# Digital Ocean As a start, read the [introduction into Kubernetes](https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/an-introduction-to-kubernetes) by the folks at Digital Ocean. The following section should enable you to deploy ocelot.social to your Kubernetes cluster. ## Connect to your local cluster 1. Create a cluster at [Digital Ocean](https://www.digitalocean.com/). 2. Download the `***-kubeconfig.yaml` from the Web UI. 3. Move the file to the default location where kubectl expects it to be: `mv ***-kubeconfig.yaml ~/.kube/config`. Alternatively you can set the config on every command: `--kubeconfig ***-kubeconfig.yaml` 4. Now check if you can connect to the cluster and if its your newly created one by running: `kubectl get nodes` The output should look about like this: ```sh $ kubectl get nodes NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION nifty-driscoll-uu1w Ready 69d v1.13.2 nifty-driscoll-uuiw Ready 69d v1.13.2 nifty-driscoll-uusn Ready 69d v1.13.2 ``` If you got the steps right above and see your nodes you can continue. Digital Ocean Kubernetes clusters don't have a graphical interface, so I suggest to setup the [Kubernetes dashboard](./dashboard/README.md) as a next step. Configuring [HTTPS](./https/README.md) is bit tricky and therefore I suggest to do this as a last step. ## Spaces We are storing our images in the s3-compatible [DigitalOcean Spaces](https://www.digitalocean.com/docs/spaces/). We still want to take backups of our images in case something happens to the images in the cloud. See these [instructions](https://www.digitalocean.com/docs/spaces/resources/s3cmd-usage/) about getting set up with `s3cmd` to take a copy of all images in a `Spaces` namespace, i.e. `ocelot-social-uploads`. After configuring `s3cmd` with your credentials, etc. you should be able to make a backup with this command. ```sh s3cmg get --recursive --skip-existing s3://ocelot-social-uploads ```