Adding Windows worker nodes

FEATURE STATE: Kubernetes v1.18 [beta]

This page explains how to add Windows worker nodes to a kubeadm cluster.

Before you begin

Adding Windows worker nodes

Do the following for each machine:

  1. Open a PowerShell session on the machine.
  2. Make sure you are Administrator or a privileged user.

Then proceed with the steps outlined below.

Install containerd

To install containerd, first run the following command:

curl.exe -LO https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes-sigs/sig-windows-tools/master/hostprocess/Install-Containerd.ps1

Then run the following command, but first replace CONTAINERD_VERSION with a recent release from the containerd repository. The version must not have a v prefix. For example, use 1.7.22 instead of v1.7.22:

.\Install-Containerd.ps1 -ContainerDVersion CONTAINERD_VERSION
  • Adjust any other parameters for Install-Containerd.ps1 such as netAdapterName as you need them.
  • Set skipHypervisorSupportCheck if your machine does not support Hyper-V and cannot host Hyper-V isolated containers.
  • If you change the Install-Containerd.ps1 optional parameters CNIBinPath and/or CNIConfigPath you will need to configure the installed Windows CNI plugin with matching values.

Install kubeadm and kubelet

Run the following commands to install kubeadm and the kubelet:

curl.exe -LO https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes-sigs/sig-windows-tools/master/hostprocess/PrepareNode.ps1
.\PrepareNode.ps1 -KubernetesVersion v1.32
  • Adjust the parameter KubernetesVersion of PrepareNode.ps1 if needed.

Run kubeadm join

Run the command that was output by kubeadm init. For example:

kubeadm join --token <token> <control-plane-host>:<control-plane-port> --discovery-token-ca-cert-hash sha256:<hash>

Additional information about kubeadm join

If you do not have the token, you can get it by running the following command on the control plane node:

# Run this on a control plane node
sudo kubeadm token list

The output is similar to this:

TOKEN                    TTL  EXPIRES              USAGES           DESCRIPTION            EXTRA GROUPS
8ewj1p.9r9hcjoqgajrj4gi  23h  2018-06-12T02:51:28Z authentication,  The default bootstrap  system:
                                                   signing          token generated by     bootstrappers:
                                                                    'kubeadm init'.        kubeadm:
                                                                                           default-node-token

By default, node join tokens expire after 24 hours. If you are joining a node to the cluster after the current token has expired, you can create a new token by running the following command on the control plane node:

# Run this on a control plane node
sudo kubeadm token create

The output is similar to this:

5didvk.d09sbcov8ph2amjw

If you don't have the value of --discovery-token-ca-cert-hash, you can get it by running the following commands on the control plane node:

sudo cat /etc/kubernetes/pki/ca.crt | openssl x509 -pubkey  | openssl rsa -pubin -outform der 2>/dev/null | \
   openssl dgst -sha256 -hex | sed 's/^.* //'

The output is similar to:

8cb2de97839780a412b93877f8507ad6c94f73add17d5d7058e91741c9d5ec78

The output of the kubeadm join command should look something like:

[preflight] Running pre-flight checks

... (log output of join workflow) ...

Node join complete:
* Certificate signing request sent to control-plane and response
  received.
* Kubelet informed of new secure connection details.

Run 'kubectl get nodes' on control-plane to see this machine join.

A few seconds later, you should notice this node in the output from kubectl get nodes. (for example, run kubectl on a control plane node).

Network configuration

CNI setup on clusters mixed with Linux and Windows nodes requires more steps than just running kubectl apply on a manifest file. Additionally, the CNI plugin running on control plane nodes must be prepared to support the CNI plugin running on Windows worker nodes.

Only a few CNI plugins currently support Windows. Below you can find individual setup instructions for them:

Install kubectl for Windows (optional)

See Install and Set Up kubectl on Windows.

What's next

Items on this page refer to third party products or projects that provide functionality required by Kubernetes. The Kubernetes project authors aren't responsible for those third-party products or projects. See the CNCF website guidelines for more details.

You should read the content guide before proposing a change that adds an extra third-party link.

Last modified December 15, 2024 at 6:24 PM PST: Merge pull request #49087 from Arhell/es-link (2c4497f)