Enabling requests to Knative services when additional authorization policies are enabled
Knative Serving system pods, such as the activator and autoscaler components, require access to your deployed Knative services. If you have configured additional security features, such as Istio’s authorization policy, you must enable access to your Knative service for these system pods.
Before you begin
You must meet the following prerequisites to use Istio AuthorizationPolicy:
Mutual TLS in Knative
Because Knative requests are frequently routed through activator, some considerations need to be made when using mutual TLS.
Generally, mutual TLS can be configured normally as in Istio’s documentation. However, since the activator can be in the request path of Knative services, it must have sidecars injected. The simplest way to do this is to label the knative-serving
namespace:
kubectl label namespace knative-serving istio-injection=enabled
If the activator isn’t injected:
- In PERMISSIVE mode, you’ll see requests appear without the expected
X-Forwarded-Client-Cert
header when forwarded by the activator.
$ kubectl exec deployment/httpbin -c httpbin -it -- curl -s http://httpbin.knative.svc.cluster.local/headers
{
"headers": {
"Accept": "*/*",
"Accept-Encoding": "gzip",
"Forwarded": "for=10.72.0.30;proto=http",
"Host": "httpbin.knative.svc.cluster.local",
"K-Proxy-Request": "activator",
"User-Agent": "curl/7.58.0",
"X-B3-Parentspanid": "b240bdb1c29ae638",
"X-B3-Sampled": "0",
"X-B3-Spanid": "416960c27be6d484",
"X-B3-Traceid": "750362ce9d878281b240bdb1c29ae638",
"X-Envoy-Attempt-Count": "1",
"X-Envoy-Internal": "true"
}
}
- In STRICT mode, requests will simply be rejected.
To understand when requests are forwarded through the activator, see documentation on the TargetBurstCapacity
setting.
This also means that many Istio AuthorizationPolicies won’t work as expected. For example, if you set up a rule allowing requests from a particular source into a Knative service, you will see requests being rejected if they are forwarded by the activator.
For example, the following policy allows requests from within pods in the serving-tests
namespace to other pods in the serving-tests
namespace.
apiVersion: security.istio.io/v1beta1
kind: AuthorizationPolicy
metadata:
name: allow-serving-tests
namespace: serving-tests
spec:
action: ALLOW
rules:
- from:
- source:
namespaces: ["serving-tests"]
Requests here will fail when forwarded by the activator, because the Istio proxy at the destination service will see the source namespace of the requests as knative-serving
, which is the namespace of the activator.
Currently, the easiest way around this is to explicitly allow requests from the knative-serving
namespace, for example by adding it to the list in the above policy:
apiVersion: security.istio.io/v1beta1
kind: AuthorizationPolicy
metadata:
name: allow-serving-tests
namespace: serving-tests
spec:
action: ALLOW
rules:
- from:
- source:
namespaces: ["serving-tests", "knative-serving"]
Health checking and metrics collection
In addition to allowing your application path, you’ll need to configure Istio AuthorizationPolicy to allow health checking and metrics collection to your applications from system pods. You can allow access from system pods by paths.
Allowing access from system pods by paths
Knative system pods access your application using the following paths:
/metrics
/healthz
The /metrics
path allows the autoscaler pod to collect metrics. The /healthz
path allows system pods to probe the service.
You can add the /metrics
and /healthz
paths to the AuthorizationPolicy as shown in the example:
$ cat <<EOF | kubectl apply -f -
apiVersion: security.istio.io/v1beta1
kind: AuthorizationPolicy
metadata:
name: allowlist-by-paths
namespace: serving-tests
spec:
action: ALLOW
rules:
- to:
- operation:
paths:
- /metrics # The path to collect metrics by system pod.
- /healthz # The path to probe by system pod.
EOF
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