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Voronenko / devops-tf-eks

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terraform baked AWS kubernetes cluster (EKS) - 1.18 compatible

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Kubernetes Cluster Setup

Important: setup follows https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/getting-started.html as of commit date.

In order to start with cluster setup, you will need:

  • Terraform
  • AWS credentials with necessary rights
  • AWS authenticator for EKS, called aws-iam-authenticator:
     curl -o ~/dotfiles/bin/aws-iam-authenticator https://amazon-eks.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/1.18.8/2020-09-18/bin/linux/amd64/aws-iam-authenticator
     chmod +x ~/dotfiles/bin/aws-iam-authenticator

Note, that with fresh aws-cli you can use aws-cli subcommands to achieve the same effect.

Upgrade 1.18->1.19 via aws UI

Upgrade kube version via aws console. After that, upgrade all nodegroups to the image recommended for the new cluster version. You will need to update kube-proxy and coredns images manually. Check proper versions at https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/managing-coredns.html

kubectl set image daemonset.apps/kube-proxy -n kube-system kube-proxy=602401143452.dkr.ecr.eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/eks/kube-proxy:v1.19.6-eksbuild.1

kubectl set image --namespace kube-system deployment.apps/coredns coredns=602401143452.dkr.ecr.eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/eks/coredns:v1.8.0-eksbuild.1

Last step would be updating cni, do not forget to update image registry to the registry located in your cluster region

curl -o aws-k8s-cni.yaml https://raw.githubusercontent.com/aws/amazon-vpc-cni-k8s/v1.7.5/config/v1.7/aws-k8s-cni.yaml
vim aws-k8s-cni.yaml
%s/us-west-2/eu-central-1/g
kubectl apply -f aws-k8s-cni.yaml

Variables

Set the following environment variables:

export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=
export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=
export TF_VAR_CLUSTER_NAME=

Requirements

Name Version
terraform >= 0.14
aws ~> 3.29.1
helm ~> 2.0.2
kubernetes ~> 1.13.3

Providers

Name Version
aws ~> 3.29.1
local n/a

Inputs

Name Description Type Default Required
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID n/a any n/a yes
AWS_REGION n/a any n/a yes
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY n/a any n/a yes
CLUSTER_NAME n/a string "istio" no
SCALING_DESIRED_CAPACITY n/a number 2 no
cluster_version Version of the kubernetes cluster string "1.18" no
domain n/a string "" no
eks_oidc_root_ca_thumbprint Thumbprint of Root CA for EKS OIDC, Valid until 2037 string "9e99a48a9960b14926bb7f3b02e22da2b0ab7280" no
enable_irsa Whether to create OpenID Connect Provider for EKS to enable IRSA bool true no
external_dns_helm_chart_name n/a string "external-dns" no
external_dns_helm_chart_version n/a string "3.5.1" no
external_dns_helm_release_name n/a string "external-dns" no
external_dns_helm_repo_url n/a string "https://charts.bitnami.com/bitnami" no
external_dns_k8s_namespace The k8s namespace in which the alb-ingress service account has been created string "kube-system" no
external_dns_k8s_service_account_name The k8s external-dns service account name, ideally should match to helm chart expectations string "external-dns" no
external_dns_settings Additional settings for external-dns helm chart check https://github.com/bitnami/charts/tree/master/bitnami/external-dns map(any) {} no
ingress_alb_helm_chart_name n/a string "aws-load-balancer-controller" no
ingress_alb_helm_chart_version n/a string "1.0.3" no
ingress_alb_helm_release_name n/a string "aws-load-balancer-controller" no
ingress_alb_helm_repo_url n/a string "https://aws.github.io/eks-charts" no
ingress_alb_k8s_dummy_dependency TODO: eliminate allows dirty re-drop any null no
ingress_alb_k8s_namespace The k8s namespace in which the alb-ingress service account has been created string "kube-system" no
ingress_alb_k8s_service_account_name The k8s alb-ingress service account name, should match to helm chart expectations string "aws-load-balancer-controller" no
ingress_alb_settings Additional settings for Helm chart check https://artifacthub.io/packages/helm/helm-incubator/aws-alb-ingress-controller map(any) {} no
namespaces List of namespaces to be created in our EKS Cluster. list(string) [] no
option_alb_ingress_enabled n/a bool false no
option_external_dns_enabled n/a bool false no
private_subnet_cidr CIDR for the Private Subnet string "10.11.1.0/24" no
private_subnet_cidr2 CIDR for the Private Subnet string "10.11.3.0/24" no
public_subnet_cidr CIDR for the Public Subnet string "10.11.0.0/24" no
public_subnet_cidr2 CIDR for the Public Subnet string "10.11.2.0/24" no
use_simple_vpc n/a bool true no
vpc_cidr CIDR for the whole VPC string "10.11.0.0/16" no

Outputs

Name Description
cluster_arn The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the cluster.
cluster_certificate_authority_data Nested attribute containing certificate-authority-data for your cluster. This is the base64 encoded certificate data required to communicate with your cluster.
cluster_endpoint The endpoint for your EKS Kubernetes API.
cluster_id The id of the EKS cluster.
cluster_oidc_issuer_url The URL on the EKS cluster OIDC Issuer
cluster_version The Kubernetes server version for the EKS cluster.
kubeconfig n/a
oidc_provider_arn The ARN of the OIDC Provider if enable_irsa = true.

Deploy

Plan and apply

$ make plan
$ make apply

Plan will check what changes Terraform needs to apply, then apply deploys the changes.

The operation takes around 20 minutes.

