Canonical Distribution of Kubernetes: Development Summary (9/7/2017)
Tim Van Steenburgh
on 7 September 2017
This article originally appeared on Tim Van Steenburgh’s blog
September 1st concluded our most recent development sprint on the Canonical Distribution of Kubernetes (CDK). Here are some highlights:
Canal Bundle
Our new Canal bundle is available for testing. We’ve been fixing a few issuesand expect to release the Canal bundle to the stable channel tomorrow.
If you need network policy support in your cluster, take it for a test drive on AWS with:
juju deploy cs:~containers/canonical-kubernetes-canal --channel edge
Once deployed, you can test network policy support by following the instructions on the Calico website.
RBAC and s390x
Our main focus was on finishing the Calico/Canal support, but progress continues on RBAC and s390x. We added a bunch of new tests for RBAC, and are working on building/publishing the last few pieces we need for an s390x cluster (nginx-ingress-controller image and an e2e snap).
1.7.4
We tested and released our latest round of charm bug fixes along with snaps for the 1.7.4 upstream binaries. If you were already on 1.7.0, you got upgraded automatically, and 1.7.4 is the new default for new clusters.
If you’d like to follow along more closely with CDK development, you can do so in the following places:
- https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes (cluster/juju directory)
- https://github.com/juju-solutions/bundle-canonical-kubernetes
- Kubernetes Slack channels and SIG meetings
- #juju on Freenode IRC
- juju@lists.ubuntu.com mailing list
If you’re interested in hacking on CDK, be sure to check out the latest blogby our friend Kos!
Until next time!
Talk to us today
Interested in running Ubuntu in your organisation?
Newsletter signup
Related posts
Ubuntu Pro comes to Nutanix bare-metal Kubernetes
Nutanix and Canonical expand partnership to offer more choice for containerized workloads Enterprise Kubernetes® is maturing into a highly flexible,...
RISC-V 101 – what is it and what does it mean for Canonical?
In this blog I will look at some of the drivers for the growth of RISC-V, its value proposition and explain why supporting RISC-V is important to Canonical.
Ubuntu Summit 26.04 is coming: Save the date and share your story!
Following the incredible success of Ubuntu Summit 25.10, we are thrilled to announce that Ubuntu Summit 26.04 is officially on the horizon. If you are new to...