HTTP routing
The HTTPRoute resource allows you to match on HTTP traffic and direct it to Kubernetes backends. This guide shows how the HTTPRoute matches traffic on host, header, and path fields and forwards it to different Kubernetes Services.
The following diagram describes a required traffic flow across three different Services:
- Traffic to
foo.example.com/login
is forwarded tofoo-svc
- Traffic to
bar.example.com/*
with aenv: canary
header is forwarded tobar-svc-canary
- Traffic to
bar.example.com/*
without the header is forwarded tobar-svc
The dotted lines show the Gateway resources deployed to configure this routing behavior. There are two HTTPRoute resources that create routing rules on the same prod-web
Gateway. This illustrates how more than one Route can bind to a Gateway which allows Routes to merge on a Gateway as long as they don’t conflict. For more information on Route merging, refer to the HTTPRoute documentation.
In order to receive traffic from a Gateway an HTTPRoute
resource must be configured with ParentRefs
which reference the parent gateway(s) that it should be attached to. The following example shows how the combination of Gateway
and HTTPRoute
would be configured to serve HTTP traffic:
apiVersion: gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Gateway
metadata:
name: example-gateway
spec:
gatewayClassName: example-gateway-class
listeners:
- name: http
protocol: HTTP
port: 80
---
apiVersion: gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: HTTPRoute
metadata:
name: example-route
spec:
parentRefs:
- name: example-gateway
hostnames:
- "example.com"
rules:
- backendRefs:
- name: example-svc
port: 80
An HTTPRoute can match against a single set of hostnames. These hostnames are matched before any other matching within the HTTPRoute takes place. Since foo.example.com
and bar.example.com
are separate hosts with different routing requirements, each is deployed as its own HTTPRoute - foo-route
and bar-route
.
The following foo-route
will match any traffic for foo.example.com
and apply its routing rules to forward the traffic to the correct backend. Since there is only one match specified, only foo.example.com/login/*
traffic will be forwarded. Traffic to any other paths that do not begin with /login
will not be matched by this Route.
apiVersion: gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: HTTPRoute
metadata:
name: foo-route
spec:
parentRefs:
- name: example-gateway
hostnames:
- "foo.example.com"
rules:
- matches:
- path:
type: PathPrefix
value: /login
backendRefs:
- name: foo-svc
port: 8080
Similarly, the bar-route
HTTPRoute matches traffic for bar.example.com
. All traffic for this hostname will be evaluated against the routing rules. The most specific match will take precedence which means that any traffic with the env: canary
header will be forwarded to bar-svc-canary
and if the header is missing or not canary
then it’ll be forwarded to bar-svc
.
apiVersion: gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: HTTPRoute
metadata:
name: bar-route
spec:
parentRefs:
- name: example-gateway
hostnames:
- "bar.example.com"
rules:
- matches:
- headers:
- type: Exact
name: env
value: canary
backendRefs:
- name: bar-svc-canary
port: 8080
- backendRefs:
- name: bar-svc
port: 8080