Overview
This document shows how to deploy a privileged DaemonSet in each node of Google Distributed Cloud to modify kubelet parameters to enable read-only ports. In version 1.16 and later, the kubelet read-only port is disabled by default.
Prerequisite
Make sure your Google Distributed Cloud is healthy before running the following patch script. You can use this solution to patch 1.16 and later admin clusters and user clusters.
Create a DaemonSet file
Create and save a DaemonSet file named patch.yaml in your current directory, with the following content:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: DaemonSet
metadata:
name: onprem-node-patcher
namespace: kube-system
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
name: onprem-node-patcher
updateStrategy:
type: RollingUpdate
template:
metadata:
labels:
name: onprem-node-patcher
spec:
tolerations:
- operator: Exists
volumes:
- name: host
hostPath:
path: /
hostPID: true
initContainers:
- name: read-only-patcher
image: "ubuntu"
env:
- name: KUBELET_READONLY_PORT
value: "10255"
# Number of 1G hugepages. Update the value as desired.
command:
- /bin/bash
- -c
- |
set -xeuo pipefail
configfile="/host/var/lib/kubelet/config.yaml"
kubeletservice="/host/etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service"
# $1: The read-only port for the kubelet to serve on with no
# authentication/authorization (set to 0 to disable)
function set-readonly-port-in-config() {
[[ "$#" -eq 1 ]] || return
local readonlyport; readonlyport="$1"
local actual; actual="$(grep readOnlyPort "${configfile}")"
if [[ "${actual}" == "" ]]; then
echo "readOnlyPort: ${readonlyport}" >> "${configfile}"
else
sed -E -i 's/readOnlyPort: [0-9]+/readOnlyPort: '"${readonlyport}"'/g' ${configfile}
fi
echo "Successfully append readOnlyPort: ${readonlyport} to ${configfile}"
}
sed -E -i 's/--read-only-port=[0-9]+/--read-only-port='"${KUBELET_READONLY_PORT}"'/g' ${kubeletservice}
[[ -f ${configfile} ]] && set-readonly-port-in-config "${KUBELET_READONLY_PORT}"
echo "Restarting kubelet..."
chroot /host nsenter -a -t1 -- systemctl daemon-reload
chroot /host nsenter -a -t1 -- systemctl restart kubelet.service
echo "Success!"
volumeMounts:
- name: host
mountPath: /host
resources:
requests:
memory: 5Mi
cpu: 5m
securityContext:
privileged: true
containers:
- image: gcr.io/google-containers/pause:3.2
name: pause
# Ensures that the pods will only run on the nodes having the correct
# label.
nodeSelector:
"kubernetes.io/os": "linux"
Update the read-only port number
To change the port number, manually edit the environment variable
KUBELET_READONLY_PORTin the DaemonSet YAML.The default read-only port is
10255, you should not pick10250as it will conflict with the predefined secure port.
Patch the admin cluster
kubectl apply -f patch.yaml \
--kubeconfig ADMIN_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG
Patch the user cluster
kubectl apply -f patch.yaml \
--kubeconfig USER_CLUSTER_KUBECONFIG
Restore
To disable the read-only port, manually edit the environment variable
KUBELET_READONLY_PORTin the DaemonSet YAML.After you save the changes, the DaemonSet will be re-run to modify the kubelet accordingly.
Caveats
This patch has the same lifecycle as your installed 3P apps. You can run it anytime as a day 2 operation. But it might not persist after you re-create the cluster. To make this change persistent, deploy this DaemonSet as a step in the Google Distributed Cloud post-initialization action.
After running once, the kubelet configuration file should be modified and reloaded. You can safely run
kubectl delete -f patch.yamlto clean up DaemonSet resources.Google Distributed Cloud running on Windows does not support this patch.
Kubernetes does not perform any authentication or authorization checks on this insecure port
10255. Enabling it will leave kubelet data unprotected and exposed to unauthorized users. The kubelet serves the same endpoint on the more secure, authenticated port10250, consider migrating to that secure port.