Deploying Cilium CNI
Cilium can be installed either via the
cilium
cli or usinghelm
.
This documentation will outline installing Cilium CNI v1.14.0 on Talos in six different ways.
Adhering to Talos principles we’ll deploy Cilium with IPAM mode set to Kubernetes, and using the cgroupv2
and bpffs
mount that talos already provides.
As Talos does not allow loading kernel modules by Kubernetes workloads, SYS_MODULE
capability needs to be dropped from the Cilium default set of values, this override can be seen in the helm/cilium cli install commands.
Each method can either install Cilium using kube proxy (default) or without: Kubernetes Without kube-proxy
In this guide we assume that KubePrism is enabled and configured to use the port 7445.
Machine config preparation
When generating the machine config for a node set the CNI to none. For example using a config patch:
Create a patch.yaml
file with the following contents:
cluster:
network:
cni:
name: none
talosctl gen config \
my-cluster https://mycluster.local:6443 \
--config-patch @patch.yaml
Or if you want to deploy Cilium without kube-proxy, you also need to disable kube proxy:
Create a patch.yaml
file with the following contents:
cluster:
network:
cni:
name: none
proxy:
disabled: true
talosctl gen config \
my-cluster https://mycluster.local:6443 \
--config-patch @patch.yaml
Installation using Cilium CLI
Note: It is recommended to template the cilium manifest using helm and use it as part of Talos machine config, but if you want to install Cilium using the Cilium CLI, you can follow the steps below.
Install the Cilium CLI following the steps here.
With kube-proxy
cilium install \
--set ipam.mode=kubernetes \
--set kubeProxyReplacement=false \
--set securityContext.capabilities.ciliumAgent="{CHOWN,KILL,NET_ADMIN,NET_RAW,IPC_LOCK,SYS_ADMIN,SYS_RESOURCE,DAC_OVERRIDE,FOWNER,SETGID,SETUID}" \
--set securityContext.capabilities.cleanCiliumState="{NET_ADMIN,SYS_ADMIN,SYS_RESOURCE}" \
--set cgroup.autoMount.enabled=false \
--set cgroup.hostRoot=/sys/fs/cgroup
Without kube-proxy
cilium install \
--set ipam.mode=kubernetes \
--set kubeProxyReplacement=true \
--set securityContext.capabilities.ciliumAgent="{CHOWN,KILL,NET_ADMIN,NET_RAW,IPC_LOCK,SYS_ADMIN,SYS_RESOURCE,DAC_OVERRIDE,FOWNER,SETGID,SETUID}" \
--set securityContext.capabilities.cleanCiliumState="{NET_ADMIN,SYS_ADMIN,SYS_RESOURCE}" \
--set cgroup.autoMount.enabled=false \
--set cgroup.hostRoot=/sys/fs/cgroup \
--set k8sServiceHost=localhost \
--set k8sServicePort=7445
Installation using Helm
Refer to Installing with Helm for more information.
First we’ll need to add the helm repo for Cilium.
helm repo add cilium https://helm.cilium.io/
helm repo update
Method 1: Helm install
After applying the machine config and bootstrapping Talos will appear to hang on phase 18/19 with the message: retrying error: node not ready. This happens because nodes in Kubernetes are only marked as ready once the CNI is up. As there is no CNI defined, the boot process is pending and will reboot the node to retry after 10 minutes, this is expected behavior.
During this window you can install Cilium manually by running the following:
helm install \
cilium \
cilium/cilium \
--version 1.15.6 \
--namespace kube-system \
--set ipam.mode=kubernetes \
--set kubeProxyReplacement=false \
--set securityContext.capabilities.ciliumAgent="{CHOWN,KILL,NET_ADMIN,NET_RAW,IPC_LOCK,SYS_ADMIN,SYS_RESOURCE,DAC_OVERRIDE,FOWNER,SETGID,SETUID}" \
--set securityContext.capabilities.cleanCiliumState="{NET_ADMIN,SYS_ADMIN,SYS_RESOURCE}" \
--set cgroup.autoMount.enabled=false \
--set cgroup.hostRoot=/sys/fs/cgroup
Or if you want to deploy Cilium without kube-proxy, also set some extra parameters:
helm install \
cilium \
cilium/cilium \
--version 1.15.6 \
--namespace kube-system \
--set ipam.mode=kubernetes \
--set kubeProxyReplacement=true \
--set securityContext.capabilities.ciliumAgent="{CHOWN,KILL,NET_ADMIN,NET_RAW,IPC_LOCK,SYS_ADMIN,SYS_RESOURCE,DAC_OVERRIDE,FOWNER,SETGID,SETUID}" \
--set securityContext.capabilities.cleanCiliumState="{NET_ADMIN,SYS_ADMIN,SYS_RESOURCE}" \
--set cgroup.autoMount.enabled=false \
--set cgroup.hostRoot=/sys/fs/cgroup \
--set k8sServiceHost=localhost \
--set k8sServicePort=7445
After Cilium is installed the boot process should continue and complete successfully.
