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Installation on BYOC

Step by step guide to install Nephio on any cluster

Nephio Installation Overview

Table of Contents

Introduction

There are many ways to assemble a Nephio installation. This Installation Guide describes the common pieces across environments, and describes the choices that need to be made to create a “Bring Your Own Cluster” Nephio installation. Because there are so many combinations, a comprehensive guide is not practical. Instead, several guides showing opinionated installations are available.

Prerequisites

Regardless of the specific choices you make, you will need the following prerequisites. This is in addition to any prerequisites that are specific to your environment and choices.

  • a Linux workstation with internet access
  • kubectl installed on your workstation
  • kpt installed on your workstation (version v1.0.0-beta.43 or later)
  • Sudo-less docker, podman, or nerdctl. If using podman or nerdctl, you must set the KPT_FN_RUNTIME environment variable.

As part of all installations, you will create or utilize an existing Kubernetes management cluster. The management cluster must have internet access, and must be a non-EOL Kubernetes version. Additionally:

  • Your default kubectl context should point to the cluster
  • You will need cluster administrator privileges (in particular you will need to be able to create namespaces and other cluster-scoped resources).

You will use kpt for most of the installation packages in these instructions, though you could also use kubectl directly to apply the resources, once they are configured.

After installing the prerequisites, create a local directory on your workstation to hold the local package instances for installing the various components:

mkdir nephio-install
cd nephio-install

The instructions for setting up the opinionated installations will assume you have installed the prerequisites and created the nephio-install directory.

Opinionated Installations

Instructions are provided for several different opinionated installations in the table below. Following this section are descriptions of the various options, if you wish to assemble your own set of components.

Environment Description
Single VM The single VM demo environment, set up “the hard way” - without using the included provisioning script. This creates a complete Nephio-in-a-VM, just like the R1 demo environment. These instructions cover both Ubuntu and Fedora.
Google Cloud Platform Nephio running in GCP. A GKE cluster is used as the management cluster, with Anthos Config Controller for GCP infrastructure provisioning, Gitea as the Git provider, and Web UI authentication and authorization via Google OAuth 2.0
OpenShift Nephio running in OpenShift, with Cluster API as the cluster provisioner, Gitea as the Git provider and Web UI authentication backed by Open Shift OIDC.

A La Carte Installation

If you wish to create a completely “a la carte” installation rather than using a documented opinionated environment, this section will help you understand the choices you need to make among various dependencies and components.

Git Providers

Nephio can support multiple Git providers for the repositories that contain packages. In R1, only Gitea repositories can be provisioned directly by Nephio; other Git providers will require manual provisioning of new repositories. But most Git providers can be supported (via standard Git protocols) as repositories for packages for read and write. It is also perfectly fine to use multiple providers; in the R1 demo environment, GitHub is used for upstream external repositories while Gitea is used for the workload cluster repositories.

A non-exhaustive list of options:

Provider Workloads Provisioning
GitHub Yes No
Gitea Yes Yes
GitLab Yes No
Google CSR Yes Yes, with KCC

See the Porch user guide to see how to register repositories in Nephio.

In R1, we must install Gitea, even if you are using another provider. However, there are slight differences per environment, so that installation will be documented in the specific environment instructions.

GitOps Tool

As configured in the R1 reference implementation, Nephio relies on ConfigSync. However, it is possible to configure it to use a different GitOps tool, such as Flux or ArgoCD to apply packages to the clusters.

Cluster Provisioner

R1 uses Cluster API, but other options may be used such as Crossplane, Google KCC, or AWS Controllers for Kubernetes. You can provision more than one.

Provider Notes
Cluster API Kubernetes project cluster provisioner for a variety of cluster providers.
KCC Google’s Kubernetes Config Connector for GKE clusters and other GCP resources.
Crossplane API composition framework with cluster and other infrastructure providers.

Load Balancer

The R1 demo environment uses MetalLB, but if you are running in a cloud, you probably do not need anything special here. However, depending on your choice of GitOps tool and Git provider, some of the packages may need customization to provision or use a well-known load balancer IP or DNS name.

Gateway or Ingress

If you wish to avoid running kubectl port-forward, the use of Kubernetes Ingress or Gateway is recommended.

Nephio WebUI Authentication and Authorization

In the default configuration, the Nephio WebUI is wide open with no authentication. The webui itself authenticates to the cluster using a static service account, which is bound to the cluster admin role. Any user accessing the webui is acting as a cluster admin.

This configuration is designed for testing and development only. You must not use this configuration in any other situation, and even for testing and development it must not be exposed on the internet (for example, via a LoadBalancer service, Ingress, or Route).

The WebUI currently supports the following options:

Nephio Stock Repositories

It is recommended that you create a repository specific to your installation environment. The packages in this repository can be derivatives of the various Nephio packages that are part of the demonstration environment. This allows exiting PackageVariant and PackageVariantSet resources to work as expected, simply by changing the Git repository pointed to by the Repository resource.

You may want to create a package containing those Repository resources, much as is done for the sandbox environment.