Canonical’s support for Kubernetes 1.6.2 released
Marco Ceppi
on 4 May 2017
We’re proud to announce support for Kubernetes 1.6.2 in the Canonical Distribution of Kubernetes and the Kubernetes Charms. This is a pure upstream distribution of Kubernetes, built with operators in mind. It allows operators do deploy, manage, and operate Kubernetes on public clouds, on-premise (ie vSphere, OpenStack), bare metal, and developer laptops. Kubernetes 1.6.2 is a patch release comprised of mostly bugfixes.
Getting Started
Here’s the simplest way to get a Kubernetes 1.6.2 cluster up and running:
# linux sudo snap install conjure-up --classic conjure-up kubernetes # macOS brew install conjure-up conjure-up kubernetes
During the installation conjure-up will ask you what cloud you want to deploy on and prompt you for the proper credentials. If you’re deploying to local containers (LXD) see these instructions for localhost-specific considerations.
For production grade deployments and cluster lifecycle management it is recommended to read the full Canonical Distribution of Kubernetes documentation.
How to upgrade
To upgrade an existing 1.5.x or 1.6.x cluster, follow the upgrade instructions in the docs. Following these instructions will upgrade the charm code and resources to the Kubernetes 1.6.2 release of the charms.
New Features
- Support for Kubernetes v1.6.2.
- Update kubernetes-e2e charm to use snaps – pr:45044
- Add namespace-{list, create, delete} actions to the kubernetes-master layer – pr:44277
- Add cifs-utils package to kubernetes-worker (required for Azure) – pr:45117, fixes:227
- Document NodePort networking for CDK – pr:44863, fixes:259
Bug Fixes
- Update outdated link in kubernetes-master readme – pr:44988
- Faster juju status updates when charm config changes – pr:44959, fixes:263
- Make new leader retrieve certs from old leader – pr:43620, fixes:43563
- Append authentication tokens instead of overwriting – pr:43620, fixes:43519
- Ensure kubernetes-worker juju layer registry action uses correct ingress controller option name – pr:44921, fixes:44920
- Send dns details only after cdk-addons are configured – pr:44945, fixes:40386, fixes:262
- Fix ceph-secret type to kubernetes.io/rbd – pr:44635
- When multiple masters, make worker choose one at random instead of trying to use all – pr:44677, fixes:255
- Prevent installation of upstream (possibly unsupported by k8s) docker – pr:44681
- Add –delete-local-data option to pause action – pr:44391, fixes:44392
- Handle etcd scale events properly – pr:44967, fixes:43461
- Resolve juju vsphere hostname bug showing only a single node in a scaled node-pool – pr:44780, fixes:237
How to contact us
We’re normally found in these Slack channels and attend these sig meetings regularly:
Or via email: kuberentes@ubuntu.com
Operators are an important part of Kubernetes, we encourage you to participate with other members of the Kubernetes community!
We also monitor the Kubernetes mailing lists and other community channels, feel free to reach out to us. As always, PRs, recommendations, and bug reports are welcome!
Ubuntu cloud
Ubuntu offers all the training, software infrastructure, tools, services and support you need for your public and private clouds.
Newsletter signup
Related posts
Building RAG with enterprise open source AI infrastructure
How to create a robust enterprise AI infrastructure for RAG systems using open source tooling?A highlight on how open source can help
Life at Canonical: Victoria Antipova’s perspective as a new joiner in Product Marketing
Life at Canonical: Victoria Antipova’s perspective as a new joiner in Product Marketing
What is patching automation?
In software, patches are updates that are designed to overcome problems, flaws or vulnerabilities in the programming. Patch management is the process of...