Configure

Once the deployment is done, the kubeconfig will let kubectl know how to connect to cluster:

$ make kubeconfig
run the suggested EXPORT

To make workers join the cluster they need to be have a role associated with it:

$ make config-map-aws-auth

and wait for nodes to appear.

Your are now ready.

Login into worker instances

To login into the instances the private key can be generated from the terraform output:

$ make private-key

Prior login you would need to switch the gateway used by the workers private route table from the nat to the internet one and open the SSH port on the worker security group.

Destroy

As simple as make destroy.

Kubernetes dashboard

Follow the documentation here https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/dashboard-tutorial.html

Working with multiple clusters at a time

By default, terraform creates one state file, that you will need to replace, if you are working with another cluster. To smoothly work with multiple clusters, you can use terraform workspaces (https://www.terraform.io/docs/state/workspaces.html)

For example, you can create workspace by cluster name before provisioning cluster, and use ${terraform.workspace} as a cluster name cluster_name= "${terraform.workspace}-cluster"

terraform workspace new dummy

view workspaces:

terraform workspace list
  default
* dummy

select specific workplace:

terraform workspace select dummy

Credits

https://github.com/TizianoPerrucci - Formatting, Readme changes, 1.16 upgrade

Further reading:

Perhaps try https://github.com/aws-samples/eks-workshop

/ end of compact notes

===========================================================================================================================

Below is the original readme as was for 1.11, for historic purposes

Long story:

2BD

Getting started with kubernetes cluster on AWS

AWS provides comprehensive guide to start with EKS on a link https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/getting-started.html

Next steps generally follow that guide, difference is that provisioning play is (can be) implemented purely with terraform w/o cloud templates.

It has advantage in a way how we do deployments, but in your scenario cloud templates might have advantage too.

First step is creating a VPC with Public and Private Subnets for Your Amazon EKS Cluster

The simpliest VPC would be all subnets public, like seen on cloud template ( https://amazon-eks.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/1.10.3/2018-06-05/amazon-eks-vpc-sample.yaml )

But if your goal is to reuse that in a production, the reasonable would be VPC with private and public parts, like https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/create-public-private-vpc.html

At the moment there are limitations: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/network_reqs.html

Let's proceed with recommended network architecture that uses private subnets for your worker nodes and public subnets for Kubernetes to create internet-facing load balancers within

Step 1.1: Create an Elastic IP Address for Your NAT Gateway(s)

Worker nodes in private subnets require a NAT gateway for outbound internet access. A NAT gateway requires an Elastic IP address in your public subnet, but the VPC wizard does not create one for you. Create the Elastic IP address before running the VPC wizard.

To create an Elastic IP address

Open the Amazon VPC console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/vpc/.

In the left navigation pane, choose Elastic IPs. Choose Allocate new address, Allocate, Close. Note the Allocation ID for your newly created Elastic IP address; you enter this later in the VPC wizard.

// reserve elastic ip for nat gateway

resource "aws_eip" "nat_eip" {
  vpc = true
  tags {
    Environment = "${local.env}"
  }
}

resource "aws_eip" "nat_eip_2" {
  vpc = true
  tags {
    Environment = "${local.env}"
  }
}

Step 1.2: Run the VPC Wizard

The VPC wizard automatically creates and configures most of your VPC resources for you.

To run the VPC wizard

In the left navigation pane, choose VPC Dashboard. Choose Start VPC Wizard, VPC with Public and Private Subnets, Select. For VPC name, give your VPC a unique name. For Elastic IP Allocation ID, choose the ID of the Elastic IP address that you created earlier. Choose Create VPC. When the wizard is finished, choose OK. Note the Availability Zone in which your VPC subnets were created. Your additional subnets should be created in a different Availability Zone. Appropriate terraform part would be

// create vpc

//Base VPC Networking
//EKS requires the usage of Virtual Private Cloud to provide the base for its networking configuration.


resource "aws_vpc" "cluster" {
  cidr_block = "${var.vpc_cidr}"
  enable_dns_hostnames = true

  tags = "${merge(
    local.common_tags,
    map(
      "Name", "${local.env}-eks-vpc"
    )
  )}"

}

//The below will create a ${var.public_subnet_cidr} VPC,
//two ${var.public_subnet_cidr} public subnets,
//two ${var.private_subnet_cidr} private subnets with nat instances,
//an internet gateway,
//and setup the subnet routing to route external traffic through the internet gateway:

// public subnets
resource "aws_subnet" "eks-public" {
  vpc_id = "${aws_vpc.cluster.id}"

  cidr_block = "${var.public_subnet_cidr}"
  availability_zone = "${local.availabilityzone}"

  tags = "${merge(
    local.common_tags,
    map(
      "Name", "${local.env}-eks-public"
    )
  )}"

}


resource "aws_subnet" "eks-public-2" {
  vpc_id = "${aws_vpc.cluster.id}"

  cidr_block = "${var.public_subnet_cidr2}"
  availability_zone = "${local.availabilityzone2}"

  tags = "${merge(
    local.common_tags,
    map(
      "Name", "${local.env}-eks-public-2"
    )
  )}"

}


// private subnet
resource "aws_subnet" "eks-private" {
  vpc_id = "${aws_vpc.cluster.id}"

  cidr_block = "${var.private_subnet_cidr}"
  availability_zone = "${local.availabilityzone}"

  tags = "${merge(
    local.common_tags,
    map(
      "Name", "${local.env}-eks-private"
    )
  )}"

}

resource "aws_subnet" "eks-private-2" {
  vpc_id = "${aws_vpc.cluster.id}"

  cidr_block = "${var.private_subnet_cidr2}"
  availability_zone = "${local.availabilityzone2}"

  tags = "${merge(
    local.common_tags,
    map(
      "Name", "${local.env}-eks-private-2"
    )
  )}"

