Decommissioning
Decommissioning a cluster requires only a few commands, but beware that it will irretrievably destroy the cluster, its workloads and any information that was stored within. Before proceeding, it is important to verify that you:
- Have the correct details for the cluster you wish to decommission
- Have retrieved any valuable data from the cluster
Destroying the model
It is always preferable to use a new Juju model for each Kubernetes cluster. Removing the model is then a simple operation.
It is useful to list all the current models to make sure you are about to destroy the correct one:
juju models
This will list all the models running on the current controller, for example:
Controller: k8s-controller
Model Cloud/Region Status Machines Cores Access Last connection
controller aws/us-east-1 available 1 4 admin just now
default aws/us-east-1 available 0 - admin 8 hours ago
k8s-devel aws/us-east-1 available 9 24 admin 3 hours ago
k8s-production aws/us-east-1 available 12 28 admin 5 minutes ago
k8s-testing aws/us-east-1 available 9 24 admin 2 hours ago
To proceed, use the juju destroy-model
command to target the model you wish to remove. For example:
juju destroy-model k8s-testing
You will see a warning, and be required to confirm the action. Juju will then continue to free up the resources, giving feedback on the process. It may take some minutes to complete depending on the size of the deployed model and the nature of the cloud it is running on.
WARNING! This command will destroy the "k8s-testing" model.
This includes all machines, applications, data and other resources.
Continue [y/N]? y
Destroying model
Waiting on model to be removed, 7 machine(s), 4 application(s)...
Waiting on model to be removed, 6 machine(s)...
...
Waiting on model to be removed, 3 machine(s)...
Waiting on model to be removed...
Model destroyed.
You should confirm that the cloud instances have been terminated with the relevant cloud console/utilities.
Destroying a controller
If there are no longer any cluster models attached to the controller, you may wish to remove the controller instance as well. This is performed with a similar command:
juju destroy-controller <controller-name>
As previously, there is a confirmation step to make sure you wish to remove the controller.
The command will return an error if there are populated models still attached to the controller.
Removing/editing Kube config
If you have permanently removed clusters, it is also advisable to remove their entries in the Kubernetes configuration file (or remove the file entirely if you have removed all the clusters).
By default the file is located at ~/.kube/config
. It is a YAML format file, and each cluster block looks similar to this:
- cluster:
certificate-authority-data:
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kFZTVJZd0ZBWURWUVFEREEwek5DNHlORFF1TVRreUxqUTVNSUlCSWpBTkJna3Foa2lHOXcw
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QOElEVVJvOTMyVFVYcG05UWkwSUgKeVF0a2N1WEVpREhlbUgwK1RORHRmaFZ4cm9BRjQrVE
czR3JWZXc0YzgrZE0zNWJMY0lMRkl1L1UydlR4NkRXbgpDa2lwblhJVlc1QUxXa1hqRUh3N
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eFIwR0l5SkM3b29VaEVjcitvQVpMOFc2YklUMUlwcklXUGQ1eWhJck10MmpmaE42NWVkV1h
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UE0SUJBUUJnCjVndFpyY0FLUlFSYUJFZDFiVm5vRXpoZkxld2RXU2RYaEZGRXB6bjlzdG05
VGdVM2ZLREJ0NktUY3JKN2hqQWQKMUlUbUc1L2ExaUlDM29qQ2d3c1o3cnFmRlhkRGQzcVZ
GdjJySmZEN2ljeGV2c0NjWTdiS1hlYy9QdVgxQmxlMwo1amRjSWRkZnhqZ1M3K2dibCtQcG
owbm9OR0c5MUgydWtBWTlaei9FUHdZckhuV1V1V1o5Z3JTZlVGam1ZMTNWCjkxZmF0S2R2d
lU1blFPUXdkdThPVHlFRGk2blA4ckN4bEJjRW1hN3hkM3c5djI0NUlaRnd5QTJBMlR6emFJ
M04KYm0vMVNyL2tTNlZCSi9sZ2s3ampxRWFicmpFakluMlU4aGkzRkluRnBkZkZlUXhBaW5
JcUx5dGRzeXY5aFZVbQpKQ3luNW8yaGVjSTFsaDU3RFRtYQotLS0tLUVORCBDRVJUSUZJQ0
FURS0tLS0t
server: https://54.229.190.254:443
name: conjure-canonical-kubern-fc3
contexts:
- context:
cluster: conjure-canonical-kubern-fc3
user: conjure-canonical-kubern-fc3
name: conjure-canonical-kubern-fc3
current-context: conjure-canonical-kubern-fc3
kind: Config
preferences: {}
users:
- name: conjure-canonical-kubern-fc3
user:
password: sZVKhY7bZK8oG7vLkkOssNhTzKZlBmcG
username: admin
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