7.6 KiB
stage | group | info |
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Deploy | Environments | To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/product/ux/technical-writing/#assignments |
Create an Amazon EKS cluster
You can create a cluster on Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS) through Infrastructure as Code (IaC). This process uses the AWS and Kubernetes Terraform providers to create EKS clusters. You connect the clusters to GitLab by using the GitLab agent for Kubernetes.
Prerequisites:
- An Amazon Web Services (AWS) account, with a set of configured security credentials.
- A runner you can use to run the GitLab CI/CD pipeline.
Steps:
- Import the example project.
- Register the agent for Kubernetes.
- Configure your project.
- Provision your cluster.
Import the example project
To create a cluster from GitLab using Infrastructure as Code, you must create a project to manage the cluster from. In this tutorial, you start with a sample project and modify it according to your needs.
Start by importing the example project by URL.
To import the project:
- In GitLab, on the top bar, select Main menu > Projects > View all projects.
- On the right of the page, select New project.
- Select Import project.
- Select Repository by URL.
- For the Git repository URL, enter
https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/configure/examples/gitlab-terraform-eks.git
. - Complete the fields and select Create project.
This project provides you with:
- An Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (VPC).
- An Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS) cluster.
- The GitLab agent for Kubernetes installed in the cluster.
Register the agent
FLAG:
In GitLab 14.10, a flag named certificate_based_clusters
changed the Actions menu to focus on the agent rather than certificates. The flag is enabled on GitLab.com and self-managed.
To create a GitLab agent for Kubernetes:
- On the left sidebar, select Infrastructure > Kubernetes clusters.
- Select Connect a cluster (agent).
- From the Select an agent dropdown list, select
eks-agent
and select Register an agent. - GitLab generates a registration token for the agent. Securely store this secret token, as you will need it later.
- GitLab provides an address for the agent server (KAS), which you will also need later.
Set up AWS credentials
Set up your AWS credentials when you want to authenticate AWS with GitLab.
-
Make sure that your IAM user or role has the appropriate permissions for your project. For this example project, you must have the permissions shown below. You can expand this when you set up your own project.
// IAM custom Policy definition { "Version": "2012-10-17", "Statement": [ { "Sid": "VisualEditor0", "Effect": "Allow", "Action": [ "ec2:*", "eks:*", "elasticloadbalancing:*", "autoscaling:*", "cloudwatch:*", "logs:*", "kms:DescribeKey", "iam:AddRoleToInstanceProfile", "iam:AttachRolePolicy", "iam:CreateInstanceProfile", "iam:CreateRole", "iam:CreateServiceLinkedRole", "iam:GetRole", "iam:ListAttachedRolePolicies", "iam:ListRolePolicies", "iam:ListRoles", "iam:PassRole", // required for destroy step "iam:DetachRolePolicy", "iam:ListInstanceProfilesForRole", "iam:DeleteRole" ], "Resource": "*" } ] }
-
Save your access key and secret. You need these to authenticate AWS with GitLab.
Configure your project
Use CI/CD environment variables to configure your project.
Required configuration:
- On the left sidebar, select Settings > CI/CD.
- Expand Variables.
- Set the variable
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
to your AWS access key ID. - Set the variable
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
to your AWS secret access key. - Set the variable
TF_VAR_agent_token
to the agent token displayed in the previous task. - Set the variable
TF_VAR_kas_address
to the agent server address displayed in the previous task.
Optional configuration:
The file variables.tf
contains other variables that you can override according to your needs:
TF_VAR_region
: Set your cluster's region.TF_VAR_cluster_name
: Set your cluster's name.TF_VAR_cluster_version
: Set the version of Kubernetes.TF_VAR_instance_type
: Set the instance type for the Kubernetes nodes.TF_VAR_instance_count
: Set the number of Kubernetes nodes.TF_VAR_agent_namespace
: Set the Kubernetes namespace for the GitLab agent.
View the AWS Terraform provider and the Kubernetes Terraform provider documentation for further resource options.
Provision your cluster
After configuring your project, manually trigger the provisioning of your cluster. In GitLab:
- On the left sidebar, go to CI/CD > Pipelines.
- Next to Play ({play}), select the dropdown list icon ({chevron-lg-down}).
- Select Deploy to manually trigger the deployment job.
When the pipeline finishes successfully, you can view the new cluster:
- In AWS: From the EKS console, select Amazon EKS > Clusters.
- In GitLab: On the left sidebar, select Infrastructure > Kubernetes clusters.
Use your cluster
After you provision the cluster, it is connected to GitLab and is ready for deployments. To check the connection:
- On the left sidebar, select Infrastructure > Kubernetes clusters.
- In the list, view the Connection status column.
For more information about the capabilities of the connection, see the GitLab agent for Kubernetes documentation.
Remove the cluster
A cleanup job is not included in your pipeline by default. To remove all created resources, you must modify your GitLab CI/CD template before running the cleanup job.
To remove all resources:
-
Add the following to your
.gitlab-ci.yml
file:stages: - init - validate - test - build - deploy - cleanup destroy: extends: .terraform:destroy needs: []
-
On the left sidebar, select CI/CD > Pipelines and select the most recent pipeline.
-
For the
destroy
job, select Play ({play}).