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vSphere Air-gapped: Configure MetalLB

If your environment is not currently equipped with a load balancer, you can use MetalLB. Otherwise, your own load balancer will work and you can proceed to vSphere Air-gapped: Install Kommander and continue the installation process.

To use MetalLB, create a MetalLB configMap for your vSphere infrastructure. MetalLB uses one of two protocols for exposing Kubernetes services:

  • Layer 2, with Address Resolution Protocol (ARP)

  • Border Gateway Protocol (BGP

Select one of the following procedures to create your MetalLB manifest for further editing.

Create a MetalLB configMap for your vSphere infrastructure. MetalLB uses one of two protocols for exposing Kubernetes services:

  • Layer 2, with Address Resolution Protocol (ARP)

  • Border Gateway Protocol (BGP)

Select one of the following procedures to create your MetalLB manifest for further editing and deployment.

Layer 2 configuration

Layer 2 mode is the simplest to configure: in many cases, you don’t need any protocol-specific configuration, only IP addresses.

Layer 2 mode does not require the IPs to be bound to the network interfaces of your worker nodes. It works by responding to Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) requests on your local network directly, to give the machine’s MAC address to clients.

  • MetalLB IP address ranges/CIDRs should be within the node’s primary network subnet.

  • MetalLB IP address ranges/CIDRs and node subnet should not conflict with the Kubernetes cluster pod and service subnets.

For example, the following configuration gives MetalLB control over IPs from 192.168.1.240 to 192.168.1.250, and configures Layer 2 mode:

The following values are generic, enter your specific values into the fields where applicable.

  1. Create a metallb-conf.yaml file for editing with the command:

    CODE
    cat << EOF > metallb-conf.yaml
    apiVersion: v1
    kind: ConfigMap
    metadata:
      namespace: metallb-system
      name: config
    data:
      config: |
        address-pools:
        - name: default
          protocol: layer2
          addresses:
          - 192.168.1.240-192.168.1.250
    EOF
  2. Edit the file to contain values specific to your environment, then run the following kubectl command:

    CODE
    kubectl apply -f metallb-conf.yaml

BGP configuration

For a basic configuration featuring one BGP router and one IP address range, you need four pieces of information:

  • The router IP address to which MetalLB should connect

  • The router’s AS number

  • The AS number MetalLB should use

  • An IP address range expressed as a CIDR prefix

For example, if you want to give MetalLB the range 192.168.10.0/24 and AS number 64500, and connect it to a router at 10.0.0.1 with AS number 64501, your configuration will look like the code snippet below.

The following example values are generic, enter your specific values into the fields where applicable.

  1. Extract the kubeconfig for your cluster and deploy a configMap for MetalLB using the following command:

    CODE
    dkp get kubeconfig -c ${DKP_CLUSTER_NAME} > ${DKP_CLUSTER_NAME}.conf
  2. Create a metallb-conf.yaml file for editing with the command:

    CODE
    cat << EOF > metallb-conf.yaml
    apiVersion: v1
    kind: ConfigMap
    metadata:
      namespace: metallb-system
      name: config
    data:
      config: |
        peers:
        - peer-address: 10.0.0.1
          peer-asn: 64501
          my-asn: 64500
        address-pools:
        - name: default
          protocol: bgp
          addresses:
          - 192.168.10.0/24
    EOF
  3. Edit the file to contain values specific to your environment, then run the following kubectl command:

    CODE
    kubectl apply -f metallb-conf.yaml

Next Step:

vSphere Air-gapped: Install Kommander

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