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AWS v6.60.0 published on Tuesday, Nov 19, 2024 by Pulumi

Amazon EKS Distro Cluster

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AWS v6.60.0 published on Tuesday, Nov 19, 2024 by Pulumi

    View Code Deploy this example with Pulumi

    This example deploys an Amazon EKS Distro cluster using a dynamic provider which utilizes kops

    Deploying the App

    To deploy your infrastructure, follow the below steps.

    Prerequisites

    1. Install Pulumi
    2. Install Node.js
    3. Install Kops
    4. Configure AWS Credentials
    5. Install aws-iam-authenticator

    Steps

    After cloning this repo, from this working directory, run these commands:

    1. Install the required Node.js packages:

      $ npm install
      
    2. Create a new stack, which is an isolated deployment target for this example:

      $ pulumi stack init
      
    3. Set the required configuration variables for this program:

      $ pulumi config set aws:region us-west-2
      
    4. Stand up the EKS cluster, which will also deploy the Kubernetes Dashboard:

      $ pulumi up
      
    5. After 10-15 minutes, your cluster will be ready, and the kubeconfig JSON you’ll use to connect to the cluster will be available as an output. You can save this kubeconfig to a file like so:

      $ pulumi stack output kubeconfig --show-secrets >kubeconfig.json
      

      Once you have this file in hand, you can interact with your new cluster as usual via kubectl:

      $ KUBECONFIG=./kubeconfig.json kubectl get nodes
      
    6. From there, feel free to experiment. Make edits and run pulumi up to incrementally update your stack. For example, in order to deploy a Helm chart into your cluster, import the @pulumi/kubernetes/helm package, add a Chart resource that targets the EKS cluster to index.ts, and run pulumi up. Note that the Helm client must be set up in order for the chart to deploy. For more details, see the Prerequisites list.

      import * as helm from "@pulumi/kubernetes/helm";
      
      // ... existing code here ...
      
      const myk8s = new k8s.Provider("myk8s", {
          kubeconfig: cluster.kubeconfig.apply(JSON.stringify),
      });
      
      const postgres = new helm.v2.Chart("postgres", {
          // stable/postgresql@0.15.0
          repo: "stable",
          chart: "postgresql",
          version: "0.15.0",
          values: {
              // Use a stable password.
              postgresPassword: "some-password",
              // Expose the postgres server via a load balancer.
              service: {
                  type: "LoadBalancer",
              },
          },
      }, { providers: { kubernetes: myk8s } });
      

      Once the chart has been deployed, you can find its public, load-balanced endpoint via the Kubernetes Dashboard.

    7. Once you’ve finished experimenting, tear down your stack’s resources by destroying and removing it:

      $ pulumi destroy --yes
      $ pulumi stack rm --yes
      
    aws logo
    AWS v6.60.0 published on Tuesday, Nov 19, 2024 by Pulumi