Virtual Machine Installation
Follow this guide to deploy Istio and connect a virtual machine to it.
This guide has a requirement that the user is using a plugin root CA and has configured Istio as an intermediate CA.
This guide is tested and validated. The Istio authors feel this guide is suitable for experimentation but not production. Like all alpha features, this guide is subject to change.
Prerequisites
- Download the Istio release
- Perform any necessary platform-specific setup
- Check the requirements for Pods and Services
- Virtual machines must have IP connectivity to the ingress gateway in the connecting mesh, and optionally every pod in the mesh via L3 networking if enhanced performance is desired.
Prepare the guide environment
Set the environment variables
"${ISTIO_DIR}"
,"${WORK_DIR}"
, your cluster name, and the service namespace. Ensure"${WORK_DIR}"
is prefixed with"${HOME}"
(e.g.WORK_DIR="${HOME}"/vmintegration
).$ ISTIO_DIR="<the directory containing an unarchived version of Istio>"
$ CLUSTER_NAME="<the name of your cluster>"
$ SERVICE_NAMESPACE="<the name of your service namespace>"
$ WORK_DIR="<a certificate working directory>"
Create the
"${WORK_DIR}"/"${CLUSTER_NAME}"/"${SERVICE_NAMESPACE}"
working directories.$ mkdir -p "${WORK_DIR}"/"${CLUSTER_NAME}"/"${SERVICE_NAMESPACE}"
Create certificates for use with the virtual machine and Istio control plane
This Makefile
is limited to creating one virtual machine certificate per cluster. The Istio authors expect operators to read and understand this guide to formulate their own plans for creating and managing virtual machines. It is important for you to read and understand this Makefile
for any deployment you place into production.
Execute the following commands to create certificates for use by Istio. See Certificate Authority (CA) certificates for more details on configuring an external CA. The
NAME
variable is used during certificate generation to uniquely identify clusters. TheNAMESPACE
variable identifies the namespace where the virtual machine connectivity is hosted.$ cd "${WORK_DIR}"
$ make -f "${ISTIO_DIR}"/samples/certs/Makefile NAME="${CLUSTER_NAME}" NAMESPACE="${SERVICE_NAMESPACE}" "${CLUSTER_NAME}"-certs-wl
Install the Istio control plane
The Istio control plane must be installed with virtual machine integration enabled (values.global.meshExpansion.enabled: true
).
Register the certificates needed for installation.
$ kubectl create namespace istio-system
$ kubectl create secret generic cacerts -n istio-system \
--from-file="${WORK_DIR}"/"${CLUSTER_NAME}"/ca-cert.pem \
--from-file="${WORK_DIR}"/"${CLUSTER_NAME}"/ca-key.pem \
--from-file="${WORK_DIR}"/"${CLUSTER_NAME}"/root-cert.pem \
--from-file="${WORK_DIR}"/"${CLUSTER_NAME}"/cert-chain.pem
Create the install
IstioOperator
custom resource:$ cat <<EOF> "${WORK_DIR}"/vmintegration.yaml
apiVersion: install.istio.io/v1alpha1
metadata:
namespace: istio-system
name: example-istiocontrolplane
kind: IstioOperator
spec:
values:
global:
meshExpansion:
enabled: true
EOF
Install or upgrade Istio with virtual machine integration features enabled.