Method 2: Helm manifests install
Instead of directly installing Cilium you can instead first generate the manifest and then apply it:
helm template \
cilium \
cilium/cilium \
--version 1.15.6 \
--namespace kube-system \
--set ipam.mode=kubernetes \
--set kubeProxyReplacement=false \
--set securityContext.capabilities.ciliumAgent="{CHOWN,KILL,NET_ADMIN,NET_RAW,IPC_LOCK,SYS_ADMIN,SYS_RESOURCE,DAC_OVERRIDE,FOWNER,SETGID,SETUID}" \
--set securityContext.capabilities.cleanCiliumState="{NET_ADMIN,SYS_ADMIN,SYS_RESOURCE}" \
--set cgroup.autoMount.enabled=false \
--set cgroup.hostRoot=/sys/fs/cgroup > cilium.yaml
kubectl apply -f cilium.yaml
Without kube-proxy:
helm template \
cilium \
cilium/cilium \
--version 1.15.6 \
--namespace kube-system \
--set ipam.mode=kubernetes \
--set kubeProxyReplacement=true \
--set securityContext.capabilities.ciliumAgent="{CHOWN,KILL,NET_ADMIN,NET_RAW,IPC_LOCK,SYS_ADMIN,SYS_RESOURCE,DAC_OVERRIDE,FOWNER,SETGID,SETUID}" \
--set securityContext.capabilities.cleanCiliumState="{NET_ADMIN,SYS_ADMIN,SYS_RESOURCE}" \
--set cgroup.autoMount.enabled=false \
--set cgroup.hostRoot=/sys/fs/cgroup \
--set k8sServiceHost=localhost \
--set k8sServicePort=7445 > cilium.yaml
kubectl apply -f cilium.yaml
Method 3: Helm manifests hosted install
After generating cilium.yaml
using helm template
, instead of applying this manifest directly during the Talos boot window (before the reboot timeout).
You can also host this file somewhere and patch the machine config to apply this manifest automatically during bootstrap.
To do this patch your machine configuration to include this config instead of the above:
Create a patch.yaml
file with the following contents:
cluster:
network:
cni:
name: custom
urls:
- https://server.yourdomain.tld/some/path/cilium.yaml
talosctl gen config \
my-cluster https://mycluster.local:6443 \
--config-patch @patch.yaml
However, beware of the fact that the helm generated Cilium manifest contains sensitive key material. As such you should definitely not host this somewhere publicly accessible.
Method 4: Helm manifests inline install
A more secure option would be to include the helm template
output manifest inside the machine configuration.
The machine config should be generated with CNI set to none
Create a patch.yaml
file with the following contents:
cluster:
network:
cni:
name: none
talosctl gen config \
my-cluster https://mycluster.local:6443 \
--config-patch @patch.yaml
if deploying Cilium with kube-proxy
disabled, you can also include the following:
Create a patch.yaml
file with the following contents:
cluster:
network:
cni:
name: none
proxy:
disabled: true
talosctl gen config \
my-cluster https://mycluster.local:6443 \
--config-patch @patch.yaml
To do so patch this into your machine configuration:
cluster:
inlineManifests:
- name: cilium
contents: |
--
# Source: cilium/templates/cilium-agent/serviceaccount.yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: ServiceAccount
metadata:
name: "cilium"
namespace: kube-system
---
# Source: cilium/templates/cilium-operator/serviceaccount.yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: ServiceAccount
-> Your cilium.yaml file will be pretty long....
This will install the Cilium manifests at just the right time during bootstrap.
Beware though:
- Changing the namespace when templating with Helm does not generate a manifest containing the yaml to create that namespace. As the inline manifest is processed from top to bottom make sure to manually put the namespace yaml at the start of the inline manifest.
