Version specific upgrade notes

Make sure to also check the general upgrade notes.

This document guides you through the process of upgrading Kuma.

First, check if a section named Upgrade to x.y.z exists, with x.y.z being the version you are planning to upgrade to.

If such a section does not exist, the upgrade you want to perform does not have any particular instructions.

Upgrade to 2.9.x

Upgrading Transparent Proxy Configuration

Removal of Deprecated IPv6 Redirection Flag and Annotation

In this release, the following deprecated options for configuring IPv6 transparent proxy redirection have been removed:

  • The --redirect-inbound-port-ipv6 flag in kumactl install transparent-proxy.
  • The kuma.io/transparent-proxying-inbound-v6-port annotation.

Previously, disabling IPv6 transparent proxy redirection could be achieved by setting these options to 0. This method is no longer supported.

To disable IPv6 transparent proxy redirection, you should now use the --ip-family-mode flag or the kuma.io/transparent-proxying-ip-family-mode annotation and set their value to ipv4. The default value for these options is dualstack.

Example:

In Universal mode, to install a transparent proxy:

  1. kumactl install transparent-proxy --ip-family-mode ipv4 ...

In the definition of the Dataplane resource:

  1. type: Dataplane
  2. mesh: default
  3. name: dp-1
  4. networking:
  5. # ...
  6. transparentProxying:
  7. redirectPortInbound: 15006
  8. redirectPortOutbound: 15001
  9. ipFamilyMode: ipv4

To set the configuration for Kubernetes workloads:

  1. kumactl install control-plane --set controlPlane.envVars.KUMA_RUNTIME_KUBERNETES_INJECTOR_SIDECAR_CONTAINER_IP_FAMILY_MODE=ipv4 ...

or

  1. helm install --set controlPlane.envVars.KUMA_RUNTIME_KUBERNETES_INJECTOR_SIDECAR_CONTAINER_IP_FAMILY_MODE=ipv4 ... kuma kuma/kuma

For more information about disabling IPv6 in transparent proxy redirection, visit our documentation: Disabling IPv6.

Please update your configurations accordingly to ensure a smooth transition and avoid any disruptions in your service.

Removal of redirectPortInboundV6 Field from Dataplane Resource

The Dataplane resource no longer includes the redirectPortInboundV6 field. Any configuration containing this field will fail validation. Update your Dataplane resources as shown below:

Previous configuration:

  1. type: Dataplane
  2. mesh: default
  3. name: dp-1
  4. networking:
  5. # ...
  6. transparentProxying:
  7. redirectPortInbound: 15006
  8. redirectPortInboundV6: 15006
  9. redirectPortOutbound: 15001

Updated configuration:

  1. type: Dataplane
  2. mesh: default
  3. name: dp-1
  4. networking:
  5. # ...
  6. transparentProxying:
  7. redirectPortInbound: 15006
  8. redirectPortOutbound: 15001

Ensure to update your Dataplane resources to the new format to avoid any validation errors.

Removal of Deprecated Exclude Outbound TCP/UDP Ports for UIDs Flags

The flags --exclude-outbound-tcp-ports-for-uids and --exclude-outbound-udp-ports-for-uids have been removed from the kumactl install transparent-proxy command. Users should now use the consolidated flag --exclude-outbound-ports-for-uids <protocol:>?<ports:>?<uids> instead.

Examples:
  • To disable redirection of outbound TCP traffic on port 22 for users with UID 1000:

    1. kumactl install transparent-proxy --exclude-outbound-ports-for-uids tcp:22:1000 ...
  • To disable redirection of outbound UDP traffic on port 53 for users with UID 1000:

    1. kumactl install transparent-proxy --exclude-outbound-ports-for-uids udp:53:1000 ...

Removal of Deprecated Exclude Outbound TCP/UDP Ports for UIDs Annotations

The annotations traffic.kuma.io/exclude-outbound-tcp-ports-for-uids and traffic.kuma.io/exclude-outbound-udp-ports-for-uids have also been removed. Use the annotation traffic.kuma.io/exclude-outbound-ports-for-uids instead.

Examples:
  • To disable redirection of outbound TCP traffic on port 22 for users with UID 1000:

    1. traffic.kuma.io/exclude-outbound-ports-for-uids: tcp:22:1000
  • To disable redirection of outbound UDP traffic on port 53 for users with UID 1000:

    1. traffic.kuma.io/exclude-outbound-ports-for-uids: udp:53:1000

Make sure to update your configuration files and scripts accordingly to accommodate these changes.

Deprecation of --kuma-dp-uid Flag

In this release, the --kuma-dp-uid flag used in the kumactl install transparent-proxy command has been deprecated. The functionality of specifying a user by UID is now included in the --kuma-dp-user flag, which accepts both usernames and UIDs.

New Usage Example:

Instead of using:

  1. kumactl install transparent-proxy --kuma-dp-uid 1234

You should now use:

  1. kumactl install transparent-proxy --kuma-dp-user 1234

If the --kuma-dp-user flag is not provided, the system will attempt to use the default UID (5678) or the default username (kuma-dp).

Please update your scripts and configurations accordingly to accommodate this change.

Setting kuma.io/service in tags of MeshGatewayInstance had been forbidden

To increase security, in version 2.7.x, setting a kuma.io/service tag for the MeshGatewayInstance was deprecated and since 2.9.x is not supported. We generate the kuma.io/service tag based on the MeshGatewayInstance resource. The service name is constructed as {MeshGatewayInstance name}_{MeshGatewayInstance namespace}_svc.

E.g.:

  1. apiVersion: kuma.io/v1alpha1
  2. kind: MeshGatewayInstance
  3. metadata:
  4. name: demo-app
  5. namespace: kuma-demo
  6. labels:
  7. kuma.io/mesh: default

The generated kuma.io/service value is demo-app_kuma-demo_svc.

Migration

The migration process requires updating all policies and MeshGateway resources using the old kuma.io/service value to adopt the new one.

Migration step:

  1. Create a copy of policies using the new kuma.io/service and the new resource name to avoid overwriting previous policies.
  2. Duplicate the MeshGateway resource with a selector using the new kuma.io/service value.
  3. Deploy the gateway and verify if traffic works correctly.
  4. Remove the old resources.

Introduction to Application Probe Proxy and deprecation of Virtual Probes

To support more types of application probes on Kubernetes, in version 2.9, we introduced a new feature named “Application Probe Proxy” which supports HTTP Get, TCP Socket and gRPC application probes. Starting from 2.9.x, Virtual Probes is deprecated, and Application Probe Proxy is enabled by default.

Application workloads using Virtual Probes will be migrated to Application Probe Proxy automatically on next restart/redeploy on Kubernetes, without other operations.

Application Probe Proxy will by default listen on port 9001. If you’d customized the Virtual Probes port, you might also want to customize the port of Application Probe Proxy. You may do so using one of these methods:

  1. Configuring on the control plane to apply on all dataplanes: set the port onto configuration key runtime.kubernetes.injector.sidecarContainer.applicationProbeProxyPort
  2. Configuring on the control plane to apply on all dataplanes: set the port using environment variable KUMA_RUNTIME_KUBERNETES_APPLICATION_PROBE_PROXY_PORT
  3. Configuring for certain dataplanes: set the port using pod annotation kuma.io/application-probe-proxy-port

By setting the port to 0, Application Probe Proxy feature will be disabled.

When the Application Probe Proxy is disabled, Virtual Probes still works as usual before Virtual Probes is removed.

