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Table of Contents generated with DocToc

Exposing applications using services of LoadBalancer type

This page shows how to create Services of LoadBalancer type in Kubernetes cluster which is running inside OpenStack. For an explanation of the Service concept and a discussion of the various types of Services, see Services.

A LoadBalancer type Service is a typical way to expose an application to the internet. It relies on the cloud provider to create an external load balancer with an IP address in the relevant network space. Any traffic that is then directed to this IP address is forwarded on to the application’s service.

Note: Different cloud providers may support different Service annotations and features.

Creating a Service of LoadBalancer type

Create an application of Deployment as the Service backend:

kubectl run echoserver --image=gcr.io/google-containers/echoserver:1.10 --port=8080

To provide the echoserver application with an internet-facing loadbalancer we can simply run the following:

cat <<EOF | kubectl apply -f -
---
kind: Service
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
  name: loadbalanced-service
spec:
  selector:
    run: echoserver
  type: LoadBalancer
  ports:
  - port: 80
    targetPort: 8080
    protocol: TCP
EOF

Check the state the status of the loadbalanced-service until the EXTERNAL-IP status is no longer pending.

$ kubectl get service loadbalanced-service
NAME                   TYPE           CLUSTER-IP      EXTERNAL-IP    PORT(S)        AGE
loadbalanced-service   LoadBalancer   10.254.28.183   202.49.242.3   80:31177/TCP   2m18s

Once we can see that our service is active and has been assigned an external IP address we should be able to test our application via curl from any internet accessible machine.

$ curl 202.49.242.3
Hostname: echoserver-74dcfdbd78-fthv9
Pod Information:
        -no pod information available-
Server values:
        server_version=nginx: 1.13.3 - lua: 10008
Request Information:
        client_address=10.0.0.7
        method=GET
        real path=/
        query=
        request_version=1.1
        request_scheme=http
        request_uri=http://202.49.242.3:8080/
Request Headers:
        accept=*/*
        host=202.49.242.3
        user-agent=curl/7.47.0
Request Body:
        -no body in request-

Supported Features

Service annotations

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/floating-network-id

    The public network id which will allocate public IP for loadbalancer. This annotation works when the value of service.beta.kubernetes.io/openstack-internal-load-balancer is false.

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/floating-subnet

    A public network can have several subnets. This annotation is the name of subnet belonging to the floating network. This annotation is optional.

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/floating-subnet-id

    This annotation is the ID of a subnet belonging to the floating network, if specified, it takes precedence over loadbalancer.openstack.org/floating-subnet or loadbalancer.openstack.org/floating-tag.

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/floating-subnet-tags

    This annotation is the tag of a subnet belonging to the floating network.

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/class

    The name of a preconfigured class in the config file. If provided, this config options included in the class section take precedence over the annotations of floating-subnet-id and floating-network-id. See the section below for how it works.

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/subnet-id

    VIP subnet ID of load balancer created.

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/network-id

    The network ID which will allocate virtual IP for loadbalancer.

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/port-id

    The VIP port ID for load balancer created.

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/connection-limit

    The maximum number of connections per second allowed for the listener. Positive integer or -1 for unlimited (default). This annotation supports update operation.

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/keep-floatingip

    If 'true', the floating IP will NOT be deleted. Default is 'false'.

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/proxy-protocol

    If 'true', the loadbalancer pool protocol will be set as PROXY. Default is 'false'.

    Not supported when lb-provider=ovn is configured in openstack-cloud-controller-manager.

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/x-forwarded-for

    If 'true', X-Forwarded-For is inserted into the HTTP headers which contains the original client IP address so that the backend HTTP service is able to get the real source IP of the request. Please note that the cloud provider will force the creation of an Octavia listener of type HTTP if this option is set. Only applies when using Octavia.

    This annotation also works in conjunction with the loadbalancer.openstack.org/default-tls-container-ref annotation. In this case the cloud provider will create an Octavia listener of type TERMINATED_HTTPS instead of an HTTP listener.

    Not supported when lb-provider=ovn is configured in openstack-cloud-controller-manager.

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/timeout-client-data

    Frontend client inactivity timeout in milliseconds for the load balancer.

    Not supported when lb-provider=ovn is configured in openstack-cloud-controller-manager.

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/timeout-member-connect

    Backend member connection timeout in milliseconds for the load balancer.

    Not supported when lb-provider=ovn is configured in openstack-cloud-controller-manager.

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/timeout-member-data

    Backend member inactivity timeout in milliseconds for the load balancer.

    Not supported when lb-provider=ovn is configured in openstack-cloud-controller-manager.

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/timeout-tcp-inspect

    Time to wait for additional TCP packets for content inspection in milliseconds for the load balancer.

    Not supported when lb-provider=ovn is configured in openstack-cloud-controller-manager.

