Before installing Usage Engine Private Edition, you must set up a Kubernetes cluster on Azure AKS (Azure’s managed Kubernetes service).
First, a basic Kubernetes cluster needs to be created. This can be done in two different ways:
Using the
terraform
tool.Using the Azure management console.
In this guide, terraform
will be used. Mainly because it will enable you to create the basic Kubernetes cluster in minutes with just a single command.
Once the basic Kubernetes cluster has been created, additional infrastructure must be added. For this terraform
is also used.
Before proceeding, go to Release Information, and download the azure.tar.gz
file for the Usage Engine Private Edition version that is being installed. Once downloaded, extract its content to a suitable location.
Assumptions
There are a few assumptions which have been made when using terraform to create cluster resources:
We assume you have an existing parent domain i.e. example.com hosted on the same account as the cluster that we are going to create in the coming section and you wish to access the cluster environment through the hostname. Terraform will create a subdomain in format
<cluster_name>.<domain>
.cluster name: uepe-aks
domain: example.com
final domain: uepe-aks.example.com
In addition, we also assume terraform is allowed to add a NS (NameServer) record to the parent domain. This is to allow DNS delegation from the parent domain to subdomain.
Terraform needs to persist the state of your provisioned infrastructure, by default the state file is stored locally on the computer that terraform is executed from. However if you have multiple person working on the infrastructure then it is recommended to store the state file on remote persistent such as Azure Storage, see https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/developer/terraform/store-state-in-azure-storage?tabs=terraform for more information.
We use the Azure Files (SMB/NFS) as the default persistent storage for data needs to be persisted.
We use the Azure Database for PostgreSQL - Flexible Server service for Usage Engine Private Edition database.
We assume that you have the privileges to create user managed identity and grant role to the identity created by terraform within the same resource group. See https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/entra/identity/managed-identities-azure-resources/how-manage-user-assigned-managed-identities?pivots=identity-mi-methods-azp for more details.
To use the terraform template, preview feature has to be enabled in your Azure subscription. Refer to https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/aks/api-server-vnet-integration#install-the-aks-preview-azure-cli-extension for the commands to run. You only need to execute these sections:
Install the aks-preview Azure CLI extension
Register the 'EnableAPIServerVnetIntegrationPreview' feature flag
Create Basic Cluster and additional infrastructure
Follow these steps to create a basic Kubernetes cluster with public and private VPC:
Extract the downloaded
azure.tar.gz
file.Go to
<your local path>/azure/terraform
folder and copy theterraform.tfvars.example
toterraform.tfvars
.Edit the
terraform.tfvars
file.Specify the desired
cluster_name
, Azurelocation
andkubernetes_version
(see Compatibility Matrix (4.2) to find out which Kubernetes versions that are compatible with this release of Usage Engine Private Edition). Also specify your Azureresource_group_name
,domain
as well as the desired number of nodes per cluster (user_node_count
).If you will be running with a database other than Derby also specify
db_password
anddb_version
.
terraform.tfvars | Where to get the value from? |
---|---|
| Name of the resource group. The resource group must exist in the Azure subscription. |
| Location of the cluster |
| Name of the cluster, it must be unique within the resource group. |
| Your existing domain name. In the Azure management console, this is the DNS zones that is listed on page The service created by Usage Engine Private Edition in the coming section will be accessible in format |
| Kubernetes version. |
| Number of nodes in the user node pool. |
| Choose a secure password for the system database administrator. Minimum 10 characters. |
| PostgreSQL database version. Supported versions are 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 and 16. |
| Boolean flag to enable PostgreSQL database resource creation. |
| Boolean flag to enable subdomain NS record auto creation in parent domain. In case your parent domain is not under the same resource group or your parent domain is hosted in another cloud provider, then you must set it to false. |
| Boolean flag to enable file storage resource creation. |
Example:
# ____ _____ _____ _____ _ _ _____ ____ _____ # / ___|| ____|_ _| |_ _| | | | ____/ ___|| ____|_ # \___ \| _| | | | | | |_| | _| \___ \| _| (_) # ___) | |___ | | | | | _ | |___ ___) | |___ _ # |____/|_____| |_| |_| |_| |_|_____|____/|_____(_) # The below values must be set explicitly in order for the setup to work correctly. # Name of the resource group # The resource group must be existed in the Azure subscription. resource_group_name = "PT_Stratus" # Location of the cluster # Use command `az account list-locations --query "[].displayName" -o tsv` to get all available locations. # Or see https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/explore/global-infrastructure/products-by-region/?products=kubernetes-service®ions=all location = "Southeast Asia" # Name of the cluster, it must be unique within the resource group. cluster_name = "uepe-aks" # Domain DNS name # The DNS zone must already exist in Azure DNS or in other cloud provider DNS zone. # We'll create a subdomain zone from parent domain, the final domain will be in format "<cluster_name>.<domain>". # Please note that if this domain is hosted on another resource group or other cloud provider, then you must # set auto_create_ns_record = false and manually add the subdomain NS record to the parent domain. domain = "stratus.az.digitalroute.net" # Admin user password to the database db_password = "super_SeCrEt_db_pAsSwOrD_457!" # _______ _______ _ _ __ _ ____ _ _____ # |_ _\ \ / / ____| / \ | |/ / / \ | __ )| | | ____|_ # | | \ \ /\ / /| _| / _ \ | ' / / _ \ | _ \| | | _| (_) # | | \ V V / | |___ / ___ \| . \ / ___ \| |_) | |___| |___ _ # |_| \_/\_/ |_____/_/ \_\_|\_\/_/ \_\____/|_____|_____(_) # The below sections are the default values, tweak them to your needs. # _ _ ______ # / \ | |/ / ___| # / _ \ | ' /\___ \ # / ___ \| . \ ___) | # /_/ \_\_|\_\____/ # The size of the Virtual Machine # Use command `az vm list-sizes --location "West Europe" --output table` to get available VM sizes. vm_size = "Standard_DS2_v2" # Kubernetes version kubernetes_version = "1.29" # Number of nodes in the system node pool, must be at least 1 node. system_node_count = 2 # Number of nodes in the user node pool. If zero, the user node pool will not be created. user_node_count = 1 # DNS prefix specified when creating the managed cluster. # It must begin and end with a letter or number, contain only letters, numbers, and hyphens and be between 1 and 54 characters in length. dns_prefix = "aks" # Operating system disk size in GB os_disk_size_gb = 30 # The priority for Virtual Machines within the Virtual Machine Scale Set that powers the node pool. # Valid values are Regular and Spot. priority = "Regular" # The eviction policy for Virtual Machines within the Virtual Machine Scale Set that powers the node pool. eviction_policy = "Delete" # The maximum price you are willing to pay for Spot VMs. The value must be -1 or a positive value with up to five decimal places. # See https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/virtual-machines/spot-vms for more information. spot_max_price = -1 .......... # ____ _ _ ____ # | _ \| \ | / ___| # | | | | \| \___ \ # | |_| | |\ |___) | # |____/|_| \_|____/ # Specify if nameservers of the subdomain should automatically inserted as a NS record to the parent domain's zone to allow DNS delegation. # By default we assume your parent domain zone is hosted on the same resource group, if this is not the case then you MUST set it to false. auto_create_ns_record = true # ____ _____ ___ ____ _ ____ _____ # / ___|_ _/ _ \| _ \ / \ / ___| ____| # \___ \ | || | | | |_) | / _ \| | _| _| # ___) || || |_| | _ < / ___ \ |_| | |___ # |____/ |_| \___/|_| \_\/_/ \_\____|_____| # Persistent storage storage_enabled = true # Kind of account to create. Valid options are Storage, StorageV2, BlobStorage, BlockBlobStorage or FileStorage. account_kind = "FileStorage" # Tier to use for the storage account. Either Standard or Premium. # For BlockBlobStorage and FileStorage accounts only Premium is valid. account_tier = "Premium" # Storage redundancy type # See https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/storage/files/files-redundancy for available options. account_replication_type = "LRS" # Protocol used for the share, either SMB or NFS. # See https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/storage/files/storage-files-planning#available-protocols for the comparison. enabled_protocol = "SMB" # Storage capacity in GB storage_capacity = 100 # ____ _ _____ _ ____ _ ____ _____ # | _ \ / \|_ _|/ \ | __ ) / \ / ___|| ____| # | | | |/ _ \ | | / _ \ | _ \ / _ \ \___ \| _| # | |_| / ___ \| |/ ___ \| |_) / ___ \ ___) | |___ # |____/_/ \_\_/_/ \_\____/_/ \_\____/|_____| # PostgreSQL database db_enabled = true # SKU Name for PostgreSQL, it follows the tier + name pattern. # Available tiers are Basic (B), GeneralPurpose (GP), MemoryOptimized (MO). # Use command `az postgres flexible-server list-skus --location "West Europe" --output table` to find out available SKU names. # For example, tier "GeneralPurpose" and name "Standard_D2s_v3", the SKU name is "GP_Standard_D2s_v3". sku_name = "GP_Standard_D2s_v3" # Storage performance tier for IOPS. See https://registry.terraform.io/providers/hashicorp/azurerm/latest/docs/resources/postgresql_flexible_server#storage_tier-defaults-based-on-storage_mb for more information db_tier = "P10" # DB version. Supported versions are 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 and 16. db_version = "16" # DB storage in MB. See https://registry.terraform.io/providers/hashicorp/azurerm/latest/docs/resources/postgresql_flexible_server#storage_tier-defaults-based-on-storage_mb for available storage sizes. db_allocated_storage = 131072 # Specify which availability zone the instance should be located in. zone = 1
Note!
If your parent domain zone is not under the same Resource Group:
You must set
auto_create_ns_record = false
to disable subdomain NS record auto creation in the parent domain.Perform terraform apply.
When terraform apply is finished, copy the name servers value from terraform output
name_servers
and manually add them to parent domain as NS record. If you are not using Azure DNS as the parent domain, consult your Domain Registrar documentation on how to add NS record.
