The only reason I even change the port is to make sure a git-client can
reach the my upcoming git-servers on the standard ssh-port. Though to
achive this I only have to make sure that the port is reacheable on the
internet, after that the port is routed through the kubernetes network.
This means that my agents can keep using the standard-port, which makes
everything easier for me :)
I want to use port 22 for my git-server, therefore I have to make this
port free for use of kubernetes. This change allows this, so when I want
to connect to the host-machines I'll use port 1022.
This changes makes it easier to differentiate and understand the
different parts of the kubernetes setup. On one hand we have the bare
infrastructure (servers, network, etc), on the other hand we have the
software (k3s in this case).
In the future we'll have a few more parts, like the minimal
configuration of the kubernetes cluster, e.g. with a cert-manager. This
is easier to manage with helm or terraform than with ansible. Therefore
it makes even more sense to split the responsibilities into dedicated
directories.