We are changing our name from k8dash to Skooner! Please bear with us as we update our documentation and codebase to reflect this change. If you previously installed k8dash, you will need to uninstall it from your cluster and install Skooner instead. For most cases this can be done by running the following kubectl delete deployment,service k8dash
Skooner is the easiest way to manage your Kubernetes cluster. Skooner is now a sandbox project of the Cloud Native Computing Foundation!
- Full cluster management: Namespaces, Nodes, Pods, Replica Sets, Deployments, Storage, RBAC and more
- Blazing fast and Always Live: no need to refresh pages to see the latest cluster status
- Quickly visualize cluster health at a glance: Real time charts help quickly track down poorly performing resources
- Easy CRUD and scaling: plus inline API docs to easily understand what each field does
- 100% responsive (runs on your phone/tablet)
- Simple OpenID integration: no special proxies required
- Simple installation: use the provided yaml resources to have skooner up and running in under 1 minute (no, seriously)
- See Skooner in action:
- A running Kubernetes cluster (e.g., minikube), with...
- metrics server installed (optional, but strongly recommended)
- configuration for OpenId Connect authentication (optional)
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Deploy Skooner with something like the following...
NOTE: never trust a file downloaded from the internet. Make sure to review the contents of kubernetes-skooner.yaml before running the script below.
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/skooner-k8s/skooner/master/kubernetes-skooner.yaml
To access skooner, you must make it publicly visible. If you have an ingress server setup, you can accomplish by adding a route like the following:
kind: Ingress
apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
metadata:
name: skooner
namespace: kube-system
spec:
rules:
-
host: skooner.example.com
http:
paths:
-
path: /
backend:
serviceName: skooner
servicePort: 80
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Unfortunately, kubectl proxy
cannot be used to access Skooner. According to this comment, it seems that kubectl proxy
strips the Authorization header when it proxies requests.
this is working as expected. "proxying" through the apiserver will not get you standard proxy behavior (preserving Authorization headers end-to-end), because the API is not being used as a standard proxy
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There are multiple options for logging into the dashboard: Service Account Token, OIDC, and NodePort.
The first (and easiest) option is to create a dedicated service account. In the command line:
# Create the service account in the current namespace (we assume default)
kubectl create serviceaccount skooner-sa
# Give that service account root on the cluster
kubectl create clusterrolebinding skooner-sa --clusterrole=cluster-admin --serviceaccount=default:skooner-sa
# Find the secret that was created to hold the token for the SA
kubectl get secrets
# Show the contents of the secret to extract the token
kubectl describe secret skooner-sa-token-xxxxx
Copy the token
value from the secret, and enter it into the login screen to access the dashboard.
Skooner makes using OpenId Connect for authentication easy. Assuming your cluster is configured to use OIDC, all you need to do is create a secret containing your credentials and apply kubernetes-skooner-oidc.yaml.
To learn more about configuring a cluster for OIDC, check out these great links
- Authenticating | Kubernetes
- Kubernetes Day 2 Operations: AuthN/AuthZ with OIDC and a Little Help From Keycloak | by Bob Killen | Medium
- kubectl with OpenID Connect. TL;DR | by Hidetake Iwata | Medium
- kubernetes configure oidc - Google Search
You can deploy Skooner with OIDC support using something like the following script...
NOTE: never trust a file downloaded from the internet. Make sure to review the contents of kubernetes-skooner-oidc.yaml before running the script below.
OIDC_URL=<put your endpoint url here... something like https://accounts.google.com>
OIDC_ID=<put your id here... something like blah-blah-blah.apps.googleusercontent.com>
OIDC_SECRET=<put your oidc secret here>
kubectl create secret -n kube-system generic skooner \
--from-literal=url="$OIDC_URL" \
--from-literal=id="$OIDC_ID" \
--from-literal=secret="$OIDC_SECRET"
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/skooner-k8s/skooner/master/kubernetes-skooner-oidc.yaml
Additionally, you can provide other OIDC options via these environment variables:
OIDC_SCOPES
: The default value for this value isopenid email
, but additional scopes can also be added using something likeOIDC_SCOPES="openid email groups"
OIDC_METADATA
: Skooner uses the excellent node-openid-client module.OIDC_METADATA
will take a JSON string and pass it to theClient
constructor. Docs here. For example,OIDC_METADATA='{"token_endpoint_auth_method":"client_secret_post"}
If you do not have an ingress server setup, you can utilize a NodePort service as configured in kubernetes-skooner-nodeport.yaml. This is ideal when creating a single node master, or if you want to get up and running as fast as possible.
This will map Skooner port 4654
to a randomly selected port on the running node. The assigned port can be found using:
$ kubectl get svc --namespace=kube-system
NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
skooner NodePort 10.107.107.62 <none> 4654:32565/TCP 1m
Skooner relies heavily on metrics-server to display real time cluster metrics. It is strongly recommended to have metrics-server
installed to get the best experience from Skooner.
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You will need:
- A running Kubernetes cluster
- Installing and running minikube is an easy way to get this.
- Once minikube is installed, you can run it with the command
minikube start --driver=docker
- Once the cluster is up and running, create some login credentials as described above
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To run the server, run npm i
from the /server
directory to install dependencies and then npm start
to run the server.
The server is a simple express.js server that is primarily responsible for proxying requests to the Kubernetes api server.
During development, the server will use whatever is configured in ~/.kube/config
to connect the desired cluster. If you are using minikube, for example, you can run kubectl config set-context minikube
to get ~/.kube/config
set up correctly.
The client is a React application (using TypeScript) with minimal other dependencies.
To run the client, open a new terminal tab and navigate to the /client
directory, run npm i
and then npm start
. This will open up a browser window to your local Skooner dashboard. If everything compiles correctly, it will load the site and then an error message will pop up Unhandled Rejection (Error): Api request error: Forbidden...
. The error message has an 'X' in the top righthand corner to close that message. After you close it, you should see the UI where you can enter your token.
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- Set OIDC_URL to keycloak OpenId endpoint configuration page.
e.g.
OIDC_URL=https://{keycloak_domain}/realms/foo/.well-known/openid-configuration
Also setOIDC_CLIENT_ID
locally withOIDC_CLIENT_ID={client_id}
(this is the same asOIDC_ID
) - While creating secret, use correct var name and use skooner namespace (by default it's
kube-system
):
kubectl create secret generic skooner \
--from-literal=url="$OIDC_URL" \
--from-literal=id="$OIDC_ID" \
--from-literal=secret="$OIDC_SECRET" \
--namespace=kube-system
-
following that, redeploy skooner server with
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/skooner-k8s/skooner/master/kubernetes-skooner-oidc.yaml
-
Make sure skooner is running by checking
kubectl rollout status deploy/skooner --namespace=kube-system
If not, report error with logging inkubectl describe pod skooner --namespace=kube-system
-
visit skooner, check if login succeeded
-
If not, please report both client and server error. Client error: check browser console and send a screenshot Server error: check logs by
kubectl logs deploy/skooner --namespace=kube-system
Note thatRequestError: connect ECONNREFUSED
may indicate a configuration issue rather than Skooner's issue.
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