Silhouette of a person with rolling luggage walking through a futuristic, glowing tunnel lined with computer monitors and tech elements, with an airplane silhouette overhead and warm orange light radiating from the vanishing point.

Reason for this blog

I’ve been working for several years with containers and Kubernetes, and I’ve been working with hypervisors/virtual machines for at least a decade.  Most commercial production work has been implemented in the Google Cloud, Digital Ocean, AWS, and friends.   However, in the interest of saving on the commercial cloud costs(I was working for a startup),  I also built a private cloud out of older machines that had been hanging around the organization.  This cloud wound up doing a lot of the long term code builds, testing, simulations and things that didn’t require the millisecond response time the outward-facing products needed.   So this blog is documenting my process of building a working Kubernetes cluster out of cheap surplus hardware.  Hopefully, this will allow hobbyists, small schools, clubs, and other groups to get a good working knowledge of Kubernetes clusters without having to take out a second mortgage 😊.  Let’s get started with the first page showing the initial design of the private cloud.