+++ title = "Building k3s on a Pi" author = ["Elia el Lazkani"] date = 2020-08-09T21:00:00+02:00 lastmod = 2021-06-28T00:00:45+02:00 tags = ["arm", "kubernetes"] categories = ["k3s"] draft = false +++ I have had a **Pi** laying around used for a simple task for a while now. A few days ago, I was browsing the web, learning more about privacy, when I stumbled upon [AdGuard Home](https://adguard.com/en/welcome.html). I have been using it as my internal DNS on top of the security and privacy layers I add to my machine. Its benefits can be argued but it is a DNS after all and I wanted to see what else it can do for me. Anyway, I digress. I searched to see if I could find a container for **AdGuard Home** and I did. At this point, I started thinking about what I could do to make the [Pi](https://www.raspberrypi.org/) more useful. That's when [k3s](https://k3s.io/) came into the picture. ## Pre-requisites {#pre-requisites} As this is not a **Pi** tutorial, I am going to be assuming that you have a _Raspberry Pi_ with **Raspberry Pi OS** _Buster_ installed on it. The assumption does not mean you cannot install any other OS on the Pi and run this setup. It only means that I have tested this on _Buster_ and that your milage will vary. ## Prepare the Pi {#prepare-the-pi} Now that you have _Buster_ already installed, let's go ahead and [fix](https://rancher.com/docs/k3s/latest/en/advanced/#enabling-legacy-iptables-on-raspbian-buster) a small default configuration issue with it. **K3s** uses `iptables` to route things around correctly. _Buster_ uses `nftables` by default, let's switch it to `iptables`. ```text $ sudo iptables -F $ sudo update-alternatives --set iptables /usr/sbin/iptables-legacy $ sudo update-alternatives --set ip6tables /usr/sbin/ip6tables-legacy $ sudo reboot ``` At this point, your _Pi_ should reboot. Your **OS** is configured for the next step. ## Pre-install Configuration {#pre-install-configuration} After testing **k3s** a few times, I found out that by _default_ it will deploy a few extra services like [Traefik](https://docs.traefik.io/). Unfortunately, just like anything the _default_ configuration is just that. It's plain and not very useful from the start. You will need to tweak it. This step could be done either _post_ or _pre_ deploy. Figuring out the _pre-deploy_ is a bit more involving but a bit more fun as well. The first thing you need to know is that the normal behavior of **k3s** is to deploy anything found in `/var/lib/rancher/k3s/server/manifests/`. So a good first step is, of course, to proceed with creating that. ```text $ mkdir -p /var/lib/rancher/k3s/server/manifests/ ``` The other thing to know is that **k3s** can deploy _Helm Charts_. It will create the _manifests_ it will deploy by default, before beginning the setup, in the manifest path I mentioned. If you would like to see what it deployed and how, visit that path after **k3s** runs. I did, and I took their configuration of **Traefik** which I was unhappy with its _defaults_. My next step was securing the _defaults_ as much as possible and I found out that **Traefik** can do [basic authentication](https://docs.traefik.io/v2.0/middlewares/basicauth/). As a starting point, that's great. Let's create the credentials. ```text $ htpasswd -c ./auth myUser ``` That was easy so far. Let's turn up the notch and create the manifest for **k3s**. Create `traefik.yaml` in `/var/lib/rancher/k3s/server/manifests/` with the following content. ```yaml --- apiVersion: helm.cattle.io/v1 kind: HelmChart metadata: name: traefik namespace: kube-system spec: chart: https://%{KUBERNETES_API}%/static/charts/traefik-1.81.0.tgz valuesContent: |- rbac: enabled: true ssl: enabled: true dashboard: enabled: true domain: traefik-ui.example.com auth: basic: myUser: $ars3$4A5tdstr$trSDDa4467Tsa54sTs. metrics: prometheus: enabled: false kubernetes: ingressEndpoint: useDefaultPublishedService: true image: "rancher/library-traefik" tolerations: - key: "CriticalAddonsOnly" operator: "Exists" - key: "node-role.kubernetes.io/master" operator: "Exists" effect: "NoSchedule" ``` It's a **Pi**, I don't need prometheus so I disabled it. I also enabled the dashboard and added the credentials we created in the previous step. Now, the _Helm Chart_ will deploy an ingress and expose the dashboard for you on the value of `domain`.

Note

I figured out the values to set in `valuesContent` by reading the _Helm Chart_
## K3s {#k3s} If everything is in place, you are ready to proceed. You can install **k3s**, now, but before I get to that step, I will say a few things about **k3s**. **K3s** has a smaller feature set than **k8s**, hence the smaller footprint. Read the documentation to see if you need any of the missing features. The second thing to mention is that **k3s** is a one binary deploy that uses **containerd**. That's why we will use the script installation method as it adds the necessary **systemd** configuration for us. It is a nice gesture. Let's do that, shall we ? ```text $ curl -sfL https://get.k3s.io | sh -s - --no-deploy traefik ```

Note

We need to make sure that **k3s** does not deploy its own **traefik** but ours. Make sure to add `--no-deploy traefik` to our deployment command.
Point `traefik.example.com` to your **Pi** `IP` in `/etc/hosts` on your machine. ```text traefik.example.com 192.168.0.5 ``` When the installation command is done, you should be able to visit [http://traefik.example.com/](http://traefik.example.com/) You can get the _kubeconfig_ from the _Raspberry Pi_, you can find it in `/etc/rancher/k3s/k3s.yaml`. You will need to change the `server` **IP**. ## Conclusion {#conclusion} If you've made it so far, you should have a **k3s** cluster running on a single _Raspberry Pi_. The next steps you might want to look into is disable the _metrics_ server and use the resources for other things.