Because of deprecation of Virtual Probes, the following items are considered deprecated:

  • Pod annotation kuma.io/virtual-probes
  • Pod annotation kuma.io/virtual-probes-port
  • Control plane configuration key runtime.kubernetes.injector.sidecarContainer.virtualProbesEnabled
  • Control plane configuration key runtime.kubernetes.injector.sidecarContainer.virtualProbesPort
  • Control plane environment variable KUMA_RUNTIME_KUBERNETES_VIRTUAL_PROBES_ENABLED
  • Control plane environment variable KUMA_RUNTIME_KUBERNETES_VIRTUAL_PROBES_PORT
  • Data field probes on Dataplane objects

kumactl

Default prometheus scrape config removes service

If you rely on a scrape config from previous version it’s advised to remove the relabel config that was adding service. Indeed service is a very common label and metrics were sometimes coliding with Kuma metrics. If you want the label kuma_io_service is always the same as service.

Removal of KDS KUMA_EXPERIMENTAL_KDS_DELTA_ENABLED configuration option

In this release, KDS Delta is used by default and the CP environment variable KUMA_EXPERIMENTAL_KDS_DELTA_ENABLED doesn’t exist anymore.

Upgrade to 2.8.x

MeshFaultInjection responseBandwidth.limit

With #10371 we have tightened the validation of the responseBandwidth.limit field in MeshFaultInjection policy. Policies with invalid values, such as -10kbps, will be rejected.

MeshRetry tcp.MaxConnectAttempt

With #10250 MeshRetry policies with spec.tcp.MaxConnectAttempt=0 will be rejected. Prior to 2.8.x these were semantically valid but would create invalid Envoy configuration and would cause issues on the dataplane. Now this is rejected sooner to avoid service disruption.

Removal of legacy tokens

Tokens issued from versions before 2.1.x needs to renewed before upgrading.

If you observe following log in control-plane logs, please rotate your tokens before upgrade.

  1. [WARNING] Using token with KID header, you should rotate this token as it will not be valid in future versions of Kuma

Upgrade to 2.7.x

MeshMetric and cluster stats merging

For MeshMetric we disabled cluster stats merging so that metrics are generated per traffic split. This means that in Grafana there will be at least two entries under “Destination service” - one for the service without a hash (e.g. backend_kuma-demo_svc_3001) and one per each split ending with a hash (e.g. backend_kuma-demo_svc_3001-de1397ec09e96dfb). If you want to see combined metrics you can run queries with a prefix instead of exact match, e.g.:

  1. ... envoy_cluster_name=~"$destination_cluster.*" ...

instead of

  1. ... envoy_cluster_name="$destination_cluster" ...

To correlate between a hash and a particular pod you have to click on the outbound, and then click on “clusters” and associate pod ip with cluster ip. This will be improved in the future by having the tags next to the outbound. This issue tracks the progress of that as well as contains screenshots of the steps.

MeshMetric sidecar.regex is replaced by sidecar.profiles.exclude

If you’re using sidecar.regex field it is getting replaced by sidecar.profiles.exclude. Replace usages of:

  1. ...
  2. sidecar:
  3. regex: "my_match.*"
  4. ...

with:

  1. sidecar:
  2. profiles:
  3. exclude:
  4. - type: Regex
  5. match: "my_match.*"

Setting kuma.io/service in tags of MeshGatewayInstance is deprecated

To increase security, since version 2.7.x, setting a kuma.io/service tag for the MeshGatewayInstance is deprecated. If the tag is not provided, we generate the kuma.io/service tag based on the MeshGatewayInstance resource. The service name is constructed as {MeshGatewayInstance name}_{MeshGatewayInstance namespace}_svc.

E.g.:

  1. apiVersion: kuma.io/v1alpha1
  2. kind: MeshGatewayInstance
  3. metadata:
  4. name: demo-app
  5. namespace: kuma-demo
  6. labels:
  7. kuma.io/mesh: default

The generated kuma.io/service value is demo-app_kuma-demo_svc.

Migration

The migration process requires updating all policies and MeshGateway resources using the old kuma.io/service value to adopt the new one.

Migration step:

  1. Create a copy of policies using the new kuma.io/service and the new resource name to avoid overwriting previous policies.
  2. Duplicate the MeshGateway resource with a selector using the new kuma.io/service value.
  3. Deploy the gateway and verify if traffic works correctly.
  4. Remove the old resources.

ZoneIngress Token support removed

The control-plane does not support tokens generated with kumactl generate zone-ingress-token. If you are running Kuma ingress with a zone ingress token generated using the deprecated method, before upgrading, verify if you are still using the old token.

How to validate if I am using zone-ingress-token?

  1. Obtain the ingress token value
  2. Run the following command

    1. jq -R 'split(".") | .[0],.[1] | @base64d | fromjson' <<< $YOUR_TOKEN

Example output of a zone token:

  1. {
  2. "alg": "RS256",
  3. "kid": "1",
  4. "typ": "JWT"
  5. }
  6. {
  7. "Zone": "test",
  8. "Scope": [
  9. "ingress",
  10. "egress",
  11. "cp",
  12. "ratelimit"
  13. ],
  14. "exp": 1712414035,
  15. "nbf": 1709821735,
  16. "iat": 1709822035,
  17. "jti": "efeb8cca-2341-47a4-b4f2-daf49290e481"
  18. }

Example output of a zone ingress token:

  1. {
  2. "alg": "RS256",
  3. "kid": "1",
  4. "typ": "JWT"
  5. }
  6. {
  7. "Zone": "test",
  8. "exp": 1709822002,
  9. "nbf": 1709821702,
  10. "iat": 1709822002,
  11. "jti": "c4cf30c5-ca30-42ec-b08d-de56fba75e7b"
  12. }
  1. If the output does not have the Scope field, you need to generate a new zone token using kumactl generate zone-token for your ingress before upgrading.
  2. Restart the Ingress with the new token.
  3. Now, you can safely upgrade the control-plane.

Configuration option KUMA_DP_SERVER_AUTH_*, dpServer.auth.* was removed

The option to configure authentication was deprecated and has been removed in release 2.7.x. If you are still using KUMA_DP_SERVER_AUTH_* environment variables or dpServer.auth.* configuration, please migrate your configuration to use dpServer.authn before upgrade.

Deprecation of --redirect-inbound-port-v6 flag and runtime.kubernetes.injector.sidecarContainer.redirectPortInboundV6 configuration option.

The --redirect-inbound-port-v6 flag and the corresponding configuration option runtime.kubernetes.injector.sidecarContainer.redirectPortInboundV6 are deprecated and will be removed in a future release of Kuma. These flags and configuration options were used to configure the port used for redirecting IPv6 traffic to Kuma.

In the upcoming release, Kuma will redirect IPv6 traffic to the same port as IPv4 traffic (15006). This means that you no longer need to configure a separate port for IPv6 traffic. If you want to disable traffic redirection for IPv6 traffic, you can set --ip-family-mode ipv4. We have also added a new configuration option runtime.kubernetes.injector.sidecarContainer.ipFamilyMode to switch traffic redirection for IP families.

We recommend that you update your configurations to use the new defaults for IPv6 traffic redirection. If you need to retain separate ports for IPv4 and IPv6 traffic, you can continue to use the deprecated flags and configuration options until they are removed.