- Only add the Cilium inline manifest to the control plane nodes machine configuration.
- Make sure all control plane nodes have an identical configuration.
- If you delete any of the generated resources they will be restored whenever a control plane node reboots.
- As a safety measure, Talos only creates missing resources from inline manifests, it never deletes or updates anything.
- If you need to update a manifest make sure to first edit all control plane machine configurations and then run
talosctl upgrade-k8s
as it will take care of updating inline manifests.
Method 5: Using a job
We can utilize a job pattern run arbitrary logic during bootstrap time. We can leverage this to our advantage to install Cilium by using an inline manifest as shown in the example below:
cluster:
inlineManifests:
- name: cilium-install
contents: |
---
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: ClusterRoleBinding
metadata:
name: cilium-install
roleRef:
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
kind: ClusterRole
name: cluster-admin
subjects:
- kind: ServiceAccount
name: cilium-install
namespace: kube-system
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: ServiceAccount
metadata:
name: cilium-install
namespace: kube-system
---
apiVersion: batch/v1
kind: Job
metadata:
name: cilium-install
namespace: kube-system
spec:
backoffLimit: 10
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: cilium-install
spec:
restartPolicy: OnFailure
tolerations:
- operator: Exists
- effect: NoSchedule
operator: Exists
- effect: NoExecute
operator: Exists
- effect: PreferNoSchedule
operator: Exists
- key: node-role.kubernetes.io/control-plane
operator: Exists
effect: NoSchedule
- key: node-role.kubernetes.io/control-plane
operator: Exists
effect: NoExecute
- key: node-role.kubernetes.io/control-plane
operator: Exists
effect: PreferNoSchedule
affinity:
nodeAffinity:
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
nodeSelectorTerms:
- matchExpressions:
- key: node-role.kubernetes.io/control-plane
operator: Exists
serviceAccount: cilium-install
serviceAccountName: cilium-install
hostNetwork: true
containers:
- name: cilium-install
image: quay.io/cilium/cilium-cli-ci:latest
env:
- name: KUBERNETES_SERVICE_HOST
valueFrom:
fieldRef:
apiVersion: v1
fieldPath: status.podIP
- name: KUBERNETES_SERVICE_PORT
value: "6443"
command:
- cilium
- install
- --set
- ipam.mode=kubernetes
- --set
- kubeProxyReplacement=true
- --set
- securityContext.capabilities.ciliumAgent="{CHOWN,KILL,NET_ADMIN,NET_RAW,IPC_LOCK,SYS_ADMIN,SYS_RESOURCE,DAC_OVERRIDE,FOWNER,SETGID,SETUID}"
- --set
- securityContext.capabilities.cleanCiliumState="{NET_ADMIN,SYS_ADMIN,SYS_RESOURCE}"
- --set
- cgroup.autoMount.enabled=false
- --set
- cgroup.hostRoot=/sys/fs/cgroup
- --set
- k8sServiceHost=localhost
- --set
- k8sServicePort=7445
Because there is no CNI present at installation time the kubernetes.default.svc cannot be used to install Cilium, to overcome this limitation we’ll utilize the host network connection to connect back to itself with ‘hostNetwork: true’ in tandem with the environment variables KUBERNETES_SERVICE_PORT and KUBERNETES_SERVICE_HOST.
The job runs a container to install cilium to your liking, after the job is finished Cilium can be managed/operated like usual.
The above can be combined exchanged with for example Method 3 to host arbitrary configurations externally but render/run them at bootstrap time.
Known issues
There are some gotchas when using Talos and Cilium on the Google cloud platform when using internal load balancers. For more details: GCP ILB support / support scope local routes to be configured
When using Talos
forwardKubeDNSToHost=true
option (which is enabled by default) in combination with ciliumbpf.masquerade=true
. There is a known issue that causesCoreDNS
to not work correctly. As a workaround, configuringforwardKubeDNSToHost=false
resolves the issue. For more details see the discusssion here
Other things to know
After installing Cilium,
cilium connectivity test
might hang and/or fail with errors similar toError creating: pods "client-69748f45d8-9b9jg" is forbidden: violates PodSecurity "baseline:latest": non-default capabilities (container "client" must not include "NET_RAW" in securityContext.capabilities.add)
This is expected, you can workaround it by adding the
pod-security.kubernetes.io/enforce=privileged
label on the namespace level.Talos has full kernel module support for eBPF, See: