Hetzner
Upload image
Hetzner Cloud does not support uploading custom images. You can email their support to get a Talos ISO uploaded by following issues:3599 or you can prepare image snapshot by yourself.
There are two options to upload your own.
- Run an instance in rescue mode and replace the system OS with the Talos image
- Use Hashicorp packer to prepare an image
Rescue mode
Create a new Server in the Hetzner console.
Enable the Hetzner Rescue System for this server and reboot.
Upon a reboot, the server will boot a special minimal Linux distribution designed for repair and reinstall.
Once running, login to the server using ssh
to prepare the system disk by doing the following:
# Check that you in Rescue mode
df
### Result is like:
# udev 987432 0 987432 0% /dev
# 213.133.99.101:/nfs 308577696 247015616 45817536 85% /root/.oldroot/nfs
# overlay 995672 8340 987332 1% /
# tmpfs 995672 0 995672 0% /dev/shm
# tmpfs 398272 572 397700 1% /run
# tmpfs 5120 0 5120 0% /run/lock
# tmpfs 199132 0 199132 0% /run/user/0
# Download the Talos image
cd /tmp
wget -O /tmp/talos.raw.xz https://github.com/siderolabs/talos/releases/download/v1.7.6/hcloud-amd64.raw.xz
# Replace system
xz -d -c /tmp/talos.raw.xz | dd of=/dev/sda && sync
# shutdown the instance
shutdown -h now
To make sure disk content is consistent, it is recommended to shut the server down before taking an image (snapshot). Once shutdown, simply create an image (snapshot) from the console. You can now use this snapshot to run Talos on the cloud.
Packer
Install packer to the local machine.
Create a config file for packer to use:
# hcloud.pkr.hcl
packer {
required_plugins {
hcloud = {
source = "github.com/hetznercloud/hcloud"
version = "~> 1"
}
}
}
variable "talos_version" {
type = string
default = "v1.7.6"
}
variable "arch" {
type = string
default = "amd64"
}
variable "server_type" {
type = string
default = "cx11"
}
variable "server_location" {
type = string
default = "hel1"
}
locals {
image = "https://github.com/siderolabs/talos/releases/download/${var.talos_version}/hcloud-${var.arch}.raw.xz"
}
source "hcloud" "talos" {
rescue = "linux64"
image = "debian-11"
location = "${var.server_location}"
server_type = "${var.server_type}"
ssh_username = "root"
snapshot_name = "talos system disk - ${var.arch} - ${var.talos_version}"
snapshot_labels = {
type = "infra",
os = "talos",
version = "${var.talos_version}",
arch = "${var.arch}",
}
}
build {
sources = ["source.hcloud.talos"]
provisioner "shell" {
inline = [
"apt-get install -y wget",
"wget -O /tmp/talos.raw.xz ${local.image}",
"xz -d -c /tmp/talos.raw.xz | dd of=/dev/sda && sync",
]
}
}
Additionally you could create a file containing
arch = "arm64"
server_type = "cax11"
server_location = "fsn1"
and build the snapshot for arm64.
Create a new image by issuing the commands shown below. Note that to create a new API token for your Project, switch into the Hetzner Cloud Console choose a Project, go to Access → Security, and create a new token.
# First you need set API Token
export HCLOUD_TOKEN=${TOKEN}
# Upload image
packer init .
packer build .
# Save the image ID
export IMAGE_ID=<image-id-in-packer-output>
After doing this, you can find the snapshot in the console interface.
Creating a Cluster via the CLI
This section assumes you have the hcloud console utility on your local machine.
# Set hcloud context and api key
hcloud context create talos-tutorial
Create a Load Balancer
Create a load balancer by issuing the commands shown below. Save the IP/DNS name, as this info will be used in the next step.
hcloud load-balancer create --name controlplane --network-zone eu-central --type lb11 --label 'type=controlplane'
### Result is like:
# LoadBalancer 484487 created
# IPv4: 49.12.X.X
# IPv6: 2a01:4f8:X:X::1
hcloud load-balancer add-service controlplane \
--listen-port 6443 --destination-port 6443 --protocol tcp
hcloud load-balancer add-target controlplane \
--label-selector 'type=controlplane'
Create the Machine Configuration Files
Generating Base Configurations
Using the IP/DNS name of the loadbalancer created earlier, generate the base configuration files for the Talos machines by issuing:
$ talosctl gen config talos-k8s-hcloud-tutorial https://<load balancer IP or DNS>:6443
created controlplane.yaml
created worker.yaml
created talosconfig
At this point, you can modify the generated configs to your liking.
Optionally, you can specify --config-patch
with RFC6902 jsonpatches which will be applied during the config generation.
Validate the Configuration Files
Validate any edited machine configs with:
$ talosctl validate --config controlplane.yaml --mode cloud
controlplane.yaml is valid for cloud mode
$ talosctl validate --config worker.yaml --mode cloud
worker.yaml is valid for cloud mode
Create the Servers
We can now create our servers.
Note that you can find IMAGE_ID
in the snapshot section of the console: https://console.hetzner.cloud/projects/$PROJECT_ID/servers/snapshots
.
Create the Control Plane Nodes
Create the control plane nodes with:
export IMAGE_ID=<your-image-id>
hcloud server create --name talos-control-plane-1 \
--image ${IMAGE_ID} \
--type cx21 --location hel1 \
--label 'type=controlplane' \
--user-data-from-file controlplane.yaml
hcloud server create --name talos-control-plane-2 \
--image ${IMAGE_ID} \
--type cx21 --location fsn1 \
--label 'type=controlplane' \
--user-data-from-file controlplane.yaml
hcloud server create --name talos-control-plane-3 \
--image ${IMAGE_ID} \
--type cx21 --location nbg1 \
--label 'type=controlplane' \
--user-data-from-file controlplane.yaml
Create the Worker Nodes
Create the worker nodes with the following command, repeating (and incrementing the name counter) as many times as desired.
hcloud server create --name talos-worker-1 \
--image ${IMAGE_ID} \
--type cx21 --location hel1 \
--label 'type=worker' \
--user-data-from-file worker.yaml
Bootstrap Etcd
To configure talosctl
we will need the first control plane node’s IP.
This can be found by issuing:
hcloud server list | grep talos-control-plane
Set the endpoints
and nodes
for your talosconfig with:
talosctl --talosconfig talosconfig config endpoint <control-plane-1-IP>
talosctl --talosconfig talosconfig config node <control-plane-1-IP>
Bootstrap etcd
on the first control plane node with:
talosctl --talosconfig talosconfig bootstrap
Retrieve the kubeconfig
At this point we can retrieve the admin kubeconfig
by running:
talosctl --talosconfig talosconfig kubeconfig .