}


// internet gateway, note: creation takes a while

resource "aws_internet_gateway" "igw" {
  vpc_id = "${aws_vpc.cluster.id}"
  tags {
    Environment = "${local.env}"
  }
}



// reserve elastic ip for nat gateway

resource "aws_eip" "nat_eip" {
  vpc = true
  tags {
    Environment = "${local.env}"
  }
}

resource "aws_eip" "nat_eip_2" {
  vpc = true
  tags {
    Environment = "${local.env}"
  }
}


// create nat once internet gateway created
resource "aws_nat_gateway" "nat_gateway" {
  allocation_id = "${aws_eip.nat_eip.id}"
  subnet_id = "${aws_subnet.eks-public.id}"
  depends_on = ["aws_internet_gateway.igw"]
  tags {
    Environment = "${local.env}"
  }
}

resource "aws_nat_gateway" "nat_gateway_2" {
  allocation_id = "${aws_eip.nat_eip_2.id}"
  subnet_id = "${aws_subnet.eks-public-2.id}"
  depends_on = ["aws_internet_gateway.igw"]
  tags {
    Environment = "${local.env}"
  }

}


//Create private route table and the route to the internet
//This will allow all traffics from the private subnets to the internet through the NAT Gateway (Network Address Translation)

resource "aws_route_table" "private_route_table" {
  vpc_id = "${aws_vpc.cluster.id}"
  tags {
    Environment = "${local.env}"
    Name = "${local.env}-private-route-table"
  }

}

resource "aws_route_table" "private_route_table_2" {
  vpc_id = "${aws_vpc.cluster.id}"
  tags {
    Environment = "${local.env}"
    Name = "${local.env}-private-route-table-2"
  }

}

resource "aws_route" "private_route" {
  route_table_id  = "${aws_route_table.private_route_table.id}"
  destination_cidr_block = "0.0.0.0/0"
  nat_gateway_id = "${aws_nat_gateway.nat_gateway.id}"
}

resource "aws_route" "private_route_2" {
  route_table_id  = "${aws_route_table.private_route_table_2.id}"
  destination_cidr_block = "0.0.0.0/0"
  nat_gateway_id = "${aws_nat_gateway.nat_gateway_2.id}"
}


resource "aws_route_table" "eks-public" {
  vpc_id = "${aws_vpc.cluster.id}"

  route {
    cidr_block = "0.0.0.0/0"
    gateway_id = "${aws_internet_gateway.igw.id}"
  }

  tags {
    Environment = "${local.env}"
    Name = "${local.env}-eks-public"
  }

}


resource "aws_route_table" "eks-public-2" {
  vpc_id = "${aws_vpc.cluster.id}"

  route {
    cidr_block = "0.0.0.0/0"
    gateway_id = "${aws_internet_gateway.igw.id}"
  }

  tags {
    Environment = "${local.env}"
    Name = "${local.env}-eks-public-2"
  }
}


// associate route tables

resource "aws_route_table_association" "eks-public" {
  subnet_id = "${aws_subnet.eks-public.id}"
  route_table_id = "${aws_route_table.eks-public.id}"
}

resource "aws_route_table_association" "eks-public-2" {
  subnet_id = "${aws_subnet.eks-public-2.id}"
  route_table_id = "${aws_route_table.eks-public-2.id}"
}


resource "aws_route_table_association" "eks-private" {
  subnet_id = "${aws_subnet.eks-private.id}"
  route_table_id = "${aws_route_table.private_route_table.id}"
}


resource "aws_route_table_association" "eks-private-2" {
  subnet_id = "${aws_subnet.eks-private-2.id}"
  route_table_id = "${aws_route_table.private_route_table_2.id}"
}

Step 2 create your Amazon EKS service role

Open the IAM console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/iam/.

Choose Roles, then Create role.

Choose EKS from the list of services, then Allows Amazon EKS to manage your clusters on your behalf for your use case, then Next: Permissions.

Choose Next: Review.

For Role name, enter a unique name for your role, such as eksServiceRole, then choose Create role.

Terraform definition for the role goes as below.

//Kubernetes Masters
//This is where the EKS service comes into play.
//It requires a few operator managed resources beforehand so that Kubernetes can properly manage
//other AWS services as well as allow inbound networking communication from your local workstation
//(if desired) and worker nodes.


//EKS Master Cluster IAM Role
//
//IAM role and policy to allow the EKS service to manage or retrieve data from other AWS services.
//For the latest required policy, see the EKS User Guide.


resource "aws_iam_role" "EKSClusterRole" {
  name = "EKSClusterRole-${local.env}",
  description = "Allows EKS to manage clusters on your behalf.",
  assume_role_policy = <<POLICY
{
   "Version":"2012-10-17",
   "Statement":[
      {
         "Effect":"Allow",
         "Principal":{
            "Service":"eks.amazonaws.com"
         },
         "Action":"sts:AssumeRole"
      }
   ]
}
POLICY
}

//https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/service_IAM_role.html

resource "aws_iam_role_policy_attachment" "eks-policy-AmazonEKSClusterPolicy" {
  policy_arn = "arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/AmazonEKSClusterPolicy"
  role       = "${aws_iam_role.EKSClusterRole.name}"
}

resource "aws_iam_role_policy_attachment" "eks-policy-AmazonEKSServicePolicy" {
  policy_arn = "arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/AmazonEKSServicePolicy"
  role       = "${aws_iam_role.EKSClusterRole.name}"
}

Step 3: Create a Control Plane Security Group

When you create an Amazon EKS cluster, your cluster control plane creates elastic network interfaces in your subnets to enable communication with the worker nodes. You should create a security group that is dedicated to your Amazon EKS cluster control plane, so that you can apply inbound and outbound rules to govern what traffic is allowed across that connection. When you create the cluster, you specify this security group, and that is applied to the elastic network interfaces that are created in your subnets.

