The easiest way to get a production grade Kubernetes cluster up and running.
We like to think of it as kubectl
for clusters.
kops
helps you create, destroy, upgrade and maintain production-grade, highly
available, Kubernetes clusters from the command line. AWS (Amazon Web Services)
is currently officially supported, with GCE in beta support , and VMware vSphere
in alpha, and other platforms planned.
To replicate the above demo, check out our tutorial for launching a Kubernetes cluster hosted on AWS.
To install a Kubernetes cluster on GCE please follow this guide.
To install a Kubernetes cluster on DigitalOcean, follow this guide.
- Automates the provisioning of Kubernetes clusters in AWS and GCE
- Deploys Highly Available (HA) Kubernetes Masters
- Built on a state-sync model for dry-runs and automatic idempotency
- Ability to generate Terraform
- Supports custom Kubernetes add-ons
- Command line autocompletion
- YAML Manifest Based API Configuration
- Templating and dry-run modes for creating Manifests
- Choose from eight different CNI Networking providers out-of-the-box
- Supports upgrading from kube-up
- Capability to add containers, as hooks, and files to nodes via a cluster manifest
Documentation is in the /docs
directory, and the index is here.
kops is intended to be backward compatible. It is always recommended to use the latest version of kops with whatever version of Kubernetes you are using. Always use the latest version of kops.
One exception, in regards to compatibility, kops supports the equivalent Kubernetes minor release number. A minor version is the second digit in the release number. kops version 1.8.0 has a minor version of 8. The numbering follows the semantic versioning specification, MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH.
For example, kops 1.8.0 does not support Kubernetes 1.9.2, but kops 1.9.0 supports Kubernetes 1.9.2 and previous Kubernetes versions. Only when kops minor version matches, the Kubernetes minor version does kops officially support the Kubernetes release. kops does not stop a user from installing mismatching versions of K8s, but Kubernetes releases always require kops to install specific versions of components like docker, that tested against the particular Kubernetes version.
kops version | k8s 1.5.x | k8s 1.6.x | k8s 1.7.x | k8s 1.8.x | k8s 1.9.x | k8s 1.10.x |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1.10.x | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y |
1.9.x | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N |
1.8.x | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N |
1.7.x | Y | Y | Y | N | N | N |
1.6.x | Y | Y | N | N | N | N |
Use the latest version of kops for all releases of Kubernetes, with the caveat that higher versions of Kubernetes are not officially supported by kops.
This project does not follow the Kubernetes release schedule. kops
aims to
provide a reliable installation experience for kubernetes, and typically
releases about a month after the corresponding Kubernetes release. This time
allows for the Kubernetes project to resolve any issues introduced by the new
version and ensures that we can support the latest features. kops will release
alpha and beta pre-releases for people that are eager to try the latest
Kubernetes release. Please only use pre-GA kops releases in environments that
can tolerate the quirks of new releases, and please do report any issues
encountered.
kubectl
is required, see here.
brew update && brew install kops
The kops
binary is also available via our releases.
curl -LO https://github.com/kubernetes/kops/releases/download/$(curl -s https://api.github.com/repos/kubernetes/kops/releases/latest | grep tag_name | cut -d '"' -f 4)/kops-linux-amd64
chmod +x kops-linux-amd64
sudo mv kops-linux-amd64 /usr/local/bin/kops
See the releases for more information on changes between releases.
Are you interested in contributing to kops? We, the maintainers and community, would love your suggestions, contributions, and help! We have a quick-start guide on adding a feature. Also, the maintainers can be contacted at any time to learn more about how to get involved.
In the interest of getting more new folks involved with kops, we are starting to
tag issues with good-starter-issue
. These are typically issues that have
smaller scope but are good ways to start to get acquainted with the codebase.
We also encourage ALL active community participants to act as if they are maintainers, even if you don't have "official" write permissions. This is a community effort, we are here to serve the Kubernetes community. If you have an active interest and you want to get involved, you have real power! Don't assume that the only people who can get things done around here are the "maintainers".
We also would love to add more "official" maintainers, so show us what you can do!
What this means:
Issues
- Help read and triage issues, assist when possible.
- Point out issues that are duplicates, out of date, etc.
- Even if you don't have tagging permissions, make a note and tag maintainers (
/close
,/dupe #127
).
- Even if you don't have tagging permissions, make a note and tag maintainers (
Pull Requests
- Read and review the code. Leave comments, questions, and critiques (
/lgtm
). - Download, compile, and run the code and make sure the tests pass (make test).
- Also verify that the new feature seems sane, follows best architectural patterns, and includes tests.
This repository uses the Kubernetes bots. See a full list of the commands here.
Kops maintainers set aside one hour every other week for public office hours. This time is used to gather with community members interested in kops. This session is open to both developers and users.
Office hours are hosted on a zoom video chat on Fridays at 12 noon (Eastern Time)/9 am (Pacific Time) during weeks with odd "numbers". To check this weeks' number, run: date +%V
. If the response is odd, join us on Friday for office hours!
We do maintain an agenda and stick to it as much as possible. If you want to hold the floor, put your item in this doc. Bullet/note form is fine. Even if your topic gets in late, we do our best to cover it.
Our office hours call is recorded, but the tone tends to be casual. First-timers are always welcome. Typical areas of discussion can include:
- Contributors with a feature proposal seeking feedback, assistance, etc
- Members planning for what we want to get done for the next release
- Strategizing for larger initiatives, such as those that involve more than one sig or potentially more moving pieces
- Help wanted requests
- Demonstrations of cool stuff. PoCs. Fresh ideas. Show us how you use kops to go beyond the norm- help us define the future!
Office hours are designed for ALL of those contributing to kops or the community. Contributions are not limited to those who commit source code. There are so many important ways to be involved-
- helping in the slack channels
- triaging/writing issues
- thinking about the topics raised at office hours and forming and advocating for your good ideas forming opinions
- testing pre-(and official) releases
Although not exhaustive, the above activities are extremely important to our continued success and are all worth contributions. If you want to talk about kops and you have doubt, just come.
Please check in with us in the #kops-users or #kops-dev channel. Often-times, a well crafted question or potential bug report in slack will catch the attention of the right folks and help quickly get the ship righted.
If you think you have found a bug please follow the instructions below.
- Please spend a small amount of time giving due diligence to the issue tracker. Your issue might be a duplicate.
- Set
-v 10
command line option and save the log output. Please paste this into your issue. - Note the version of kops you are running (from
kops version
), and the command line options you are using. - Open a new issue.
- Remember users might be searching for your issue in the future, so please give it a meaningful title to helps others.
- Feel free to reach out to the kops community on kubernetes slack.
We also use the issue tracker to track features. If you have an idea for a feature, or think you can help kops become even more awesome follow the steps below.
- Open a new issue.
- Remember users might be searching for your issue in the future, so please give it a meaningful title to helps others.
- Clearly define the use case, using concrete examples. EG: I type
this
and kops doesthat
. - Some of our larger features will require some design. If you would like to include a technical design for your feature please include it in the issue.
- After the new feature is well understood, and the design agreed upon we can start coding the feature. We would love for you to code it. So please open up a WIP (work in progress) pull request, and happy coding.