--- layout: docs page_title: Connect - Transparent Proxy sidebar_title: Transparent Proxy Beta description: |- Transparent proxy is used to direct inbound and outbound traffic to services via the Envoy proxy and configure upstreams via intentions. --- # Transparent Proxy Beta Transparent proxy allows users to reach other services in the service mesh while ensuring that inbound and outbound traffic for services in the mesh are directed through the sidecar proxy. This makes it more likely that traffic is secure and only reaches intended destinations since the proxy can enforce security and policy like TLS and Service Intentions. Previously, service mesh users would need to explicitly define upstreams for a service as a local listener on the sidecar proxy, and dial the local listener to reach the appropriate upstream. Users would also have to set intentions to allow specific services to talk to one another. Transparent proxying reduces this duplication, by determining upstreams implicitly from Service Intentions. Explicit upstreams are still supported in the [proxy service registration](/docs/connect/registration/service-registration) on VMs and via the [annotation](/docs/k8s/connect#consul-hashicorp-com-connect-service-upstreams) in Kubernetes. To support transparent proxying, Consul now supports a command [`consul connect redirect-traffic`](/commands/connect/redirect-traffic) to redirect traffic through an inbound and outbound listener on the sidecar. It also watches Service Intentions and configures the Envoy proxy with the appropriate upstream IPs. If the default ACL policy is "allow", then Service Intentions are not required. In Consul on Kubernetes, the traffic redirection command is automatically set up via an init container. ## Prerequisites ### Kubernetes * To use transparent proxy on Kubernetes, Consul-helm >= `0.32.0` and Consul-k8s >= `0.26.0` are required in addition to the Consul >= `1.10.0`. * If the default policy for ACLs is "deny", then Service Intentions should be set up to allow intended services to connect to each other. Otherwise, all Connect services can talk to all other services. The Kubernetes integration takes care of registering Kubernetes services with Consul, injecting a sidecar proxy, and enabling traffic redirection. ## Configuration Transparent proxy can be enabled in Kubernetes on the whole cluster via the Helm value: ```yaml connectInject: transparentProxy: defaultEnabled: true ``` It can also be enabled on a per service basis via the annotation `consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy=true` on the Pod for each service: ```yaml apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: name: static-server spec: selector: app: static-server ports: - protocol: TCP port: 80 targetPort: 8080 --- apiVersion: v1 kind: ServiceAccount metadata: name: static-server --- apiVersion: apps/v1 kind: Deployment metadata: name: static-server spec: replicas: 1 selector: matchLabels: app: static-server template: metadata: name: static-server labels: app: static-server annotations: 'consul.hashicorp.com/connect-inject': 'true' 'consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy': 'true' spec: containers: - name: static-server image: hashicorp/http-echo:latest args: - -text="hello world" - -listen=:8080 ports: - containerPort: 8080 name: http serviceAccountName: static-server ``` ## Known Beta Limitations * There is no first class support for transparent proxying on VMs. * Traffic can only be transparently proxied within a Consul datacenter. ## Using Transparent Proxy In Kubernetes, services can reach other services via their [KubeDNS](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/dns-pod-service/) address or via Pod IPs, and that traffic will be transparently sent through the proxy. Connect services in Kubernetes are required to have a Kubernetes service selecting the Pods. ~> Note: In order to use KubeDNS, the Kubernetes service name will need to match the Consul service name. This will be the case by default, unless the service Pods have the annotation `consul.hashicorp.com/connect-service` overriding the Consul service name. Transparent proxy is enabled by default in Consul-helm >=`0.32.0`. The Helm value used to enable/disable transparent proxy for all applications in a Kubernetes cluster is `connectInject.transparentProxy.defaultEnabled`. Each Pod for the service will be configured with iptables rules to direct all inbound and outbound traffic through an inbound and outbound listener on the sidecar proxy. The proxy will be configured to know how to route traffic to the appropriate upstream services based on [Service Intentions](/docs/connect/config-entries/service-intentions). This means Connect services no longer need to use the `consul.hashicorp.com/connect-service-upstreams` annotation to configure upstreams explicitly. Once the Service Intentions are set, they can simply address the upstream services using KubeDNS. As of Consul-k8s >= `0.26.0` and Consul-helm >= `0.32.0`, a Kubernetes service that selects application pods is required for Connect applications, i.e: ```yaml apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: name: sample-app namespace: default spec: selector: app: sample-app ports: - protocol: TCP port: 80 ``` In the example above, if another service wants to reach `sample-app` via transparent proxying, it can dial `sample-app.default.svc.cluster.local`, using [KubeDNS](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/dns-pod-service/). If ACLs with default "deny" policy are enabled, it also needs a [ServiceIntention](/docs/connect/config-entries/service-intentions) allowing it to talk to `sample-app`.