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ingress-controller.md

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Ingress Controllers

This lab will show how to use Kubernetes ingress controllers to route traffic to our Heroes web application.

Add Ingress Controller to an Azure Kubernetes Service Cluster

There are a number of ingress controllers available today. Here is a quick, but not exhaustive list for reference purposes:

  • Nginx
  • Traefik
  • LinkerD
  • Custom Ingress Controllers

For the purposes of this lab we will be using Nginx as our ingress controller.

Configure Helm

We will use Helm to install Nginx. We had configured Helm in prior labs.

#f03c15 Perform below steps in the Jumpbox

  1. Connect to the jumpbox and open shell

  2. Validate your Helm install by running the below commands.

    helm version
    
    # You should see something like the following as output:
    Client: &version.Version{SemVer:"v2.9.1", GitCommit:"8478fb4fc723885b155c924d1c8c410b7a9444e6", GitTreeState:"clean"}
    Server: &version.Version{SemVer:"v2.9.1", GitCommit:"8478fb4fc723885b155c924d1c8c410b7a9444e6", GitTreeState:"clean"}

    Note: If helm was not configured, you must run helm init

Install Nginx using Helm

The Nginx Ingress Controller is an Ingress controller that uses a ConfigMap to store the nginx configuration and provides layer 7 capabilities for applications deployed on Kubernetes.

  1. Install Nginx using Helm CLI

    # The following command will install the Nginx ingress controller into the K8s cluster with RBAC enabled.
    
    helm install --name ingress stable/nginx-ingress --namespace kube-system --set rbac.create=true --set rbac.createRole=true --set rbac.createClusterRole=true
    # The following command will install the Nginx ingress controller into the K8s cluster with RBAC disabled.
    
    helm install --name ingress stable/nginx-ingress --namespace kube-system --set rbac.create=false --set rbac.createRole=true --set rbac.createClusterRole=true
  2. Validate that Nginx was installed

    kubectl get pods -n kube-system | grep nginx
    
    # You should see something like the following as output:
    ingress-nginx-ingress-controller-86bf69bcfc-jqvsg        1/1       Running   0          1d
    ingress-nginx-ingress-default-backend-86d6db4c47-td2k8   1/1       Running   0          1d
    • The nginx-ingress helm chart deploys a nginx ingress controller and also a backend for the ingress controller. The backend is used when a route is not found and will display a 404 error. You can browse to the public IP to preview this.
    kubectl get svc -n kube-system | grep nginx
    
    # You should see something like the following as output:
    ingress-nginx-ingress-controller       LoadBalancer  10.0.231.143  52.173.190.190  80:30910/TCP,443:30480/TCP  1d
    ingress-nginx-ingress-default-backend  ClusterIP     10.0.175.123  <none>          80/TCP                      1d
    • The nginx controller will use a LoadBalancer type service where the backend is of type ClusterIP

Deploy the heroes web\api app with Ingress

We will now deploy the application with a configured Ingress resource.

  1. Switch to helper-files directory. Clear anything out of your cluster by deleting your deployments

    cd ~/container-bootcamp/labs/helper-files/
    
    # kubectl delete -f heroes-db.yaml
    kubectl delete -f heroes-web-api.yaml
  2. View the heroes-web-api-ingress.yaml file.

  3. Change all image field in the YAML files to match your Azure Container registry url.

    • Update the yaml files for the proper container image names.

    • You will need to replace the <login server> with the ACR login server created in earlier labs.

      Note: You will update the image name TWICE updating the web and api container images and ONCE in the database container image.

      • Example:

        spec:
        containers:
        - image: mycontainerregistry.azurecr.io/azureworkshop/rating-web:v1
            name:  heroes-web-cntnr
  4. Deploy heroes-db.yaml and import the data

    kubectl apply -f heroes-db.yaml
    # exec into pod and import data
    kubectl get pods
    
    NAME                                 READY     STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
    heroes-db-deploy-2357291595-k7wjk    1/1       Running   0          3m
    
    MONGO_POD=heroes-db-deploy-2357291595-k7wjk
    
    kubectl exec -it $MONGO_POD bash
    
    root@heroes-db-deploy-2357291595-xb4xm:/# ./import.sh
    
    2018-01-16T21:38:44.819+0000	connected to: localhost
    2018-01-16T21:38:44.918+0000	imported 4 documents
    2018-01-16T21:38:44.927+0000	connected to: localhost
    2018-01-16T21:38:45.031+0000	imported 72 documents
    2018-01-16T21:38:45.040+0000	connected to: localhost
    2018-01-16T21:38:45.152+0000	imported 2 documents
    root@heroes-db-deploy-2357291595-xb4xm:/# exit
    
    # be sure to exit pod as shown above
  5. Create an additional web pod instance for load balancing

  • Update the heroes-web-api-ingress.yaml file and change the number of replicas for heroes-web-deploy to 2.
apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
  name:  heroes-web-deploy
  labels:
    name:  heroes-web
spec:
  replicas: 2
  strategy:
    rollingUpdate:
      maxSurge: 1
      maxUnavailable: 1
    type: RollingUpdate
  template:
  1. Deploy heroes-web-api-ingress.yaml

    kubectl apply -f heroes-web-api-ingress.yaml

    Note: Below is an example of a Ingress object

    ---
    apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
    kind: Ingress
    metadata:
    name: heroes-web-ingress
    annotations:
        kubernetes.io/ingress.class: nginx
        # Add to generate certificates for this ingress
        kubernetes.io/tls-acme: 'false'
    spec:
    rules:
        - host:
        http:
            paths:
            - backend:
                serviceName: web
                servicePort: 8080
                path: /
  2. Validate the pods

  • There will be 2 pods runnning for web-deploy and one each for db-deploy and api-deploy
kubectl get pods

NAME                                 READY     STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
heroes-api-deploy-74fcf46688-ndrzl   1/1       Running   0          50s
heroes-db-deploy-7d6bf97b54-d5n9z    1/1       Running   0          1m
heroes-web-deploy-8695d44cdb-7wrgq   1/1       Running   0          50s
heroes-web-deploy-8695d44cdb-mkzzx   1/1       Running   0          50s
  1. Browse to the web app via the Ingress Controller
# get ingress external IP
kubectl get svc -n kube-system | grep ingress

ingress-nginx-ingress-controller        LoadBalancer   10.0.155.205   52.186.29.245   80:32045/TCP,443:31794/TCP   2h
ingress-nginx-ingress-default-backend   ClusterIP      10.0.171.59    <none>          80/TCP                       2h

Note: you will likely see a privacy SSL warning

Test the Load Balancing

Refresh the page multiple times and notice the change in the name of the pod and the IP address as shown in example snippets below:

Screenshot1

Screenshot2