94 lines
5.5 KiB
Plaintext
94 lines
5.5 KiB
Plaintext
---
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layout: docs
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page_title: Ingress Controller Integrations
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description: Configuring Ingress Controllers With Consul On Kubernetes
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---
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# Configuring Ingress Controllers with Consul on Kubernetes
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-> This topic requires familiarity with [Ingress Controllers](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/ingress-controllers/)
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-> The following information requires Consul 1.10+, Consul-k8s 0.26+, Consul-helm 0.32+ configured with
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[Transparent Proxy](/docs/connect/transparent-proxy) mode enabled.
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This page describes a general approach for integrating Ingress Controllers with Consul on Kubernetes to secure traffic from the Controller
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to the backend services. This allows Consul to transparently secure traffic from the ingress point through the entire traffic flow of the service.
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A few steps are generally required to enable an Ingress controller to join the mesh and pass traffic through to a service:
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* Enable connect-injection via an annotation on the Ingress Controller's deployment: `consul.hashicorp.com/connect-inject` is `true`.
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* Using the following annotations on the Ingress controller's deployment, set up exclusion rules for its ports.
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* [`consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy-exclude-inbound-ports`](/docs/k8s/connect#consul-hashicorp-com-transparent-proxy-exclude-inbound-ports) - Provides the ability to exclude a list of ports for
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inbound traffic that the service exposes from redirection. Typical configurations would require all inbound service ports
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for the controller to be included in this list.
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* [`consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy-exclude-outbound-ports`](/docs/k8s/connect#consul-hashicorp-com-transparent-proxy-exclude-outbound-ports) - Provides the ability to exclude a list of ports for
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outbound traffic that the service exposes from redirection. These would be outbound ports used by your ingress controller
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which expect to skip the mesh and talk to non-mesh services.
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* [`consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy-exclude-outbound-cidrs`](/docs/k8s/connect#consul-hashicorp-com-transparent-proxy-exclude-outbound-cidrs) - Provides the ability to exclude a list of CIDRs that
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the service communicates with for outbound requests from redirection. It is somewhat common that an Ingress controller
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will expect to make API calls to the Kubernetes service for service/endpoint management. As such including the ClusterIP of the
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Kubernetes service is common.
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~> Note: Depending on which ingress controller you use, these stanzas may differ in name and layout, but it is important to apply
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these annotations to the *pods* of your *ingress controller*.
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```yaml
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# An example list of pod annotations for an ingress controller, which need be applied to PODS for the controller, not the deployment itself.
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podAnnotations:
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consul.hashicorp.com/connect-inject: "true"
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# Add the container ports used by your ingress controller
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consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy-exclude-inbound-ports: "80,8000,9000,8443"
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# And the CIDR of your Kubernetes API: `kubectl get svc kubernetes -o jsonpath='{.spec.clusterIP}'
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consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy-exclude-outbound-cidrs: "10.108.0.1/32"
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```
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* If the Ingress controller acts as a LoadBalancer and routes directly to Pod IPs instead of the ClusterIP of your Kubernetes Services
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a `ServiceDefault` CRD must be applied to *each backend service* allowing it to use the `dialedDirectly` features. By default this is disabled.
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```yaml
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# Example Service defaults config entry
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apiVersion: consul.hashicorp.com/v1alpha1
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kind: ServiceDefaults
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metadata:
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name: backend
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spec:
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transparentProxy:
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dialedDirectly: true
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```
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* An intention from the Ingress Controller to the backend application must also be applied, this could be an L4 or L7 intention:
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```yaml
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# example L4 intention, but an L7 intention can also be used to control access to specific routes.
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apiVersion: consul.hashicorp.com/v1alpha1
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kind: ServiceIntentions
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metadata:
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name: ingress-backend
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spec:
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destination:
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name: backend
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sources:
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- name: ingress
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action: allow
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```
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### Common Configuration Problems:
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- The Ingress Controller's ServiceAccount name and Service name differ by default in some platforms. Consul on Kubernetes requires the
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ServiceAccount and Service to have the same name. To resolve this be sure to explicitly set ServiceAccount name the same as the ingress
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controller service name using it's respective helm configurations.
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- If the Ingress Controller does not have the correct inbound ports excluded it will fail to start and the Ingress'
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service will not get created, causing the controller to hang in the init container. The required container ports are not
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always readily available in the helm charts, so in order to resolve this examine the ingress controller's
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underlying pod spec and look for the required container ports, adding these to the `consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy-exclude-inbound-ports`
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annotation on the ingress controller deployment.
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### Examples:
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Here are a couple example configurations which can be used as reference points in setting up your own ingress controller configuration!
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These were used in dev environments and are not intended to be fully supported but should provide some idea how to extend the information
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above to your own uses cases.
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- [Traefik Consul example - kschoche](https://github.com/kschoche/traefik-consul)
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- [Consul K8s Ingress Controllers examples - joatmon08](https://github.com/joatmon08/consul-k8s-ingress-controllers)
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