  • service.beta.kubernetes.io/openstack-internal-load-balancer

    If 'true', the loadbalancer VIP won't be associated with a floating IP. Default is 'false'. This annotation is ignored if only internal Service is allowed to create in the cluster.

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/enable-health-monitor

    Defines whether to create health monitor for the load balancer pool, if not specified, use create-monitor config. The health monitor can be created or deleted dynamically.

    Not supported when lb-provider=ovn is configured in openstack-cloud-controller-manager.

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/flavor-id

    The id of the flavor that is used for creating the loadbalancer.

    Not supported when lb-provider=ovn is configured in openstack-cloud-controller-manager.

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/availability-zone

    The name of the loadbalancer availability zone to use. It is ignored if the Octavia version doesn't support availability zones yet.

    Not supported when lb-provider=ovn is configured in openstack-cloud-controller-manager.

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/default-tls-container-ref

    Reference to a tls container. This option works with Octavia, when this option is set then the cloud provider will create an Octavia Listener of type TERMINATED_HTTPS for a TLS Terminated loadbalancer. Format for tls container ref: https://{keymanager_host}/v1/containers/{uuid}

    Not supported when lb-provider=ovn is configured in openstack-cloud-controller-manager.

  • loadbalancer.openstack.org/load-balancer-id

    This annotation is automatically added to the Service if it's not specified when creating. After the Service is created successfully it shouldn't be changed, otherwise the Service won't behave as expected.

    If this annotation is specified with a valid cloud load balancer ID when creating Service, the Service is reusing this load balancer rather than creating another one. Again, it shouldn't be changed after the Service is created.

    If this annotation is specified, the other annotations which define the load balancer features will be ignored.

Switching between Floating Subnets by using preconfigured Classes

If you have multiple FloatingIPPools and/or FloatingIPSubnets it might be desirable to offer the user logical meanings for LoadBalancers like internetFacing or DMZ instead of requiring the user to select a dedicated network or subnet ID at the service object level as an annotation.

With a LoadBalancerClass it possible to specify to which floating network and corresponding subnetwork the LoadBalancer belong.

In the example cloud.conf below three LoadBalancerClass'es have been defined: internetFacing, dmz and office

[Global]
auth-url="https://someurl"
domain-name="mydomain"
tenant-name="mytenant"
username="myuser"
password="mypassword"

[LoadBalancer]
use-octavia=true
floating-network-id="a57af0a0-da92-49be-a98a-345ceca004b3"
floating-subnet-id="a02eb6c3-fc69-46ae-a3fe-fb43c1563cbc"
subnet-id="fa6a4e6c-6ae4-4dde-ae86-3e2f452c1f03"
create-monitor=true
monitor-delay=60s
monitor-timeout=30s
monitor-max-retries=5

[LoadBalancerClass "internetFacing"]
floating-network-id="c57af0a0-da92-49be-a98a-345ceca004b3"
floating-subnet-id="f90d2440-d3c6-417a-a696-04e55eeb9279"

[LoadBalancerClass "dmz"]
floating-subnet-id="a374bed4-e920-4c40-b646-2d8927f7f67b"

[LoadBalancerClass "office"]
floating-subnet-id="b374bed4-e920-4c40-b646-2d8927f7f67b"

Within a LoadBalancerClass one of floating-subnet-id, floating-subnet or floating-subnet-tags is mandatory. floating-subnet-id takes precedence over the other ones with must all match if specified. If the pattern starts with a !, the match is negated. The rest of the pattern can either be a direct name, a glob or a regular expression if it starts with a ~. floating-subnet-tags can be a comma separated list of tags. By default it matches a subnet if at least one tag is present. If the list is preceded by a & all tags must be present. Again with a preceding ! the condition be be negated. floating-network-id is optional can be defined in case it differs from the default floating-network-id in the LoadBalancer section.

By using the loadbalancer.openstack.org/class annotation on the service object, you can now select which floating subnets the LoadBalancer should be using.

apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
  annotations:
    loadbalancer.openstack.org/class: internetFacing
  name: nginx-internet
spec:
  type: LoadBalancer
  selector:
    app: nginx
  ports:
  - port: 80
    targetPort: 80

Creating Service by specifying a floating IP

Sometimes it's useful to use an existing available floating IP rather than creating a new one, especially in the automation scenario. In the example below, 122.112.219.229 is an available floating IP created in the OpenStack Networking service.

NOTE: If 122.112.219.229 is not available, a new floating IP will be created automatically from the configured public network. If 122.112.219.229 is already associated with another port, the Service creation will fail.

apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
  name: nginx-internet
spec:
  type: LoadBalancer
  selector:
    app: nginx
  ports:
  - port: 80
    targetPort: 80
  loadBalancerIP: 122.112.219.229

Restrict Access For LoadBalancer Service

When using a Service with spec.type: LoadBalancer, you can specify the IP ranges that are allowed to access the load balancer by using spec.loadBalancerSourceRanges. This field takes a list of IP CIDR ranges, which Kubernetes will use to configure firewall exceptions.

