harvester
typhoon
harvester | typhoon | |
---|---|---|
62 | 12 | |
3,539 | 1,895 | |
1.7% | 0.6% | |
9.4 | 8.4 | |
about 11 hours ago | 9 days ago | |
Go | HCL | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
harvester
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TrueNAS virtualization using Harvester and Kubevirt
At Harvester v1.1.2, it seems virtual machines on some AMD platforms cannot detect nested virtualization. This might relate to Harvester issue #3900, but that issue is categorized as a user interface bug only. Besides, I can run virtual machines on my Ryzen 5600G node normally (with SVM, IOMMU, and SR-IOV enabled, while /sys/module/kvm_amd/parameters/nested returns 1).
- Are there any dedicated linux distros that come out of the box with k8s?
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🔧I tried out Harvester HCI for the homelab, and it is an interesting solution
With this being nowhere documented, I dived into GitHub issues and found #1479. I learned the bootstrap password is admin, which then allowed me to log in.
- Self hosting our Startup, where do we begin?
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proxmox in docker or vagrant
Or with Hyper-converged infrastructure https://harvesterhci.io/
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Any easy to use gui to create/deploy/monitor k8s for a devops newbie?
Have a look at Harvester if you have a unused pc. It can create a k3s cluster in vms automatically. TechnoTim has done a video about it, looks really easy. Also combines with rancher and longhorn for managing cluster a storage.
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Has anyone used Harvester?
Im currently using proxmox and I want to what the community's feelings towards Suse Harvester. What are your experiences and is it worth trying out?
- Can you do infrastructure as code on non-cloud assets?
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3 node kubernetes cluster - All masters?
This seems like the route, thank you for your response. u/happyColoradoDave pointed me towards harvester which should make VM management easier. Going to go with that to run VMs now.
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Is anyone using kubevirt, oVirt or some "kubernetes VM" solution to fire up Windows (not linux) VM's in any reasonable number?
I assume you mean https://harvesterhci.io/
typhoon
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You Can't Control Your Data in the Cloud
Don't forget the lies of cost savings that the Cloud providers have shoved down our industry's throats. We are paying out the nose for cloud services and we are giving up all the rights to our data. It's a bad deal in the end.
I have a bunch of friends that work at SaaS companies and their cloud spend for pretty basic deployments is in the many thousands of dollars a month. Most of their deployments could be handled by a half rack with beefy servers in a couple of datacenters for a fraction of the cost. I pay for a full rack myself and it costs me ~$1200 a month for space, power and bandwidth (10Gb pipe with a current 1Gb commit), and my hardware costs for everything in that rack were a one time cost of around $3000. I have 160 GHz of CPU and 141 GiB of memory for my workloads with a few servers that are not yet provisioned into my Nomad cluster.
And before you say well there are costs involved with finding people that have the skills to do that kind of thing and time needed to set all of that up, yes that is true, but our industry has moved from one bucket to another one that is more expensive in the end with a bunch of downsides. I think there is a middle ground where you can use some cloud services and run the important stuff on hardware you own. The tooling to self-host your own stack in a rack of servers you own is light years better than it was 10 years ago and it keeps getting better. Tools like https://nebula.defined.net/docs/ and https://github.com/poseidon/typhoon for example enable you to use whatever providers you want and build a deployment can cost less, gives you more control over your data, while being agile enough to make changes when the team needs something new or different.
I am excited for the next 10 years of progress and I'd expect we are going to see more companies self-hosting their deployments on bare metal.
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Kubernetes Exposed: One YAML Away from Disaster
This is also why managed Kubernetes is a useful thing (EKS, GKE, et al)... but if you still want to do it yourself, maybe look into some Kubernetes distros (like Typhoon (https://typhoon.psdn.io) which I run on my clusters)
- Provision a K8s with Terraform in 3 local VMs
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Kubernetes and Terraform
Sounds like this may work for you: https://typhoon.psdn.io/
- Kubernetes on Bare Metal
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Kubernetes The IaC Way - Or how to install Kubernetes The Hard Way in one command using Infrastructure as Code
These days I deploy using Typhoon. Production ready k8s in less than 20 minutes. It leverages Terraform and Flatcar Linux. Lovely combo. No need to do any of it "the hard way" unless you want to know about the internals.
- Minimal and free Kubernetes distribution with Terraform!
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Kubernetes, Jenkins, Docker/Packer, and dynamic kickstart server.
I actually use terraform + matchbox to bare metal provision k8s (flatcar linux) using Typhoon.
- Recommendations for a container OS?
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Typhoon
Wondering what others think? Typhoon
What are some alternatives?
homelab - Modern self-hosting framework, fully automated from empty disk to operating services with a single command.
kubespray - Deploy a Production Ready Kubernetes Cluster
kubevirt - Kubernetes Virtualization API and runtime in order to define and manage virtual machines.
terraform-k3s-private-cloud - Private cluster with k3s. Why have 1 huge complicated cluster (pet) when you can have many simple, cheap clusters (cattle)?
rancher - Complete container management platform
k8s-hetzner - A Kubernetes cluster provisioned with Terraform, running in Hetzner Cloud
longhorn - Cloud-Native distributed storage built on and for Kubernetes
Flatcar - Flatcar project repository for issue tracking, project documentation, etc.
slim - Build and run tiny vms from Dockerfiles. Small and sleek.
terraform-azurerm-caf-enterprise-scale - Azure landing zones Terraform module
azure-aks-kubernetes-masterclass - Azure AKS Kubernetes Masterclass