This is a mono repository for my home infrastructure and Kubernetes cluster. I try to adhere to Infrastructure as Code (IaC) and GitOps practices using the tools like Ansible, Pulumi, Kubernetes, Flux, Renovate and GitHub Actions.
There is a template over at onedr0p/flux-cluster-template if you wanted to try and follow along with some of the practices I use here.
My cluster is talos provisioned overtop bare-metal. This is a semi hyper-converged cluster, workloads and block storage are sharing the same available resources on my nodes while I have a separate server for (NFS) file storage.
- actions-runner-controller: self-hosted Github runners
- cilium: internal Kubernetes networking plugin
- cert-manager: creates SSL certificates for services in my cluster
- external-dns: automatically syncs DNS records from my cluster ingresses to a DNS provider
- external-secrets: managed Kubernetes secrets using 1Password Connect.
- ingress-nginx: ingress controller for Kubernetes using NGINX as a reverse proxy and load balancer
- rook: distributed block storage for persistent storage
- sops: managed secrets for Kubernetes, Ansible, and Terraform which are committed to Git
- spegel: stateless cluster local OCI registry mirror
- tf-controller: additional Flux component used to run Terraform from within a Kubernetes cluster.
- volsync: backup and recovery of persistent volume claims
Flux watches the clusters in my kubernetes folder (see Directories below) and makes the changes to my clusters based on the state of my Git repository.
The way Flux works for me here is it will recursively search the kubernetes/${cluster}/apps
folder until it finds the most top level kustomization.yaml
per directory and then apply all the resources listed in it. That aforementioned kustomization.yaml
will generally only have a namespace resource and one or many Flux kustomizations (ks.yaml
). Under the control of those Flux kustomizations there will be a HelmRelease
or other resources related to the application which will be applied.
Renovate watches my entire repository looking for dependency updates, when they are found a PR is automatically created. When some PRs are merged Flux applies the changes to my cluster.
This Git repository contains the following directories under Kubernetes.
📁 kubernetes
├── 📁 kyak # kyak cluster
│ ├── 📁 apps # applications
│ ├── 📁 bootstrap # bootstrap procedures
│ ├── 📁 flux # core flux configuration
│ └── 📁 templates # re-useable components
└── 📁 sol # sol cluster
├── 📁 apps # applications
├── 📁 bootstrap # bootstrap procedures
└── 📁 flux # core flux configuration
This is a high-level look how Flux deploys my applications with dependencies. Below there are 3 apps postgres
, lldap
and authelia
. postgres
is the first app that needs to be running and healthy before lldap
and authelia
. Once postgres
is healthy lldap
will be deployed and after that is healthy authelia
will be deployed.
graph TD;
id1>Kustomization: cluster] -->|Creates| id2>Kustomization: cluster-apps];
id2>Kustomization: cluster-apps] -->|Creates| id3>Kustomization: postgres];
id2>Kustomization: cluster-apps] -->|Creates| id6>Kustomization: lldap]
id2>Kustomization: cluster-apps] -->|Creates| id8>Kustomization: authelia]
id2>Kustomization: cluster-apps] -->|Creates| id5>Kustomization: postgres-cluster]
id3>Kustomization: postgres] -->|Creates| id4[HelmRelease: postgres];
id5>Kustomization: postgres-cluster] -->|Depends on| id3>Kustomization: postgres];
id5>Kustomization: postgres-cluster] -->|Creates| id10[Postgres Cluster];
id6>Kustomization: lldap] -->|Creates| id7(HelmRelease: lldap);
id6>Kustomization: lldap] -->|Depends on| id5>Kustomization: postgres-cluster];
id8>Kustomization: authelia] -->|Creates| id9(HelmRelease: authelia);
id8>Kustomization: authelia] -->|Depends on| id5>Kustomization: postgres-cluster];
id9(HelmRelease: authelia) -->|Depends on| id7(HelmRelease: lldap);
Name | CIDR |
---|---|
Management VLAN | 10.1.237.0/24 |
Kubernetes Nodes VLAN | 10.10.10.0/24 |
Kubernetes external services (Cilium w/ BGP) | 10.0.42.0/24 |
Kubernetes pods | 10.42.0.0/16 |
Kubernetes services | 10.43.0.0/16 |
- HAProxy configured on my
Vyos
router for the Kubernetes Control Plane Load Balancer. - Cilium configured with
loadBalancerIPs
to expose Kubernetes services with their own IP over BGP (w/ECMP) which is configured on my router.
