Provisioning Fedora CoreOS on KubeVirt
This guide shows how to provision new Fedora CoreOS (FCOS) nodes on any KubeVirt-enabled Kubernetes cluster.
Prerequisites
Before provisioning an FCOS machine, you must have an Ignition configuration file containing your customizations. If you do not have one, see Producing an Ignition File.
You also need to have access to a Kubernetes environment with KubeVirt installed.
Referencing the KubeVirt Image
Fedora CoreOS is designed to be updated automatically, with different schedules per stream.
The image for each stream can directly be referenced from the official registry:
-
quay.io/fedora/fedora-coreos-kubevirt:stable
-
quay.io/fedora/fedora-coreos-kubevirt:testing
-
quay.io/fedora/fedora-coreos-kubevirt:next
Creating an Ignition config secret
There are various ways to expose userdata to Kubevirt VMs that are covered in the KubeVirt user guide. In this example we’ll use the Ignition config stored in local file example.ign
to create a secret named ignition-payload
. We’ll then use this secret when defining our virtual machine in the examples below.
kubectl create secret generic ignition-payload --from-file=userdata=example.ign
If the user prefers, they can use oc instead of kubectl in the commands throughout this guide.
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Launching a virtual machine
Given the quay.io/fedora/fedora-coreos-kubevirt
images you can create a VM definition and combine that with the Ignition secret reference to launch a virtual machine.
STREAM="stable" # or "testing" or "next"
cat <<END > vm.yaml
---
apiVersion: kubevirt.io/v1
kind: VirtualMachine
metadata:
name: my-fcos
spec:
runStrategy: Always
template:
spec:
domain:
devices:
disks:
- name: containerdisk
disk:
bus: virtio
- name: cloudinitdisk
disk:
bus: virtio
rng: {}
resources:
requests:
memory: 2048M
volumes:
- name: containerdisk
containerDisk:
image: quay.io/fedora/fedora-coreos-kubevirt:${STREAM}
imagePullPolicy: Always
- name: cloudinitdisk
cloudInitConfigDrive:
secretRef:
name: ignition-payload
END
kubectl create -f vm.yaml
Now you should be able to SSH into the instance. If you didn’t change the defaults, the username is core
.
virtctl
via sshvirtctl ssh core@my-fcos
Launching a virtual machine with persistent storage
The above example will give you a VM that will lose any changes made to it if it is stopped and started again. You can instruct the cluster to import a containerdisk into a Physical Volume when provisioning in order to have virtual machine will have persistence of the OS disk across stop/start operations.
The positive to this approach is that the machine behaves much more like a traditional virtual machine. The drawback is that the cluster needs to offer Block PV storage and not all clusters may do that.
You may have to specify a storageClassName parameter in the spec.dataVolumeTemplates.spec.storage section of the config if your cluster doesn’t offer a default. See the API docs.
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STREAM="stable" # or "testing" or "next"
DISK=10
cat <<END > vm.yaml
---
apiVersion: kubevirt.io/v1
kind: VirtualMachine
metadata:
name: my-fcos
spec:
runStrategy: Always
dataVolumeTemplates:
- metadata:
name: fcos-os-disk-volume
spec:
source:
registry:
url:
docker://quay.io/fedora/fedora-coreos-kubevirt:${STREAM}
storage:
volumeMode: Block
resources:
requests:
storage: ${DISK}Gi
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
template:
spec:
domain:
devices:
disks:
- name: fcos-os-disk
disk:
bus: virtio
- name: cloudinitdisk
disk:
bus: virtio
name: cloudinitdisk
rng: {}
resources:
requests:
memory: 2048M
volumes:
- name: fcos-os-disk
dataVolume:
name: fcos-os-disk-volume
- name: cloudinitdisk
cloudInitConfigDrive:
secretRef:
name: ignition-payload
END
kubectl create -f vm.yaml
The data volume import into the PVC from the container registry may take some time. You can monitor the import by watching the logs of the importer-fcos-os-disk-volume pod.
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After the machine is up you can connect to it using virtctl
as shown in the previous example.
Mirroring the image for use in private registries
If a private registry in air-gapped installations is used, the image can be mirrored to that registry using skopeo
.
skopeo copy docker://quay.io/fedora/fedora-coreos-kubevirt:stable docker://myregistry.io/myorg/fedora-coreos-kubevirt:stable
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