1.7 KiB
1.7 KiB
Multiple standalone K3s nodes
This is an example of when you might want to configure multiple standalone k3s nodes simultaneously. For this we will assume a hypothetical situation where we are configuring 25 Raspberry Pis to deploy to our shop floors.
Each Rasperry Pi will be configured as a standalone IoT device hosting an application that will push data to head office.
Architecture
+-------------+
| |
| Node-01 +-+
| | |
+--+----------+ +-+
| | |
+--+---------+ +-+
| | |
+--+--------+ |
| | Node-N
+----------+
Configuration
Below is our example inventory of 200 nodes (Truncated):
---
k3s_workers:
hosts:
kube-0:
ansible_user: ansible
ansible_host: 10.10.9.2
ansible_python_interpreter: /usr/bin/python3
kube-1:
ansible_user: ansible
ansible_host: 10.10.9.3
ansible_python_interpreter: /usr/bin/python3
kube-2:
ansible_user: ansible
ansible_host: 10.10.9.4
ansible_python_interpreter: /usr/bin/python3
# ..... SNIP .....
kube-199:
ansible_user: ansible
ansible_host: 10.10.9.201
ansible_python_interpreter: /usr/bin/python3
kube-200:
ansible_user: ansible
ansible_host: 10.10.9.202
ansible_python_interpreter: /usr/bin/python3
In our group_vars/
(or as vars:
in our playbook), we will need to set the
k3s_build_cluster
variable to false
. This will stop the role from
attempting to cluster all 200 nodes, instead it will install k3s across each
node as as 200 standalone servers.
---
k3s_build_cluster: false