Deprecation of ‘from[].targetRef.kind: MeshService’

At this moment only MeshTrafficPermission and MeshFaultInjection allowed MeshService in the from[].targetRef.kind. Starting 2.7 this value is deprecated, instead the MeshSubset with kuma.io/service tag should be used. For example, instead of:

  1. type: MeshTrafficPermission
  2. name: allow-orders
  3. mesh: default
  4. spec:
  5. targetRef:
  6. kind: Mesh
  7. from:
  8. - targetRef:
  9. kind: MeshService
  10. name: orders
  11. default:
  12. action: Allow

we should have:

  1. type: MeshTrafficPermission
  2. name: allow-orders
  3. mesh: default
  4. spec:
  5. targetRef:
  6. kind: Mesh
  7. from:
  8. - targetRef:
  9. kind: MeshSubset
  10. tags:
  11. kuma.io/service: orders
  12. default:
  13. action: Allow

Change in internal resources with Kubernetes Gateway API

This section describes changes to internal resources used by Kuma when configuring the built-in gateway using the Kubernetes Gateway API.

Prior Behavior (Before Kuma 2.7.0):

  • Applying a Gateway resource resulted in the creation of corresponding MeshGateway and MeshGatewayInstance resources.
  • An applied HTTPRoute resource was converted to a MeshGatewayRoute resource.

Changes Introduced in Kuma 2.7.0:

  • HTTPRoute resources are now converted to MeshHTTPRoute resources instead of MeshGatewayRoute resources.

Upgrade Impact:

  • Existing MeshGatewayRoute resources automatically created from HTTPRoute definitions will be deleted during the upgrade.
  • New MeshHTTPRoute resources will be created to replace the deleted ones.

Important Note:

This change is transparent with regard to the generated Envoy configuration. There should be no impact on existing traffic routing.

Gateway API Promotion to GA

The Gateway API functionality within Kuma is now considered Generally Available (GA). This means the --experimental-gatewayapi flag and the experimental.gatewayAPI setting are no longer required for installation.

[!WARNING] If you previously used the --experimental-gatewayapi flag with kumactl install control-plane in your workflows, it’s important to note that this flag has been removed and is no longer supported. Using it will now result in an error.

Removed Flags and Settings

Previously, these flags were necessary for using the Gateway API feature:

  • --experimental-gatewayapi flag for kumactl install control-plane and kumactl install crds
  • experimental.gatewayAPI=true setting in both kumactl install control-plane and Helm charts

TLS Secrets with Gateway API in namespace other than mesh system namespace

If you use TLS secrets with Gateway API for a builtin gateway deployed in any other namespace than mesh system namespace, set controlPlane.supportGatewaySecretsInAllNamespaces HELM value to true. This change was introduced so that control plane does not have capability to read content of secrets in all namespaces by default.

Upgrade to 2.6.x

Policy

Sorting

This change relates only to the new targetRef policies. When 2 policies have a tie on the targetRef kind we compare their names lexicographically. Policy merging now gives precedence to policies that lexicographically “less” than other policies, i.e. policy “aaa” takes precedence over “bbb” because “aaa” < “bbb”. Previously, before 2.6.0 the order was the opposite.

targetRef.kind: MeshGateway

Note that when targeting MeshGateways you should be using targetRef.kind: MeshGateway. Previously targetRef.kind: MeshService was necessary but this left the control plane unable to fully validate policies for builtin gateway usage.

to instead of from

With MeshFaultInjection and MeshRateLimit, spec.to with kind: MeshGateway is now required instead of spec.from and kind: MeshService.

MeshGateway

A new maximum length of 253 characters for listener hostnames has been introduced in order to ensure they are valid DNS names.

Unifying Default Connection Timeout Values

To simplify configuration and provide a more consistent user experience, we’ve unified the default connection timeout values. When no MeshTimeout or Timeout policy is specified, the connection timeout will now be the same as the default connectTimeout values for MeshTimeout and Timeout policies. This value is now 5s, which is a decrease from the previous default of 10s.

The connection timeout specifies the amount of time Envoy will wait for an upstream TCP connection to be established.

The only users who need to take action are those who are explicitly relying on the previous default connection timeout value of 10s. These users will need to create a new MeshTimeout policy with the appropriate connectTimeout value to maintain their desired behavior.

We encourage all users to review their configuration, but we do not anticipate that this change will require any action for most users.

Default TrafficRoute and TrafficPermission resources are not created when creating a new Mesh

We decided to remove default TrafficRoute and TrafficPermission policies that were created during a new mesh creation. Since this release your applications can communicate without need to apply any policy by default. If you want to keep the previous behaviour set KUMA_DEFAULTS_CREATE_MESH_ROUTING_RESOURCES to true.

The following policies will no longer be created automatically:

  • CircuitBreaker
  • Retry
  • Timeout
  • TrafficPermission
  • TrafficRoute

The following policies will be created by default:

  • MeshCircuitBreaker
  • MeshRetry
  • MeshTimeout

[!CAUTION] Before enabling mTLS, remember to add MeshTrafficPermission.

Previously, Kuma would automatically create the default TrafficPermission policy for traffic routing. However, starting from version 2.6.0, this is no longer the case.

If you are using mTLS, you will need to manually create the MeshTrafficPermission policy before enabling mTLS.

The MeshTrafficPermission policy allows you to specify which services can communicate with each other. This is necessary in a mTLS environment because mTLS requires that all communication between services be authenticated and authorized.

When is it appropriate to set the KUMA_DEFAULTS_CREATE_MESH_ROUTING_RESOURCES environment variable to true?

  • When zones connecting to the global control plane may be running an older version than 2.6.0.
  • When recreating an environment using continuous delivery (CD) with legacy policies, missing the TrafficRoute policy will prevent legacy policies from being applied.

Change of underlying envoy RBAC plugin for MeshTrafficPermission policies targeting HTTP services

With the release of Kuma 2.6.0, we’ve made some changes to the implementation of MeshTrafficPermission policies targeting HTTP services. These changes primarily revolve around the use of the envoy.filters.http.rbac envoy filter instead of the envoy.filters.network.rbac filter. This migration entails the following adjustments:

  1. Denied Request Response: Rejected requests will now receive a 403 response code with the message RBAC: access denied instead of the previous 503 code. This aligns with the typical HTTP response code for authorization failures.

  2. RBAC-Related Envoy Stats: The prefix for RBAC-related Envoy stats has been updated from <inbound|outbound>:<stat_prefix>.rbac. to http.<stat_prefix>.rbac.. This reflects the use of the HTTP filter for RBAC enforcement. For instance, the stat inbound:127.0.0.1:21011.rbac.allowed will now become http.127.0.0.1:21011.rbac.allowed. If you’re utilizing these stats in your observability stack, you’ll need to update your configuration to reflect the change.

To ensure a smooth transition to Kuma 2.6.0, carefully review your existing configuration files and make necessary adjustments related to denied request responses and RBAC-related Envoy stats.

Make SI format valid for bandwidth in MeshFaultInjection policy

Prior to this upgrade mbps and gbps were used for units for parameter conf.responseBandwidth.percentage. These are not valid units according to the International System of Units they are respectively corrected to Gbps and Mbps if using these invalid units convert them into kbps prior to upgrade to avoid invalid format.

Deprecation of postgres driverName=postgres (lib/pq)

The postgres driver postgres (lib/pq) is deprecated and will be removed in the future. Please migrate to the new postgres driver pgx by setting DriverName=pgx configuration option or KUMA_STORE_POSTGRES_DRIVER_NAME=pgx env variable.

Upgrade to 2.5.x

Transparent-proxy and CNI v1 removal

v2 has been default since 2.2.x. We are therefore removing v1.

Deprecated argument to transparent-proxy

Parameters --exclude-outbound-tcp-ports-for-uids and --exclude-outbound-udp-ports-for-uids are now merged into --exclude-outbound-ports-for-uids for kumactl install transparent-proxy. We’ve also added the matching Kubernetes annotation: traffic.kuma.io/exclude-outbound-ports-for-uids. The previous versions will still work but will be removed in the future.

