Using Ingress
If you’re planning on injecting Linkerd into your ingress controller’s podsthere is some configuration required. Linkerd discovers services based on the:authority
or Host
header. This allows Linkerd to understand what service arequest is destined for without being dependent on DNS or IPs.
When it comes to ingress, most controllers do not rewrite theincoming header (example.com
) to the internal service name(example.default.svc.cluster.local
) by default. In this case, when Linkerdreceives the outgoing request it thinks the request is destined forexample.com
and not example.default.svc.cluster.local
. This creates aninfinite loop that can be pretty frustrating!
Luckily, many ingress controllers allow you to either modify the Host
headeror add a custom header to the outgoing request. Here are some instructionsfor common ingress controllers:
NoteIf your ingress controller is terminating HTTPS, Linkerd will only provideTCP stats for the incoming requests because all the proxy sees is encryptedtraffic. It will provide complete stats for the outgoing requests from yourcontroller to the backend services as this is in plain text from thecontroller to Linkerd.
NoteIf requests experience a 2-3 second delay after injecting your ingresscontroller, it is likely that this is because the service of type:LoadBalancer
is obscuring the client source IP. You can fix this by settingexternalTrafficPolicy: Local
in the ingress’ service definition.
Nginx
This uses emojivoto
as an example, take a look atgetting started for a refresher on how to install it.
The sample ingress definition is:
apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: web-ingress
namespace: emojivoto
annotations:
kubernetes.io/ingress.class: "nginx"
nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/configuration-snippet: |
proxy_set_header l5d-dst-override $service_name.$namespace.svc.cluster.local:$service_port;
grpc_set_header l5d-dst-override $service_name.$namespace.svc.cluster.local:$service_port;
spec:
rules:
- host: example.com
http:
paths:
- backend:
serviceName: web-svc
servicePort: 8080
The important annotation here is:
nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/configuration-snippet: |
proxy_set_header l5d-dst-override $service_name.$namespace.svc.cluster.local:$service_port;
grpc_set_header l5d-dst-override $service_name.$namespace.svc.cluster.local:$service_port;
This example combines the two directives that NGINX uses for proxying HTTPand gRPC traffic. In practice, it is only necessary to set either theproxy_set_header
or grpc_set_header
directive, depending on the protocolused by the service, however NGINX will ignore any directives that it doesn’tneed.
This sample ingress definition uses a single ingress for an applicationwith multiple endpoints using different ports.
apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: web-ingress
namespace: emojivoto
annotations:
kubernetes.io/ingress.class: "nginx"
nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/configuration-snippet: |
proxy_set_header l5d-dst-override $service_name.$namespace.svc.cluster.local:$service_port;
grpc_set_header l5d-dst-override $service_name.$namespace.svc.cluster.local:$service_port;
spec:
rules:
- host: example.com
http:
paths:
- path: /
backend:
serviceName: web-svc
servicePort: 80
- path: /another-endpoint
backend:
serviceName: another-svc
servicePort: 8080
Nginx will add a l5d-dst-override
header to instruct Linkerd what servicethe request is destined for. You’ll want to include both the Kubernetes serviceFQDN (web-svc.emojivoto.svc.cluster.local
) and the destinationservicePort
.
To test this, you’ll want to get the external IP address for your controller. Ifyou installed nginx-ingress via helm, you can get that IP address by running:
kubectl get svc --all-namespaces \
-l app=nginx-ingress,component=controller \
-o=custom-columns=EXTERNAL-IP:.status.loadBalancer.ingress[0].ip
You can then use this IP with curl:
curl -H "Host: example.com" http://external-ip
NoteIt is not possible to rewrite the header in this way for the defaultbackend. Because of this, if you inject Linkerd into your Nginx ingresscontroller’s pod, the default backend will not be usable.
Traefik
This uses emojivoto
as an example, take a look atgetting started for a refresher on how to install it.
The sample ingress definition is:
apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: web-ingress
namespace: emojivoto
annotations:
kubernetes.io/ingress.class: "traefik"
ingress.kubernetes.io/custom-request-headers: l5d-dst-override:web-svc.emojivoto.svc.cluster.local:80
spec:
rules:
- host: example.com
http:
paths:
- backend:
serviceName: web-svc
servicePort: 80
The important annotation here is:
ingress.kubernetes.io/custom-request-headers: l5d-dst-override:web-svc.emojivoto.svc.cluster.local:80
Traefik will add a l5d-dst-override
header to instruct Linkerd what servicethe request is destined for. You’ll want to include both the Kubernetes serviceFQDN (web-svc.emojivoto.svc.cluster.local
) and the destinationservicePort
. Please see the Traefik website for more information.
To test this, you’ll want to get the external IP address for your controller. Ifyou installed Traefik via helm, you can get that IP address by running:
kubectl get svc --all-namespaces \
-l app=traefik \
-o='custom-columns=EXTERNAL-IP:.status.loadBalancer.ingress[0].ip'
You can then use this IP with curl:
curl -H "Host: example.com" http://external-ip
NoteThis solution won’t work if you’re using Traefik’s service weights asLinkerd will always send requests to the service name in l5d-dst-override
. Aworkaround is to use traefik.frontend.passHostHeader: "false"
instead. Beaware that if you’re using TLS, the connection between Traefik and the backendservice will not be encrypted. There is anopen issue to track thesolution to this problem.
