Kubernetes Gateway API
Kuma supports Kubernetes Gateway API for configuring built-in gateway as well as traffic routing using the experimental GAMMA routing spec.
Installation
Kubernetes doesn’t include Gateway API CRDs, install them from the standard channel CRD bundle.
Gateways
Install the counter demo.
kumactl install demo | kubectl apply -f -
Add a Gateway.
The
Gateway
resource represents the proxy instance that handles traffic for a set of Gateway API routes.Every
Gateway
refers to a GatewayClass. TheGatewayClass
represents the class ofGateway
, in this case Kuma’s builtin edge gateway, and points to a controller that should manage theseGateways
. It can also hold additional configuration.For Helm and
kumactl
installations, aGatewayClass
namedkuma
is automatically installed if the Gateway API CRDs are present.If you’ve installed Kuma some other way, you can create your own
GatewayClass
using thecontrollerName: gateways.kuma.io/controller
:apiVersion: gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: GatewayClass
metadata:
name: kuma
spec:
controllerName: gateways.kuma.io/controller
apiVersion: gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Gateway
metadata:
name: kuma
namespace: kuma-demo
spec:
gatewayClassName: kuma
listeners:
- name: proxy
port: 8080
protocol: HTTP
When a user applies a
Gateway
resource, Kuma automatically creates aDeployment
of built-in gateways with a correspondingService
.kubectl get pods -n kuma-demo
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
redis-59c9d56fc-6gcbc 2/2 Running 0 2m8s
demo-app-5845d6447b-v7npw 2/2 Running 0 2m8s
kuma-4j6wr-58998b5576-25wl6 1/1 Running 0 30s
kubectl get svc -n kuma-demo
NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
redis ClusterIP 10.43.223.223 <none> 6379/TCP 3m27s
demo-app ClusterIP 10.43.216.203 <none> 5000/TCP 3m27s
kuma-pfh4s LoadBalancer 10.43.122.93 172.20.0.3 8080:30627/TCP 87s
The
Gateway
is now accessible using the external address172.20.0.3:8080
.Add an HTTPRoute.
HTTPRoute
resources contain a set of matching criteria for HTTP requests and upstreamServices
to route those requests to.apiVersion: gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: HTTPRoute
metadata:
name: echo
namespace: kuma-demo
spec:
parentRefs:
- group: gateway.networking.k8s.io
kind: Gateway
name: kuma
namespace: kuma-demo
rules:
- backendRefs:
- kind: Service
name: demo-app
port: 5000
weight: 1
matches:
- path:
type: PathPrefix
value: /
After creating an
HTTPRoute
, accessing/
forwards a request to the demo app:curl 172.20.0.3:8080/ -i
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
x-powered-by: Express
accept-ranges: bytes
cache-control: public, max-age=0
last-modified: Tue, 20 Oct 2020 17:16:41 GMT
etag: W/"2b91-175470350a8"
content-type: text/html; charset=UTF-8
content-length: 11153
date: Fri, 18 Mar 2022 11:33:29 GMT
x-envoy-upstream-service-time: 2
server: Kuma Gateway
<html>
<head>
...
TLS termination
Gateway API supports TLS termination by using standard kubernetes.io/tls
Secrets.
Here is an example
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: secret-tls
namespace: kuma-demo
type: kubernetes.io/tls
data:
tls.crt: "MIIEOzCCAyO..." # redacted
tls.key: "MIIEowIBAAKC..." # redacted
apiVersion: gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Gateway
metadata:
name: kuma
namespace: kuma-demo
spec:
gatewayClassName: kuma
listeners:
- name: proxy
port: 8080
hostname: test.kuma.io
protocol: HTTPS
tls:
certificateRefs:
- name: secret-tls
Under the hood, Kuma CP copies the Secret
to kuma-system
namespace and converts it to Kuma secret . It tracks all the changes to the secret and deletes it upon deletion of the original secret.
Customization
Gateway API provides the parametersRef
field on GatewayClass.spec
to provide additional, implementation-specific configuration to Gateways
. When using Gateway API with Kuma, you can refer to a MeshGatewayConfig
resource:
apiVersion: gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: GatewayClass
metadata:
name: kuma
spec:
controllerName: gateways.kuma.io/controller
parametersRef:
kind: MeshGatewayConfig
group: kuma.io
name: kuma
This resource has the same structure as the MeshGatewayInstance resource except that the tags
field is optional. With a MeshGatewayConfig
you can then customize the generated Service
and Deployment
resources.
Multi-mesh
You can specify a Mesh
for Gateway
and HTTPRoute
resources by setting the kuma.io/mesh annotation Note that HTTPRoutes
must also have the annotation to reference a Gateway
from a non-default Mesh
.
