Editing Machine Configuration
Talos node state is fully defined by machine configuration. Initial configuration is delivered to the node at bootstrap time, but configuration can be updated while the node is running.
Note: Be sure that config is persisted so that configuration updates are not overwritten on reboots. Configuration persistence was enabled by default since Talos 0.5 (
persist: true
in machine configuration).
There are three talosctl
commands which facilitate machine configuration updates:
talosctl apply-config
to apply configuration from the filetalosctl edit machineconfig
to launch an editor with existing node configuration, make changes and apply configuration backtalosctl patch machineconfig
to apply automated machine configuration via JSON patch
Each of these commands can operate in one of three modes:
- apply change with a reboot (default): update configuration, reboot Talos node to apply configuration change
- apply change immediately (
--immediate
flag): change is applied immediately without a reboot, only.cluster
sub-tree of the machine configuration can be updated in Talos 0.9 - apply change on next reboot (
--on-reboot
): change is staged to be applied after a reboot, but node is not rebooted
Note: applying change on next reboot (
--on-reboot
) doesn’t modify current node configuration, so next call totalosctl edit machineconfig --on-reboot
will not see changes
talosctl apply-config
This command is mostly used to submit initial machine configuration to the node (generated by talosctl gen config
).
It can be used to apply new configuration from the file to the running node as well, but most of the time it’s not convenient, as it doesn’t operate on the current node machine configuration.
Example:
talosctl -n <IP> apply-config -f config.yaml
Command apply-config
can also be invoked as apply machineconfig
:
talosctl -n <IP> apply machineconfig -f config.yaml
Applying machine configuration immediately (without a reboot):
talosctl -n IP apply machineconfig -f config.yaml --immediate
taloctl edit machineconfig
Command talosctl edit
loads current machine configuration from the node and launches configured editor to modify the config.
If config hasn’t been changed in the editor (or if updated config is empty), update is not applied.
Note: Talos uses environment variables
TALOS_EDITOR
,EDITOR
to pick up the editor preference. If environment variables are missing,vi
editor is used by default.
Example:
talosctl -n <IP> edit machineconfig
Configuration can be edited for multiple nodes if multiple IP addresses are specified:
talosctl -n <IP1>,<IP2>,... edit machineconfig
Applying machine configuration change immediately (without a reboot):
talosctl -n <IP> edit machineconfig --immediate
talosctl patch machineconfig
Command talosctl patch
works similar to talosctl edit
command - it loads current machine configuration, but instead of launching configured editor it applies JSON patch to the configuration and writes result back to the node.
Example, updating kubelet version (with a reboot):
$ talosctl -n <IP> patch machineconfig -p '[{"op": "replace", "path": "/machine/kubelet/image", "value": "ghcr.io/talos-systems/kubelet:v1.20.5"}]'
patched mc at the node <IP>
Updating kube-apiserver version in immediate mode (without a reboot):
$ talosctl -n <IP> patch machineconfig --immediate -p '[{"op": "replace", "path": "/cluster/apiServer/image", "value": "k8s.gcr.io/kube-apiserver:v1.20.5"}]'
patched mc at the node <IP>
Patch might be applied to multiple nodes when multiple IPs are specified:
taloctl -n <IP1>,<IP2>,... patch machineconfig --immediate -p '[{...}]'
Recovering from Node Boot Failures
If a Talos node fails to boot because of wrong configuration (for example, control plane endpoint is incorrect), configuration can be updated to fix the issue.
If the boot sequence is still running, Talos might refuse applying config in default mode.
In that case --on-reboot
mode can be used coupled with talosctl reboot
command to trigger a reboot and apply configuration update.