Authenticate your computer with Azure by running the following command:
az login --scope https://management.core.windows.net//.default
Run the following commands:
terraform init terraform plan terraform apply
Wait for the terraform commands to finish and you will see an output similar to:
Apply complete! Resources: 40 added, 0 changed, 0 destroyed. Outputs: aks_domain_zone_name = "uepe-aks.stratus.az.digitalroute.net" appgw_ingress_controller_client_id = "1aee4369-d6c2-4912-ab5a-45fe5d3e3526" appgw_ingress_controller_namespace = "uepe" appgw_ingress_controller_service_account = "ingress-azure" appgw_name = "uepe-aks-application-gateway" azure_resource_group = "PT_Stratus" azure_subscription_id = "e6d5f094-a3a1-4ae1-b660-4aa689593bf7" azure_tenant_id = "bc3dbf22-18e0-4f00-b10d-9595a47abf83" cert_manager_client_id = "b21cf932-fa5a-4d81-8230-05cfa85245ac" cert_manager_namespace = "cert-manager" cert_manager_service_account = "cert-manager" cluster_location = "Southeast Asia" db_endpoint = "uepe-aks-db.postgres.database.azure.com" db_password = "super_SeCrEt_db_pAsSwOrD_457!" db_username = "postgres" external_dns_client_id = "c97fad12-109e-4fb4-971e-9446b0964f3c" external_dns_namespace = "uepe" external_dns_service_account = "external-dns" kube_config = "./kubeconfig" kubernetes_cluster_name = "uepe-aks" name_servers = toset([ "ns1-38.azure-dns.com.", "ns2-38.azure-dns.net.", "ns3-38.azure-dns.org.", "ns4-38.azure-dns.info.", ]) storage_account_key = "trfSDOsyDS2SFCp59Q3x4t3RA8a2KZGtNUJ2lLJ7xS0L6pDm8BZ2AFkoCoMHmtUizQSSLOA+8nQA+AStvjbRaw==" storage_account_name = "uepeaks" storage_capacity_gb = 100 storage_persistence_yaml = "./manifests/storage_persistence.yaml" storage_share_name = "uepe-aks-storage-share"
Ensure that you save the output from terraform above since it will be used as input throughout the remainder of this installation guide.
A basic Kubernetes cluster has now been set up successfully.
Note!
It is important to keep the Terraform state file safe after the cluster creation is completed, as it will be needed if you wish to destroy the cluster later.
In this example, an PostgreSQL flexible servers database instance up and running on private subnet VNET with default listening port 5432. The default database postgres
is accessible within the cluster at end point uepe-aks-db.postgres.database.azure.com
with admin username postgres
.
You can check the status of the cluster, db and the other resources in the Azure dashboard.
Configure Cluster Access
The previous terraform
command will generate a ./kubeconfig
file containing information on how to connect to your newly created cluster. Make sure to set the KUBECONFIG
environment variable to point to that file on the terraform’s working directory:
export KUBECONFIG=<full path to ./kubeconfig>
This will ensure that tools like kubectl
and helm
will connect to your newly created cluster.
Alternatively, you can use the following command to bind your local kubectl to the created cluster:
az aks get-credentials --name uepe-aks --resource-group PT_Stratus
You can check the status of the cluster nodes with the following command:
kubectl get nodes
For this example cluster the output will look something like this:
NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION aks-default-41718565-vmss000000 Ready <none> 6d2h v1.29.5 aks-default-41718565-vmss000001 Ready <none> 6d1h v1.29.5 aks-internal-23883603-vmss000000 Ready <none> 6d2h v1.29.5
Create a namespace called Unless explicitly stated, this is the namespace that is used throughout the remainder of this installation guide. Hint! You can also create and use a namespace with another name. This command shows all namespaces that currently exist in your cluster: Namespace
uepe
:kubectl create namespace uepe
kubectl get namespaces
Persistent Volume and Persistent Volume Claim
Note!
The persistent volume setup is an optional step. Skip this section if you do not intend to have persistent file storage.
Persistent Volume (PV) and Persistent Volume Claim (PVC) must be setup before Usage Engine Private Edition Helm Chart installation. The PV and PVC yaml files have already been generated in <terraform script directory>/manifests/storage_persistence.yaml
.
Kubernetes needs credentials to access the Azure storage that was created by the terraform
command in the previous section. Create the storage account secret with this command:
kubectl create secret generic <kubernetes_cluster_name from terraform output>-persistence-secret \ --from-literal=azurestorageaccountname=<storage_account_name from terraform output> \ --from-literal=azurestorageaccountkey=<storage_account_key from terraform output> \ -n uepe
Change directory to <terraform script directory>/manifests
.
To setup Persistent Volume and Persistent Volume Claim run the following command:
kubectl apply -f storage_persistence.yaml -n uepe
To ensure PVC bounded to allocated Persistent Volume run the following command:
kubectl get pvc -n uepe
The output should display PVC status is Bound, similar to:
NAME STATUS VOLUME CAPACITY ACCESS MODES STORAGECLASS VOLUMEATTRIBUTESCLASS AGE uepe-aks-pvc Bound uepe-aks-pv 100Gi RWX azurefile-csi <unset> 6s
This section is now complete and you can proceed to the Kubernetes Cluster Add-ons - Azure (4.2) section.