Adding Windows nodes

FEATURE STATE: Kubernetes v1.18 [beta]

You can use Kubernetes to run a mixture of Linux and Windows nodes, so you can mix Pods that run on Linux on with Pods that run on Windows. This page shows how to register Windows nodes to your cluster.

Before you begin

Your Kubernetes server must be at or later than version 1.17. To check the version, enter kubectl version.

Objectives

  • Register a Windows node to the cluster
  • Configure networking so Pods and Services on Linux and Windows can communicate with each other

Getting Started: Adding a Windows Node to Your Cluster

Networking Configuration

Once you have a Linux-based Kubernetes control-plane node you are ready to choose a networking solution. This guide illustrates using Flannel in VXLAN mode for simplicity.

Configuring Flannel

  1. Prepare Kubernetes control plane for Flannel

    Some minor preparation is recommended on the Kubernetes control plane in our cluster. It is recommended to enable bridged IPv4 traffic to iptables chains when using Flannel. The following command must be run on all Linux nodes:

    sudo sysctl net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-iptables=1
    
  2. Download & configure Flannel for Linux

    Download the most recent Flannel manifest:

    wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/coreos/flannel/master/Documentation/kube-flannel.yml
    

    Modify the net-conf.json section of the flannel manifest in order to set the VNI to 4096 and the Port to 4789. It should look as follows:

    net-conf.json: |
        {
          "Network": "10.244.0.0/16",
          "Backend": {
            "Type": "vxlan",
            "VNI": 4096,
            "Port": 4789
          }
        }
    
  3. Apply the Flannel manifest and validate

    Let's apply the Flannel configuration:

    kubectl apply -f kube-flannel.yml
    

    After a few minutes, you should see all the pods as running if the Flannel pod network was deployed.

    kubectl get pods -n kube-system
    

    The output should include the Linux flannel DaemonSet as running:

    NAMESPACE     NAME                                      READY        STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
    ...
    kube-system   kube-flannel-ds-54954                     1/1          Running   0          1m
    
  4. Add Windows Flannel and kube-proxy DaemonSets

    Now you can add Windows-compatible versions of Flannel and kube-proxy. In order to ensure that you get a compatible version of kube-proxy, you'll need to substitute the tag of the image. The following example shows usage for Kubernetes v1.23.0, but you should adjust the version for your own deployment.

    curl -L https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/sig-windows-tools/releases/latest/download/kube-proxy.yml | sed 's/VERSION/v1.23.0/g' | kubectl apply -f -
    kubectl apply -f https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/sig-windows-tools/releases/latest/download/flannel-overlay.yml
    

Joining a Windows worker node

Install Docker EE

Install the Containers feature

Install-WindowsFeature -Name containers

Install Docker Instructions to do so are available at Install Docker Engine - Enterprise on Windows Servers.

Install wins, kubelet, and kubeadm

curl.exe -LO https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes-sigs/sig-windows-tools/master/kubeadm/scripts/PrepareNode.ps1
.\PrepareNode.ps1 -KubernetesVersion v1.23.0

Run kubeadm to join the node

Use the command that was given to you when you ran kubeadm init on a control plane host. If you no longer have this command, or the token has expired, you can run kubeadm token create --print-join-command (on a control plane host) to generate a new token and join command.

Install containerD

curl.exe -LO https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/sig-windows-tools/releases/latest/download/Install-Containerd.ps1
.\Install-Containerd.ps1

Install wins, kubelet, and kubeadm

curl.exe -LO https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes-sigs/sig-windows-tools/master/kubeadm/scripts/PrepareNode.ps1
.\PrepareNode.ps1 -KubernetesVersion v1.23.0 -ContainerRuntime containerD

Run kubeadm to join the node

Use the command that was given to you when you ran kubeadm init on a control plane host. If you no longer have this command, or the token has expired, you can run kubeadm token create --print-join-command (on a control plane host) to generate a new token and join command.

Verifying your installation

You should now be able to view the Windows node in your cluster by running:

kubectl get nodes -o wide

If your new node is in the NotReady state it is likely because the flannel image is still downloading. You can check the progress as before by checking on the flannel pods in the kube-system namespace:

kubectl -n kube-system get pods -l app=flannel

Once the flannel Pod is running, your node should enter the Ready state and then be available to handle workloads.

What's next