18e2e752f6
Let's make the documentation more inclusive and sensitive of the familiarity and comfort of users. Signed-off-by: Lucas Servén Marín <lserven@gmail.com>
95 lines
2.9 KiB
Markdown
95 lines
2.9 KiB
Markdown
# kgctl
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Kilo provides a command line tool for inspecting and interacting with clusters: `kgctl`.
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This tool can be used to understand a mesh's topology, get the WireGuard configuration for a peer, or graph a cluster.
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`kgctl` requires a Kubernetes configuration file to be provided, either by setting the `KUBECONFIG` environment variable or by providing the `--kubeconfig` flag.
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## Installation
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Installing `kgctl` currently requires building the binary from source.
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*Note*: the [Go toolchain must be installed](https://golang.org/doc/install) in order to build the binary.
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To build and install `kgctl`, run:
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```shell
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go install github.com/squat/kilo/cmd/kgctl
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```
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## Commands
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|Command|Syntax|Description|
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|----|----|-------|
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|[graph](#graph)|`kgctl graph [flags]`|Produce a graph in GraphViz format representing the topology of the cluster.|
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|[showconf](#showconf)|`kgctl showconf ( node \| peer ) NAME [flags]`|Show the WireGuard configuration for a node or peer in the mesh.|
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### graph
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The `graph` command generates a graph in GraphViz format representing the Kilo mesh.
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This graph can be helpful in understanding or debugging the topology of a network.
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Example:
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```shell
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kgctl graph
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```
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This will produce some output in the DOT graph description language, e.g.:
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```dot
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digraph kilo {
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label="10.2.4.0/24";
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labelloc=t;
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outputorder=nodesfirst;
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overlap=false;
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"ip-10-0-6-7"->"ip-10-0-6-146"[ dir=both ];
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"ip-10-1-13-74"->"ip-10-1-20-76"[ dir=both ];
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"ip-10-0-6-7"->"ip-10-1-13-74"[ dir=both ];
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"ip-10-0-6-7"->"squat"[ dir=both, style=dashed ];
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"ip-10-1-13-74"->"squat"[ dir=both, style=dashed ];
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# ...
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}
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;
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```
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To render the graph, use one of the GraphViz layout tools, e.g. `circo`:
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```shell
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kgctl graph | circo -Tsvg > cluster.svg
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```
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This will generate an SVG like:
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<img src="./graphs/location.svg" />
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### showconf
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The `showconf` command outputs the WireGuard configuration for a node or peer in the cluster, i.e. the configuration that the node or peer would need to set on its local WireGuard interface in order to participate in the mesh.
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Example:
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```shell
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NODE=master # the name of a node
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kgctl showconf node $NODE
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```
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This will produce some output in INI format, e.g.
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```ini
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[Interface]
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ListenPort = 51820
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[Peer]
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AllowedIPs = 10.2.0.0/24, 10.1.13.74/32, 10.2.4.0/24, 10.1.20.76/32, 10.4.0.2/32
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Endpoint = 3.120.246.76:51820
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PersistentKeepalive = 0
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PublicKey = IgDTEvasUvxisSAmfBKh8ngFmc2leZBvkRwYBhkybUg=
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```
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The `--as-peer` flag modifies the behavior of the command so that it outputs the configuration that a different WireGuard interface would need in order to communicate with the specified node or peer.
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When further combined with the `--output yaml` flag, this command can be useful to register a node in one cluster as a peer of another cluster, e.g.:
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```shell
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NODE=master # the name of a node
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kgctl --kubeconfig $KUBECONFIG1 showconf node $NODE --as-peer --output yaml | kubectl --kubeconfig $KUBECONFIG2 apply -f -
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```
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