthentication module. See TLS Bootstrapping for more details--allow-privilegedtotrue(required e.g. by kube proxy)--requestheader-client-ca-filetofront-proxy-ca.crt--enable-admission-pluginsto:NamespaceLifecyclee.g. to avoid deletion of system reserved namespacesLimitRangerandResourceQuotato enforce limits on namespacesServiceAccountto enforce service account automationPersistentVolumeLabelattaches region or zone labels to PersistentVolumes as defined by the cloud provider (This admission controller is deprecated and will be removed in a future version. It is not deployed by kubeadm by default with v1.9 onwards when not explicitly opting into usinggceorawsas cloud providers)DefaultStorageClassto enforce default storage class onPersistentVolumeClaimobjectsDefaultTolerationSecondsNodeRestrictionto limit what a kubelet can modify (e.g. only pods on this node)
--kubelet-preferred-address-typestoInternalIP,ExternalIP,Hostname;this makeskubectl logsand other API server-kubelet communication work in environments where the hostnames of the nodes aren't resolvable- Flags for using certificates generated in previous steps:
--client-ca-filetoca.crt--tls-cert-filetoapiserver.crt--tls-private-key-filetoapiserver.key--kubelet-client-certificatetoapiserver-kubelet-client.crt--kubelet-client-keytoapiserver-kubelet-client.key--service-account-key-filetosa.pub--requestheader-client-ca-filetofront-proxy-ca.crt--proxy-client-cert-filetofront-proxy-client.crt--proxy-client-key-filetofront-proxy-client.key
- Other flags for securing the front proxy (API Aggregation) communications:
--requestheader-username-headers=X-Remote-User--requestheader-group-headers=X-Remote-Group--requestheader-extra-headers-prefix=X-Remote-Extra---requestheader-allowed-names=front-proxy-client
Controller manager
The static Pod manifest for the API server is affected by following parameters provided by the users:
- If kubeadm is invoked specifying a
--pod-network-cidr, the subnet manager feature required for some CNI network plugins is enabled by setting:--allocate-node-cidrs=true--cluster-cidrand--node-cidr-mask-sizeflags according to the given CIDR
- If a cloud provider is specified, the corresponding
--cloud-provideris specified, together with the--cloud-configpath if such configuration file exists (this is experimental, alpha and will be removed in a future version)
Other flags that are set unconditionally are:
--controllersenabling all the default controllers plusBootstrapSignerandTokenCleanercontrollers for TLS bootstrap. See TLS Bootstrapping for more details--use-service-account-credentialstotrue- Flags for using certificates generated in previous steps:
--root-ca-filetoca.crt--cluster-signing-cert-filetoca.crt, if External CA mode is disabled, otherwise to""--cluster-signing-key-filetoca.key, if External CA mode is disabled, otherwise to""--service-account-private-key-filetosa.key
Scheduler
The static Pod manifest for the scheduler is not affected by parameters provided by the users.
Generate static Pod manifest for local etcd
If the user specified an external etcd this step will be skipped, otherwise kubeadm generates a static Pod manifest file for creating a local etcd instance running in a Pod with following attributes:
- listen on
localhost:2379and useHostNetwork=true - make a
hostPathmount out from thedataDirto the host's filesystem - Any extra flags specified by the user
Please note that:
- The etcd image will be pulled from
k8s.gcr.ioby default. See using custom images for customizing the image repository - in case of kubeadm is executed in the
--dry-runmode, the etcd static Pod manifest is written in a temporary folder - Static Pod manifest generation for local etcd can be invoked individually with the
kubeadm init phase etcd localcommand
Optional Dynamic Kubelet Configuration
To use this functionality call kubeadm alpha kubelet config enable-dynamic. It writes the kubelet init configuration
into /var/lib/kubelet/config/init/kubelet file.
The init configuration is used for starting the kubelet on this specific node, providing an alternative for the kubelet drop-in file; such configuration will be replaced by the kubelet base configuration as described in following steps. See set Kubelet parameters via a config file for additional info.
Please note that:
- To make dynamic kubelet configuration work, flag
--dynamic-config-dir=/var/lib/kubelet/config/dynamicshould be specified in/etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d/10-kubeadm.conf - The kubelet configuration can be changed by passing a
KubeletConfigurationobject tokubeadm initorkubeadm joinby using a configuration file--config some-file.yaml. TheKubeletConfigurationobject can be separated from other objects such asInitConfigurationusing the---separator. For more details have a look at thekubeadm config print-defaultcommand.
Wait for the control plane to come up
kubeadm waits (upto 4m0s) until localhost:6443/healthz (kube-apiserver liveness) returns ok. However in order to detect
deadlock conditions, kubeadm fails fast if localhost:10255/healthz (kubelet liveness) or
localhost:10255/healthz/syncloop (kubelet readiness) don't return ok within 40s and 60s respectively.
kubeadm relies on the kubelet to pull the control plane images and run them properly as static Pods. After the control plane is up, kubeadm completes the tasks described in following paragraphs.