To create a control plane security group

In the left navigation pane, for Filter by VPC, select your VPC and choose Security Groups, Create Security Group.

Note

If you don't see your new VPC here, refresh the page to pick it up. Fill in the following fields and choose Yes, Create:

For Name tag, provide a name for your security group. For example, -control-plane. For Description, provide a description of your security group to help you identify it later. For VPC, choose the VPC that you are using for your Amazon EKS cluster.

//EKS Master Cluster Security Group

//This security group controls networking access to the Kubernetes masters.
//Needs to be configured also with an ingress rule to allow traffic from the worker nodes.

resource "aws_security_group" "eks-control-plane-sg" {
  name        = "${local.env}-control-plane"
  description = "Cluster communication with worker nodes [${local.env}]"
  vpc_id      = "${aws_vpc.cluster.id}"

  egress {
    from_port       = 0
    to_port         = 0
    protocol        = "-1"
    cidr_blocks     = ["0.0.0.0/0"]
  }
}

# OPTIONAL: Allow inbound traffic from your local workstation external IP
#           to the Kubernetes. You will need to replace A.B.C.D below with
#           your real IP. Services like icanhazip.com can help you find this.
//resource "aws_security_group_rule" "eks-ingress-workstation-https" {
//  cidr_blocks       = ["A.B.C.D/32"]
//  description       = "Allow workstation to communicate with the cluster API Server"
//  from_port         = 443
//  protocol          = "tcp"
//  security_group_id = "${aws_security_group.eks-control-plane-sg.id}"
//  to_port           = 443
//  type              = "ingress"
//}

Download aws authenticator, kind of

   curl -o ~/dotfiles/bin/aws-iam-authenticator https://amazon-eks.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/1.18.8/2020-09-18/bin/linux/amd64/aws-iam-authenticator
   chmod +x ~/dotfiles/bin/aws-iam-authenticator

Validate by running

aws-iam-authenticator help

Check if you have latest awscli installed, you should get output similar to one below

aws eks describe-cluster --name test-cluster

{
    "cluster": {
        "status": "ACTIVE",
        "endpoint": "https://1F3D31820046A120545D3A2FC1422C04.sk1.us-east-1.eks.amazonaws.com",
        "name": "test-cluster",
        "certificateAuthority": {
            "data": "CENSORED"
        },
        "roleArn": "arn:aws:iam::CENSORED:role/EKSClusterRole",
        "resourcesVpcConfig": {
            "subnetIds": [
                "subnet-065058abfee2adfca",
                "subnet-0eb04ec6e3f359b5c",
                "subnet-0fd73ea9b4a7dab35",
                "subnet-0ca730350e571154b"
            ],
            "vpcId": "vpc-0daf88b515eac80ab",
            "securityGroupIds": [
                "sg-09de76fce3a132c15"
            ]
        },
        "version": "1.10",
        "arn": "arn:aws:eks:us-east-1:CENSORED:cluster/test-cluster",
        "createdAt": 1530892117.396
    }
}

Step 4: create EKS cluster

Now it is time to launch the cluster, either via UI or using provisioning tool of your choice

Making cluster to ECS might seem a bit tricky , as by default AWS proposes to hold cluster info in the separate files, like ~/.kube/eksconfig and use environment variables for switching context export KUBECONFIG=~/.kube/eksconfig

If you have multiple clusters configured, that's for sure will not be convenient to you.

apiVersion: v1
clusters:
- cluster:
    server: ${aws_eks_cluster.demo.endpoint}
    certificate-authority-data: ${aws_eks_cluster.demo.certificate_authority.0.data}
  name: kubernetes
contexts:
- context:
    cluster: kubernetes
    user: aws
  name: aws
current-context: aws
kind: Config
preferences: {}
users:
- name: aws
  user:
    exec:
      apiVersion: client.authentication.k8s.io/v1alpha1
      command: aws-iam-authenticator
      args:
        - "token"
        - "-i"
        - "${var.cluster-name}"
        # - "-r"
        # - "<role-arn>"
      # env:
        # - name: AWS_PROFILE
        #   value: "<aws-profile>"

for example above, you could validate, if you configured your cluster and kubectl right.

kubectx
aws

kubectl get svc
NAME         TYPE        CLUSTER-IP   EXTERNAL-IP   PORT(S)   AGE
kubernetes   ClusterIP   172.20.0.1   <none>        443/TCP   4d

Terraform part for the creating cluster action would be

//
//EKS Master Cluster
//This resource is the actual Kubernetes master cluster. It can take a few minutes to provision in AWS.



resource "aws_eks_cluster" "eks-cluster" {
  name     = "${local.cluster_name}"
  role_arn = "${aws_iam_role.EKSClusterRole.arn}"

  vpc_config {
    security_group_ids = ["${aws_security_group.eks-control-plane-sg.id}"]

    subnet_ids = [
      "${aws_subnet.eks-private.id}",
      "${aws_subnet.eks-private-2.id}"
    ]
  }

  depends_on = [
    "aws_iam_role_policy_attachment.eks-policy-AmazonEKSClusterPolicy",
    "aws_iam_role_policy_attachment.eks-policy-AmazonEKSServicePolicy",
  ]
}


locals {
  kubeconfig = <<KUBECONFIG


apiVersion: v1
clusters:
- cluster:
    server: ${aws_eks_cluster.eks-cluster.endpoint}
    certificate-authority-data: ${aws_eks_cluster.eks-cluster.certificate_authority.0.data}
  name: kubernetes
contexts:
- context:
    cluster: kubernetes
    user: aws
  name: aws-${local.env}
current-context: aws-${local.env}
kind: Config
preferences: {}
users:
- name: aws
  user:
    exec:
      apiVersion: client.authentication.k8s.io/v1alpha1
      command: aws-iam-authenticator
      args:
        - "token"
        - "-i"
        - "${local.cluster_name}"
KUBECONFIG
}

output "kubeconfig" {
  value = "${local.kubeconfig}"
}

Note, that instead of patching kubelet config, as per original guide, you can just get ready-to-use file content from terraform output kubeconfig.

