IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack

Kubernetes lets you configure single-stack IPv4 networking, single-stack IPv6 networking, or dual stack networking with both network families active. This page explains how.

FEATURE STATE: Kubernetes v1.23 [stable]

IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack networking enables the allocation of both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses to Pods and Services.

IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack networking is enabled by default for your Kubernetes cluster starting in 1.21, allowing the simultaneous assignment of both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.

Supported Features

IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack on your Kubernetes cluster provides the following features:

  • Dual-stack Pod networking (a single IPv4 and IPv6 address assignment per Pod)
  • IPv4 and IPv6 enabled Services
  • Pod off-cluster egress routing (eg. the Internet) via both IPv4 and IPv6 interfaces

Prerequisites

The following prerequisites are needed in order to utilize IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack Kubernetes clusters:

  • Kubernetes 1.20 or later

    For information about using dual-stack services with earlier Kubernetes versions, refer to the documentation for that version of Kubernetes.

  • Provider support for dual-stack networking (Cloud provider or otherwise must be able to provide Kubernetes nodes with routable IPv4/IPv6 network interfaces)

  • A network plugin that supports dual-stack networking.

Configure IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack

To configure IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack, set dual-stack cluster network assignments:

  • kube-apiserver:
    • --service-cluster-ip-range=<IPv4 CIDR>,<IPv6 CIDR>
  • kube-controller-manager:
    • --cluster-cidr=<IPv4 CIDR>,<IPv6 CIDR>
    • --service-cluster-ip-range=<IPv4 CIDR>,<IPv6 CIDR>
    • --node-cidr-mask-size-ipv4|--node-cidr-mask-size-ipv6 defaults to /24 for IPv4 and /64 for IPv6
  • kube-proxy:
    • --cluster-cidr=<IPv4 CIDR>,<IPv6 CIDR>
  • kubelet:
    • --node-ip=<IPv4 IP>,<IPv6 IP>
      • This option is required for bare metal dual-stack nodes (nodes that do not define a cloud provider with the --cloud-provider flag). If you are using a cloud provider and choose to override the node IPs chosen by the cloud provider, set the --node-ip option.
      • (The legacy built-in cloud providers do not support dual-stack --node-ip.)

Note:

An example of an IPv4 CIDR: 10.244.0.0/16 (though you would supply your own address range)

An example of an IPv6 CIDR: fdXY:IJKL:MNOP:15::/64 (this shows the format but is not a valid address - see RFC 4193)

Services

You can create Services which can use IPv4, IPv6, or both.

The address family of a Service defaults to the address family of the first service cluster IP range (configured via the --service-cluster-ip-range flag to the kube-apiserver).

When you define a Service you can optionally configure it as dual stack. To specify the behavior you want, you set the .spec.ipFamilyPolicy field to one of the following values:

  • SingleStack: Single-stack service. The control plane allocates a cluster IP for the Service, using the first configured service cluster IP range.
  • PreferDualStack: Allocates both IPv4 and IPv6 cluster IPs for the Service when dual-stack is enabled. If dual-stack is not enabled or supported, it falls back to single-stack behavior.
  • RequireDualStack: Allocates Service .spec.clusterIPs from both IPv4 and IPv6 address ranges when dual-stack is enabled. If dual-stack is not enabled or supported, the Service API object creation fails.
    • Selects the .spec.clusterIP from the list of .spec.clusterIPs based on the address family of the first element in the .spec.ipFamilies array.

If you would like to define which IP family to use for single stack or define the order of IP families for dual-stack, you can choose the address families by setting an optional field, .spec.ipFamilies, on the Service.

Note:

The .spec.ipFamilies field is conditionally mutable: you can add or remove a secondary IP address family, but you cannot change the primary IP address family of an existing Service.

You can set .spec.ipFamilies to any of the following array values:

  • ["IPv4"]
  • ["IPv6"]
  • ["IPv4","IPv6"] (dual stack)
  • ["IPv6","IPv4"] (dual stack)

The first family you list is used for the legacy .spec.clusterIP field.

Dual-stack Service configuration scenarios

These examples demonstrate the behavior of various dual-stack Service configuration scenarios.

Dual-stack options on new Services

  1. This Service specification does not explicitly define .spec.ipFamilyPolicy. When you create this Service, Kubernetes assigns a cluster IP for the Service from the first configured service-cluster-ip-range and sets the .spec.ipFamilyPolicy to SingleStack. (Services without selectors and headless Services with selectors will behave in this same way.)

    1. service/networking/dual-stack-default-svc.yaml

    ``` apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: name: my-service labels:

    1. app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp

    spec: selector:

    1. app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp

    ports:

    1. - protocol: TCP
    2. port: 80
  1. ```
  1. This Service specification explicitly defines PreferDualStack in .spec.ipFamilyPolicy. When you create this Service on a dual-stack cluster, Kubernetes assigns both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses for the service. The control plane updates the .spec for the Service to record the IP address assignments. The field .spec.clusterIPs is the primary field, and contains both assigned IP addresses; .spec.clusterIP is a secondary field with its value calculated from .spec.clusterIPs.

    • For the .spec.clusterIP field, the control plane records the IP address that is from the same address family as the first service cluster IP range.
    • On a single-stack cluster, the .spec.clusterIPs and .spec.clusterIP fields both only list one address.
    • On a cluster with dual-stack enabled, specifying RequireDualStack in .spec.ipFamilyPolicy behaves the same as PreferDualStack.
    1. service/networking/dual-stack-preferred-svc.yaml

    ``` apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: name: my-service labels:

    1. app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp

    spec: ipFamilyPolicy: PreferDualStack selector:

    1. app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp

    ports:

    1. - protocol: TCP
    2. port: 80
  1. ```
  1. This Service specification explicitly defines IPv6 and IPv4 in .spec.ipFamilies as well as defining PreferDualStack in .spec.ipFamilyPolicy. When Kubernetes assigns an IPv6 and IPv4 address in .spec.clusterIPs, .spec.clusterIP is set to the IPv6 address because that is the first element in the .spec.clusterIPs array, overriding the default.