(optional and alpha in v1.9) Write base kubelet configuration
If kubeadm is invoked with --feature-gates=DynamicKubeletConfig:
- Write the kubelet base configuration into the
kubelet-base-config-v1.9ConfigMap in thekube-systemnamespace - Creates RBAC rules for granting read access to that ConfigMap to all bootstrap tokens and all kubelet instances
(that is
system:bootstrappers:kubeadm:default-node-tokenandsystem:nodesgroups) - Enable the dynamic kubelet configuration feature for the initial control-plane node by pointing
Node.spec.configSourceto the newly-created ConfigMap
Save the kubeadm ClusterConfiguration in a ConfigMap for later reference
kubeadm saves the configuration passed to kubeadm init in a ConfigMap named kubeadm-config under kube-system namespace.
This will ensure that kubeadm actions executed in future (e.g kubeadm upgrade) will be able to determine the actual/current cluster
state and make new decisions based on that data.
Please note that:
- Before saving the ClusterConfiguration, sensitive information like the token is stripped from the configuration
- Upload of master configuration can be invoked individually with the
kubeadm init phase upload-configcommand
Mark the node as control-plane
As soon as the control plane is available, kubeadm executes following actions:
- Labels the node as control-plane with
node-role.kubernetes.io/master="" - Taints the node with
node-role.kubernetes.io/master:NoSchedule
Please note that:
- Mark control-plane phase phase can be invoked individually with the
kubeadm init phase mark-control-planecommand
Configure TLS-Bootstrapping for node joining
Kubeadm uses Authenticating with Bootstrap Tokens for joining new nodes to an existing cluster; for more details see also design proposal.
kubeadm init ensures that everything is properly configured for this process, and this includes following steps as well as
setting API server and controller flags as already described in previous paragraphs.
Please note that:
- TLS bootstrapping for nodes can be configured with the
kubeadm init phase bootstrap-tokencommand, executing all the configuration steps described in following paragraphs; alternatively, each step can be invoked individually
Create a bootstrap token
kubeadm init create a first bootstrap token, either generated automatically or provided by the user with the --token flag; as documented
in bootstrap token specification, token should be saved as secrets with name bootstrap-token-<token-id> under kube-system namespace.
Please note that:
- The default token created by
kubeadm initwill be used to validate temporary user during TLS bootstrap process; those users will be member ofsystem:bootstrappers:kubeadm:default-node-tokengroup - The token has a limited validity, default 24 hours (the interval may be changed with the
—token-ttlflag) - Additional tokens can be created with the
kubeadm tokencommand, that provide as well other useful functions for token management
Allow joining nodes to call CSR API
Kubeadm ensures that users in system:bootstrappers:kubeadm:default-node-token group are able to access the certificate signing API.
This is implemented by creating a ClusterRoleBinding named kubeadm:kubelet-bootstrap between the group above and the default
RBAC role system:node-bootstrapper.
Setup auto approval for new bootstrap tokens
Kubeadm ensures that the Bootstrap Token will get its CSR request automatically approved by the csrapprover controller.
This is implemented by creating ClusterRoleBinding named kubeadm:node-autoapprove-bootstrap between
the system:bootstrappers:kubeadm:default-node-token group and the default role system:certificates.k8s.io:certificatesigningrequests:nodeclient.
The role system:certificates.k8s.io:certificatesigningrequests:nodeclient should be created as well, granting
POST permission to /apis/certificates.k8s.io/certificatesigningrequests/nodeclient.
Setup nodes certificate rotation with auto approval
Kubeadm ensures that certificate rotation is enabled for nodes, and that new certificate request for nodes will get its CSR request automatically approved by the csrapprover controller.
This is implemented by creating ClusterRoleBinding named kubeadm:node-autoapprove-certificate-rotation between the system:nodes group
and the default role system:certificates.k8s.io:certificatesigningrequests:selfnodeclient.
Create the public cluster-info ConfigMap
This phase creates the cluster-info ConfigMap in the kube-public namespace.
Additionally it creates a Role and a RoleBinding granting access to the ConfigMap for unauthenticated users
(i.e. users in RBAC group system:unauthenticated).
Please note that:
- The access to the
cluster-infoConfigMap is not rate-limited. This may or may not be a problem if you expose your master to the internet; worst-case scenario here is a DoS attack where an attacker uses all the in-flight requests the kube-apiserver can handle to serving thecluster-infoConfigMap.
