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Services and Networking (13%)

Create a pod with image nginx called nginx and expose its port 80

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kubectl run nginx --image=nginx --restart=Never --port=80 --expose
# observe that a pod as well as a service are created

Confirm that ClusterIP has been created. Also check endpoints

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kubectl get svc nginx # services
kubectl get ep # endpoints

Get pod's ClusterIP, create a temp busybox pod and 'hit' that IP with wget

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kubectl get svc nginx # get the IP (something like 10.108.93.130)
kubectl run busybox --rm --image=busybox -it --restart=Never -- sh
wget -O- IP:80
exit

or

IP=$(kubectl get svc nginx --template={{.spec.clusterIP}}) # get the IP (something like 10.108.93.130)
kubectl run busybox --rm --image=busybox -it --restart=Never --env="IP=$IP" -- wget -O- $IP:80

Convert the ClusterIP to NodePort for the same service and find the NodePort port. Hit service using Node's IP. Delete the service and the pod at the end.

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kubectl edit svc nginx
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
  creationTimestamp: 2018-06-25T07:55:16Z
  name: nginx
  namespace: default
  resourceVersion: "93442"
  selfLink: /api/v1/namespaces/default/services/nginx
  uid: 191e3dac-784d-11e8-86b1-00155d9f663c
spec:
  clusterIP: 10.97.242.220
  ports:
  - port: 80
    protocol: TCP
    targetPort: 80
  selector:
    run: nginx
  sessionAffinity: None
  type: NodePort # change cluster IP to nodeport
status:
  loadBalancer: {}
kubectl get svc
# result:
NAME         TYPE        CLUSTER-IP       EXTERNAL-IP   PORT(S)        AGE
kubernetes   ClusterIP   10.96.0.1        <none>        443/TCP        1d
nginx        NodePort    10.107.253.138   <none>        80:31931/TCP   3m
wget -O- NODE_IP:31931 # if you're using Kubernetes with Docker for Windows/Mac, try 127.0.0.1
#if you're using minikube, try minikube ip, then get the node ip such as 192.168.99.117
kubectl delete svc nginx # Deletes the service
kbuectl delete pod nginx # Deletes the pod

Create a deployment called foo using image 'dgkanatsios/simpleapp' (a simple server that returns hostname) and 3 replicas. Label it as 'app=foo'. Declare that containers in this pod will accept traffic on port 8080 (do NOT create a service yet)

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kubectl run foo --image=dgkanatsios/simpleapp --labels=app=foo --port=8080 --replicas=3

Or, you can use the more recent approach of creating the requested deployment as kubectl run has been deprecated.

kubectl create deploy foo --image=dgkanatsios/simpleapp --dry-run -o yaml > foo.yml

vi foo.yml

Update the yaml to update the replicas and add container port.

apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
  creationTimestamp: null
  labels:
    app: foo
  name: foo
spec:
  replicas: 3 # Update this
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: foo
  strategy: {}
  template:
    metadata:
      creationTimestamp: null
      labels:
        app: foo
    spec:
      containers:
      - image: dgkanatsios/simpleapp
        name: simpleapp
        ports:                   # Add this
          - containerPort: 8080  # Add this
        resources: {}
status: {}

Get the pod IPs. Create a temp busybox pod and trying hitting them on port 8080

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kubectl get pods -l app=foo -o wide # 'wide' will show pod IPs
kubectl run busybox --image=busybox --restart=Never -it --rm -- sh
wget -O- POD_IP:8080 # do not try with pod name, will not work
# try hitting all IPs to confirm that hostname is different
exit

Create a service that exposes the deployment on port 6262. Verify its existence, check the endpoints

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kubectl expose deploy foo --port=6262 --target-port=8080
kubectl get service foo # you will see ClusterIP as well as port 6262
kubectl get endpoints foo # you will see the IPs of the three replica nodes, listening on port 8080

Create a temp busybox pod and connect via wget to foo service. Verify that each time there's a different hostname returned. Delete deployment and services to cleanup the cluster

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kubectl get svc # get the foo service ClusterIP
kubectl run busybox --image=busybox -it --rm --restart=Never -- sh
wget -O- foo:6262 # DNS works! run it many times, you'll see different pods responding
wget -O- SERVICE_CLUSTER_IP:6262 # ClusterIP works as well
# you can also kubectl logs on deployment pods to see the container logs
kubectl delete svc foo
kubectl delete deploy foo

Create an nginx deployment of 2 replicas, expose it via a ClusterIP service on port 80. Create a NetworkPolicy so that only pods with labels 'access: true' can access the deployment and apply it

kubernetes.io > Documentation > Concepts > Services, Load Balancing, and Networking > Network Policies

show

kubectl run nginx --image=nginx --replicas=2 --port=80 --expose
kubectl describe svc nginx # see the 'run=nginx' selector for the pods
# or
kubectl get svc nginx -o yaml --export

vi policy.yaml
kind: NetworkPolicy
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
metadata:
  name: access-nginx # pick a name
spec:
  podSelector:
    matchLabels:
      run: nginx # selector for the pods
  ingress: # allow ingress traffic
  - from:
    - podSelector: # from pods
        matchLabels: # with this label
          access: 'true' # 'true' *needs* quotes in YAML, apparently
# Create the NetworkPolicy
kubectl create -f policy.yaml

# Check if the Network Policy has been created correctly
# make sure that your cluster's network provider supports Network Policy (https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/administer-cluster/declare-network-policy/#before-you-begin)
kubectl run busybox --image=busybox --rm -it --restart=Never -- wget -O- http://nginx:80                       # This should not work
kubectl run busybox --image=busybox --rm -it --restart=Never --labels=access=true -- wget -O- http://nginx:80  # This should be fine