While most of my infrastructure and workloads are selfhosted I do rely upon the cloud for certain key parts of my setup. This saves me from having to worry about two things. (1) Dealing with chicken/egg scenarios and (2) services I critically need whether my cluster is online or not.
The alternative solution to these two problems would be to host a Kubernetes cluster in the cloud and deploy applications like HCVault, Vaultwarden, ntfy, and Gatus. However, maintaining another cluster and monitoring another group of workloads is a lot more time and effort than I am willing to put in.
Service | Use | Cost |
---|---|---|
Fastmail | Email hosting | ~$90/yr |
GitHub | Hosting this repository and continuous integration/deployments | Free |
Cloudflare | Domain, DNS and proxy management | ~$30/yr |
1Password | Secrets with External Secrets | ~$65/yr |
B2 Storage | Offsite application backups | ~$5/mo |
Pushover | Kubernetes Alerts and application notifications | Free |
NextDNS | My routers DNS server which includes AdBlocking | ~20/yr |
Frugal | Usenet access | ~$35/yr |
Total: ~$20/mo |
On my Vyos router I have Bind9 and dnsdist deployed as containers. In my cluster external-dns
is deployed with the RFC2136
provider which syncs DNS records to bind9
.
Downstream DNS servers configured in dnsdist
such as bind9
(above) and NextDNS. All my clients use dnsdist
as the upstream DNS server, this allows for more granularity with configuring DNS across my networks. These could be things like giving each of my VLANs a specific nextdns
profile, or having all requests for my domain forward to bind9
on certain networks, or only using 1.1.1.1
instead of nextdns
on certain networks where adblocking isn't required.
Outside the external-dns
instance mentioned above another instance is deployed in my cluster and configured to sync DNS records to Cloudflare. The only ingress this external-dns
instance looks at to gather DNS records to put in Cloudflare
are ones that have an ingress class name of external
and contain an ingress annotation external-dns.alpha.kubernetes.io/target
.
Device | Count | OS Disk Size | Data Disk Size | Ram | Operating System | Purpose |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Supermicro SYS-510T-ML | 1 | 256GB NVMe | N/A | 16GB | Vyos | Router |
Dell Optiplex 3060 Micro | 1 | 240GB SSD | N/A | 32GB | Talos | Kubernetes master |
Dell Optiplex 3080 Micro | 2 | 256GB SSD | N/A | 16GB | Talos | Kubernetes master |
Lenovo M910q Tiny | 2 | 512GB NVMe | 500GB SSD (rook-ceph) | 16GB | Talos | Kubernetes worker |
Lenovo M720q Tiny | 2 | 480GB NVMe | N/A | 16GB | Talos | Kubernetes worker |
HP EliteDesk 800 G4 SFF | 2 | 240GB NVMe | 500GB SSD (rook-ceph) | 16GB | Talos | Kubernetes worker |
HPE DL160 G10 | 1 | 512GB SSD | 2x6TB HDD (rook-ceph) | 32GB | Talos | Kubernetes worker |
HPE DL160 G10 | 1 | 500GB SSD | 16TB zfs mirror | 128GB | Ubuntu 23.10 | Shared file storage |
Dell R630 | 1 | 500GB SSD | 3x1.5TB HDD (rook-ceph) | 192GB | Fedora 39 | Single node k3s cluter |
TESmart 8 Port KVM Switch | 1 | - | - | - | - | Network KVM (PiKVM) |
PiKVM v4 plus | 1 | - | - | - | PiKVM (Arch) | Network KVM |
Tripplite SMART3000RMXLN | 1 | - | - | - | - | UPS |
Aruba Instant on 1930 24G | 1 | - | - | - | - | Switch |
Cisco Nexus 9372PX | 1 | - | - | - | - | Switch |
DELL EMC PowerSwitch N2048 | 1 | - | - | - | - | Switch |
Thanks to all the people who donate their time to the Home Operations Discord community. Be sure to check out kubesearch.dev for ideas on how to deploy applications or get ideas on what you may deploy.
See my awful commit history
See LICENSE