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Raspberry Pi - Kubernetes Cluster

Description

This code is used on a Raspberry-Pi based Akka Cluster to demonstrate cluster formation, split-brain occurrence and Split Brain Resolver in a visual manner.

Each node is equipped with an 8-LED RGB strip where different LED's are used to show each node's state (Joining, Up, Weakly-up, Unreachable, Leaving, Exiting and Down/Removed). In addition, it shows if a node has a so-called leader role and whether a node is running an Akka Cluster Singleton (if one is created on the cluster).

In the last series of exercises, we deploy an actor based application (a Sudoku Solver) on the cluster and add monitoring (Cinnamon/Prometheus/Grafana) and tracing to the set-up (Open-tracing/Zipkin).

Maintainers & Changelog

Removed the changelog & list of maintainers. Git history contains this information.

Instructions

  • Make sure you completed the installation of
    • Java 8 SDK
    • Some terminal (iTerm-2 on Mac, Terminator on Linux style OS-es, Powershell or ConEmu on Windows
    • curl
  • Clone the project on your laptop

Preparing your laptop for a Raspberry-Pi based Akka Cluster workshop

Detailed instructions can be found here.

Building your own 5-node Raspberry-Pi based Akka Cluster

If you want to build your own physical cluster, you may want to have a look at the BOM here.

Pi-Hypriot installation instructions

The easiest and fastest way to flash a Hypriot OS instance that is ready to use for the Akka Cluster software can be found here.

Travel router configuration

In some cases it can be handy to use a so-called travel router which allows you to connect to a Wifi network on location, and still get access to a physical network with a fixed IP network address. This is because, currently, all nodes have statically configured IP addresses.

Details on how to configure such a (TP-Link TL-WR802N) router can be found here.

Build your own Akka-Cluster on Raspberry Pi

  • A bill of material can be found here
  • A schematic of the LED strip can be found here

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