constellation/docs/versioned_docs/version-2.15/workflows/create.md
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docs: add release v2.15.0 (#2875)
Co-authored-by: elchead <elchead@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-01-31 15:29:01 +01:00

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Create your cluster

:::info This recording presents the essence of this page. It's recommended to read it in full for the motivation and all details. :::


Creating your cluster happens through multiple phases. The most significant ones are:

  1. Creating the necessary resources in your cloud environment
  2. Bootstrapping the Constellation cluster and setting up a connection
  3. Installing the necessary Kubernetes components

constellation apply handles all this in a single command. You can use the --skip-phases flag to skip specific phases of the process. For example, if you created the infrastructure manually, you can skip the cloud resource creation phase.

See the architecture section for details on the inner workings of this process.

:::tip If you don't have a cloud subscription, you can also set up a local Constellation cluster using virtualization for testing. :::

Before you create the cluster, make sure to have a valid configuration file.

constellation apply

apply stores the state of your cluster's cloud resources in a constellation-terraform directory in your workspace.

Self-managed infrastructure allows for more flexibility in the setup, by separating the infrastructure setup from the Constellation cluster management. This provides flexibility in DevOps and can meet potential regulatory requirements. It's recommended to use Terraform for infrastructure management, but you can use any tool of your choice.

:::info

When using Terraform, you can use the Constellation Terraform provider to manage the entire Constellation cluster lifecycle.

:::

You can refer to the Terraform files for the selected CSP from the Constellation GitHub repository for a minimum Constellation cluster configuration. From this base, you can now add, edit, or substitute resources per your own requirements with the infrastructure management tooling of your choice. You need to keep the essential functionality of the base configuration in order for your cluster to function correctly.

:::info

On Azure, if the enforcement policy is set to MAAFallback in constellation-config.yaml, a manual update to the MAA provider's policy is necessary. You can apply the update with the following command after creating the infrastructure, with <URL> being the URL of the MAA provider (i.e., $(terraform output attestation_url | jq -r), when using the minimal Terraform configuration).

constellation maa-patch <URL>

:::

Make sure all necessary resources are created, e.g., through checking your CSP's portal and retrieve the necessary values, aligned with the outputs (specified in outputs.tf) of the base configuration.

Fill these outputs into the corresponding fields of the Infrastructure block inside the constellation-state.yaml file. For example, fill the IP or DNS name your cluster can be reached at into the .Infrastructure.ClusterEndpoint field.

With the required cloud resources set up, continue with initializing your cluster.

constellation apply --skip-phases=infrastructure

Finally, configure kubectl for your cluster:

export KUBECONFIG="$PWD/constellation-admin.conf"

🏁 That's it. You've successfully created a Constellation cluster.

Troubleshooting

In case apply fails, the CLI collects logs from the bootstrapping instance and stores them inside constellation-cluster.log.