Traefik & Rancher
A Story of Labels, Services & Containers
Attach labels to your services and let Traefik do the rest!
This provider is specific to Rancher 1.x.
Rancher 2.x requires Kubernetes and does not have a metadata endpoint of its own for Traefik to query. As such, Rancher 2.x users should utilize the Kubernetes provider directly.
Routing Configuration
Labels
- Labels are case insensitive.
- The complete list of labels can be found in the reference page.
General
Traefik creates, for each rancher service, a corresponding service and router.
The Service automatically gets a server per container in this rancher service, and the router gets a default rule attached to it, based on the service name.
Service definition
In general when configuring a Traefik provider, a service assigned to one (or several) router(s) must be defined as well for the routing to be functional.
There are, however, exceptions when using label-based configurations:
- If a label defines a router (e.g. through a router Rule) and a label defines a service (e.g. implicitly through a loadbalancer server port value), but the router does not specify any service, then that service is automatically assigned to the router.
- If a label defines a router (e.g. through a router Rule) but no service is defined, then a service is automatically created and assigned to the router.
As one would expect, in either of these cases, if in addition a service is specified for the router, then that service is the one assigned, regardless of whether it actually is defined or whatever else other services are defined.
Automatic service assignment with labels
With labels in a compose file
labels:
- "traefik.http.routers.myproxy.rule=Host(`example.net`)"
# service myservice gets automatically assigned to router myproxy
- "traefik.http.services.myservice.loadbalancer.server.port=80"
Automatic service creation and assignment with labels
With labels in a compose file
labels:
# no service specified or defined and yet one gets automatically created
# and assigned to router myproxy.
- "traefik.http.routers.myproxy.rule=Host(`example.net`)"
Routers
To update the configuration of the Router automatically attached to the container, add labels starting with traefik.routers.{name-of-your-choice}.
and followed by the option you want to change.
For example, to change the rule, you could add the label traefik.http.routers.my-container.rule=Host(
.example.com
)
The character @
is not authorized in the router name
.
traefik.http.routers.
See rule for more information.
- "traefik.http.routers.myrouter.rule=Host(`example.com`)"
traefik.http.routers.
See entry points for more information.
- "traefik.http.routers.myrouter.entrypoints=ep1,ep2"
traefik.http.routers.
See middlewares and middlewares overview for more information.
- "traefik.http.routers.myrouter.middlewares=auth,prefix,cb"
traefik.http.routers.
See rule for more information.
- "traefik.http.routers.myrouter.service=myservice"
traefik.http.routers.
See tls for more information.
- "traefik.http.routers.myrouter>.tls=true"
traefik.http.routers.
See certResolver for more information.
- "traefik.http.routers.myrouter.tls.certresolver=myresolver"
traefik.http.routers.
See domains for more information.
- "traefik.http.routers.myrouter.tls.domains[0].main=example.org"
traefik.http.routers.
See domains for more information.
- "traefik.http.routers.myrouter.tls.domains[0].sans=test.example.org,dev.example.org"
traefik.http.routers.
See options for more information.
- "traefik.http.routers.myrouter.tls.options=foobar"
traefik.http.routers.
See priority for more information.
- "traefik.http.routers.myrouter.priority=42"
Services
To update the configuration of the Service automatically attached to the container, add labels starting with traefik.http.services.{name-of-your-choice}.
, followed by the option you want to change.
For example, to change the passHostHeader
behavior, you'd add the label traefik.http.services.{name-of-your-choice}.loadbalancer.passhostheader=false
.
The character @
is not authorized in the service name
.
traefik.http.services.
Registers a port. Useful when the container exposes multiples ports.
- "traefik.http.services.myservice.loadbalancer.server.port=8080"
traefik.http.services.
Overrides the default scheme.
- "traefik.http.services.myservice.loadbalancer.server.scheme=http"
traefik.http.services.
See pass Host header for more information.
- "traefik.http.services.myservice.loadbalancer.passhostheader=true"
traefik.http.services.
See health check for more information.
- "traefik.http.services.myservice.loadbalancer.healthcheck.headers.X-Foo=foobar"
traefik.http.services.
See health check for more information.
- "traefik.http.services.myservice.loadbalancer.healthcheck.hostname=example.org"
traefik.http.services.
See health check for more information.
- "traefik.http.services.myservice.loadbalancer.healthcheck.interval=10"
traefik.http.services.
See health check for more information.
- "traefik.http.services.myservice.loadbalancer.healthcheck.path=/foo"
traefik.http.services.
See health check for more information.
- "traefik.http.services.myservice.loadbalancer.healthcheck.port=42"
traefik.http.services.
See health check for more information.
- "traefik.http.services.myservice.loadbalancer.healthcheck.scheme=http"
traefik.http.services.
See health check for more information.
- "traefik.http.services.myservice.loadbalancer.healthcheck.timeout=10"
traefik.http.services.
See health check for more information.
- "traefik.http.services.myservice.loadbalancer.healthcheck.followredirects=true"
traefik.http.services.
See sticky sessions for more information.