$ istioctl install -f "${WORK_DIR}"/vmintegration.yaml
Create files to transfer to the virtual machine
Make a copy of files to copy to the virtual machine
$ cp -a "${WORK_DIR}"/"${CLUSTER_NAME}"/ca-cert.pem "${WORK_DIR}"/"${CLUSTER_NAME}"/"${SERVICE_NAMESPACE}"/
$ cp -a "${WORK_DIR}"/"${CLUSTER_NAME}"/key.pem "${WORK_DIR}"/"${CLUSTER_NAME}"/"${SERVICE_NAMESPACE}"/
$ cp -a "${WORK_DIR}"/"${CLUSTER_NAME}"/root-cert.pem "${WORK_DIR}"/"${CLUSTER_NAME}"/"${SERVICE_NAMESPACE}"/
$ cp -a "${WORK_DIR}"/"${CLUSTER_NAME}"/workload-cert-chain.pem "${WORK_DIR}"/"${CLUSTER_NAME}"/"${SERVICE_NAMESPACE}"/cert-chain.pem
Generate a
cluster.env
configuration file that informs the virtual machine deployment which network CIDR to capture and redirect to the Kubernetes cluster:$ ISTIO_SERVICE_CIDR=$(echo '{"apiVersion":"v1","kind":"Service","metadata":{"name":"tst"},"spec":{"clusterIP":"1.1.1.1","ports":[{"port":443}]}}' | kubectl apply -f - 2>&1 | sed 's/.*valid IPs is //')
$ touch "${WORK_DIR}"/"${CLUSTER_NAME}"/"${SERVICE_NAMESPACE}"/cluster.env
$ echo ISTIO_SERVICE_CIDR=$ISTIO_SERVICE_CIDR > "${WORK_DIR}"/"${CLUSTER_NAME}"/"${SERVICE_NAMESPACE}"/cluster.env
Optionally configure configure a select set of ports for exposure from the virtual machine. If you do not apply this optional step, all outbound traffic on all ports is sent to the Kubernetes cluster. You may wish to send some traffic on specific ports to other destinations. This example shows enabling ports
3306
and8080
for capture by Istio virtual machine integration and transmission to Kubernetes. All other ports are sent over the default gateway of the virtual machine.$ echo "ISTIO_INBOUND_PORTS=3306,8080" >> "${WORK_DIR}"/"${CLUSTER_NAME}"/"${SERVICE_NAMESPACE}"/cluster.env
Add an IP address that represents Istiod. Replace
${INGRESS_HOST}
with the ingress gateway service of istiod. Revisit Determining the ingress host and ports to set the environment variable${INGRESS_HOST}
.$ touch "${WORK_DIR}"/"${CLUSTER_NAME}"/"${SERVICE_NAMESPACE}"/hosts-addendum
$ echo "${INGRESS_HOST} istiod.istio-system.svc" > "${WORK_DIR}"/"${CLUSTER_NAME}"/"${SERVICE_NAMESPACE}"/hosts-addendum
A sophisticated option involves configuring DNS within the virtual machine to reference an external DNS server. This option is beyond the scope of this guide.
Configure the virtual machine
Run the following commands on the virtual machine you want to add to the Istio mesh:
Securely transfer the files from
"${WORK_DIR}"/"${CLUSTER_NAME}"/"${SERVICE_NAMESPACE}"
to the virtual machine. How you choose to securely transfer those files should be done with consideration for your information security policies.Update the cache of package updates for your
deb
packaged distro.$ sudo apt -y update
Upgrade the
deb
packaged distro to ensure all latest security packages are applied.$ sudo apt -y upgrade
Install the
deb
package containing the Istio virtual machine integration runtime.$ curl -LO https://storage.googleapis.com/istio-release/releases/1.6.0/deb/istio-sidecar.deb
$ sudo dpkg -i istio-sidecar.deb
Install
root-cert.pem
,key.pem
andcert-chain.pem
within the directory/etc/certs/
.$ sudo mkdir -p /etc/certs
$ sudo cp {root-cert.pem,cert-chain.pem,key.pem} /etc/certs
Install
cluster.env
within/var/lib/istio/envoy/
.$ sudo cp cluster.env /var/lib/istio/envoy
Add the istiod host to
/etc/hosts
.$ sudo cat hosts-addendum >> /etc/hosts
Transfer ownership of the files in
/etc/certs/
and/var/lib/istio/envoy/
to the Istio proxy.$ sudo chown -R istio-proxy /etc/certs /var/lib/istio/envoy
Start Istio within the virtual machine.
$ sudo systemctl start istio
Uninstall
To uninstall Istio, run the following command:
$ istioctl manifest generate -f "${WORK_DIR}"/vmintegration.yaml | kubectl delete -f -
The control plane namespace (e.g., istio-system
) is not removed by default. If no longer needed, use the following command to remove it:
$ kubectl delete namespace istio-system
See also
Virtual Machines in Multi-Network Meshes
Learn how to add a service running on a virtual machine to your multi-network Istio mesh.
Bookinfo with a Virtual Machine
Run the Bookinfo application with a MySQL service running on a virtual machine within your mesh.
Virtual Machines in Single-Network Meshes
Learn how to add a service running on a virtual machine to your single network Istio mesh.
Provision and manage DNS certificates in Istio.
A more secure way to manage Istio webhooks.
Demystifying Istio’s Sidecar Injection Model
De-mystify how Istio manages to plugin its data-plane components into an existing deployment.