More strict validation rules for resource names

In order to be compatible with Kubernetes naming policy we updated the validation rules. Old rule:

Valid characters are numbers, lowercase latin letters and ‘-‘, ‘_’ symbols.

New rule:

A lowercase RFC 1123 subdomain must consist of lower case alphanumeric characters, ‘-‘ or ‘.’, and must start and end with an alphanumeric character

New rule is applied for CREATE operations. The old rule is still applied for UPDATE, but this is going to change in Kuma 2.7.x or later.

API

overview API coherency

These endpoints are getting replaced to achieve more coherency on the API:

  • /meshes/{mesh}/zoneegressoverviews moves to /meshes/{mesh}/zoneegresses/_overview
  • /meshes/{mesh}/zoneingresses+insights moves to /meshes/{mesh}/zone-ingresses/_overview
  • /meshes/{mesh}/dataplanes+insights moves to /meshes/{mesh}/dataplanes/_overview
  • /zones+insights moves to /zones/_overview

While you can use the old API they will be removed in a future version

Prometheus inbound listener is not secured by TrafficPermission anymore

Due to the shadowing issue with old TrafficPermission it was quite impossible to protect Prometheus inbound listener as expected. RBAC rules on the Prometheus inbound listener were blocking users from fully migrate to the new MeshTrafficPermission policy. That’s why we decided to discontinue TrafficPermission support on the Prometheus inbound listener starting 2.5.x.

Gateway API

We support v1 resources and v1.0.0 of gateway-api. v1beta1 resources are still supported but support for these WILL be removed in a future release.

KDS Delta enabled by default

KDS Delta is enabled by default. You can fallback to SOTW KDS by setting KUMA_EXPERIMENTAL_KDS_DELTA_ENABLED=false. As a side effect, on kubernetes policies synced will be persisted in the kuma-system namespace instead of default.

Upgrade to 2.4.x

Configuration change

The configuration: Metrics.Mesh.MinResyncTimeout and Metrics.Mesh.MaxResyncTimeout are replaced by Metrics.Mesh.MinResyncInterval and Metrics.Mesh.FullResyncInterval. You can still use the current configs but it will be removed in the future.

Breaking changes

Removal of service field in Dataplane outbound

After a period of depreciation, the service field in now removed. The service name is only defined by the value of kuma.io/service in the outbound tags field.

Upgrade to 2.3.x

Breaking changes

MeshHTTPRoute

  • Changed path match type from Prefix to PathPrefix

MeshAccessLog

MeshTrace

kumactl container image

  • Changed image’s entrypoint to /usr/bin/kumactl

This change was introduced to be consistent with kuma-cp and kuma-dp images, where names of images refer to binaries set in entrypoint.

Example valid before:

  1. docker run kumahq/kumactl:2.2.1 kumactl install transparent-proxy --help

Equivalent example valid now:

  1. docker run kumahq/kumactl:2.3.0 install transparent-proxy --help

TLS verification between Zone CP and Global CP

If the CA used to sign the Global CP sync server is not provided to a Zone CP (HELM controlPlane.tls.kdsZoneClient, ENV: KUMA_MULTIZONE_ZONE_KDS_ROOT_CA_FILE), and the certificate is signed by a CA that is not included in the system’s CA bundle on the Zone CP machine, you must do one of the following:

Removal of Common Name from generated certificates

This only affects users who rely on generated certificates having a common name set.

  • kumactl generate tls-certificate generates certificates without CN
  • autogenerated TLS certificate for kuma-cp (when general.tlsCertFile is not provided) won’t have CN

Upgrade to 2.2.x

Universal

CentOS 7

We are dropping support for running Envoy on CentOS 7 with this release and will not release CentOS 7 compatible Envoy builds.

Changed default postgres driver to pgx

  • If you encounter any problems with the persistence layer please submit an issue and temporarily switch to the previous driver (lib/pq) by setting DriverName=postgres configuration option or KUMA_STORE_POSTGRES_DRIVER_NAME='postgres' env variable.
  • Several configuration settings are not supported by the new driver right now, if used to configure them please try running with new defaults or submit an issue. List of unsupported configuration options:
    • MaxIdleConnections (used in store)
    • MinReconnectInterval (used in events listener)
    • MaxReconnectInterval (used in events listener)

Longer name of the resource in postgres

Kuma now permits the creation of a resource with a name of up to 253 characters, which is an increase from the previous limit of 100 characters. This adjustment brings our system in line with the naming convention supported by Kubernetes. This change requires to run kuma-cp migrate up to apply changes to the postgres database.

K8s

Removed deprecated annotations

  • kuma.io/builtindns and kuma.io/builtindnsport are removed in favour of kuma.io/builtin-dns and kuma.io/builtin-dns-port introduced in 1.8.0. If you are using the legacy CNI you main need to set these old annotations manually in your pod definition.
  • kuma.io/sidecar-injection is no longer supported as an annotation, you should use it as a label.

Helm

All containers now have defaults for resources.requests.{cpu,memory} and resources.limits.{memory}. There are new default values for *.podSecurityContext and *.containerSecurityContext, see values.yaml.

Gateway API

We now support version v0.6.0 of the Gateway API. See the upstream API changes for more info.

Auth configuration of DP server in Kuma CP

dpServer.auth configuration of Kuma CP was deprecated. You can still set config in this section, but it will be removed in the future. It’s recommended to migrate to dpServer.authn if you explicitly set any of the configuration in this config section.

  • dpServer.auth.type is now split into two: dpServer.authn.dpProxy.type and dpServer.authn.zoneProxy.type and is still autoconfigured based on the environment.
  • dpServer.auth.useTokenPath is now dpServer.authn.enableReloadableTokens

Transparent Proxy Engine v2 and CNI v2 as default

As they matured, in the upcoming release Kuma will by default use transparent proxy engine v2 and CNI v2.

If you want to still use v1 versions of these components, you will have to install Kuma with provided legacy.transparentProxy=true or legacy.cni.enabled=true options.

Examples

CNI

Helm

  1. helm upgrade --install --create-namespace --namespace kuma-system \
  2. --set "legacy.cni.enabled=true" \
  3. --set "cni.enabled=true" \
  4. --set "cni.chained=true" \
  5. --set "cni.netDir=/etc/cni/net.d" \
  6. --set "cni.binDir=/opt/cni/bin" \
  7. --set "cni.confName=10-calico.conflist"
  8. kuma kuma/kuma

kumactl

  1. kumactl install control-plane \
  2. --set "legacy.cni.enabled=true" \
  3. --set "cni.enabled=true" \
  4. --set "cni.chained=true" \
  5. --set "cni.netDir=/etc/cni/net.d" \
  6. --set "cni.binDir=/opt/cni/bin" \
  7. --set "cni.confName=10-calico.conflist" \
  8. | kubectl apply -f-
Transparent Proxy Engine

Helm

  1. helm upgrade --install --create-namespace --namespace kuma-system \
  2. --set "legacy.transparentProxy=true" kuma kuma/kuma

kumactl

  1. kumactl install control-plane --set "legacy.transparentProxy=true" | kubectl apply -f-

Removal of deprecated options to reach applications bound to localhost

The deprecated options KUMA_DEFAULTS_ENABLE_LOCALHOST_INBOUND_CLUSTERS and defaults.enableLocalhostInboundClusters were removed.

This change affects only applications using transparent proxy.

Applications that are binding to localhost won’t be reachable anymore. This is the default behaviour from Kuma 1.8.0. Until now, it was possible to set a deprecated kuma-cp configurations KUMA_DEFAULTS_ENABLE_LOCALHOST_INBOUND_CLUSTERS or defaults.enableLocalhostInboundClusters to true, which was allowing to still reach these applications.