- "traefik.http.services.myservice.loadbalancer.sticky=true"
traefik.http.services.
See sticky sessions for more information.
- "traefik.http.services.myservice.loadbalancer.sticky.cookie.httponly=true"
traefik.http.services.
See sticky sessions for more information.
- "traefik.http.services.myservice.loadbalancer.sticky.cookie.name=foobar"
traefik.http.services.
See sticky sessions for more information.
- "traefik.http.services.myservice.loadbalancer.sticky.cookie.secure=true"
traefik.http.services.
See sticky sessions for more information.
- "traefik.http.services.myservice.loadbalancer.sticky.cookie.samesite=none"
traefik.http.services.
See response forwarding for more information.
- "traefik.http.services.myservice.loadbalancer.responseforwarding.flushinterval=10"
Middleware
You can declare pieces of middleware using labels starting with traefik.http.middlewares.{name-of-your-choice}.
, followed by the middleware type/options.
For example, to declare a middleware redirectscheme
named my-redirect
, you'd write traefik.http.middlewares.my-redirect.redirectscheme.scheme: https
.
More information about available middlewares in the dedicated middlewares section.
The character @
is not authorized in the middleware name.
Declaring and Referencing a Middleware
# ...
labels:
# Declaring a middleware
- traefik.http.middlewares.my-redirect.redirectscheme.scheme=https
# Referencing a middleware
- traefik.http.routers.my-container.middlewares=my-redirect
Conflicts in Declaration
If you declare multiple middleware with the same name but with different parameters, the middleware fails to be declared.
TCP
You can declare TCP Routers and/or Services using labels.
Declaring TCP Routers and Services
services:
my-container:
# ...
labels:
- "traefik.tcp.routers.my-router.rule=HostSNI(`example.com`)"
- "traefik.tcp.routers.my-router.tls=true"
- "traefik.tcp.services.my-service.loadbalancer.server.port=4123"
TCP and HTTP
If you declare a TCP Router/Service, it will prevent Traefik from automatically creating an HTTP Router/Service (like it does by default if no TCP Router/Service is defined). You can declare both a TCP Router/Service and an HTTP Router/Service for the same container (but you have to do so manually).
TCP Routers
traefik.tcp.routers.
See entry points for more information.
- "traefik.tcp.routers.mytcprouter.entrypoints=ep1,ep2"
traefik.tcp.routers.
See rule for more information.
- "traefik.tcp.routers.mytcprouter.rule=HostSNI(`example.com`)"
traefik.tcp.routers.
See service for more information.
- "traefik.tcp.routers.mytcprouter.service=myservice"
traefik.tcp.routers.
See TLS for more information.
- "traefik.tcp.routers.mytcprouter.tls=true"
traefik.tcp.routers.
See certResolver for more information.
- "traefik.tcp.routers.mytcprouter.tls.certresolver=myresolver"
traefik.tcp.routers.
See domains for more information.
- "traefik.tcp.routers.mytcprouter.tls.domains[0].main=example.org"
traefik.tcp.routers.
See domains for more information.
- "traefik.tcp.routers.mytcprouter.tls.domains[0].sans=test.example.org,dev.example.org"
traefik.tcp.routers.
See options for more information.
- "traefik.tcp.routers.mytcprouter.tls.options=mysoptions"
traefik.tcp.routers.
See TLS for more information.
- "traefik.tcp.routers.mytcprouter.tls.passthrough=true"
TCP Services
traefik.tcp.services.
Registers a port of the application.
- "traefik.tcp.services.mytcpservice.loadbalancer.server.port=423"
traefik.tcp.services.
See termination delay for more information.
- "traefik.tcp.services.mytcpservice.loadbalancer.terminationdelay=100"
UDP
You can declare UDP Routers and/or Services using labels.
Declaring UDP Routers and Services
services:
my-container:
# ...
labels:
- "traefik.udp.routers.my-router.entrypoints=udp"
- "traefik.udp.services.my-service.loadbalancer.server.port=4123"
UDP and HTTP
If you declare a UDP Router/Service, it will prevent Traefik from automatically creating an HTTP Router/Service (like it does by default if no UDP Router/Service is defined). You can declare both a UDP Router/Service and an HTTP Router/Service for the same container (but you have to do so manually).
UDP Routers
traefik.udp.routers.
See entry points for more information.
- "traefik.udp.routers.myudprouter.entrypoints=ep1,ep2"
traefik.udp.routers.
See service for more information.
- "traefik.udp.routers.myudprouter.service=myservice"
UDP Services
traefik.udp.services.
Registers a port of the application.
- "traefik.udp.services.myudpservice.loadbalancer.server.port=423"
Specific Provider Options
traefik.enable
- "traefik.enable=true"
You can tell Traefik to consider (or not) the container by setting traefik.enable
to true or false.
This option overrides the value of exposedByDefault
.
Port Lookup
Traefik is capable of detecting the port to use, by following the default rancher flow. That means, if you just expose lets say port :1337
on the rancher ui, traefik will pick up this port and use it.