    1. service/networking/dual-stack-preferred-ipfamilies-svc.yaml

    ``` apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: name: my-service labels:

    1. app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp

    spec: ipFamilyPolicy: PreferDualStack ipFamilies:

    • IPv6
    • IPv4 selector: app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp ports:
      • protocol: TCP port: 80
  1. ```

Dual-stack defaults on existing Services

These examples demonstrate the default behavior when dual-stack is newly enabled on a cluster where Services already exist. (Upgrading an existing cluster to 1.21 or beyond will enable dual-stack.)

  1. When dual-stack is enabled on a cluster, existing Services (whether IPv4 or IPv6) are configured by the control plane to set .spec.ipFamilyPolicy to SingleStack and set .spec.ipFamilies to the address family of the existing Service. The existing Service cluster IP will be stored in .spec.clusterIPs.

    1. service/networking/dual-stack-default-svc.yaml

    ``` apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: name: my-service labels:

    1. app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp

    spec: selector:

    1. app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp

    ports:

    1. - protocol: TCP
    2. port: 80
  1. ```
  2. You can validate this behavior by using kubectl to inspect an existing service.
  3. ```
  4. kubectl get svc my-service -o yaml
  5. ```
  6. ```
  7. apiVersion: v1
  8. kind: Service
  9. metadata:
  10. labels:
  11. app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp
  12. name: my-service
  13. spec:
  14. clusterIP: 10.0.197.123
  15. clusterIPs:
  16. - 10.0.197.123
  17. ipFamilies:
  18. - IPv4
  19. ipFamilyPolicy: SingleStack
  20. ports:
  21. - port: 80
  22. protocol: TCP
  23. targetPort: 80
  24. selector:
  25. app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp
  26. type: ClusterIP
  27. status:
  28. loadBalancer: {}
  29. ```
  1. When dual-stack is enabled on a cluster, existing headless Services with selectors are configured by the control plane to set .spec.ipFamilyPolicy to SingleStack and set .spec.ipFamilies to the address family of the first service cluster IP range (configured via the --service-cluster-ip-range flag to the kube-apiserver) even though .spec.clusterIP is set to None.

    1. service/networking/dual-stack-default-svc.yaml

    ``` apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: name: my-service labels:

    1. app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp

    spec: selector:

    1. app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp

    ports:

    1. - protocol: TCP
    2. port: 80
  1. ```
  2. You can validate this behavior by using kubectl to inspect an existing headless service with selectors.
  3. ```
  4. kubectl get svc my-service -o yaml
  5. ```
  6. ```
  7. apiVersion: v1
  8. kind: Service
  9. metadata:
  10. labels:
  11. app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp
  12. name: my-service
  13. spec:
  14. clusterIP: None
  15. clusterIPs:
  16. - None
  17. ipFamilies:
  18. - IPv4
  19. ipFamilyPolicy: SingleStack
  20. ports:
  21. - port: 80
  22. protocol: TCP
  23. targetPort: 80
  24. selector:
  25. app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp
  26. ```

Switching Services between single-stack and dual-stack

Services can be changed from single-stack to dual-stack and from dual-stack to single-stack.

  1. To change a Service from single-stack to dual-stack, change .spec.ipFamilyPolicy from SingleStack to PreferDualStack or RequireDualStack as desired. When you change this Service from single-stack to dual-stack, Kubernetes assigns the missing address family so that the Service now has IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.

    Edit the Service specification updating the .spec.ipFamilyPolicy from SingleStack to PreferDualStack.

    Before:

    1. spec:
    2. ipFamilyPolicy: SingleStack

    After:

    1. spec:
    2. ipFamilyPolicy: PreferDualStack
  2. To change a Service from dual-stack to single-stack, change .spec.ipFamilyPolicy from PreferDualStack or RequireDualStack to SingleStack. When you change this Service from dual-stack to single-stack, Kubernetes retains only the first element in the .spec.clusterIPs array, and sets .spec.clusterIP to that IP address and sets .spec.ipFamilies to the address family of .spec.clusterIPs.

Headless Services without selector

For Headless Services without selectors and without .spec.ipFamilyPolicy explicitly set, the .spec.ipFamilyPolicy field defaults to RequireDualStack.

Service type LoadBalancer

To provision a dual-stack load balancer for your Service:

  • Set the .spec.type field to LoadBalancer
  • Set .spec.ipFamilyPolicy field to PreferDualStack or RequireDualStack

Note:

To use a dual-stack LoadBalancer type Service, your cloud provider must support IPv4 and IPv6 load balancers.

Egress traffic

If you want to enable egress traffic in order to reach off-cluster destinations (eg. the public Internet) from a Pod that uses non-publicly routable IPv6 addresses, you need to enable the Pod to use a publicly routed IPv6 address via a mechanism such as transparent proxying or IP masquerading. The ip-masq-agent project supports IP masquerading on dual-stack clusters.

Note:

Ensure your CNI provider supports IPv6.

Windows support

Kubernetes on Windows does not support single-stack “IPv6-only” networking. However, dual-stack IPv4/IPv6 networking for pods and nodes with single-family services is supported.

You can use IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack networking with l2bridge networks.

Note:

Overlay (VXLAN) networks on Windows do not support dual-stack networking.

You can read more about the different network modes for Windows within the Networking on Windows topic.

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