For the purpose of this guide, we will assume a new local key called "onap-key"
has been downloaded and is copied into **~/.ssh/**, from which it can be referenced.
-Example:
+Example::
+
> mv onap-key ~/.ssh
> chmod 600 ~/.ssh/onap-key
Run RKE
-------
-From within the same directory as the cluster.yml file, simply execute:
+From within the same directory as the cluster.yml file, simply execute::
> rke up
-The output will look something like:
-
-.. code-block::
+The output will look something like::
INFO[0000] Initiating Kubernetes cluster
INFO[0000] [certificates] Generating admin certificates and kubeconfig
Validate deployment
-------------------
+
+::
+
> cp kube_config_cluster.yml ~/.kube/config.onap
> export KUBECONFIG=~/.kube/config.onap
> kubectl get nodes -o=wide
-.. code-block::
+::
NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION INTERNAL-IP EXTERNAL-IP OS-IMAGE KERNEL-VERSION CONTAINER-RUNTIME
onap-control-1 Ready controlplane,etcd 3h53m v1.13.5 10.0.0.8 <none> Ubuntu 18.04 LTS 4.15.0-22-generic docker://18.9.5
Install Helm
============
-Example Helm client install on Linux:
+Example Helm client install on Linux::
+
> wget http://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-helm/helm-v2.12.3-linux-amd64.tar.gz
> tar -zxvf helm-v2.12.3-linux-amd64.tar.gz
Initialize Kubernetes Cluster for use by Helm
---------------------------------------------
+
+::
+
> kubectl -n kube-system create serviceaccount tiller
> kubectl create clusterrolebinding tiller --clusterrole=cluster-admin --serviceaccount=kube-system:tiller