Standalone Operator Install
This guide installs Istio using the standalone Istio operator. The only dependencies required are a supported Kubernetes cluster, the kubectl
command at the version to match the cluster, and the istioctl
command at the desired release version.
To install Istio for production use, we recommend installing with istioctl instead.
Prerequisites
Perform any necessary platform-specific setup.
Check the Requirements for Pods and Services.
Install the istioctl command.
Deploy the Istio operator:
$ istioctl operator init
This command runs the operator by creating the following resources in the
istio-operator
namespace:- The operator custom resource definition
- The operator controller deployment
- A service to access operator metrics
- Necessary Istio operator RBAC rules
See the available
istioctl operator init
flags to control which namespaces the controller and Istio are installed into and the installed Istio image sources and versions.You can alternatively deploy the operator using Helm:
$ helm template manifests/charts/istio-operator/ \
--set hub=docker.io/istio \
--set tag=1.6.0 \
--set operatorNamespace=istio-operator \
--set istioNamespace=istio-system | kubectl apply -f -
Note that you need to download the Istio release to run the above command.
Install
To install the Istio demo
configuration profile using the operator, run the following command:
$ kubectl create ns istio-system
$ kubectl apply -f - <<EOF
apiVersion: install.istio.io/v1alpha1
kind: IstioOperator
metadata:
namespace: istio-system
name: example-istiocontrolplane
spec:
profile: demo
EOF
The controller will detect the IstioOperator
resource and then install the Istio components corresponding to the specified (demo
) configuration.
The Istio operator controller begins the process of installing Istio within 90 seconds of the creation of the IstioOperator
resource. The Istio installation completes within 120 seconds.
You can confirm the Istio control plane services have been deployed with the following commands:
$ kubectl get svc -n istio-system
NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
grafana ClusterIP 10.104.1.213 <none> 3000/TCP 13s
istio-egressgateway ClusterIP 10.103.243.113 <none> 80/TCP,443/TCP,15443/TCP 17s
istio-ingressgateway LoadBalancer 10.101.204.227 <pending> 15020:31077/TCP,80:30689/TCP,443:32419/TCP,31400:31411/TCP,15443:30176/TCP 17s
istiod ClusterIP 10.96.237.249 <none> 15010/TCP,15012/TCP,443/TCP,15014/TCP,53/UDP,853/TCP 30s
jaeger-agent ClusterIP None <none> 5775/UDP,6831/UDP,6832/UDP 13s
jaeger-collector ClusterIP 10.109.244.165 <none> 14267/TCP,14268/TCP,14250/TCP 13s
jaeger-collector-headless ClusterIP None <none> 14250/TCP 13s
jaeger-query ClusterIP 10.105.128.63 <none> 16686/TCP 13s
kiali ClusterIP 10.102.172.30 <none> 20001/TCP 13s
prometheus ClusterIP 10.102.190.194 <none> 9090/TCP 13s
tracing ClusterIP 10.110.231.250 <none> 80/TCP 13s
zipkin ClusterIP 10.96.63.117 <none> 9411/TCP 13s
$ kubectl get pods -n istio-system
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
grafana-54b54568fc-fk6p5 1/1 Running 0 82s
istio-egressgateway-5444c68db8-9h6dz 1/1 Running 0 87s
istio-ingressgateway-5c68cb968-x7qv9 1/1 Running 0 87s
istio-tracing-9dd6c4f7c-hd9qq 1/1 Running 0 82s
istiod-598984548d-wjq9j 1/1 Running 0 99s
kiali-d45468dc4-4nqdv 1/1 Running 0 82s
prometheus-6cf46c47fb-tvvkv 2/2 Running 0 82s
Update
Now, with the controller running, you can change the Istio configuration by editing or replacing the IstioOperator
resource. The controller will detect the change and respond by updating the Istio installation correspondingly.
For example, you can switch the installation to the default
profile with the following command:
$ kubectl apply -f - <<EOF
apiVersion: install.istio.io/v1alpha1
kind: IstioOperator
metadata:
namespace: istio-system
name: example-istiocontrolplane
spec:
profile: default
EOF
You can also enable or disable components and modify resource settings. For example, to enable the Grafana
component and increase pilot memory requests:
$ kubectl apply -f - <<EOF
apiVersion: install.istio.io/v1alpha1
kind: IstioOperator
metadata:
namespace: istio-system
name: example-istiocontrolplane
spec:
profile: default
components:
pilot:
k8s:
resources:
requests:
memory: 3072Mi
addonComponents:
grafana:
enabled: true
EOF
You can observe the changes that the controller makes in the cluster in response to IstioOperator
CR updates by checking the operator controller logs:
$ kubectl logs -f -n istio-operator $(kubectl get pods -n istio-operator -lname=istio-operator -o jsonpath='{.items[0].metadata.name}')
Refer to the IstioOperator
API for the complete set of configuration settings.
Uninstall
Delete the Istio deployment:
$ kubectl delete istiooperators.install.istio.io -n istio-system example-istiocontrolplane
Wait until Istio is uninstalled - this may take some time. Delete the Istio operator:
$ istioctl operator remove
Or:
$ kubectl delete ns istio-operator --grace-period=0 --force
Note that deleting the operator before Istio is fully removed may result in leftover Istio resources. To clean up anything not removed by the operator:
$ istioctl manifest generate | kubectl delete -f -
$ kubectl delete ns istio-system --grace-period=0 --force
See also
Extended and Improved WebAssemblyHub to Bring the Power of WebAssembly to Envoy and Istio
Community partner tooling of Wasm for Istio by Solo.io.
Introducing istiod: simplifying the control plane
Istiod consolidates the Istio control plane components into a single binary.
Declarative WebAssembly deployment for Istio
Configuring Wasm extensions for Envoy and Istio declaratively.
Redefining extensibility in proxies - introducing WebAssembly to Envoy and Istio
The future of Istio extensibility using WASM.
Istio in 2020 - Following the Trade Winds
A vision statement and roadmap for Istio in 2020.
Provision and manage DNS certificates in Istio.