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Deploy Kubernetes to Azure Stack Hub using Active Directory Federated Services

Note

Only use the Kubernetes Azure Stack Marketplace item to deploy clusters as a proof-of-concept. For supported Kubernetes clusters on Azure Stack, use the AKS engine.

You can follow the steps in this article to deploy and set up the resources for Kubernetes. Use these steps when Active Directory Federated Services (AD FS) is your identity management service.

Prerequisites

To get started, make sure you have the right permissions and that your Azure Stack Hub is ready.

  1. Generate an SSH public and private key pair to sign in to the Linux VM on Azure Stack Hub. You need the public key when creating the cluster.

    For instructions on generating a key, see SSH Key Generation.

  2. Check that you have a valid subscription in your Azure Stack Hub tenant portal, and that you have enough public IP addresses available to add new applications.

    The cluster cannot be deployed to an Azure Stack Hub Administrator subscription. You must use a User subscription.

  3. If you do not have Kubernetes Cluster in your marketplace, talk to your Azure Stack Hub administrator.

Create a service principal

You need to work with your Azure Stack Hub administrator to set up your service principal when using AD FS as your identity solution. The service principal gives your application access to Azure Stack Hub resources.

  1. Your Azure Stack Hub administrator provides you with the information for the service principal. The service principal information should look like:

      ApplicationIdentifier : S-1-5-21-1512385356-3796245103-1243299919-1356
      ClientId              : 00001111-aaaa-2222-bbbb-3333cccc4444
      ClientSecret          : <your client secret>
      Thumbprint            : <often this value is empty>
      ApplicationName       : Azurestack-MyApp-c30febe7-1311-4fd8-9077-3d869db28342
      PSComputerName        : 192.168.200.224
      RunspaceId            : a78c76bb-8cae-4db4-a45a-c1420613e01b
    
  2. Assign your new service principal a role as a contributor to your subscription. For instructions, see Assign a role.

Deploy Kubernetes

  1. Open the Azure Stack Hub portal https://portal.local.azurestack.external.

  2. Select + Create a resource > Compute > Kubernetes Cluster. Select Create.

    Screenshot that shows the page where you create a Kubernetes cluster.

1. Basics

  1. Select Basics in Create Kubernetes Cluster.

    Screenshot that shows where you add basic information about your Kubernetes cluster.

  2. Select your Subscription ID.

  3. Enter the name of a new resource group or select an existing resource group. The resource name needs to be alphanumeric and lowercase.

  4. Select the Location of the resource group. This is the region you choose for your Azure Stack Hub installation.

2. Kubernetes Cluster Settings

  1. Select Kubernetes Cluster Settings in Create Kubernetes Cluster.

    Screenshot that shows the step where you configure the Kubernetes cluster settings.

  2. Enter the Linux VM admin username. User name for the Linux Virtual Machines that are part of the Kubernetes cluster and DVM.

  3. Enter the SSH Public Key used for authorization to all Linux machines created as part of the Kubernetes cluster and DVM.

  4. Enter the Master Profile DNS Prefix that is unique to the region. This must be a region-unique name, such as k8s-12345. Try to chose it same as the resource group name as best practice.

    Note

    For each cluster, use a new and unique master profile DNS prefix.

  5. Select the Kubernetes master pool profile count. The count contains the number of nodes in the master pool. There can be from 1 to 7. This value should be an odd number.

  6. Select The VMSize of the Kubernetes master VMs.

  7. Select the Kubernetes node pool profile count. The count contains the number of agents in the cluster.

  8. Select the VMSize of the Kubernetes node VMs. This specifies the VM Size of Kubernetes node VMs.

  9. Select ADFS for the Azure Stack Hub identity system for your Azure Stack Hub installation.

  10. Enter the Service principal clientId This is used by the Kubernetes Azure cloud provider. The Client ID identified as the Application ID when your Azure Stack Hub administrator created the service principal.

  11. Enter the Service principal client secret. This is the client secret provided to you for your AD FS service principle from your Azure Stack Hub administrator.

  12. Enter the Kubernetes version. This is the version for the Kubernetes Azure provider. Azure Stack Hub releases a custom Kubernetes build for each Azure Stack Hub version.

3. Summary

  1. Select Summary. The blade displays a validation message for your Kubernetes Cluster configurations settings.

    Deploy Solution Template

  2. Review your settings.

  3. Select OK to deploy your cluster.

Tip

If you have questions about your deployment, you can post your question or see if someone has already answered the question in the Azure Stack Hub Forum.

Next steps

Connect to your cluster

Enable the Kubernetes Dashboard