Installing Knative Serving using YAML files

This topic describes how to install Knative Serving by applying YAML files using the kubectl CLI.

Prerequisites

Before installing Knative, you must meet the following prerequisites:

  • For prototyping purposes, Knative works on most local deployments of Kubernetes. For example, you can use a local, one-node cluster that has 3 CPUs and 4 GB of memory.

    Tip

    You can install a local distribution of Knative for development purposes using the Knative Quickstart plugin

  • For production purposes, it is recommended that:

    • If you have only one node in your cluster, you need at least 6 CPUs, 6 GB of memory, and 30 GB of disk storage.
    • If you have multiple nodes in your cluster, for each node you need at least 2 CPUs, 4 GB of memory, and 20 GB of disk storage.
    • You have a cluster that uses Kubernetes v1.28 or newer.
    • You have installed the kubectl CLI.
    • Your Kubernetes cluster must have access to the internet, because Kubernetes needs to be able to fetch images. To pull from a private registry, see Deploying images from a private container registry.

Caution

The system requirements provided are recommendations only. The requirements for your installation might vary, depending on whether you use optional components, such as a networking layer.

Verifying image signatures

Knative releases from 1.9 onwards are signed with cosign.

  1. Install cosign and jq.

  2. Extract the images from a manifeset and verify the signatures.

  1. curl -sSL https://github.com/knative/serving/releases/download/knative-v1.16.0/serving-core.yaml \
  2. | grep 'gcr.io/' | awk '{print $2}' | sort | uniq \
  3. | xargs -n 1 \
  4. cosign verify -o text \
  5. --certificate-identity=signer@knative-releases.iam.gserviceaccount.com \
  6. --certificate-oidc-issuer=https://accounts.google.com

Note

Knative images are signed in KEYLESS mode. To learn more about keyless signing, please refer to Keyless Signatures Our signing identity(Subject) for our releases is signer@knative-releases.iam.gserviceaccount.com and the Issuer is https://accounts.google.com

Install the Knative Serving component

To install the Knative Serving component:

  1. Install the required custom resources by running the command:

    1. kubectl apply -f https://github.com/knative/serving/releases/download/knative-v1.16.0/serving-crds.yaml
  2. Install the core components of Knative Serving by running the command:

    1. kubectl apply -f https://github.com/knative/serving/releases/download/knative-v1.16.0/serving-core.yaml

    Info

    For information about the YAML files in Knative Serving, see Knative Serving installation files.

Install a networking layer

The following tabs expand to show instructions for installing a networking layer. Follow the procedure for the networking layer of your choice:

Note

Only Kourier network plugin supported for IBM Z and IBM Power platform. Follow the below steps to install Kourier. Post installation, patch the envoy image based on RedHat Maistra as described in this link.

Kourier (Choose this if you are not sure)IstioContour

The following commands install Kourier and enable its Knative integration.

  1. Install the Knative Kourier controller by running the command:

    1. kubectl apply -f https://github.com/knative/net-kourier/releases/download/knative-v1.16.0/kourier.yaml
  2. Configure Knative Serving to use Kourier by default by running the command:

    1. kubectl patch configmap/config-network \
    2. --namespace knative-serving \
    3. --type merge \
    4. --patch '{"data":{"ingress-class":"kourier.ingress.networking.knative.dev"}}'
  3. Fetch the External IP address or CNAME by running the command:

    1. kubectl --namespace kourier-system get service kourier

    Tip

    Save this to use in the following Configure DNS section.

The following commands install Istio and enable its Knative integration.

  1. Install a properly configured Istio by following the Advanced Istio installation instructions or by running the command:

    1. kubectl apply -l knative.dev/crd-install=true -f https://github.com/knative/net-istio/releases/download/knative-v1.16.0/istio.yaml
    2. kubectl apply -f https://github.com/knative/net-istio/releases/download/knative-v1.16.0/istio.yaml
  2. Install the Knative Istio controller by running the command:

    1. kubectl apply -f https://github.com/knative/net-istio/releases/download/knative-v1.16.0/net-istio.yaml
  3. Fetch the External IP address or CNAME by running the command:

    1. kubectl --namespace istio-system get service istio-ingressgateway

    Tip

    Save this to use in the following Configure DNS section.

The following commands install Contour and enable its Knative integration.

  1. Install a properly configured Contour by running the command:

    1. kubectl apply -f https://github.com/knative/net-contour/releases/download/knative-v1.16.0/contour.yaml
  2. Install the Knative Contour controller by running the command:

    1. kubectl apply -f https://github.com/knative/net-contour/releases/download/knative-v1.16.0/net-contour.yaml
  3. Configure Knative Serving to use Contour by default by running the command:

    1. kubectl patch configmap/config-network \
    2. --namespace knative-serving \
    3. --type merge \
    4. --patch '{"data":{"ingress-class":"contour.ingress.networking.knative.dev"}}'
  4. Fetch the External IP address or CNAME by running the command:

    1. kubectl --namespace contour-external get service envoy

    Tip

    Save this to use in the following Configure DNS section.