This feature is only supported in the OpenStack Cloud with Octavia(API version >= v2.12) service deployed, otherwise loadBalancerSourceRanges is ignored.

In the following example, a load balancer will be created that is only accessible to clients with IP addresses in 192.168.32.1/24.

apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
  name: test
  namespace: default
spec:
  type: LoadBalancer
  loadBalancerSourceRanges:
    - 192.168.32.1/24
  selector:
    run: echoserver
  ports:
    - protocol: TCP
      port: 80
      targetPort: 8080

loadBalancerSourceRanges field supports to be updated.

Use PROXY protocol to preserve client IP

When exposing services like nginx-ingress-controller, it's a common requirement that the client connection information could pass through proxy servers and load balancers, therefore visible to the backend services. Knowing the originating IP address of a client may be useful for setting a particular language for a website, keeping a denylist of IP addresses, or simply for logging and statistics purposes.

This requires that not only the proxy server(e.g. NGINX) should support PROXY protocol, but also the external load balancer (created by openstack-cloud-controller-manager in our case) should be able to send the correct data traffic to the proxy server.

This guide uses nginx-ingress-controller as an example.

To enable PROXY protocol support, the openstack-cloud-controller-manager config option enable-ingress-hostname should set to true.

  1. Set up the nginx-ingress-controller

    Refer to https://docs.nginx.com/nginx-ingress-controller/installation for how to install nginx-ingress-controller deployment or daemonset. Before creating load balancer service, make sure to enable PROXY protocol in the nginx config.

    proxy-protocol: "True"
    real-ip-header: "proxy_protocol"
    set-real-ip-from: "0.0.0.0/0"
  2. Create load balancer service

    Use the following manifest to create nginx-ingress Service of LoadBalancer type.

    apiVersion: v1
    kind: Service
    metadata:
      name: nginx-ingress
      namespace: nginx-ingress
      annotations:
        loadbalancer.openstack.org/proxy-protocol: "true"
    spec:
      externalTrafficPolicy: Cluster
      type: LoadBalancer
      ports:
      - port: 80
        targetPort: 80
        protocol: TCP
        name: http
      - port: 443
        targetPort: 443
        protocol: TCP
        name: https
      selector:
        app: nginx-ingress

    Wait until the service gets an external IP.

    $ kubectl -n nginx-ingress get svc
    NAME            TYPE           CLUSTER-IP       EXTERNAL-IP             PORT(S)                      AGE
    nginx-ingress   LoadBalancer   10.104.112.154   103.250.240.24.nip.io   80:32418/TCP,443:30009/TCP   107s
  3. To validate the PROXY protocol is working, create a service that can print the request header and an ingress backed by nginx-ingress-controller.

    $ cat <<EOF | kubectl apply -f -
    apiVersion: apps/v1
    kind: Deployment
    metadata:
      name: echoserver
      namespace: default
      labels:
        app: echoserver
    spec:
      replicas: 1
      selector:
        matchLabels:
          app: echoserver
      template:
        metadata:
          labels:
            app: echoserver
        spec:
          containers:
          - name: echoserver
            image: gcr.io/google-containers/echoserver:1.10
            imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
            ports:
              - containerPort: 8080
    EOF
    
    $ kubectl expose deployment echoserver --type=ClusterIP --target-port=8080
    
    $ cat <<EOF | kubectl apply -f -
    apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
    kind: Ingress
    metadata:
      name: test-proxy-protocol
      namespace: default
      annotations:
        kubernetes.io/ingress.class: "nginx"
    spec:
      rules:
        - host: test.com
          http:
            paths:
            - path: /ping
              pathType: Exact
              backend:
                service:
                  name: echoserver
                  port:
                    number: 80
    EOF
    
    $ kubectl get ing
    NAME                   CLASS    HOSTS      ADDRESS                 PORTS   AGE
    test-proxy-protocol    <none>   test.com   103.250.240.24.nip.io   80      58m

    Now, send request to the ingress URL defined above, you should see your public IP address is shown in the Request Headers (x-forwarded-for or x-real-ip).

