Deploying IBM Cloud Satellite on Intel NUCs
Key Points
- Jake Kitchener, a Senior Technical Staff member and Lead Architect at IBM, introduces IBM Cloud Satellite as a platform that extends IBM Cloud services to infrastructure outside IBM’s own data centers.
- IBM Cloud Satellite enables consumption of cloud services close to where data resides—whether on‑premises, in another cloud provider, or at edge locations like a desktop desk.
- In the demo, Jake uses three Intel NUCs to create a Satellite “location,” showing how distributed cloud can be deployed on small, edge‑style hardware.
- He walks through the process of creating the location in the IBM Cloud console, attaching hosts by downloading and applying a post‑provisioning script, and bootstrapping the NUCs with a custom image via USB to achieve a highly available setup.
- Finally, he designates one of the NUCs as the Satellite Control Plane, establishing a secure management layer for running IBM Cloud services within the new Satellite location.
Sections
- Untitled Section
- Managing OpenShift Clusters in IBM Cloud - The speaker demonstrates navigating IBM Cloud’s OpenShift console, reviewing cluster locations (including a local instance), and using standard service options such as version upgrades, worker‑node maintenance, single sign‑on, and built‑in logging, monitoring, registry, and development tools.
Full Transcript
# Deploying IBM Cloud Satellite on Intel NUCs **Source:** [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8WNjwlN5gMk](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8WNjwlN5gMk) **Duration:** 00:05:02 ## Summary - Jake Kitchener, a Senior Technical Staff member and Lead Architect at IBM, introduces IBM Cloud Satellite as a platform that extends IBM Cloud services to infrastructure outside IBM’s own data centers. - IBM Cloud Satellite enables consumption of cloud services close to where data resides—whether on‑premises, in another cloud provider, or at edge locations like a desktop desk. - In the demo, Jake uses three Intel NUCs to create a Satellite “location,” showing how distributed cloud can be deployed on small, edge‑style hardware. - He walks through the process of creating the location in the IBM Cloud console, attaching hosts by downloading and applying a post‑provisioning script, and bootstrapping the NUCs with a custom image via USB to achieve a highly available setup. - Finally, he designates one of the NUCs as the Satellite Control Plane, establishing a secure management layer for running IBM Cloud services within the new Satellite location. ## Sections - [00:00:00](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8WNjwlN5gMk&t=0s) **Untitled Section** - - [00:03:33](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8WNjwlN5gMk&t=213s) **Managing OpenShift Clusters in IBM Cloud** - The speaker demonstrates navigating IBM Cloud’s OpenShift console, reviewing cluster locations (including a local instance), and using standard service options such as version upgrades, worker‑node maintenance, single sign‑on, and built‑in logging, monitoring, registry, and development tools. ## Full Transcript
Hi I'm Jake Kitchener, I'm a Senior Technical Staff Member here at IBM Cloud and the Lead
Architect for IBM Cloud Satellite, an exciting product that we have available for you now in
IBM Cloud. What is IBM Cloud Satellite? IBM Cloud Satellite is a platform service that allows us to
expand the reaches of IBM Cloud to infrastructure outside of IBM Cloud data centers. A powerful
technology if you want to be able to consume cloud services, but you need to be able to use it
closer to your data, whether that may be in your on-premises data center, on another cloud provider
where you may have a data lake, or potentially it's sitting on your desk like I have right here.
Today I've got three Intel NUCs that I'm going to be using to set up a Satellite location
which I think is pretty cool. It's kind of like any sort of store kiosk that you might need to
set up and it's a great example of the power of using distributed cloud with IBM Cloud Satellite.
So to get started, the first thing I need to do is log into the IBM Cloud console and navigate over
to IBM Cloud Satellite. Once I'm there, I'm going to go ahead and create a new location to represent
my desk. I'm going to go ahead and click the create location button, give this location a name,
and click create. Pretty straightforward. Now, once that location is up and running what I need
to do is bring some of my infrastructure on board. To do that I'm going to navigate over to the Hosts
section which is the concept that we use in IBM Cloud Satellite to represent the idea of systems
that are outside of IBM Cloud as the host. The first thing I need to do is click on Attach host.
I'm going to go ahead and download this post provisioning script and then once I've got that
in my hand I can go apply that post provisioning script to any system on the planet. That could be
in another cloud provider, it could be in your on-premises data center, or in this case I want
to get it bootstrapped onto these Intel NUCs that are sitting on my desk. Now to do that i've built
a custom image that will automatically carve up these systems into virtual machines and bootstrap
them with my post provisioning script. So all I need to do is get this onto that USB key,
insert it into my Intel NUCs, and go ahead and power them on. Now I'm going to go ahead
and go through that process for all three of these because I want a highly available
setup. So I can do maintenance by removing these later on, but that's pretty much it.
Now that those systems are online. We can see they're all up here and ready for me to use in
my Satellite location and I'm going to go ahead and get one from each of those systems assigned
to be my Satellite Control Plane. This is really the heart of IBM Cloud Satellite that allows us
to build a secure way for us to go manage cloud services into your IBM Cloud Satellite location.
Now I've got these hosts assigned, my location is in a normal state,
and I'm ready to start using IBM Cloud Services. Let's go ahead and take a look at what that
experience is like. I'm going to navigate over to the IBM Cloud Catalog and I could choose any of
the IBM Cloud Satellite enabled services that we have available. Today we're going to demonstrate
Red Hat OpenShift on IBM Cloud, but it could be other services as well like our Postgres database
or potentially maybe some of our Cloud Pak for Data as a Service options as well. So let's go
ahead into the catalog to Red Hat OpenShift on IBM Cloud and we can see I still have my
traditional cloud service options where I can provision into IBM Cloud data centers like a VCP,
but I've also got the Satellite option available to me as well. So I'm going to go ahead and
choose Satellite. Choose my new location I created and go ahead and give that a name,
and then create that OpenShift cluster.
Now, I can navigate over to my OpenShift clusters in IBM Cloud and we can see I've got a number of
clusters in here, some of them are located in IBM Cloud, some of them are in Satellite locations,
but this one is on my desk. Let's go ahead and see what that looks like. I’m going to click
over to my cluster here and I can see I’ve got all the normal service options that I would have for
Red Hat OpenShift and IBM Cloud, I can update the version of this cluster to the latest version of
Red Hat OpenShift, or I can go in and perform maintenance on my worker nodes as well like
providing updates to them. I’m going to click over to my cluster here and I can see I’ve got
all the normal service options that I would have for Red Hat OpenShift and IBM Cloud, I can update
the version of this cluster to the latest version of Red Hat OpenShift, or I can go in and perform
maintenance on my worker nodes as well like providing updates to them. I get the standard user
experience with single sign-on from IBM Cloud into Red Hat OpenShift and all the usual tools that I
would find in in Red Hat OpenShift are available - I’ve got all my logging tools my monitoring tools
the registry, all of the development tools that are available to users of Red Hat OpenShift.
So, very powerful tool that we've got available to us here that allows us to really expand the reach
of IBM Cloud and the powerful Cloud services that we provide - in this case on my desk,
but remember, it could be on any infrastructure in the world running Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
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