One of the options to upgrade change address which the application is listening on, to 0.0.0.0. Other option is to define dataplane.networking.inbound[].serviceAddress to the address which service is binding to.

Upgrade to 2.1.x

Breaking changes

Naming Serviceless dataplanes has changed

Currently, the kuma.io/service value of the inbound of a Dataplane generated for a Pod without a Service is based on the Pod name. The Kuma CP takes the pod’s name and removes 2 last elements after splitting by -. This behavior is correct when the Pod is owned by a Deployment or CronJob but not for other owner kinds. Kuma will now use the name of the owner resource as the kuma.io/service value. Before upgrade:

  1. Identify all Serviceless Pods that are not managed by a Deployment or CronJob.
  2. Create copies of policies that were created for the services corresponding to these Pods. The kuma.io/service value is the name of the owner resource. If there is no owner, Kuma uses the Pod’s name.

This breaking change is required to provide correct naming. The previous behavior could produce the same kuma.io/service value of the inbound of a Dataplane for many different serviceless Dataplanes.

MeshTrafficPermission

Action value have switched to PascalCase. ALLOW is Allow, DENY is Deny and ALLOW_WITH_SHADOW_DENY is AllowWithShadowDeny.

HTTP api

We’ve removed the deprecated endpoint POST /tokens, use the POST /tokens/dataplane endpoint instead (same request and response). Make sure you are using a recent kumactl or that you use the right path if using the API directly to upgrade with no issues.

Kubernetes

The sidecar container is always injected first (since #5436). This should only impact you when modifying the sidecar container with a container-patch. If you do so, upgrade Kuma and then change your container patch to modify the right container.

This version changes the leader election mechanism from leader for life to the more robust leader with lease. As the result, during the upgrade you may have two leaders in the cluster. This should not impact the system in any significant way other than logs like resource was already updated.

Kumactl

--valid-for must be set for all token types, before it was defaulting to 10 years.

Upgrade to 2.0.x

Built-in gateway

If you’re using the PREFIX path match for MeshGatewayRoute, note that validation is now stricter. If you try to update an existing MeshGatewayRoute or create a new one, make sure your PREFIX matching value does not include a trailing slash. All prefix matches are checked path-separated, meaning that /prefix only matches if the request’s path is /prefix or begins with /prefix/. This has always been the case, so no behavior has been changed and existing resources with a trailing slash are not affected.

Universal

A lib/pq change enables SNI by default when connecting to Postgres over TLS. Either make sure your certificates contain a valid CN or SANs for the hostname you’re using or update to 2.0.1 and disable sslsni by setting the KUMA_STORE_POSTGRES_TLS_DISABLE_SSLSNI environment variable or store.postgres.tls.disableSSLSNI in the config to true.

kuma-prometheus-sd

This component has been removed after a long period of deprecation.

Zone Ingress Token migration

This is only relevant to Multizone deployment with Universal zones. Zone Token that was previously used for authenticating Zone Egress, can now be used to authenticate Zone Ingress. Please regenerate Zone Ingress token using kumactl generate zone-token --scope=ingress. For the time being you can still use the old Zone Ingress token and Zone Token with scope ingress. However, Zone Ingress Token is now deprecated and will be removed in the future.

Helm

ingress.annotations and egress.annotations are deprecated in favour of ingress.podAnnotations and egress.podAnnotations which is a better name and aligne with the existing controlPlane.podAnnoations.

Kuma-cp

  • By default, the minimum TLS version allowed on servers is TLSv1.2. If you require using TLS < 1.2 you can set KUMA_GENERAL_TLS_MIN_VERSION.
  • KUMA_MONITORING_ASSIGNMENT_SERVER_GRPC_PORT was removed after a long deprecation period use KUMA_MONITORING_ASSIGNMENT_SERVER_PORT instead.

gRPC metrics

With this release, emitting separate statistics for every gRPC method is disabled. gRPC metrics from different methods are now aggregated under envoy_cluster_grpc_request_message_count. It will be re-enabled again in the future once Envoy with replace_dots_in_grpc_service_name feature is released. If you need to enable this setting, you can use ProxyTemplate to patch envoy.filters.http.grpc_stats http filter.

Upgrade to 1.8.x

Kumactl

  • kumactl inspect dataplane --config-dump was deprecated in favour of kumactl inspect dataplane --type config-dump. The behaviour of the new flag is unchanged but you should migrate.
  • kumactl install transparent-proxy --skip-resolv-conf was deprecated as there’s no reason for us to update the /etc/resolv.conf of the user.
  • kumactl install transparent-proxy --kuma-cp-ip was removed as it’s not possible to run a DNS server on the cp.

Helm

  • Under cni.image, the default values for repository and registry have been changed to agree with the other image values.

CP

  • The /versions endpoint was removed. This is not something that was reliable enough and version compatibility is checked inside the DP
  • We are deprecating kuma.io/builtindns and kuma.io/builtindnsport annotations in favour of the clearer kuma.io/builtin-dns and kuma.io/builtin-dns-port. The behavior of the new annotations is unchanged but you should migrate (a warning is present on the log if you are using the deprecated version).
  • By default, applications binding to localhost are not reachable anymore. A Dataplane inbound’s default serviceAddress is now the inbound’s address. Before upgrade, if you have applications listening on localhost that you want to expose on:
    • Kubernetes: listen on 0.0.0.0 instead
    • Universal: listen on inbound.address instead or set dataplane.networking.inbound[].serviceAddress: "127.0.0.1" To make migration easier you can temporarily disable this new behavior by setting KUMA_DEFAULTS_ENABLE_LOCALHOST_INBOUND_CLUSTERS=true on kuma-cp, this option will be removed in a future version.

Upgrade to 1.7.x

Kumactl

  • We’re deprecating kumactl install metrics/tracing/logging, please use kumactl install observability instead

DNS

The control-plane no longer hosts a builtin DNS server. You should always rely on the embedded DNS in the dataplane proxy and VIPs can’t be used without transparent proxy.

Timeout policy

‘grpc’ section is deprecated. Timeouts for HTTP, HTTP2 and GRPC should be set in ‘http’ section:

  1. tcp:
  2. idleTimeout: 1h
  3. http: # http, http2, grpc
  4. requestTimeout: 15s
  5. idleTimeout: 1h
  6. streamIdleTimeout: 30m
  7. maxStreamDuration: 0s
  8. grpc: # DEPRECATED
  9. streamIdleTimeout: 30m # DEPRECATED, use 'http.streamIdleTimeout'
  10. maxStreamDuration: 0s # DEPRECATED, use 'http.maxStreamDuration'

Upgrade to 1.6.x

Helm

  • the Helm chart for this release requires at least Helm version 3.8.0.
  • controlPlane.resources is now on object instead of a string. Any existing value should be adapted accordingly.

Zone egress and ExternalService

When an ExternalService has the tag kuma.io/zone and ZoneEgress is enabled then the request flow will be different after upgrading Kuma to the newest version. Previously, the request to the ExternalService goes through the ZoneEgress in the current zone. The newest version flow is different, and when ExternalService is defined in a different zone then the request will go through local ZoneEgress to ZoneIngress in zone where ExternalService is defined and leave the cluster through ZoneEgress in this cluster. To keep previous behavior, remove the kuma.io/zone tag from the ExternalService definition.

Zone egress

Previously, when mTLS was configured and ZoneEgress deployed, requests were routed automatically through ZoneEgress. Now it’s required to explicitly set that traffic should be routed through ZoneEgress by setting Mesh configuration property routing.zoneEgress: true. The default value of the property is set to false so in case your network policies don’t allow you to reach other external services/zone without using ZoneEgress, set routing.zoneEgress: true.