Step 5,6: Now it is time to launch worker nodes

At a time being AWS recommends to launch stack using, for example, following cloud formation template https://amazon-eks.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/1.10.3/2018-06-05/amazon-eks-nodegroup.yaml

What you would need from outcomes, is record the NodeInstanceRole for the node group that was created. You need this when you configure your Amazon EKS worker nodes.

On outputs pane you would see output kind of

arn:aws:iam::CENSORED:role/test-cluster-worker-nodes-NodeInstanceRole-XF8G1BPXC56B

final step would be ensuring that worker nodes can join your cluster.

You would need template for kubernetes configuration map

https://amazon-eks.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/1.10.3/2018-06-05/aws-auth-cm.yaml

curl -O https://amazon-eks.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/1.10.3/2018-06-05/aws-auth-cm.yaml

cat aws-auth-cm.yaml

apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
  name: aws-auth
  namespace: kube-system
data:
  mapRoles: |
    - rolearn: <ARN of instance role (not instance profile)>
      username: system:node:{{EC2PrivateDNSName}}
      groups:
        - system:bootstrappers
        - system:nodes

amend role arn and apply changes with

kubectl apply -f aws-auth-cm.yaml
configmap "aws-auth" created

In a few minutes your fleet should be ready

kubectl get nodes
NAME                          STATUS     ROLES     AGE       VERSION
ip-10-11-1-210.ec2.internal   NotReady   <none>    11s       v1.10.3
ip-10-11-3-36.ec2.internal    NotReady   <none>    14s       v1.10.3
ip-10-11-3-4.ec2.internal     NotReady   <none>    9s        v1.10.3

~~~~~~~~~~~~

kubectl get nodes
NAME                          STATUS    ROLES     AGE       VERSION
ip-10-11-1-210.ec2.internal   Ready     <none>    1m        v1.10.3
ip-10-11-3-36.ec2.internal    Ready     <none>    1m        v1.10.3
ip-10-11-3-4.ec2.internal     Ready     <none>    1m        v1.10.3

If you want to omit relying on cloud formation template by URL, and instead stick to fully scripted infrastructure:

Step 5: on that we prepare worker node and security groups

//Kubernetes Worker Nodes
//The EKS service does not currently provide managed resources for running worker nodes.
//Here we will create a few operator managed resources so that Kubernetes can properly manage
//other AWS services, networking access, and finally a configuration that allows
//automatic scaling of worker nodes.


//Worker Node IAM Role and Instance Profile
//IAM role and policy to allow the worker nodes to manage or retrieve data from other AWS services.
//It is used by Kubernetes to allow worker nodes to join the cluster.
//
//For the latest required policy, see the EKS User Guide.

resource "aws_iam_role" "EKSNodeRole" {
  name = "eks-${local.cluster_name}-node-role"

  assume_role_policy = <<POLICY
{
  "Version": "2012-10-17",
  "Statement": [
    {
      "Effect": "Allow",
      "Principal": {
        "Service": "ec2.amazonaws.com"
      },
      "Action": "sts:AssumeRole"
    }
  ]
}
POLICY
}

resource "aws_iam_role_policy_attachment" "eks-node-AmazonEKSWorkerNodePolicy" {
  policy_arn = "arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/AmazonEKSWorkerNodePolicy"
  role       = "${aws_iam_role.EKSNodeRole.name}"
}

resource "aws_iam_role_policy_attachment" "eks-node-AmazonEKS_CNI_Policy" {
  policy_arn = "arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/AmazonEKS_CNI_Policy"
  role       = "${aws_iam_role.EKSNodeRole.name}"
}

resource "aws_iam_role_policy_attachment" "eks-node-AmazonEC2ContainerRegistryReadOnly" {
  policy_arn = "arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/AmazonEC2ContainerRegistryReadOnly"
  role       = "${aws_iam_role.EKSNodeRole.name}"
}

resource "aws_iam_instance_profile" "eks-node-instance-profile" {
  name = "terraform-eks-demo"
  role = "${aws_iam_role.EKSNodeRole.name}"
}


//Worker Node Security Group
//This security group controls networking access to the Kubernetes worker nodes.


resource "aws_security_group" "eks-nodes-sg" {
  name  =  "${local.cluster_name}-nodes-sg"
  description = "Security group for all nodes in the cluster [${local.env}] "
  vpc_id = "${aws_vpc.cluster.id}"
  //    ingress {
  //      from_port       = 0
  //      to_port         = 0
  //      protocol        = "-1"
  //      description = "allow nodes to communicate with each other"
  //      self = true
  //    }

  //    ingress {
  //      from_port       = 1025
  //      to_port         = 65535
  //      protocol        = "tcp"
  //      description = "Allow worker Kubelets and pods to receive communication from the cluster control plane"
  //      security_groups = ["${aws_security_group.eks-control-plane.id}"]
  //    }


  egress {
    from_port       = 0
    to_port         = 0
    protocol        = "-1"
    cidr_blocks     = ["0.0.0.0/0"]
  }

  tags = "${
    map(
     "Name", "${local.cluster_name}-nodes-sg",
     "kubernetes.io/cluster/${local.cluster_name}", "owned",
    )
  }"
}


//Worker Node Access to EKS Master Cluster
//Now that we have a way to know where traffic from the worker nodes is coming from,
//we can allow the worker nodes networking access to the EKS master cluster.

resource "aws_security_group_rule" "https_nodes_to_plane" {
  type                     = "ingress"
  from_port                = 443
  to_port                  = 443
  protocol                 = "tcp"
  security_group_id        = "${aws_security_group.eks-control-plane-sg.id}"
  source_security_group_id = "${aws_security_group.eks-nodes-sg.id}"