Verify the installation

Success

Monitor the Knative components until all of the components show a STATUS of Running or Completed. You can do this by running the following command and inspecting the output:

  1. kubectl get pods -n knative-serving

Example output:

  1. NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
  2. 3scale-kourier-control-54cc54cc58-mmdgq 1/1 Running 0 81s
  3. activator-67656dcbbb-8mftq 1/1 Running 0 97s
  4. autoscaler-df6856b64-5h4lc 1/1 Running 0 97s
  5. controller-788796f49d-4x6pm 1/1 Running 0 97s
  6. domain-mapping-65f58c79dc-9cw6d 1/1 Running 0 97s
  7. domainmapping-webhook-cc646465c-jnwbz 1/1 Running 0 97s
  8. webhook-859796bc7-8n5g2 1/1 Running 0 96s

Configure DNS

You can configure DNS to prevent the need to run curl commands with a host header.

The following tabs expand to show instructions for configuring DNS. Follow the procedure for the DNS of your choice:

Magic DNS (sslip.io)Real DNSNo DNS

Knative provides a Kubernetes Job called default-domain that configures Knative Serving to use sslip.io as the default DNS suffix.

  1. kubectl apply -f https://github.com/knative/serving/releases/download/knative-v1.16.0/serving-default-domain.yaml

Warning

This will only work if the cluster LoadBalancer Service exposes an IPv4 address or hostname, so it will not work with IPv6 clusters or local setups like minikube unless minikube tunnel is running.

In these cases, see the “Real DNS” or “No DNS” tabs.

To configure DNS for Knative, take the External IP or CNAME from setting up networking, and configure it with your DNS provider as follows:

  • If the networking layer produced an External IP address, then configure a wildcard A record for the domain:

    1. # Here knative.example.com is the domain suffix for your cluster
    2. *.knative.example.com == A 35.233.41.212
  • If the networking layer produced a CNAME, then configure a CNAME record for the domain:

    1. # Here knative.example.com is the domain suffix for your cluster
    2. *.knative.example.com == CNAME a317a278525d111e89f272a164fd35fb-1510370581.eu-central-1.elb.amazonaws.com
  • Once your DNS provider has been configured, direct Knative to use that domain:

    1. # Replace knative.example.com with your domain suffix
    2. kubectl patch configmap/config-domain \
    3. --namespace knative-serving \
    4. --type merge \
    5. --patch '{"data":{"knative.example.com":""}}'

If you are using curl to access the sample applications, or your own Knative app, and are unable to use the “Magic DNS (sslip.io)” or “Real DNS” methods, there is a temporary approach. This is useful for those who wish to evaluate Knative without altering their DNS configuration, as per the “Real DNS” method, or cannot use the “Magic DNS” method due to using, for example, minikube locally or IPv6 clusters.

To access your application using curl using this method:

  1. Configure Knative to use a domain reachable from outside the cluster:

    1. kubectl patch configmap/config-domain \
    2. --namespace knative-serving \
    3. --type merge \
    4. --patch '{"data":{"example.com":""}}'
  2. After starting your application, get the URL of your application:

    1. kubectl get ksvc

    The output should be similar to:

    1. NAME URL LATESTCREATED LATESTREADY READY REASON
    2. helloworld-go http://helloworld-go.default.example.com helloworld-go-vqjlf helloworld-go-vqjlf True
  3. Instruct curl to connect to the External IP or CNAME defined by the networking layer mentioned in section 3, and use the -H "Host:" command-line option to specify the Knative application’s host name. For example, if the networking layer defines your External IP and port to be http://192.168.39.228:32198 and you wish to access the helloworld-go application mentioned earlier, use:

    1. curl -H "Host: helloworld-go.default.example.com" http://192.168.39.228:32198

    In the case of the provided helloworld-go sample application, using the default configuration, the output is:

    1. Hello Go Sample v1!

    Refer to the “Real DNS” method for a permanent solution.

Install optional Serving extensions

The following tabs expand to show instructions for installing each Serving extension.

HPA autoscalingKnative encryption with cert-manager

Knative also supports the use of the Kubernetes Horizontal Pod Autoscaler (HPA) for driving autoscaling decisions.

  • Install the components needed to support HPA-class autoscaling by running the command:

    1. kubectl apply -f https://github.com/knative/serving/releases/download/knative-v1.16.0/serving-hpa.yaml

Knative supports encryption features through cert-manager. Follow the documentation in Serving encryption for more information.