This topic describes example ingress routing (Layer 7) and load balancing (Layer 4) configurations for Kubernetes clusters deployed by VMware Tanzu Kubernetes Grid Integrated Edition (TKGI) on vSphere with NSX integration.
Note: The examples in this topic are based on NCP v2.3.2.
A Kubernetes ingress resource exposes HTTP and HTTPS routes from outside the cluster to services within the cluster. Traffic routing is controlled by rules defined on the ingress resource.
You define ingress resource configuration in the manifest of your Kubernetes deployment. When you define an ingress rule, the hostname and path values are both optional. It is common to define an ingress rule that specifies a hostname and no path, but defining an ingress rule without a hostname is uncommon. You can use wildcard DNS entries to route traffic to the exposed ingress resource.
When you define two ingress rules with the same hostname, include both the hostname and path in the ingress rules to avoid ambiguity.
Rules:
For example:
The following NSX ingress rule includes both a host and a path specification. The rule matches host: test.com
and path: /testpath
in the incoming request:
Ingress Rule Example 1
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: svc-ingress1
annotations:
spec:
rules:
- host: test.com
http:
paths:
- path: /testpath
pathType: Prefix
backend:
service:
name: svc1
port:
number: 80
The following NSX ingress rule includes only a host specification. The rule matches all host: test.com
in the incoming request:
Ingress Rule Example 2
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: svc-ingress2
annotations:
spec:
rules:
- host: test.com
http:
paths:
- path: /
pathType: Prefix
backend:
service:
name: svc1
port:
number: 80
If you create Ingress Rule Example 1 before Ingress Rule Example 2, then svc-ingress1
serves the test.com/testpath
URI because inbound requests hit the host: test.com
and path: /testpath
NSX ingress rule first.
If you create Ingress Rule Example 2 before Ingress Rule Example 1, then svc2-ingress2
serves the test.com/testpath
URI because inbound requests hit the host: test.com
NSX ingress rule first.
For more information about Kubernetes ingress resources, see Ingress in the Kubernetes documentation.
NSX supports autoscaling, which spins up a new Kubernetes type: LoadBalancer
service if the previous one has reached its scale limit. The NSX load balancer that is automatically provisioned by Tanzu Kubernetes Grid Integrated Edition provides two Layer 7 virtual servers for Kubernetes ingress resources, one for HTTP and the other for HTTPS.
For more information, see Supported Load Balancer Features in the NSX documentation.
The following is the format for the Kubernetes LoadBalancer
service definition:
kind: Service
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
name: SERVICE-NAME
spec:
type: LoadBalancer
selector:
app: APP-NAME
ports:
- protocol: PROTOCOL
port: PORT
targetPort: TARGET-PORT
name: PORT-NAME
Where:
SERVICE-NAME
is the name for your load balancer service.APP-NAME
is the name of your app serviced by the load balancer service.PROTOCOL
(Optional) is the network protocol to service. If the protocol is not specified it defaults to TCP
. For more information about supported protocols, see Supported protocols in the Kubernetes documentation.PORT
is the listening port. An integer value is supported. For example, 80
.TARGET-PORT
is the target port. Either an integer or a string value is supported. For example, 8080
or http
.PORT-NAME
(Optional) is the port name. Kubernetes requires the port name be specified for multi-port services.For example, the following is a LoadBalancer
service definition for an Tanzu Kubernetes Grid Integrated Edition-provisioned cluster with NSX:
kind: Service
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
name: test-service
spec:
type: LoadBalancer
selector:
app: testApp
ports:
- protocol: TCP
port: 80
targetPort: 8080
name: web
Note: With NCP v2.3.2 and earlier, the named targetPort
must be an integer, not a string. If you define a service type: LoadBalancer
with NSX, the value of targetPort
must be a port number, not a port name.
For more information about the Kubernetes LoadBalancer
service definition see Type LoadBalancer in the Kubernetes documentation.
When deploying a Kubernetes LoadBalancer
service, NSX automatically creates a new virtual IP address (VIP) on the existing load balancer.