  depends_on = ["aws_security_group.eks-nodes-sg", "aws_security_group.eks-control-plane-sg" ]
}


resource "aws_security_group_rule" "communication_plane_to_nodes" {
  type                     = "ingress"
  from_port                = 1025
  to_port                  = 65534
  protocol                 = "tcp"
  security_group_id = "${aws_security_group.eks-nodes-sg.id}"
  source_security_group_id        = "${aws_security_group.eks-control-plane-sg.id}"
  depends_on = ["aws_security_group.eks-nodes-sg", "aws_security_group.eks-control-plane-sg" ]
}

resource "aws_security_group_rule" "nodes_internode_communications" {
  type = "ingress"
  from_port       = 0
  to_port         = 0
  protocol        = "-1"
  description = "allow nodes to communicate with each other"
  security_group_id = "${aws_security_group.eks-nodes-sg.id}"
  self = true
}

Step 5: on that step we are creating autoscaling group

//Worker Node AutoScaling Group
//Now we have everything in place to create and manage EC2 instances that will serve as our worker nodes
//in the Kubernetes cluster. This setup utilizes an EC2 AutoScaling Group (ASG) rather than manually working with
//EC2 instances. This offers flexibility to scale up and down the worker nodes on demand when used in conjunction
//with AutoScaling policies (not implemented here).
//
//First, let us create a data source to fetch the latest Amazon Machine Image (AMI) that Amazon provides with an
//EKS compatible Kubernetes baked in.

data "aws_ami" "eks-worker" {
  filter {
    name   = "name"
    values = ["eks-worker-*"]
  }

  most_recent = true
  owners      = ["602401143452"] # Amazon Account ID
}

# EKS currently documents this required userdata for EKS worker nodes to
# properly configure Kubernetes applications on the EC2 instance.
# We utilize a Terraform local here to simplify Base64 encoding this
# information into the AutoScaling Launch Configuration.
# More information: https://amazon-eks.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/1.10.3/2018-06-05/amazon-eks-nodegroup.yaml
locals {
  eks-node-userdata = <<USERDATA
#!/bin/bash -xe

CA_CERTIFICATE_DIRECTORY=/etc/kubernetes/pki
CA_CERTIFICATE_FILE_PATH=$CA_CERTIFICATE_DIRECTORY/ca.crt
mkdir -p $CA_CERTIFICATE_DIRECTORY
echo "${aws_eks_cluster.eks-cluster.certificate_authority.0.data}" | base64 -d >  $CA_CERTIFICATE_FILE_PATH
INTERNAL_IP=$(curl -s http://169.254.169.254/latest/meta-data/local-ipv4)
sed -i s,MASTER_ENDPOINT,${aws_eks_cluster.eks-cluster.endpoint},g /var/lib/kubelet/kubeconfig
sed -i s,CLUSTER_NAME,${local.cluster_name},g /var/lib/kubelet/kubeconfig
sed -i s,REGION,${var.AWS_REGION},g /etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service
sed -i s,MAX_PODS,20,g /etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service
sed -i s,MASTER_ENDPOINT,${aws_eks_cluster.eks-cluster.endpoint},g /etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service
sed -i s,INTERNAL_IP,$INTERNAL_IP,g /etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service
DNS_CLUSTER_IP=10.100.0.10
if [[ $INTERNAL_IP == 10.* ]] ; then DNS_CLUSTER_IP=172.20.0.10; fi
sed -i s,DNS_CLUSTER_IP,$DNS_CLUSTER_IP,g /etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service
sed -i s,CERTIFICATE_AUTHORITY_FILE,$CA_CERTIFICATE_FILE_PATH,g /var/lib/kubelet/kubeconfig
sed -i s,CLIENT_CA_FILE,$CA_CERTIFICATE_FILE_PATH,g  /etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service
systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl restart kubelet
USERDATA
}

resource "aws_launch_configuration" "eks-launch-configuration" {
  associate_public_ip_address = true
  iam_instance_profile        = "${aws_iam_instance_profile.eks-node-instance-profile.name}"
  image_id                    = "${data.aws_ami.eks-worker.id}"
  instance_type               = "t2.small"
  name_prefix                 = "eks-${local.cluster_name}"
  security_groups             = ["${aws_security_group.eks-nodes-sg.id}"]
  user_data_base64            = "${base64encode(local.eks-node-userdata)}"
  key_name                    = "${var.ec2_keyname}"

  lifecycle {
    create_before_destroy = true
  }
}


//Finally, we create an AutoScaling Group that actually launches EC2 instances based on the
//AutoScaling Launch Configuration.

//NOTE: The usage of the specific kubernetes.io/cluster/* resource tag below is required for EKS
//and Kubernetes to discover and manage compute resources.

resource "aws_autoscaling_group" "eks-autoscaling-group" {
  desired_capacity     = 2
  launch_configuration = "${aws_launch_configuration.eks-launch-configuration.id}"
  max_size             = 2
  min_size             = 1
  name                 = "eks-${local.cluster_name}"
  vpc_zone_identifier  = ["${aws_subnet.eks-private.id}", "${aws_subnet.eks-private-2.id}"]


  tag {
    key                 = "Environment"
    value               = "${local.env}"
    propagate_at_launch = true
  }

  tag {
    key                 = "Name"
    value               = "eks-${local.cluster_name}"
    propagate_at_launch = true
  }

  tag {
    key                 = "kubernetes.io/cluster/${local.cluster_name}"
    value               = "owned"
    propagate_at_launch = true
  }
}

//NOTE: At this point, your Kubernetes cluster will have running masters and worker nodes, however, the worker nodes will
//not be able to join the Kubernetes cluster quite yet. The next section has the required Kubernetes configuration to
//enable the worker nodes to join the cluster.


//Required Kubernetes Configuration to Join Worker Nodes
//The EKS service does not provide a cluster-level API parameter or resource to automatically configure the underlying
