Skip to main content
  1. Blog
  2. Article

Matt Bruzek
on 23 July 2015

Deploy a Kubernetes development cluster with Juju!


Our team has been working to make Kubernetes easy to deploy in a public cloud. In March we created some Juju charms that have the ability to deploy specific releases of Kubernetes on a public cloud. In April we worked to get the charm and bundle code in the Kubernetes project itself. Making it even easier for people to deploy a cluster from the official Kubernetes repository.

We have reached another milestone in the Kubernetes story. We added the ability to deploy a Kubernetes cluster with binaries built from local source! This is important to software engineers because it gives them an easy way to stand up a cluster and see their changes right away.

Development setup

To use this new feature the local environment must be set up for development. Refer to the Development Guide for details on how to set up your environment for development in the Go programming language.

Deploy local binaries

We are calling this deploy from source option “local”. Here is how it works:

  • Clone the Kubernetes project from Github:
    git clone http://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/kubernetes.git
    cd kubernetes
  • Set the Kubernetes provider to “juju”:
    export KUBERNETES_PROVIDER=juju
  • Change/edit the source code, and when you are ready, run the kube-up.sh script to deploy a cluster with your locally built binaries:
    cluster/kube-up.sh

The kube-up.sh script will build the required binary files (using make all), copy the binary files to the charm directory and deploy a cluster to the public cloud you have configured with Juju, if you do not have a public cloud configured you will be presented with the opportunity to configure one.

The resulting cluster consists of one kubernetes-master, two kubernetes nodes on different hosts. The etcd and flannel parts are there so the containers on different hosts can communicate with each other.

To get access to the controller node use juju ssh kubernetes-master/0 or the minion nodes with juju ssh kubernetes/0 commands. You will find the kubectl is already installed on the controller node.

When you are done with the cluster running kube-down.sh will destroy the cluster as expected.

cluster/kube-down.sh

Why use Kubernetes with Juju?

Juju provides a way to model deployments in a cloud agnostic language. The same commands can deploy a cluster on the major public clouds Amazon, Google Compute Engine, any OpenStack cloud, Windows Azure and many others. You will need to put your cloud credentials into Juju but that only needs to be done one time. This allows you to deploy a cluster on AWS, juju switch gce and deploy the same cluster on the GCE public cloud using the same kube-up.sh command. Juju reduces the cost of experimentation on other clouds and lets you focus on the Kubernetes development.

Help us improve!

There is a small team working on the Kubernetes story @whitmo, @chuckbutler, and @mbruzek. We are always trying to improve and make something useful for the community. If you find a bug in the code create an issue and reference one or all of us in the issue and we will have a look. If you have any feedback or a use case that we can help with please let us know. You can reach us on IRC in #system-zoo on irc.freenode.net.

Related posts


Canonical
27 February 2026

Canonical and Ubuntu RISC-V: a 2025 retro and looking forward to 2026

Ubuntu Article

2025: From RISC-V enablement to real execution  2025 was the year that RISC-V readiness gave way to RISC-V adoption. It’s been quite a journey. What began years ago as early architectural exploration and enablement has matured into real silicon, systems, and deployments. In particular, RVA23 provides a  stable and predictable baseline we ...


Aaron Prisk
26 February 2026

Unmasking the Resolute Raccoon

Desktop Article

You’ve almost certainly seen them… In the forest, rummaging through a dumpster, in poorly aging millennial memes. Raccoons are ubiquitous and endlessly entertaining creatures. YouTube and TikTok are full of videos documenting their clever antics and escapades. One such intrepid raccoon gained fame for making their way to the most unlikely ...


Benjamin Ryzman
24 February 2026

Building quantum-safe telecom infrastructure for 5G and beyond

private mobile network Article

coRAN Labs and Canonical at MWC Barcelona 2026 At MWC Barcelona 2026, coRAN Labs and Canonical are presenting a working demonstration of a cloud-native, quantum-safe telecom platform for 5G and beyond 5G networks. This is not a conceptual exercise. It is a full 5G System (5GS) deployment with post-quantum cryptography embedded across the ...