Andrey Smirnov d9bdea2b54
chore: fork docs and compatibility modules for Talos 1.5
Getting ready for the next Talos 1.5.0-alpha.0 release.

Signed-off-by: Andrey Smirnov <andrey.smirnov@talos-systems.com>
2023-04-27 15:36:31 +04:00

1.3 KiB

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Quickstart 20 A short guide on setting up a simple Talos Linux cluster locally with Docker.

Local Docker Cluster

The easiest way to try Talos is by using the CLI (talosctl) to create a cluster on a machine with docker installed.

Prerequisites

talosctl

Download talosctl:

curl -sL https://talos.dev/install | sh

kubectl

Download kubectl via one of methods outlined in the documentation.

Create the Cluster

Now run the following:

talosctl cluster create

You can explore using Talos API commands:

talosctl dashboard --nodes 10.5.0.2

Verify that you can reach Kubernetes:

$ kubectl get nodes -o wide
NAME                     STATUS   ROLES    AGE    VERSION   INTERNAL-IP   EXTERNAL-IP   OS-IMAGE         KERNEL-VERSION   CONTAINER-RUNTIME
talos-default-controlplane-1   Ready    master   115s   v{{< k8s_release >}}   10.5.0.2      <none>        Talos ({{< release >}})   <host kernel>    containerd://1.5.5
talos-default-worker-1   Ready    <none>   115s   v{{< k8s_release >}}   10.5.0.3      <none>        Talos ({{< release >}})   <host kernel>    containerd://1.5.5

Destroy the Cluster

When you are all done, remove the cluster:

talosctl cluster destroy