Medium
medium.com › @pedrotychang › how-i-setup-talos-linux-bc2832ec87cc
How I Setup Talos Linux. My journey to building a secure… | by Pedro Chang | Medium
February 19, 2025 - talosctl --nodes 10.0.2.15 --endpoints 10.0.2.15 \ --talosconfig=./talosconfig kubeconfig ./kubeconfig · If you have other clusters you can setup your configs in this manner:
DEV Community
dev.to › nabsul › talos-kubernetes-in-five-minutes-1p1h
Talos Kubernetes in Five Minutes - DEV Community
September 28, 2025 - The likelihood of this happening is very low, but if it did, you would see a failure in the apply-config command, and you would simply delete the VM. There are more secure ways to do this, specifically generating an ISO that is preconfigured to only respond to your cert. However, that is beyond the scope of this simple tutorial. talosctl apply-config --insecure --nodes $VM_IP --file "$CONFIG_DIR/controlplane.yaml"
Videos
12:08
Remotely configure Talos Linux with HTTP - YouTube
18:05
talos linux and kubernetes install (avoid common mistakes) - YouTube
13:09
Multi-doc configurations with Talos Linux - YouTube
Talos Linux: A Quick Installation and Configuration Guide
26:22
Use and Create Talos Linux System Extensions - YouTube
18:38
Talos Linux on AWS - YouTube
GitHub
github.com › nazarewk-iac › talos-configs
GitHub - nazarewk-iac/talos-configs: Repository containing my personal Talos Kubernetes configurations · GitHub
Repository containing my personal Talos Kubernetes setup. nix develop --command fish # (re-)generate configurations talos-gen # generate an ISO to USB drive talos-installer-disk-write /dev/disk/by-id/usb-Samsung_Portable_SSD_T5_1234567D585A-0:0 pwet nas-initial # generate an ISO to NanoKVM mountable scp "$(talos-image-url pwet cache iso nas-initial)" root@kvm-4385.lan.etra.net.int.kdn.im:/data/ # in BIOS enter Secure Boot "Setup Mode" (becomes visible when doing custom secure boot) # plug in the USB # select from Talos boot menu: `Enroll Secure Boot keys: auto` # confirm presence of the new ke
Author nazarewk-iac
Leaf
docs.leaf.cloud › en › latest › talos › creating-talos-cluster
Creating a Talos Cluster - Leafcloud Documentation
In this tutorial we'll show you how to create a ready-to-use Talos Linux based Kubernetes cluster in your LeafCloud account. Before we begin you need both the Openstack command line set up and configured (see Getting Started -> How to use the Openstack CLI) and talosctl set up on your local ...
Talos Linux
talos.dev › v1.8 › reference › configuration
Overview - Sidero Documentation
April 27, 2026 - Talos Linux machine is fully configured via a single YAML file called machine configuration. The file might contain one or more configuration documents separated by --- (three dashes) lines.
A cup of coffee
a-cup-of.coffee › blog › talos
Talos - An Immutable OS for Kubernetes - A cup of coffee
May 2, 2026 - At first, I used to directly modify the files to add specific parameters for my infrastructure, but in hindsight, I realize that it’s not the right approach. It’s better to store the configuration delta in a patch.yaml file and apply it using the talosctl gen config --config-patch @patch.yaml command.
Raptorcs
wiki.raptorcs.com › wiki › Talos_II_Beginner's_Quick_Start_Guide
Talos II Beginner's Quick Start Guide - RCS Wiki
This way, it already will have its own address on the network and will not need to rely on DHCP to auto-configure one. Next, we provide it with the IP address we would like it to use. In this case, we're going to use 192.168.0.43 for the secondary computer, and 192.168.0.42 for the Talos BMC.
Dalydays
blog.dalydays.com › posts › kubernetes homelab series part 1 - introduction and talos installation
Kubernetes Homelab Series Part 1 - Introduction and Talos Installation | Eric Daly's Blog
October 10, 2024 - Otherwise, continue to the end of this one and circle back to that article afterward so you can safely encrypt and store your configs in a git repo. Create node specific patches (used for defining a static IP, etc.): https://www.talos.dev/v1.8/talos-guides/configuration/patching/