kubernetes-yaml/learn/learn-kubernetes-master/kiamol/ch17/lab/README.md

52 lines
1.7 KiB
Markdown
Raw Normal View History

# ch17 lab
## Setup
Deploy the Kube Explorer app in the lab configuration:
```
kubectl apply -f lab/kube-explorer/
```
Note that [02-service-account.yaml](./kube-explorer/02-service-account.yaml) sets `automountServiceAccountToken` to `false` so Pods don't automatically see the token; [04-deployment.yaml](./kube-explorer/04-deployment.yaml) explicitly mounts the token in the Pod spec.
> Browse to the app and check you can access Pods - e.g. http://localhost:8022
> But not Pods in the lab namespace - http://localhost:8022?ns=kiamol-ch17-lab
## Sample Solution
To access Pods in the lab namespace [rbac-pods.yaml](./solution/rbac-pods.yaml) applies the `default-pod-reader-lab` ClusterRole to the lab namespace:
```
kubectl apply -f lab/solution/rbac-pods.yaml
```
> Now you can work with Pods in the lab namespace - http://localhost:8022?ns=kiamol-ch17-lab
![Kube Explorer browsing Pods in the lab namespace](./solution/pods.png)
> But not Service Accounts - http://localhost:8022/ServiceAccounts
To access Service Accounts [rbac-serviceaccounts.yaml](./solution/rbac-serviceaccounts.yaml) creates:
- a ClusterRole with get and list access to ServiceAccounts
- a RoleBinding applying the ClusterRole to the default namespace
- a RoleBinding applying the ClusterRole to the lab namespace
```
kubectl apply -f lab/solution/rbac-serviceaccounts.yaml
```
> Now you can access Pods in the default and lab namespaces - http://localhost:8022/ServiceAccounts?ns=kiamol-ch17-lab
![Kube Explorer browsing Service Accounts in the lab namespace](./solution/service-accounts.png)
## Teardown
Delete all the resources:
```
kubectl delete ns,rolebinding,role,clusterrole -l kiamol=ch17-lab
```