GCE
This example is similar to Traefik, and also uses emojivoto
as an example.Take a look at getting started for a refresher on how toinstall it.
In addition to the custom headers found in the Traefik example, it shows how touse a Google Cloud Static External IP Addressand TLS with a Google-managed certificate.
The sample ingress definition is:
apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: web-ingress
namespace: emojivoto
annotations:
kubernetes.io/ingress.class: "gce"
ingress.kubernetes.io/custom-request-headers: "l5d-dst-override: web-svc.emojivoto.svc.cluster.local:80"
ingress.gcp.kubernetes.io/pre-shared-cert: "managed-cert-name"
kubernetes.io/ingress.global-static-ip-name: "static-ip-name"
spec:
rules:
- host: example.com
http:
paths:
- backend:
serviceName: web-svc
servicePort: 80
To use this example definition, substitute managed-cert-name
andstatic-ip-name
with the short names defined in your project (n.b. use the namefor the IP address, not the address itself).
The managed certificate will take about 30-60 minutes to provision, but thestatus of the ingress should be healthy within a few minutes. Once the managedcertificate is provisioned, the ingress should be visible to the Internet.
Ambassador
This uses emojivoto
as an example, take a look atgetting started for a refresher on how to install it.
Ambassador does not use Ingress
resources, instead relying on Service
. Thesample service definition is:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: web-ambassador
namespace: emojivoto
annotations:
getambassador.io/config: |
---
apiVersion: ambassador/v1
kind: Mapping
name: web-ambassador-mapping
service: http://web-svc.emojivoto.svc.cluster.local:80
host: example.com
prefix: /
add_linkerd_headers: true
spec:
selector:
app: web-svc
ports:
- name: http
port: 80
targetPort: http
The important annotation here is:
add_linkerd_headers: true
Ambassador will add a l5d-dst-override
header to instruct Linkerd what servicethe request is destined for. This will contain both the Kubernetes serviceFQDN (web-svc.emojivoto.svc.cluster.local
) and the destinationservicePort
.
NoteTo make this global, add add_linkerd_headers
to your Module
configuration.
To test this, you’ll want to get the external IP address for your controller. Ifyou installed Ambassador via helm, you can get that IP address by running:
kubectl get svc --all-namespaces \
-l "app.kubernetes.io/name=ambassador" \
-o='custom-columns=EXTERNAL-IP:.status.loadBalancer.ingress[0].ip'
NoteIf you’ve installed the admin interface, this will return two IPs, one of whichwill be <none>
. Just ignore that one and use the actual IP address.
You can then use this IP with curl:
curl -H "Host: example.com" http://external-ip
Gloo
This uses books
as an example, take a look atDemo: Books for instructions on how to run it.
If you installed Gloo using the Gateway method (gloo install gateway
), thenyou’ll need a VirtualService to be able to route traffic to your Booksapplication.
To use Gloo with Linkerd, you can choose one of two options.
Automatic
As of Gloo v0.13.20, Gloo has native integration with Linkerd, so that therequired Linkerd headers are added automatically.
Assuming you installed gloo to the default location, you can enable the nativeintegration by running:
kubectl patch settings -n gloo-system default \
-p '{"spec":{"linkerd":true}}' --type=merge
Gloo will now automatically add the l5d-dst-override
header to everykubernetes upstream.
Now simply add a route to the books app upstream:
glooctl add route --path-prefix=/ --dest-name booksapp-webapp-7000
Manual
As explained in the beginning of this document, you’ll need to instruct Gloo toadd a header which will allow Linkerd to identify where to send traffic to.
apiVersion: gateway.solo.io/v1
kind: VirtualService
metadata:
name: books
namespace: gloo-system
spec:
virtualHost:
domains:
- '*'
name: gloo-system.books
routes:
- matcher:
prefix: /
routeAction:
single:
upstream:
name: booksapp-webapp-7000
namespace: gloo-system
routePlugins:
transformations:
requestTransformation:
transformationTemplate:
headers:
l5d-dst-override:
text: webapp.booksapp.svc.cluster.local:7000
passthrough: {}
The important annotation here is:
routePlugins:
transformations:
requestTransformation:
transformationTemplate:
headers:
l5d-dst-override:
text: webapp.booksapp.svc.cluster.local:7000
passthrough: {}
Using the content transformation engine built-in in Gloo, you can instruct it toadd the needed l5d-dst-override
header which in the example above is pointingto the service’s FDQN and port: webapp.booksapp.svc.cluster.local:7000
Test
To easily test this you can get the URL of the Gloo proxy by running:
glooctl proxy URL
Which will return something similar to:
$ glooctl proxy url
http://192.168.99.132:30969
For the example VirtualService above, which listens to any domain and path,accessing the proxy URL (http://192.168.99.132:30969
) in your browsershould open the Books application.