Cross-mesh
Cross-mesh gateways are supported with Gateway API. You’ll just need to create a corresponding GatewayClass
pointing to a MeshGatewayConfig
that sets crossMesh: true
:
apiVersion: gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: GatewayClass
metadata:
name: kuma-cross-mesh
spec:
controllerName: gateways.kuma.io/controller
parametersRef:
group: kuma.io
kind: MeshGatewayConfig
name: default-cross-mesh
---
apiVersion: kuma.io/v1alpha1
kind: MeshGatewayConfig
metadata:
name: default-cross-mesh
spec:
crossMesh: true
and then reference it in your Gateway
:
apiVersion: gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Gateway
metadata:
name: kuma
namespace: default
spec:
gatewayClassName: kuma-cross-mesh
listeners:
- name: proxy
port: 8080
protocol: HTTP
Multi-zone Deployments
The Gateway API supports multi-zone deployments, but with some limitations:
Gateway API resources like
Gateway
,ReferenceGrant
, andHTTPRoute
must be created in non-global zones.Only services deployed within the same Kubernetes cluster, such as the
HTTPRoute
, can be referenced viabackendRef
.Important Note: This limitation exist because, Kuma currently only allows referencing as
backendRefs
Kubernetes Services.This is a temporary limitation. We’re actively working on extending backendRef to support Kuma’s MeshServices. Once this feature is complete, you’ll be able to reference services across different clusters within your mesh.
To better visualize this limitation here’s an example scenario that describes how you could configure multi-zone deployments with the Gateway API. In this example, you have the following resources:
Two zones (
zone-1
andzone-2
) in separate Kubernetes clustersGateway with listener on port
8080
deployed inzone-1
Two services:
A service named
backend
deployed in each zoneA service named
db
deployed only inzone-2
flowchart TD
subgraph c2["k8s-cluster-2"]
subgraph z2["zone-2"]
subgraph c1z2s1["Service"]
b2(backend)
end
subgraph c1z2s2["Service"]
db(db)
end
end
end
subgraph c1["k8s-cluster-1"]
subgraph z1["zone-1"]
subgraph Gateway
listener(:8080)
end
subgraph Service
b1(backend)
end
end
end
If you deploy multi-zone with Gateway API, the following will occur:
- If you create an
HTTPRoute
with abackendRef
targeting thebackend
service ink8s-cluster-1
, it will only route traffic to thebackend
service ink8s-cluster-1
.
flowchart TD
subgraph c2["k8s-cluster-2"]
subgraph z2["zone-2"]
subgraph c1z2s1["Service"]
backend2(backend)
end
subgraph c1z2s2["Service"]
db(db)
end
end
end
subgraph c1["k8s-cluster-1"]
subgraph z1["zone-1"]
subgraph Service
backend1(backend)
end
subgraph Gateway
listener(:8080)
end
subgraph HTTPRoute
route1(/)
end
route1--"❌"-->backend2
linkStyle 0 stroke:red,color:red,stroke-dasharray: 5 5;
route1-->backend1
listener-->route1
end
end
- Similarly, if you create an
HTTPRoute
with abackendRef
pointing to thedb
service ink8s-cluster-1
, it will result in aHTTPRoute
with aResolvedRefs
status condition ofBackendNotFound
because servicedb
is not present ink8s-cluster-1
.
flowchart TD
subgraph c2["k8s-cluster-2"]
subgraph z2["zone-2"]
subgraph c1z2s1["Service"]
backend2(backend)
end
subgraph c1z2s2["Service"]
db(db)
end
end
end
subgraph c1["k8s-cluster-1"]
subgraph z1["zone-1"]
subgraph Gateway
listener(:8080)
end
subgraph HTTPRoute
route1(/)
end
subgraph Service
backend1(backend)
end
route1--"❌"-->db
linkStyle 0 stroke:red,color:red,stroke-dasharray: 5 5;
listener-->route1
end
end
Service to service routing
Kuma also supports routing between services with HTTPRoute
in conformance with the GAMMA specifications.
GAMMA is a Gateway API subproject focused on mesh implementations of Gateway API and extending the Gateway API resources to mesh use cases.
The key feature of HTTPRoute
for mesh routing is specifying a Kubernetes Service
as the parentRef
, as opposed to a Gateway
. All requests to this Service
are then filtered and routed as specified in the HTTPRoute
.
apiVersion: gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: HTTPRoute
metadata:
name: canary-demo-app
namespace: kuma-demo
spec:
parentRefs:
- name: demo-app
port: 5000
kind: Service
rules:
- backendRefs:
- name: demo-app-v1
port: 5000
- name: demo-app-v2
port: 5000
The namespace of the HTTPRoute
is key. If the route’s namespace and the parentRef
’s namespace are identical, Kuma applies the route to requests from all workloads. If the route’s namespace differs from its parentRef
’s namespace, the HTTPRoute
applies only to requests from workloads in the route’s namespace.
Remember to tag your Service
ports with appProtocol: http
to use them in an HTTPRoute
!
Because of how Kuma maps resources at the moment, the combination of the HTTPRoute
s name and namespace and the parent Service
name and namespace must be no more than 249 characters.
How it works
Kuma includes controllers that reconcile Gateway API CRDs and convert them into the corresponding Kuma CRDs. This is why in the GUI, Kuma MeshGateways
/MeshHTTPRoutes
/MeshTCPRoutes
are visible and not Kubernetes Gateway API resources.
Kubernetes Gateway API resources serve as the source of truth for Kuma gateways and routes. Any edits to the corresponding Kuma resources are overwritten.