    $ ip=103.250.240.24.nip.io
    $ curl -sH "Host: test.com" http://$ip/ping | sed '/^\s*$/d'
    Hostname: echoserver-5c79dc5747-m4spf
    Pod Information:
            -no pod information available-
    Server values:
            server_version=nginx: 1.13.3 - lua: 10008
    Request Information:
            client_address=10.244.215.132
            method=GET
            real path=/ping
            query=
            request_version=1.1
            request_scheme=http
            request_uri=http://test.com:8080/ping
    Request Headers:
            accept=*/*
            connection=close
            host=test.com
            user-agent=curl/7.58.0
            x-forwarded-for=103.197.63.236
            x-forwarded-host=test.com
            x-forwarded-port=80
            x-forwarded-proto=http
            x-real-ip=103.197.63.236
    Request Body:
            -no body in request-

Sharing load balancer with multiple Services

By default, different Services of LoadBalancer type should have different corresponding cloud load balancers, however, openstack-cloud-controller-manager allows multiple Services to share a single load balancer if the Octavia service supports the tag feature (since version 2.5).

The shared load balancer can be created either by other Services or outside the cluster, e.g. created manually by the user in the cloud or by Services from the other Kubernetes clusters. The load balancer is deleted only when the last attached Service is deleted, unless the load balancer was created outside the Kubernetes cluster.

The maximum number of Services that share a load balancer can be configured in [LoadBalancer] max-shared-lb, default value is 2. The ports of those Services shouldn't have collisions.

For example, create a Service service-1 as before:

kind: Service
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
  name: service-1
  namespace: default
spec:
  type: LoadBalancer
  selector:
    app: webserver
  ports:
    - protocol: TCP
      port: 80
      targetPort: 8080

When service-1 is created successfully, check the load balancer created in the cloud, which has its name in its tags.

$ openstack loadbalancer show 2b224530-9414-4302-8163-5abebdcdc84f -c name -c tags
+-------+---------------------------------------------+
| Field | Value                                       |
+-------+---------------------------------------------+
| name  | kube_service_cluster-name_default_service-1 |
| tags  | kube_service_cluster-name_default_service-1 |
+-------+---------------------------------------------+

Check the Service, you should notice a new annotation loadbalancer.openstack.org/load-balancer-id is added:

$ kubectl describe service service-1 | grep loadbalancer.openstack.org/load-balancer-id
                          loadbalancer.openstack.org/load-balancer-id: 2b224530-9414-4302-8163-5abebdcdc84f

NOTE: Do not update the annotation loadbalancer.openstack.org/load-balancer-id after the Service is created successfully or the relationship between Service and the load balancer will be broken.

Now, create another Service service-2 but re-use the load balancer created for service-1 by specifying the annotation loadbalancer.openstack.org/load-balancer-id:

kind: Service
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
  name: service-2
  namespace: default
  annotations:
    loadbalancer.openstack.org/load-balancer-id: "2b224530-9414-4302-8163-5abebdcdc84f"
spec:
  type: LoadBalancer
  selector:
    app: webserver
  ports:
    - protocol: TCP
      port: 8080
      targetPort: 8080

After service-2 is created successfully, check the load balancer again, you'll see there is a new tag added. Now the load balancer should have 2 listeners, listening on the ports of the 2 Services respectively.

$ openstack loadbalancer show 2b224530-9414-4302-8163-5abebdcdc84f -c name -c tags
+-------+---------------------------------------------+
| Field | Value                                       |
+-------+---------------------------------------------+
| name  | kube_service_lingxian-k8s_default_service-1 |
| tags  | kube_service_lingxian-k8s_default_service-1 |
|       | kube_service_lingxian-k8s_default_service-2 |
+-------+---------------------------------------------+
$ openstack loadbalancer listener list --loadbalancer 2b224530-9414-4302-8163-5abebdcdc84f -c id -c protocol -c protocol_port
+--------------------------------------+----------+---------------+
| id                                   | protocol | protocol_port |
+--------------------------------------+----------+---------------+
| 05fbcc93-61e5-4eb4-be21-632ab8022d46 | TCP      |            80 |
| 50e94cc4-f08e-4c71-9ee4-4488350834f6 | TCP      |          8080 |
+--------------------------------------+----------+---------------+

Check the load balancer again after deleting service-1:

$ openstack loadbalancer show 2b224530-9414-4302-8163-5abebdcdc84f -c name -c tags
+-------+---------------------------------------------+
| Field | Value                                       |
+-------+---------------------------------------------+
| name  | kube_service_lingxian-k8s_default_service-1 |
| tags  | kube_service_lingxian-k8s_default_service-2 |
+-------+---------------------------------------------+
$ openstack loadbalancer listener list --loadbalancer 2b224530-9414-4302-8163-5abebdcdc84f -c id -c protocol -c protocol_port
+--------------------------------------+----------+---------------+
| id                                   | protocol | protocol_port |
+--------------------------------------+----------+---------------+
| 50e94cc4-f08e-4c71-9ee4-4488350834f6 | TCP      |          8080 |
+--------------------------------------+----------+---------------+

The load balancer will be deleted after service-2 is deleted.