//Kubernetes cluster to allow worker nodes to join the cluster via AWS IAM role authentication.


//To output an IAM Role authentication ConfigMap from your Terraform configuration:

locals {
  config-map-aws-auth = <<CONFIGMAPAWSAUTH


apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
  name: aws-auth
  namespace: kube-system
data:
  mapRoles: |
    - rolearn: ${aws_iam_role.EKSNodeRole.arn}
      username: system:node:{{EC2PrivateDNSName}}
      groups:
        - system:bootstrappers
        - system:nodes
CONFIGMAPAWSAUTH
}

output "config-map-aws-auth" {
  value = "${local.config-map-aws-auth}"
}


//Run
//
//terraform output config-map-aws-auth and save the configuration into a file,
//e.g. config-map-aws-auth.yaml
//
//Run kubectl apply -f config-map-aws-auth.yaml
//
//You can verify the worker nodes are joining the cluster via: kubectl get nodes --watch
//At this point, you should be able to utilize Kubernetes as expected!
//

On that step, you should also have fully working EKS cluster. Upon terraform apply run you should see smth like

Apply complete! Resources: 36 added, 0 changed, 0 destroyed.

Outputs:

To make cluster fully operational, after provision you should:

  1. get cluster kubelet config via
make kubelet-config

terraform output kubeconfig > kubeconfig
export KUBECONFIG=/home/slavko/kubernetes/tf/kubeconfig

after that you should be able to execute commands over your eks cluster

kubectl get nodes
No resources found.
  1. to allow nodes to join, you need to provide cluster with additional config map
make config-map-aws-auth
terraform output config-map-aws-auth > config-map-aws-auth.yaml
kubectl apply -f config-map-aws-auth.yaml
configmap "aws-auth" created
kubectl get nodes --watch
NAME                         STATUS     ROLES     AGE       VERSION
ip-10-11-1-21.ec2.internal   NotReady   <none>    1s        v1.10.3
ip-10-11-3-220.ec2.internal   NotReady   <none>    0s        v1.10.3
...
ip-10-11-1-21.ec2.internal   Ready     <none>    31s       v1.10.3
ip-10-11-3-220.ec2.internal   Ready     <none>    31s       v1.10.3
  1. You should be able to run pods and services
kubectl run  --image busybox pod-test --restart=Never
pod "pod-test" created
┌[tf]>
└──➜ kubectl get pods
NAME       READY     STATUS      RESTARTS   AGE
pod-test   0/1       Completed   0          8s

Deploy Kubernetes UI dashboard

as per https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/dashboard-tutorial.html

Step 1: Deploy the Dashboard

Use the following steps to deploy the Kubernetes dashboard, heapster, and the influxdb backend for CPU and memory metrics to your cluster.

To deploy the Kubernetes dashboard

Deploy the Kubernetes dashboard to your cluster:

kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/dashboard/v1.10.1/src/deploy/recommended/kubernetes-dashboard.yaml

secret "kubernetes-dashboard-certs" created
serviceaccount "kubernetes-dashboard" created
role "kubernetes-dashboard-minimal" created
rolebinding "kubernetes-dashboard-minimal" created
deployment "kubernetes-dashboard" created
service "kubernetes-dashboard" created

Deploy heapster to enable container cluster monitoring and performance analysis on your cluster:

kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/heapster/master/deploy/kube-config/influxdb/heapster.yaml

serviceaccount "heapster" created
deployment "heapster" created
service "heapster" created

Deploy the influxdb backend for heapster to your cluster:

kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/heapster/master/deploy/kube-config/influxdb/influxdb.yaml

deployment "monitoring-influxdb" created
service "monitoring-influxdb" created

Create the heapster cluster role binding for the dashboard:

kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/heapster/master/deploy/kube-config/rbac/heapster-rbac.yaml

clusterrolebinding "heapster" created

Step 2: Create an eks-admin Service Account and Cluster Role Binding

By default, the Kubernetes dashboard user has limited permissions. In this section, you create an eks-admin service account and cluster role binding that you can use to securely connect to the dashboard with admin-level permissions. For more information, see Managing Service Accounts in the Kubernetes documentation.

To create the eks-admin service account and cluster role binding

Important

The example service account created with this procedure has full cluster-admin (superuser) privileges on the cluster. For more information, see Using RBAC Authorization in the Kubernetes documentation.

Create a file called eks-admin-service-account.yaml with the text below. This manifest defines a service account and cluster role binding called eks-admin.

apiVersion: v1
kind: ServiceAccount
metadata:
  name: eks-admin
  namespace: kube-system
---
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: ClusterRoleBinding
metadata:
  name: eks-admin
roleRef:
  apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
  kind: ClusterRole
  name: cluster-admin
subjects:
- kind: ServiceAccount
  name: eks-admin
  namespace: kube-system

Apply the service account and cluster role binding to your cluster:

kubectl apply -f eks-admin-service-account.yaml
Output:

serviceaccount "eks-admin" created
clusterrolebinding.rbac.authorization.k8s.io "eks-admin" created

Step 3: Connect to the Dashboard

Now that the Kubernetes dashboard is deployed to your cluster, and you have an administrator service account that you can use to view and control your cluster, you can connect to the dashboard with that service account.

To connect to the Kubernetes dashboard

