# Home Cluster ## TODO - **Netboot**: https://www.sidero.dev/v0.5/getting-started/prereq-dhcp/ - Can probably leverage `dnsmasq` on the router for this? ## Setup ### Networking - Prepare networking - Internally: - Add a DNS entry for the cluster endpoint (router's `/etc/hosts` + `dnsmasq`) to point to the initial node - Externally: - Add a DNS entry for the cluster endpoint to point to the router - Setup the router to forward external requests to the initial node ### Setup Kubernetes Cluster > **Source**: https://www.talos.dev/v1.1/introduction/getting-started/ - Boot the Talos image on the initial node - If you are not using _this_ configuration: - `talosctl gen config "cluster-name" "cluster-endpoint"` - Edit files as needed - Apply the control plane config to the initial node - `talosctl apply-config --insecure --nodes "$INITIAL_NODE_ADDR" --file controlplane.yaml` - You will need to wait a bit for the configuration to be applied, Talos to install itself, for the node to reboot, and for post-boot initialization - Setup the client to communicate with the newly-configured node - `talosctl --talosconfig=./talosconfig config endpoint "$INITIAL_NODE_ADDR"` - Optionally also make this the default with `talosctl config merge ./talosconfig` - Bootstrap the cluster - `talosctl bootstrap --nodes "$INITIAL_NODE_ADDR"` - You will need to wait a bit for Kubernetes to initialize - Pull down the kubeconfig - `talosctl kubeconfig` Once the cluster has finished initializing _and starting up_, you should be able to `kubectl get nodes`. #### Adding Nodes > **Note**: UNTESTED - Boot the Talos ISO on the target node - Apply the appropriate configuration to the target node - `talosctl apply-config --insecure --nodes "$TARGET_NODE_ADDR" --file controlplane.yaml` - You will need to wait a bit for Kubernetes to initialize, start up, and then join the cluster - Add the node to `talosconfig` as needed #### Untaint Masters Since we're "frugal" (cheap) and we want to use all the hardware for all the things: ```bash kubectl taint nodes --all node-role.kubernetes.io/master- ``` ### Apply Initialization Manifests ```bash kubectl apply -k manifests/initialization ``` ### Setting up GitOps **TODO** ### Storage **TODO** ## Load Balancing I can _probably_ handle this with my router? **TODO**