  1. type: Mesh
  2. name: default
  3. mtls: # mTLS is required for zoneEgress
  4. [...]
  5. routing:
  6. zoneEgress: true

The new approach changes the flow of requests to external services. Previously when there was no instance of ZoneEgress traffic was routed directly to the destination, now it won’t reach the destination.

Gateway (experimental)

Previously, a MeshGatewayInstance generated a Deployment and Service whose names ended with a unique suffix. With this release, those objects will have the same name as the MeshGatewayInstance.

Inspect API

In connection with the changes around MeshGateway and MeshGatewayRoute, the output schema of the <policy-type>/<policy>/dataplanes has changed. Every policy can now affect both normal Dataplanes and Dataplanes configured as builtin gateways. The configuration for the latter type is done via MeshGateway resources.

Every item in the items array now has a kind property of either:

  • SidecarDataplane: a normal Dataplane with outbounds, inbounds, etc.
  • MeshGatewayDataplane: a MeshGateway-configured Dataplane with a new structure representing the MeshGateway it serves.

Some examples can be found in the Inspect API docs.

Upgrade to 1.5.x

Any type

The kuma.metrics.dataplane.enabled and kuma.metrics.zone.enabled configurations have been removed.

Kuma always generate the corresponding metrics.

Kubernetes

  • Please migrate your kuma.io/sidecar-injection annotations to labels. The new version still supports annotation, but to have a guarantee that applications can only start with sidecar, you must use label instead of annotation.
  • Configuration parameter kuma.runtime.kubernetes.injector.sidecarContainer.adminPort and environment variable KUMA_RUNTIME_KUBERNETES_INJECTOR_SIDECAR_CONTAINER_ADMIN_PORT have been deprecated in favor of kuma.bootstrapServer.params.adminPort and KUMA_BOOTSTRAP_SERVER_PARAMS_ADMIN_PORT.

Universal

  • We removed support for old Ingress (Dataplane#networking.ingress) from pre 1.2 days. If you are still using it, please migrate to ZoneIngress first (see Upgrade to 1.2.0 section).
  • You can’t use 0.0.0.0 or :: in networking.address most of the time using loopback is what people intended.
  • Kuma DP flag --admin-port and environment variable KUMA_DATAPLANE_ADMIN_PORT have been deprecated, admin port should be specified in Dataplane or ZoneIngress resources.

Upgrade to 1.4.0

Starting with this version, the default API server authentication method is user tokens. In order to continue using client certificates (the previous default method), you’ll need to explicitly set the authentication method to client certificates. This can be done by setting the KUMA_API_SERVER_AUTHN_TYPE variable to "clientCerts".

See Configuration - Control plane for how to set this variable.

Upgrade to 1.3.0

Starting with this version Mesh resource will limit the maximal number of mtls backends to 1, so please make sure your Mesh has correct backend applied before the upgrade.

Outbound generated internally are no longer listed in dataplane.network.outbound[]. For Kubernetes, they will automatically disappear. For universal to remove them you should recreate your dataplane resources (either with kumactl apply or by restarting your services if the dataplanes lifecycle is managed by Kuma).

Kuma 1.3.0 has additional mechanism for tracking data plane proxies and zone statuses in a more reliable way. This mechanism works as a heartbeat and periodically increments the generation counter for the Insights. If the overall time for upgrading all Kuma CP instances is more than 5 minutes, then some data plane proxies or zones may become Offline in the GUI, but this doesn’t affect real connectivity, only view. This unwanted effect will disappear as soon as all Kuma CP instances will be upgraded to 1.3.0.

Upgrade to 1.2.1

When Global is upgraded to 1.2.1 and Zone CP is still 1.2.0, ZoneIngresses will always be listed as offline. After Zone CPs are upgraded to 1.2.1, the status will work again. ZoneIngress status does not affect cross-zone traffic.

Upgrade to 1.2.0

One of the changes introduced by Kuma 1.2.0 is renaming Remote Control Planes to Zone Control Planes and Dataplane Ingress to Zone Ingress. We think this change makes the naming more consistent with the rest of the application and also removes some of unnecessary confusion.

As a result of this renaming, some values and arguments in multizone/kubernetes environment changed. You can read below more.

Upgrading with kumactl on Kubernetes

  1. Changes in arguments/flags for kumactl install control-plane

    • --mode accepts now values: standalone, zone and global (remote changed to zone)

    • --tls-kds-remote-client-secret flag was renamed to --tls-kds-zone-client-secret

  2. Service kuma-global-remote-sync changed to kuma-global-zone-sync so after upgrading global control plane you have to manually remote old service. For example:

    1. kubectl delete -n kuma-system service/kuma-global-remote-sync

    Hint: It’s worth to remember that often at this point the IP address/hostname which is used as a KDS address when installing Kuma Zone Control Planes will change. Make sure that you update the address when upgrading the Remote CPs to the newest version.

Upgrading with helm on Kubernetes

Changes in values in Kuma’s HELM chart

  • controlPlane.mode accepts now values: standalone, zone and global (remote changed to zone)

  • controlPlane.globalRemoteSyncService was renamed to controlPlane.globalZoneSyncService

  • controlPlane.tls.kdsRemoteClient was renamed to controlPlane.tls.kdsZoneClient

Suggested Upgrade Path on Universal

  1. Zone Control Planes should be started using new environment variables

    • KUMA_MODE accepts now values: standalone, zone and global (remote changed to zone)

      Old:

      1. KUMA_MODE="remote" [...] kuma-cp run

      New:

      1. KUMA_MODE="zone" [...] kuma-cp run
    • KUMA_MULTIZONE_REMOTE_ZONE was renamed to KUMA_MULTIZONE_ZONE_NAME

      Old:

      1. KUMA_MULTIZONE_REMOTE_ZONE="remote-1" [...] kuma-cp run

      New:

      1. KUMA_MULTIZONE_ZONE_NAME="remote-1" [...] kuma-cp run
    • KUMA_MULTIZONE_REMOTE_GLOBAL_ADDRESS was renamed to KUMA_MULTIZONE_ZONE_GLOBAL_ADDRESS

      Old:

      1. KUMA_MULTIZONE_REMOTE_GLOBAL_ADDRESS="grpcs://localhost:5685" [...] kuma-cp run

      New:

      1. KUMA_MULTIZONE_ZONE_GLOBAL_ADDRESS="grpcs://localhost:5685" [...] kuma-cp run
    • KUMA_MULTIZONE_REMOTE_KDS_ROOT_CA_FILE was renamed to KUMA_MULTIZONE_ZONE_KDS_ROOT_CA_FILE

      Old:

      1. KUMA_MULTIZONE_REMOTE_KDS_ROOT_CA_FILE="/rootCa" [...] kuma-cp run

      New:

      1. KUMA_MULTIZONE_ZONE_KDS_ROOT_CA_FILE="/rootCa" [...] kuma-cp run
    • KUMA_MULTIZONE_REMOTE_KDS_ROOT_CA_FILE was renamed to KUMA_MULTIZONE_ZONE_KDS_ROOT_CA_FILE

      Old:

      1. KUMA_MULTIZONE_REMOTE_KDS_REFRESH_INTERVAL="9s" [...] kuma-cp run

      New:

      1. KUMA_MULTIZONE_ZONE_KDS_REFRESH_INTERVAL="9s" [...] kuma-cp run
  2. Dataplane Ingress resource should be replaced with ZoneIngress resource:

    Old:

    1. type: Dataplane
    2. name: dp-ingress
    3. mesh: default
    4. networking:
    5. address: <ADDRESS>
    6. ingress:
    7. publicAddress: <PUBLIC_ADDRESS>
    8. publicPort: <PUBLIC_PORT>
    9. inbound:
    10. - port: <PORT>
    11. tags:
    12. kuma.io/service: ingress

    New:

    1. type: ZoneIngress
    2. name: zone-ingress
    3. networking:
    4. address: <ADDRESS>
    5. port: <PORT>
    6. advertisedAddress: <PUBLIC_ADDRESS>
    7. advertisedPort: <PUBLIC_PORT>

    NOTE: ZoneIngress resource is a global scoped resource, it’s not bound to a Mesh The old Dataplane resource is still supported but it’s considered deprecated and will be removed in the next major version of Kuma

  3. Since ZoneIngress resource is not bound to a Mesh, it requires another token type that is bound to a Zone:

    1. kumactl generate zone-ingress-token --zone=zone-1 > /tmp/zone-ingress-token
  4. kuma-dp run command should be updated with a new flag --proxy-type=ingress:

    1. kuma-dp run \
    2. --proxy-type=ingress \
    3. --dataplane-token-file=/tmp/zone-ingress-token \
    4. --dataplane-file=zone-ingress.yaml

Upgrade to 1.1.0

The major change in this release is the migration to XDSv3 for the kuma-cp to envoy data plane proxy communication. The previous XDSv2 is still available and will continue working. All the existing data plane proxies will still use XDSv2 until being restarted. The newly deployed kuma-dp instances will automatically get bootstrapped to XDSv3. In case that needs to be changed, kuma-cp needs to be started with KUMA_BOOTSTRAP_SERVER_API_VERSION=v2.

With Kuma 1.1.0, the kuma-cp will installs default retry and timeout policies for each new created Mesh object. The pre-existing meshes will not automatically get these default policies. If needed, they should be created accordingly.

This version removes the deprecated --dataplane flag in kumactl generate dataplane-token, please consider migrating to use --name instead.

Upgrade to 1.0.0

This release introduces a number of breaking changes. If Kuma is being deployed in production we strongly suggest to backup the current configuration, tear down the whole cluster and zones, and install in a clean setup. However, we enumerate the details of these changes below.

Suggested Upgrade Path on Kubernetes

  • Drop k8s 1.13 support

    Take this into account if you run Kuma on an old Kubernetes version.

  • kumactl merged install ingress into install control-plane

    This change impacts any deployment pipelines that are based on kumactl and are used for multi-zone deployments.

  • Change policies on K8S to scope global

    All the CRDs are now in the global scope, therefore all policies need to be backed up. The relevant CRDs need to be deleted, which will clear all the policies. After the upgrade, you can apply the policies again. We do recommend to keep all the Kuma Control Planes down while doing these operations.

  • Autoconfigure single cert for all services

    Deployment flags for providing TLS certificates in Helm and kumactl have changed, refer to the relevant documentation to verify the new naming.

  • Create default resources for Mesh

    The following default resources will be created upon the first start of Kuma Control Plane - default signing key - default Allow All traffic permission policy allow-all-<mesh name> - Default Allow All traffic route policy allow-all-<mesh name>

    Please verify if this conflicts with your deployment and expected policies.

  • New Multizone deployment flow

    Deploying Multizone clusters is now simplified, please refer to the deployment documentation of the updated procedure.

  • Improved control plane communication security

    Kuma Control Plane exposed ports are reduced, please revise the documentation for detailed list. Consider reinstalling the metrics due to the port changes in Kuma Prometheus SD.

  • Traffic route format

    The format of the TrafficRoute has changed. Please check the documentation and adapt your resources.

Suggested Upgrade Path on Universal

  • Get rid of advertised hostname KUMA_GENERAL_ADVERTISED_HOSTNAME was removed and not needed now.

  • Autoconfigure single cert for all services Deployment flags for providing TLS certificates in Helm and kumactl have changed, refer to the documentation](https://github.com/kumahq/kuma/blob/release-1.0/pkg/config/app/kuma-cp/kuma-cp.defaults.yaml) to verify the new naming.

  • Create default resources for Mesh

    The following default resources will be created upon the first start of Kuma Control Plane - default signing key - default Allow All traffic permission policy allow-all-<mesh name> - Default Allow All traffic route policy allow-all-<mesh name>

    Please verify if this conflicts with your deployment and expected policies.

  • New Multizone deployment flow

    Deploying Multizone clusters is now simplified, please refer to the deployment documentation of the updated procedure.

  • Improved control plane communication security

    kuma-dp invocation has changed and now allows for a more flexible usage leveraging automated, template based Dataplane resource creation, customizable data-plane token boundaries and additional CA ceritficate validation for the Kuma Control plane boostrap server. Kuma Control Plane exposed ports are reduced, please revise the documentation for detailed list.

  • Traffic route format

    The format of the TrafficRoute has changed. Please check the documentation and adapt your resources.

Upgrade to 0.7.0

Support for kuma.io/sidecar-injection annotation. On Kubernetes change the namespace resources that host Kuma mesh services with the aforementioned annotation and delete the label.

Prefix the Kuma built-in tags with kuma.io/ as follows: kuma.io/service, kuma.io/protocol, kuma.io/zone.

Suggested Upgrade Path on Kubernetes

Update the applied policy tag selector to include the kuma.io/ prefix. A sample traffic resource follows:

  1. apiVersion: kuma.io/v1alpha1
  2. kind: TrafficPermission
  3. mesh: default
  4. metadata:
  5. namespace: default
  6. name: allow-all-traffic
  7. spec:
  8. sources:
  9. - match:
  10. kuma.io/service: '*'
  11. destinations:
  12. - match:
  13. kuma.io/service: '*'

The Kuma Control Plane will update the relevant Dataplane resources accordingly

Suggested Upgrade Path on Universal

Update the applied policy tag selector to include the kuma.io/ prefix. A sample traffic resource follows:

  1. type: TrafficPermission
  2. name: allow-all-traffic
  3. mesh: default
  4. sources:
  5. - match:
  6. kuma.io/service: '*'
  7. destinations:
  8. - match:
  9. kuma.io/service: '*'

Update the dataplane resources with the new tag format as well. Example:

  1. echo "type: Dataplane
  2. mesh: default
  3. name: redis-1
  4. networking:
  5. address: 192.168.0.1
  6. inbound:
  7. - port: 9000
  8. servicePort: 6379
  9. tags:
  10. kuma.io/service: redis" | kumactl apply -f -

This release changes the way that Distributed and Hybrid Kuma Control planes are deployed. Please refer to the documentation for more details.

Upgrade to 0.6.0

Passive Health Check were removed in favor of Circuit Breaking.

Format of Active Health Check changed from :

  1. apiVersion: kuma.io/v1alpha1
  2. kind: HealthCheck
  3. mesh: default
  4. metadata:
  5. namespace: default
  6. name: web-to-backend-check
  7. mesh: default
  8. spec:
  9. sources:
  10. - match:
  11. service: web
  12. destinations:
  13. - match:
  14. service: backend
  15. conf:
  16. activeChecks:
  17. interval: 10s
  18. timeout: 2s
  19. unhealthyThreshold: 3
  20. healthyThreshold: 1
  21. passiveChecks:
  22. unhealthyThreshold: 3
  23. penaltyInterval: 5s

to

  1. apiVersion: kuma.io/v1alpha1
  2. kind: HealthCheck
  3. mesh: default
  4. metadata:
  5. namespace: default
  6. name: web-to-backend-check
  7. mesh: default
  8. spec:
  9. sources:
  10. - match:
  11. service: web
  12. destinations:
  13. - match:
  14. service: backend
  15. conf:
  16. interval: 10s
  17. timeout: 2s
  18. unhealthyThreshold: 3
  19. healthyThreshold: 1

Suggested Upgrade Path on Kubernetes

In the new Kuma version serivce tag format has been changed. Instead of backend.kuma-demo.svc:5678 service tag will look like this backend_kuma-demo_svc_5678. This is a breaking change and Policies should be updated to be compatible with the new Kuma version.

