Load-balancing & Service Discovery
This tutorial will guide you to perform load-balancing and service discovery across multiple Kubernetes clusters when using Cilium.
Prerequisites
You need to have a functioning Cluster Mesh setup, please follow the guide Setting up Cluster Mesh to set it up.
Load-balancing with Global Services
Establishing load-balancing between clusters is achieved by defining a Kubernetes service with identical name and namespace in each cluster and adding the annotation io.cilium/global-service: "true"
to declare it global. Cilium will automatically perform load-balancing to pods in both clusters.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: rebel-base
annotations:
io.cilium/global-service: "true"
spec:
type: ClusterIP
ports:
- port: 80
selector:
name: rebel-base
Load-balancing Only to a Remote Cluster
By default, a Global Service will load-balance across backends in multiple clusters. This implicitly configures io.cilium/shared-service: "true"
. To prevent service backends from being shared to other clusters, and to ensure that the service will only load-balance to backends in remote clusters, this option should be disabled.
Below example will expose remote endpoint without sharing local endpoints.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: rebel-base
annotations:
io.cilium/global-service: "true"
io.cilium/shared-service: "false"
spec:
type: ClusterIP
ports:
- port: 80
selector:
name: rebel-base
Deploying a Simple Example Service
In cluster 1, deploy:
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cilium/cilium/v1.10/examples/kubernetes/clustermesh/global-service-example/rebel-base-global-shared.yaml
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cilium/cilium/v1.10/examples/kubernetes/clustermesh/global-service-example/cluster1.yaml
In cluster 2, deploy:
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cilium/cilium/v1.10/examples/kubernetes/clustermesh/global-service-example/rebel-base-global-shared.yaml
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cilium/cilium/v1.10/examples/kubernetes/clustermesh/global-service-example/cluster2.yaml
From either cluster, access the global service:
kubectl exec -ti xwing-xxx -- curl rebel-base
You will see replies from pods in both clusters.