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This article walks you through the process of installing Coder onto your Kubernetes cluster.

Dependencies

Install the following dependencies if you haven't already:

For production deployments: set up and use an external PostgreSQL instance to store data, including workspace information and session tokens.

For public sector deployments

Users with public sector deployments may need to obtain Coder's installation resources from Big Bang (Helm charts) and Ironbank (installation images).

Both the Big Bang and Ironbank repositories are one release behind the latest version of Coder.

Install Coder

  1. Create the Coder namespace:
kubectl create namespace coder
  1. Add the Coder Helm repo:

    helm repo add coder https://helm.coder.com
    
  2. Install the Helm chart onto your cluster (see the changelog for a list of Coder versions or run helm search repo coder -l)

    This step will install Coder with the default configuration. This does not set up dev URLs, TLS, ingress controllers, or an external database. To configure these recommended features, please see the following sections.

    helm install coder coder/coder --namespace coder --version=<VERSION>
    
  3. Once coderd is running, tail the logs to find the randomly generated password for the admin user:

    kubectl logs -n coder -l coder.deployment=coderd -c coderd \
     --tail=-1 | grep -A1 -B2 Password
    

    When this step is done, you will see:

    ----------------------
    User:     admin
    Password: kv...k3
    ----------------------
    

    You will need these credentials to continue setup using Coder's web UI.

    If you lose your admin credentials, you can use the admin password reset process to regain access.

  4. Create a values.yaml file to configure Coder:

    helm show values coder/coder --namespace coder --version=<VERSION> > values.yaml
    

    View the configuration options available in the values.yaml file.

Set the super admin password

Optional: change the admin user password by updating values.yaml as follows:

superAdmin:
  # Options for configuring the secret used to specify the password for the
  # built-in super admin account.
  passwordSecret:
    # coderd.superAdmin.passwordSecret.name -- Name of a secret that should
    # be used to determine the password for the super admin account. The
    # password should be contained in the field `password`, or the manually
    # specified one.
    name: ""
    # coderd.superAdmin.passwordSecret.key -- The key of the secret that
    # contains the super admin password.
    key: "password"

Connect an external database

Optional: To configure an externally hosted database, set the following in values.yaml:

Ensure that you have superuser privileges to your PostgreSQL database.

postgres:
  default:
    enable: false
  host: HOST_ADDRESS
  port: PORT_NUMBER
  user: YOUR_USER_NAME
  database: YOUR_DATABASE
  passwordSecret: secret-name
  sslMode: require

a. To create the passwordSecret, run:

kubectl create secret generic <NAME> --from-literal="password=UserDefinedPassword"

Put a space before the command to prevent it from being saved in your shell history.

Running this command could potentially expose your database password to other users on your system through /proc. If this is a concern, you can use --from-file=password=/dev/stdin instead of --from-literal=... to enter your password and press Ctrl+D when you're done to submit it.

Ensure that there are no trailing white spaces in your password secret.

For more detailed configuration instructions, see our PostgreSQL setup guide. Alternatively, see our guide on connecting to AWS RDS via IAM credentials.

Enable dev URLs

Optional: Enable dev URL usage. You must provide a wildcard domain in the Helm chart.

coderd:
  devurlsHost: "*.my-custom-domain.io"

Enable TLS

Optional: To set up TLS:

a. You will need to create a TLS secret. To do so, run the following with the .pem files provided by your certificate:

kubectl create secret tls tls-secret --key key.pem --cert cert.pem

If your certificate provider does not provide .pem files, then you may need to attach the certificate to the LoadBalancer manually.

b. Attach the secret to the coderd service by setting the following values:

coderd:
  tls:
    hostSecretName: <tls-secret>
    devurlsHostSecretName: <tls-secret>

Set up an ingress controller

Optional: If you cannot use a load balancer, you may need an ingress controller. To configure one with Coder, set the following in values.yaml:

We assume that you already have an ingress controller installed in your cluster.

coderd:
  devurlsHost: "*.devurls.coderhost.com"
  serviceSpec:
    # The Ingress will route traffic to the internal ClusterIP.
    type: ClusterIP
    externalTrafficPolicy: ""
  tls:
    hostSecretName: <tls-secret>
    devurlsHostSecretName: <tls-secret>
ingress:
  enable: true
  # Hostname to use for routing decisions
  host: "coder.coderhost.com"
  # Custom annotations to apply to the resulting Ingress object
  # This is useful for configuring other controllers in the cluster
  # such as cert-manager or the ingress controller
  annotations: {}

Configure a proxy

Optional: To have Coder initiate outbound connections via a proxy, set the following (applicable) values:

coderd:
   proxy:
      http: ""
      https: ""
      exempt: "cluster.local"

Once you've implemented all of the changes in values.yaml, upgrade Coder with the following command:

helm upgrade coder coder/coder --namespace coder --version=<VERSION> -f values.yaml

Logging

At this time, we recommend reviewing Coder's default logging settings. Logs help monitor the health of your cluster and troubleshooting, and Coder offers you several options for obtaining these.

Accessing Coder

  1. To access Coder's web UI, you'll need to get its IP address by running the following in the terminal to list the Kubernetes services running:

    kubectl --namespace coder get services
    

    You'll see a row named coderd with an EXTERNAL-IP value; this is the IP address you need.

  2. In your browser, navigate to the external IP.

  3. Use the admin credentials you obtained in this installation guide's previous step to log in to the Coder platform. If this is the first time you've logged in, Coder will prompt you to change your password.

At this point, you're ready to proceed to configuring Coder.

EKS troubleshooting

If you're unable to access your Coder deployment via the external IP generated by EKS, this is likely due to coderd being scheduled onto the incorrect node group, causing the load balancer health checks to fail. Below are two methods to resolve this:

  1. Set the externalTrafficPolicy Helm value to Cluster by running the following command:

    helm upgrade --install coder coder/coder --set coderd.serviceSpec.externalTrafficPolicy=Cluster
    

    Note that setting externalTrafficPolicy to Cluster masks the source IP address of your Coder users. For more information on this value, see the Kubernetes documentation.

  2. Set the services.nodeSelector Helm value to a label assigned to the standard-workers node group created by AWS. Common labels include:

    eks.amazonaws.com/nodegroup=standard-workers
    alpha.eksctl.io/nodegroup-name=standard-workers
    beta.kubernetes.io/instance-type=t3.small
    

    This option is recommended if you'd like to preserve the source IP. See the Kubernetes documentation for a full list of the standard node labels.

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