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mirror of https://github.com/minio/docs.git synced 2025-05-29 12:01:29 +03:00
docs/source/includes/aks/deploy-minio-on-azure-kubernetes-service.rst
Andrea Longo 65e284f453
Helm deploy docs (#851)
Document how to deploy with a Helm chart, based on [How to install MinIO
Using Helm in
Kubernetes](https://github.com/cniackz/public/wiki/How-to-install-MinIO-Using-Helm-in-Kubernetes).

This addition maintains the existing plugin instructions as the primary
path, with Helm as a child page under that. That makes room for future
deploy options.

The existing `common-install-operator-kubectl-plugin-install.rst` is now
in two parts, to allow only including the second part in the Helm
instructions. Also promoted the Upgrade page to be a sibling to Deploy.

Many of the original instructions are environment setup that enable
installing the Helm charts, starting Operator, and creating a tenant.
That will vary by the user's environment, so omitted for docs.

Staged:

http://192.241.195.202:9000/staging/DOCS-798/k8s/html/operations/install-deploy-manage/deploy-operator-helm.html

Fixes https://github.com/minio/docs/issues/798
2023-06-05 17:45:58 -06:00

3.1 KiB

Deploy MinIO Operator on Azure Kubernetes Service

minio

Table of Contents

Overview

Azure Kubernetes Engine (AKS) is a highly available, secure, and fully managed Kubernetes service from Microsoft Azure. The MinIO Kubernetes Operator supports deploying MinIO Tenants onto AKS infrastructure using the MinIO Operator Console, the kubectl minio CLI tool, or kustomize for YAML-defined deployments <operator/tree/master/examples/kustomization>.

Through the AKS Marketplace <product/multicloud-azure-kubernetes-service>

MinIO maintains an AKS Marketplace listing through which you can register your AKS cluster with . Any MinIO tenant you deploy through Marketplace-connected clusters can take advantage of SUBNET registration, including 24/7 access to MinIO engineers.

Using the MinIO kubectl Plugin

MinIO provides a kubectl plugin for installing and managing the MinIO Operator and Tenants through a terminal or shell (CLI) environment. You can manually register these tenants with at any time.

This page documents deploying the MinIO Operator through the CLI using the kubectl minio plugin. For instructions on deploying the MinIO Operator through the AKS Marketplace, see Deploy MinIO through AKS <multicloud-azure-kubernetes-service/deploy>

This documentation assumes familiarity with all referenced Kubernetes and Azure Kubernetes Service concepts, utilities, and procedures. While this documentation may provide guidance for configuring or deploying Kubernetes-related or Azure Kubernetes Service-related resources on a best-effort basis, it is not a replacement for the official Kubernetes Documentation <>.

Prerequisites

Existing AKS Cluster

This procedure assumes an existing AKS (Azure Kubernetes Service) cluster onto which you can deploy the MinIO Operator.

The Operator by default deploys pods and services with two replicas each and pod anti-affinity. The AKS cluster should therefore have at least two nodes available for scheduling Operator pods and services. While these nodes may be the same nodes intended for use by MinIO Tenants, co-locating Operator and Tenant pods may increase the risk of service interruptions due to the loss of any one node.

kubectl Access to the GKE Cluster

Ensure your host machine has a kubectl installation compatible with the target GKE cluster. For guidance on connecting kubectl to AKS, see Install kubectl and configure cluster access <tutorial-kubernetes-deploy-cluster?tabs=azure-cli#connect-to-cluster-using-kubectl>.

Procedure