WoK platform clusters list¶
The WoK platform is made of several OKD clusters.
What are clusters in the context of the WoK platform ?¶
The WoK platform was born in 2017. It began with a OKD v3.9 cluster that evolved and reached OKD v3.11. It is still known today as the WoK cluster (and may be refered to as "WoK 1" sometimes). With the years, new clusters emerged, with newer OKD releases and the technical requirement of creating a new cluster for the OKD 4 release branch. In the future, new clusters may be deployed for specific user bases and communities, for targeted workload types or any other technical motivation.
In the end, clusters in the WoK platform are just a bunch of machines that runs the Kubernetes and OKD software and provide their users with the APIs necessary to leverage their compute resources in order to deploy and run workloads.
Clusters¶
The following table lists and details the WoK clusters:
Cluster name | Kubernetes version | OKD version | Console URL | API Endpoint | Network range | Target workloads | Production level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
WoK 2 | v1.26 | v4.13 | https://console.wok2.in2p3.fr | https://api.wok2.in2p3.fr:6443 | 134.158.80.128/25 |
Any kind of workload | Production |
WoK 3 | v1.27 | v4.14 | https://console.wok2.in2p3.fr | https://api.wok3.in2p3.fr:6443 | 134.158.80.96/27 |
Any kind of workload | Preproduction |
Production status levels¶
- Production: These clusters are meant for running production services and applications.
- Preproduction: These clusters are meant for trying infrastructure changes and may also be used by end users for development and test workloads. No production workload should run on those clusters.
- Deprecated: These clusters are not meant for new deployments and will eventually be terminated, their workloads migrated on production clusters.