Please re-install Prometheus via kubectl install metrics and make sure that skipMTLS is set to false or omitted.

  1. apiVersion: kuma.io/v1alpha1
  2. kind: Mesh
  3. metadata:
  4. name: default
  5. spec:
  6. metrics:
  7. enabledBackend: prometheus-1
  8. backends:
  9. - name: prometheus-1
  10. type: prometheus
  11. conf:
  12. skipMTLS: false

Suggested Upgrade Path on Universal

Make sure that skipMTLS is set to true.

  1. type: Mesh
  2. name: default
  3. metrics:
  4. enabledBackend: prometheus-1
  5. backends:
  6. - name: prometheus-1
  7. type: prometheus
  8. conf:
  9. skipMTLS: true

Upgrade to 0.5.0

Suggested Upgrade Path on Kubernetes

Mesh resource format changes

The Mesh resource format in Kubernetes changed from

  1. apiVersion: kuma.io/v1alpha1
  2. kind: Mesh
  3. metadata:
  4. name: default
  5. spec:
  6. mtls:
  7. enabled: true
  8. ca:
  9. builtin: {}
  10. metrics:
  11. prometheus: {}
  12. logging:
  13. backends:
  14. - name: file-1
  15. file:
  16. path: /var/log/access.log
  17. tracing:
  18. backends:
  19. - name: zipkin-1
  20. zipkin:
  21. url: http://zipkin.local:9411/api/v1/spans

to

  1. apiVersion: kuma.io/v1alpha1
  2. kind: Mesh
  3. metadata:
  4. name: default
  5. spec:
  6. mtls:
  7. enabledBackend: ca-1
  8. backends:
  9. - name: ca-1
  10. type: builtin
  11. metrics:
  12. enabledBackend: prom-1
  13. backends:
  14. - name: prom-1
  15. type: prometheus
  16. logging:
  17. backends:
  18. - name: file-1
  19. type: file
  20. conf:
  21. path: /var/log/access.log
  22. tracing:
  23. backends:
  24. - name: zipkin-1
  25. type: zipkin
  26. conf:
  27. url: http://zipkin.local:9411/api/v1/spans

Removing kuma-injector

Kuma 0.5.0 ships with kuma-injector embedded into the kuma-cp, which makes its previously created resources obsolete and potentially can cause problems with the deployments. Before deploying the new version, it is strongly advised to run a cleanup script kuma-0.5.0-k8s-remove_injector_resources.sh.

NOTE: if Kuma was deployed in a namespace other than kuma-system, please run export KUMA_SYSTEM=<othernamespace before running the cleanup script.

Kuma resources ownerReferences

Kuma 0.5.0 introduce webhook for setting ownerReferences to the Kuma resources. If you have some Kuma resources in your k8s cluster, then you can use our script kuma-0.5.0-k8s-set_owner_references.sh in order to properly set ownerReferences .

Suggested Upgrade Path on Universal

Mesh resource format changes

Mesh format on Universal changed from

  1. type: Mesh
  2. name: default
  3. mtls:
  4. enabled: true
  5. ca:
  6. builtin: {}
  7. metrics:
  8. prometheus: {}
  9. logging:
  10. backends:
  11. - name: file-1
  12. file:
  13. path: /var/log/access.log
  14. tracing:
  15. backends:
  16. - name: zipkin-1
  17. zipkin:
  18. url: http://zipkin.local:9411/api/v1/spans

to

  1. type: Mesh
  2. name: default
  3. mtls:
  4. enabledBackend: ca-1
  5. backends:
  6. - name: ca-1
  7. type: builtin
  8. metrics:
  9. enabledBackend: prom-1
  10. backends:
  11. - name: prom-1
  12. type: prometheus
  13. logging:
  14. backends:
  15. - name: file-1
  16. type: file
  17. conf:
  18. path: /var/log/access.log
  19. tracing:
  20. backends:
  21. - name: zipkin-1
  22. type: zipkin
  23. conf:
  24. url: http://zipkin.local:9411/api/v1/spans

Upgrade to 0.4.0

Suggested Upgrade Path on Kubernetes

No additional steps are needed.

Suggested Upgrade Path on Universal

Migrations

Kuma 0.4.0 introduces DB Migrations for Postgres therefore before running the new version of Kuma, run the kuma-cp migration command.

  1. kuma-cp migrate up

Remember to provide config just like in kuma-cp run command. All existing data will be preserved.

New Dataplane Entity format

Kuma 0.4.0 introduces new Dataplane entity format to improve readability as well as add support for scraping metrics of Gateway Dataplanes.

Here is example of migration to the new format.

Dataplane

Old format

  1. type: Dataplane
  2. mesh: default
  3. name: web-01
  4. networking:
  5. inbound:
  6. - interface: 192.168.0.1:21011:21012
  7. tags:
  8. service: web
  9. outbound:
  10. - interface: :3000
  11. service: backend

New format

  1. type: Dataplane
  2. mesh: default
  3. name: web-01
  4. networking:
  5. address: 192.168.0.1
  6. inbound:
  7. - port: 21011
  8. servicePort: 21012
  9. tags:
  10. service: web
  11. outbound:
  12. - port: 3000
  13. service: backend

Gateway Dataplane

Old format

  1. type: Dataplane
  2. mesh: default
  3. name: kong-01
  4. networking:
  5. gateway:
  6. tags:
  7. service: kong

New format

  1. type: Dataplane
  2. mesh: default
  3. name: kong-01
  4. networking:
  5. address: 192.168.0.1
  6. gateway:
  7. tags:
  8. service: kong

Although the old format is still supported, it is recommended to migrate since the support for it will be dropped in the next major version of Kuma.

Upgrade to 0.3.1

List of breaking changes

kuma policies:

  • Mesh CRD on Kubernetes is now Cluster-scoped
  • TrafficLog policy is applied differently now: instead of applying all TrafficLog policies that match to a given outbound interface of a Dataplane, only a single the most specific TrafficLog policy is applied

kumactl:

  • a few options in kumactl config control-planes add command have been renamed:
    • --dataplane-token-client-cert has been renamed into --admin-client-cert
    • --dataplane-token-client-key has been renamed into --admin-client-key

Suggested Upgrade Path on Kubernetes

  • Users on Kubernetes will have to re-install Kuma:

    1. Export all Kuma resources

      1. kubectl get meshes,trafficpermissions,trafficroutes,trafficlogs,proxytemplates --all-namespaces -oyaml > backup.yaml
    2. Uninstall previous version of Kuma Control Plane

      1. # using previous version of `kumactl`
      2. kumactl install control-plane | kubectl delete -f -
    3. Install new version of Kuma Control Plane

      1. # using new version of `kumactl`
      2. kumactl install control-plane | kubectl apply -f -
    4. Re-apply Kuma resources back again

      1. kubectl apply -f backup.yaml

Suggested Upgrade Path on Universal

  • Those users who used --dataplane-token-client-cert and --dataplane-token-client-key command line options in the past will have to re-run

    1. kumactl config control-planes add

    this time with

    1. --admin-client-cert <CERT> --admin-client-cert <KEY> --overwrite
  • all components of Kuma Control Plane - kuma-cp, kuma-dp, envoy - have to be re-deployed