Retrieve an authentication token for the eks-admin service account. Copy the <authentication_token> value from the output. You use this token to connect to the dashboard.

kubectl -n kube-system describe secret $(kubectl -n kube-system get secret | grep eks-admin | awk '{print $1}')
Output:

Name:         eks-admin-token-b5zv4
Namespace:    kube-system
Labels:       <none>
Annotations:  kubernetes.io/service-account.name=eks-admin
              kubernetes.io/service-account.uid=bcfe66ac-39be-11e8-97e8-026dce96b6e8

Type:  kubernetes.io/service-account-token

Data
====
ca.crt:     1025 bytes
namespace:  11 bytes
token:      <authentication_token>

Start the kubectl proxy.

kubectl proxy

Open the following link with a web browser to access the dashboard endpoint: http://localhost:8001/api/v1/namespaces/kube-system/services/https:kubernetes-dashboard:/proxy/#!/login

Choose Token, paste the <authentication_token> output from the previous command into the Token field, and choose SIGN IN.

Step 4 (optional) kube2iam

Check this nice cluster addition: https://github.com/jtblin/kube2iam

Below goes extract from the Readme

Kube2iam allows you to use IAM roles to give individual pods access to your other AWS resources. Without some way to delegate IAM access to pods, you would instead have to give your worker nodes every IAM permission that your pods need, which is cumbersome to manage and a poor security practice.

First, set up RBAC for the kube2iam service account:

---
apiVersion: v1
kind: ServiceAccount
metadata:
  name: kube2iam
  namespace: kube-system
---
apiVersion: v1
items:
  - apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
    kind: ClusterRole
    metadata:
      name: kube2iam
    rules:
      - apiGroups: [""]
        resources: ["namespaces","pods"]
        verbs: ["get","watch","list"]
  - apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
    kind: ClusterRoleBinding
    metadata:
      name: kube2iam
    subjects:
    - kind: ServiceAccount
      name: kube2iam
      namespace: kube-system
    roleRef:
      kind: ClusterRole
      name: kube2iam
      apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
kind: List

Then, install the kube2iam DaemonSet. The kube2iam agent will run on each worker node and intercept calls to the EC2 metadata API. If your pods are annotated correctly, kube2iam will assume the role specified by your pod to authenticate the request, allowing your pods to access AWS resources using roles, and requiring no change to your application code. The only option we have to pay attention to specifically for EKS is to set the --host-interface option to eni+.

Kube2iam has many configuration options that are documented on the GitHub repo, but this manifest will get you started:

apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: DaemonSet
metadata:
  name: kube2iam
  namespace: kube-system
  labels:
    app: kube2iam
spec:
  updateStrategy:
    type: RollingUpdate
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      name: kube2iam
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        name: kube2iam
    spec:
      serviceAccountName: kube2iam
      hostNetwork: true
      containers:
        - image: jtblin/kube2iam:0.10.4
          imagePullPolicy: Always
          name: kube2iam
          args:
            - "--app-port=8181"
            - "--auto-discover-base-arn"
            - "--iptables=true"
            - "--host-ip=$(HOST_IP)"
            - "--host-interface=eni+"
            - "--auto-discover-default-role"
            - "--log-level=info"
          env:
            - name: HOST_IP
              valueFrom:
                fieldRef:
                  fieldPath: status.podIP
          ports:
            - containerPort: 8181
              hostPort: 8181
              name: http
          securityContext:
            privileged: true

Once kube2iam is set up, you can add an annotation in the pod spec of your deployments or other pod controllers to specify which IAM role should be used for the pod like so:

      annotations:
        iam.amazonaws.com/role: my-role

Make sure that the roles you are using with kube2iam have been configured so that your worker nodes can assume those roles. This is why we output the worker_role_arn from the Terraform EKS module in the last step. Modify your pod roles so they can be assumed by your worker nodes by adding the following to the Trust Relationship for each role:

    {
      "Sid": "",
      "Effect": "Allow",
      "Principal": {
        "AWS": "WORKER_ROLE_ARN"
      },
      "Action": "sts:AssumeRole"
    }

Be sure to replace WORKER_ROLE_ARN with the ARN of the IAM Role that your EKS worker nodes are configured with, not the ARN of the Instance Profile.

Questions?

Troubleshouting ...

Now lets start smth

kubectl run -i --tty --image busybox dns-test --restart=Never --rm /bin/sh

if you see state pending

NAME       READY     STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
dns-test   0/1       Pending   0          1m

you might want immediately check

kubectl get events

you might see smth like

LAST SEEN   FIRST SEEN   COUNT     NAME                        KIND      SUBOBJECT   TYPE      REASON             SOURCE              MESSAGE
34s         5m           22        dns-test.15404a7104cc67cf   Pod                   Warning   FailedScheduling   default-scheduler   no nodes available to schedule pods

where in message you will get hint about the issue

Troubleshouting hints from AWS can be found on

https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/troubleshooting.html

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