Install addons
Kubeadm installs the internal DNS server and the kube-proxy addon components via the API server. Please note that:
- This phase can be invoked individually with the
kubeadm init phase addon allcommand.
proxy
A ServiceAccount for kube-proxy is created in the kube-system namespace; then kube-proxy is deployed as a DaemonSet:
- The credentials (
ca.crtandtoken) to the master come from the ServiceAccount - The location of the master comes from a ConfigMap
- The
kube-proxyServiceAccount is bound to the privileges in thesystem:node-proxierClusterRole
DNS
- In Kubernetes version 1.18 kube-dns usage with kubeadm is deprecated and will be removed in a future release
- The CoreDNS service is named
kube-dns. This is done to prevent any interruption in service when the user is switching the cluster DNS from kube-dns to CoreDNS or vice-versa the--configmethod described here - A ServiceAccount for CoreDNS/kube-dns is created in the
kube-systemnamespace. - The
kube-dnsServiceAccount is bound to the privileges in thesystem:kube-dnsClusterRole
kubeadm join phases internal design
Similarly to kubeadm init, also kubeadm join internal workflow consists of a sequence of atomic work tasks to perform.
This is split into discovery (having the Node trust the Kubernetes Master) and TLS bootstrap (having the Kubernetes Master trust the Node).
see Authenticating with Bootstrap Tokens or the corresponding design proposal.
Preflight checks
kubeadm executes a set of preflight checks before starting the join, with the aim to verify preconditions and avoid common
cluster startup problems.
Please note that:
kubeadm joinpreflight checks are basically a subsetkubeadm initpreflight checks- Starting from 1.9, kubeadm provides better support for CRI-generic functionality; in that case, docker specific controls are skipped or replaced by similar controls for crictl.
- Starting from 1.9, kubeadm provides support for joining nodes running on Windows; in that case, linux specific controls are skipped.
- In any case the user can skip specific preflight checks (or eventually all preflight checks) with the
--ignore-preflight-errorsoption.
Discovery cluster-info
There are 2 main schemes for discovery. The first is to use a shared token along with the IP address of the API server. The second is to provide a file (that is a subset of the standard kubeconfig file).
Shared token discovery
If kubeadm join is invoked with --discovery-token, token discovery is used; in this case the node basically retrieves
the cluster CA certificates from the cluster-info ConfigMap in the kube-public namespace.
In order to prevent "man in the middle" attacks, several steps are taken:
- First, the CA certificate is retrieved via insecure connection (this is possible because
kubeadm initgranted access tocluster-infousers forsystem:unauthenticated) - Then the CA certificate goes trough following validation steps:
- Basic validation: using the token ID against a JWT signature
- Pub key validation: using provided
--discovery-token-ca-cert-hash. This value is available in the output ofkubeadm initor can be calculated using standard tools (the hash is calculated over the bytes of the Subject Public Key Info (SPKI) object as in RFC7469). The--discovery-token-ca-cert-hash flagmay be repeated multiple times to allow more than one public key. - As a additional validation, the CA certificate is retrieved via secure connection and then compared with the CA retrieved initially
Please note that:
- Pub key validation can be skipped passing
--discovery-token-unsafe-skip-ca-verificationflag; This weakens the kubeadm security model since others can potentially impersonate the Kubernetes Master.
File/https discovery
If kubeadm join is invoked with --discovery-file, file discovery is used; this file can be a local file or downloaded via an HTTPS URL; in case of HTTPS, the host installed CA bundle is used to verify the connection.
With file discovery, the cluster CA certificates is provided into the file itself; in fact, the discovery file is a kubeconfig
file with only server and certificate-authority-data attributes set, as described in kubeadm join reference doc;
when the connection with the cluster is established, kubeadm try to access the cluster-info ConfigMap, and if available, uses it.
TLS Bootstrap
Once the cluster info are known, the file bootstrap-kubelet.conf is written, thus allowing kubelet to do TLS Bootstrapping
(conversely until v.1.7 TLS bootstrapping were managed by kubeadm).
The TLS bootstrap mechanism uses the shared token to temporarily authenticate with the Kubernetes Master to submit a certificate signing request (CSR) for a locally created key pair.
The request is then automatically approved and the operation completes saving ca.crt file and kubelet.conf file to be used
by kubelet for joining the cluster, whilebootstrap-kubelet.conf is deleted.
Please note that:
- The temporary authentication is validated against the token saved during the
kubeadm initprocess (or with additional tokens created withkubeadm token) - The temporary authentication resolve to a user member of
system:bootstrappers:kubeadm:default-node-tokengroup which was granted access to CSR api during thekubeadm initprocess - The automatic CSR approval is managed by the csrapprover controller, according with configuration done the
kubeadm initprocess
(optional and alpha in v1.9) Write init kubelet configuration
If kubeadm is invoked with --feature-gates=DynamicKubeletConfig:
- Read the kubelet base configuration from the
kubelet-base-config-v1.9ConfigMap in thekube-systemnamespace using the Bootstrap Token credentials, and write it to disk as kubelet init configuration file/var/lib/kubelet/config/init/kubelet - As soon as kubelet starts with the Node's own credential (
/etc/kubernetes/kubelet.conf), update current node configuration specifying that the source for the node/kubelet configuration is the above ConfigMap.
Please note that:
- To make dynamic kubelet configuration work, flag
--dynamic-config-dir=/var/lib/kubelet/config/dynamicshould be specified in/etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d/10-kubeadm.conf
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