Sourcegraph with Kubernetes on Amazon EKS
Amazon EKS is Amazon's managed Kubernetes offering, similar to how Google Cloud offers managed Kubernetes clusters (GKE).
If your preferred cloud provider is Amazon, we strongly recommend using EKS instead of plain EC2. By using EKS, you will not need to manage your own Kubernetes control plane (complex). Instead, Amazon will provide it for you and you will only be responsible for managing the NodeGroups and the Sourcegraph deployment running on the Kubernetes cluster.
This guide will help you create a simple Kuberentes cluster using EKS, for more information or other advanced use-cases, please check Amazon EKS documentation.
Requirements
The easiest way to get started with Amazon EKS is using the eksctl
. This tool will create all the necesary resources to bootstrap a simple Kuberentes cluster in AWS.
You can find an extensive guide on using eksctl
with Amazon EKS in the EKS Getting Starrted guide.
Before moving forward, you will need:
awscli
: The command line tool provided by Amazon to work with AWS resources. Installation guide and Configuration guide.kubectl
: The command line tool used for working with Kuberentes clusters and resources. Installation guide.eksctl
: A tool provided by Waveworks for configuring and creating EKS clusters in Amazon. Installation guide.- IAM permissions: The user that will be performing the installtion must have permissions to work with Amazon EKS IAM roles and service linked roles, AWS CloudFormation, and a VPC and related resources.
Through this guide, we will be using a number of parameters starting with $
that you will need to replace with your desired values:
$REGION
: The AWS region to use for all resources in this tutorial.$KEY_NAME
: The name of the SSH key-pair in AWS used to access instances.$CLUSTER_NAME
: A name to be given to the Amazon EKS Cluster.$NODE_TYPE
: The instance type that will be used by the cluster NodeGroup.$NODE_MAX
: The maximum number of nodes in your cluster.$NODE_MIN
: The minimum number of nodes in your cluster.
Sizing the cluster
Before getting started, we need to identify the size for our initial cluster. You can use the following chart as reference:
Users | $NODE_TYPE |
$NODE_MIN |
$NODE_MAX |
Cost est. |
---|---|---|---|---|
10-500 | m5.4xlarge | 3 | 6 | $59-118/day |
500-2000 | m5.4xlarge | 6 | 10 | $118-195/day |
Note: You can modify these values later on to scale up/down the number of worker nodes using the
eksctl
command line. For more information please the eksctl documentation
Create an EC2 key-pair
Note: If you already have an existing keypair you can skip this step and reuse your existing key
Creating an EC2 keypair will allow you to access the Kuberentes nodes after the setup is complete, which might be required in the future to perform troublshooting or administration tasks.
To create a key-pair in use the following command:
aws ec2 create-key-pair --region $REGION --key-name $KEY_NAME
Create an Amazon EKS Cluster
We will leverage eksctl
to create our cluster, as it automates all the steps necesary to get our EKS Cluster and its NodeGroup working.
Note: This command might take 10-30 minutes to finish.
eksctl create cluster \ --name $CLUSTER_NAME \ --region $REGION \ --with-oidc \ --ssh-access \ --ssh-public-key $KEY_NAME \ --managed \ --node-type $NODE_TYPE --nodes-min $NODE_MIN --nodes $NODE_MIN --nodes-max $NODE_MAX
Access to the cluster
Before accessing the cluster, we need to configure kubectl
to connect to the correct cluster, we can do this with eksctl
:
eksctl --region $REGION utils write-kubeconfig --cluster $CLUSTER_NAME
At this point, running kubectl get svc
should show something like:
$ kubectl get svc NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE kubernetes ClusterIP 172.20.0.1 <none> 443/TCP 4m
Important: If kubectl
commands prompt you for username/password, make sure that kubectl version
reports a client version of v1.10+. Older versions of kubectl do not work with the authentication configuration provided by Amazon EKS.
Deploy the Kubernetes Web UI Dashboard (optional)
See Tutorial: Deploy the Kubernetes Dashboard.
Deploy Sourcegraph! 🎉
Your Kubernetes cluster is now all set up and running!
Luckily, deploying Sourcegraph on your cluster is much easier and quicker than the above steps. :)
Follow our installation documentation to continue.