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Pre-provisioned Delete Cluster

NOTE: A self-managed workload cluster cannot delete itself. If your workload cluster is self-managed, you must create a bootstrap cluster and move the cluster lifecycle services to the bootstrap cluster before deleting the workload cluster.

If you did not make your workload cluster self-managed, as described in Make New Cluster Self-Managed, see Delete the workload cluster.

Prepare to Delete the Pre-provisioned Cluster

Follow these steps:

  1. Create a bootstrap cluster:

    The bootstrap cluster will host the Cluster API controllers that reconcile the cluster objects marked for deletion:

    (info) NOTE: To avoid using the wrong kubeconfig, the following steps use explicit kubeconfig paths and contexts.

    CODE
    dkp create bootstrap --kubeconfig $HOME/.kube/config

    CODE
     ✓ Creating a bootstrap cluster
     ✓ Initializing new CAPI components
  2. Move the Cluster API objects from the workload to the bootstrap cluster: The cluster lifecycle services on the bootstrap cluster are ready, but the workload cluster configuration is on the workload cluster. The move command moves the configuration, which takes the form of Cluster API Custom Resource objects, from the workload to the bootstrap cluster. This process is also called a Pivot.

    CODE
    dkp move capi-resources \
    	--from-kubeconfig ${CLUSTER_NAME}.conf \
    	--from-context ${CLUSTER_NAME}-admin@${CLUSTER_NAME} \
    	--to-kubeconfig $HOME/.kube/config \
    	--to-context kind-konvoy-capi-bootstrapper

    CODE
    ✓ Moving cluster resources
    You can now view resources in the moved cluster by using the --kubeconfig flag with kubectl. For example: kubectl --kubeconfig $HOME/.kube/config get nodes

  3. Use the cluster lifecycle services on the workload cluster to check the workload cluster status by running the following command:

    CODE
    dkp describe cluster --kubeconfig $HOME/.kube/config -c ${CLUSTER_NAME}

    CODE
    NAME                                                                       READY  SEVERITY  REASON  SINCE  MESSAGE
    Cluster/preprovisioned-example                                             True                     2m31s         
    ├─ClusterInfrastructure - PreprovisionedCluster/preprovisioned-example                                            
    ├─ControlPlane - KubeadmControlPlane/preprovisioned-example-control-plane  True                     2m31s         
    │ ├─Machine/preprovisioned-example-control-plane-6g6nr                     True                     2m33s         
    │ ├─Machine/preprovisioned-example-control-plane-8lhcv                     True                     2m33s         
    │ └─Machine/preprovisioned-example-control-plane-kk2kg                     True                     2m33s         
    └─Workers                                                                                                
      └─MachineDeployment/preprovisioned-example-md-0                          True                     2m34s         
        └─Machine/preprovisioned-example-md-0-77f667cd9-tnctd                  True                     2m33s  

    (info) NOTE: After moving the cluster lifecycle services to the workload cluster, remember to use dkp with the workload cluster kubeconfig.

  4. Wait for the cluster control-plane to be ready. Run the command below and wait for the condition to be met:

    CODE
    kubectl --kubeconfig $HOME/.kube/config wait --for=condition=controlplaneready "clusters/${CLUSTER_NAME}" --timeout=20m

    CODE
    cluster.cluster.x-k8s.io/preprovisioned-example condition met

Persistent Volumes (PVs) are not deleted automatically by design in order to preserve your data. However, they take up storage space if not deleted. You must delete PVs manually. Information for backup of a cluster and PVs is on the page in documentation called Back up your Cluster's Applications and Persistent Volumes .

Delete the Workload Cluster

If you have a need to remove the Kubernetes cluster, such as for environment cleanup, use this command to delete the provisioned Kubernetes cluster.

  1. To delete a cluster, you would use dkp delete cluster and pass in the name of the cluster you are trying to delete with --cluster-name flag. You would use kubectl get clusters to get those details (--cluster-name and --namespace) of the Kubernetes cluster to delete it.
    NOTE: Do not use dkp get clusters since that gets you Kommander cluster details rather than Konvoy kubernetes cluster details.

    CODE
    kubectl get clusters
  2. Delete the Kubernetes cluster and wait a few minutes:

    NOTE: Before deleting the cluster, dkp deletes all Services of type LoadBalancer on the cluster. Each Service is backed by an AWS Classic ELB. Deleting the Service deletes the ELB that backs it. To skip this step, use the flag --delete-kubernetes-resources=false. Do not skip this step if the VPC is managed by DKP. When DKP deletes the cluster, it deletes the VPC. If the VPC has any AWS Classic ELBs, AWS does not allow the VPC to be deleted, and DKP cannot delete the cluster.

    CODE
    dkp delete cluster --cluster-name=${CLUSTER_NAME} --kubeconfig $HOME/.kube/config
    CODE
    ✓ Deleting Services with type LoadBalancer for Cluster default/preprovisioned-example
    ✓ Deleting ClusterResourceSets for Cluster default/preprovisioned-example
    ✓ Deleting cluster resources
    ✓ Waiting for cluster to be fully deleted
    Deleted default/preprovisioned-example cluster

Delete the Bootstrap Cluster

After you have moved the workload resources back to a bootstrap cluster and deleted the workload cluster, you no longer need the bootstrap cluster. You can safely delete the bootstrap cluster with this command:

  1. Use dkp with the bootstrap cluster to delete the workload cluster.

Delete the kind Kubernetes cluster:

CODE
dkp delete bootstrap --kubeconfig $HOME/.kube/config
CODE
✓ Deleting bootstrap cluster
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