Using port forwarding to access applications in a container

OKD supports port forwarding to pods.

Understanding port forwarding

You can use the CLI to forward one or more local ports to a pod. This allows you to listen on a given or random port locally, and have data forwarded to and from given ports in the pod.

Support for port forwarding is built into the CLI:

  1. $ oc port-forward <pod> [<local_port>:]<remote_port> [...[<local_port_n>:]<remote_port_n>]

The CLI listens on each local port specified by the user, forwarding using the protocol described below.

Ports may be specified using the following formats:

5000

The client listens on port 5000 locally and forwards to 5000 in the pod.

6000:5000

The client listens on port 6000 locally and forwards to 5000 in the pod.

:5000 or 0:5000

The client selects a free local port and forwards to 5000 in the pod.

OKD handles port-forward requests from clients. Upon receiving a request, OKD upgrades the response and waits for the client to create port-forwarding streams. When OKD receives a new stream, it copies data between the stream and the pod’s port.

Architecturally, there are options for forwarding to a pod’s port. The supported OKD implementation invokes nsenter directly on the node host to enter the pod’s network namespace, then invokes socat to copy data between the stream and the pod’s port. However, a custom implementation could include running a helper pod that then runs nsenter and socat, so that those binaries are not required to be installed on the host.

Using port forwarding

You can use the CLI to port-forward one or more local ports to a pod.

Procedure

Use the following command to listen on the specified port in a pod:

  1. $ oc port-forward <pod> [<local_port>:]<remote_port> [...[<local_port_n>:]<remote_port_n>]

For example:

  • Use the following command to listen on ports 5000 and 6000 locally and forward data to and from ports 5000 and 6000 in the pod:

    1. $ oc port-forward <pod> 5000 6000

    Example output

    1. Forwarding from 127.0.0.1:5000 -> 5000
    2. Forwarding from [::1]:5000 -> 5000
    3. Forwarding from 127.0.0.1:6000 -> 6000
    4. Forwarding from [::1]:6000 -> 6000
  • Use the following command to listen on port 8888 locally and forward to 5000 in the pod:

    1. $ oc port-forward <pod> 8888:5000

    Example output

    1. Forwarding from 127.0.0.1:8888 -> 5000
    2. Forwarding from [::1]:8888 -> 5000
  • Use the following command to listen on a free port locally and forward to 5000 in the pod:

    1. $ oc port-forward <pod> :5000

    Example output

    1. Forwarding from 127.0.0.1:42390 -> 5000
    2. Forwarding from [::1]:42390 -> 5000

    Or:

    1. $ oc port-forward <pod> 0:5000

Protocol for initiating port forwarding from a client

Clients initiate port forwarding to a pod by issuing a request to the Kubernetes API server:

  1. /proxy/nodes/<node_name>/portForward/<namespace>/<pod>

In the above URL:

  • <node_name> is the FQDN of the node.

  • <namespace> is the namespace of the target pod.

  • <pod> is the name of the target pod.

For example:

  1. /proxy/nodes/node123.openshift.com/portForward/myns/mypod

After sending a port forward request to the API server, the client upgrades the connection to one that supports multiplexed streams; the current implementation uses Hyptertext Transfer Protocol Version 2 (HTTP/2).

The client creates a stream with the port header containing the target port in the pod. All data written to the stream is delivered via the kubelet to the target pod and port. Similarly, all data sent from the pod for that forwarded connection is delivered back to the same stream in the client.

The client closes all streams, the upgraded connection, and the underlying connection when it is finished with the port forwarding request.