Skip to main content

Your submission was sent successfully! Close

Thank you for signing up for our newsletter!
In these regular emails you will find the latest updates from Canonical and upcoming events where you can meet our team.Close

Thank you for contacting us. A member of our team will be in touch shortly. Close

  1. Blog
  2. Article

Charles Butler
on 21 July 2015

Launch the newly released kubernetes 1.0.0 with Juju


Kubernetes 1.0 was launched yesterday! We’ve been tracking upstream development to enable a strong story across the two perspectives a user can enter the container cluster management space: as a consumer, and as a contributor.

Deploying Kubernetes as a Consumer

We’ve imported the Kubernetes charms into the charm store under the ~kubernetes namespace for immediate launching into your cloud environment of choice. Where might that be, you ask? Anywhere that supports Juju – so any data center, public or private. If you include the manual provider, we are everywhere!)

For the impatient

To deploy right away, if you have the juju-quickstart package installed, simply copy and paste the following into a terminal and enjoy the magic.

juju quickstart u/kubernetes/kubernetes-cluster

This will deploy the reference core of Kubernetes 1.0.0 for you, consisting of:

  • Kubernetes Master
  • Docker Engine x2
  • Kubernetes Nodes driving the docker engines
  • Flannel overlay networking between nodes
  • ETCD as a shared configuration/coordinator

Total machine cost: 4

Extend your infrastructure

Since Kubernetes was modeled with Juju, you gain the instant benefit of adding complementary services to your stack, such as log aggregation with Logstash/Elasticsearch/Kibana – the ELK stack. You can deploy ELK right alongside your Kubernetes deployment, and – using Logspout – aggregate all the logs from your containers and glean insights into your cluster using kibana searches.

The fun doesn’t have to stop there however, there are tons of services in the juju charmstore (~ 250 at last count, not including namespaces) for you to bolt into your infrastructure and instantly gain benefits. Integrate full host monitoring with Zabbix, attach Landscape to apply internal policies to the machines and get monitoring as added benefit, the possibilities literally end at your imagination. With a little bit of charming, you can drive your infrastructure your way. And that is where you find the happiness.

Deploying Kubernetes as a Contributor

As an ISV or core Kubernetes contributor you can gain instant benefit from the work we’ve landed in Kubernetes upstream. Every clone of the Kubernetes git repository ships with Juju deployment scripts which enable you as the developer to make modifications and ship in a reference deployment of Kubernetes.

git clone http://github.com/googlecloudplatform/kubernetes.git
cd kubernetes
*hack hack hack*
export KUBERNETES_PROVIDER=juju
cluster/kube-up.sh

This will compile the binaries for Kubernetes, and “fat pack” the charms with the modified binaries from your developer workstation. The kube-up script will do the heavy lifting of deploying the architecture and re-use the shipped binaries and distribute them across all the nodes for you.

This is excellent not only for checking modifications, but also to deploy from HEAD of the Kubernetes repository. Did you land a PR and want to verify it in a high-parity environment to your production setup? Simply set the Kuberentes provider to juju, and enjoy the consistent configuration of your deployment.

Where do we go from here?

We will continue to track the upstream Kubernetes project and offer instant value to consumers and contributors alike. Join us on the Juju Mailing list to discuss the future of our integration with the Kuberentes project.

You can also find us in #juju on irc.freenode.net – the primary drivers of the Kubernetes charms are:

  • whitmo
  • mbruzek
  • lazypower

Deploy Happy!

Related posts


Mita Bhattacharya
6 November 2024

Meet Canonical at KubeCon + CloudNativeCon North America 2024

Cloud and server Article

We are ready to connect with the pioneers of open-source innovation! Canonical, the force behind Ubuntu, is returning as a gold sponsor at KubeCon + CloudNativeCon North America 2024.  This premier event, hosted by the Cloud Native Computing Foundation, brings together the brightest minds in open source and cloud-native technologies. From ...


Michael C. Jaeger
29 April 2024

Kubernetes backups just got easier with the CloudCasa charm from Catalogic

Charms Article

For a native integration for Canonical’s Kubernetes platform, Juju was the perfect fit, and the charm makes consuming CloudCasa seamless for users. ...


Hugo Huang
9 April 2024

Canonical Delivers Secure, Compliant Cloud Solutions for Google Distributed Cloud

Canonical announcements Article

Today, Canonical is thrilled to announce our expanded collaboration with Google Cloud to provide Ubuntu images for Google Distributed Cloud. This partnership empowers Google Distributed Cloud customers with security-focused Ubuntu images, ensuring they meet the most stringent compliance standards. Since 2021, Google Cloud, with its charac ...