nginx-third-party

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Published: Jan 27, 2016 License: Apache-2.0 Imports: 24 Imported by: 0

README

Nginx Ingress Controller

This is a nginx Ingress controller that uses ConfigMap to store the nginx configuration. See Ingress controller documentation for details on how it works.

What it provides?

  • Ingress controller
  • nginx 1.9.x with lua-nginx-module
  • SSL support
  • custom ssl_dhparam (optional). Just mount a secret with a file named dhparam.pem.
  • support for TCP services (flag --tcp-services)
  • custom nginx configuration using ConfigMap
  • custom error pages. Using the flag --custom-error-service is possible to use a custom compatible 404-server image nginx-error-server that provides an additional /errors route that returns custom content for a particular error code. This is completely optional

Requirements

  • default backend 404-server (or a custom compatible image)

SSL

Please follow test.sh as a guide on how to generate secrets containing SSL certificates. The name of the secret can be different than the name of the certificate.

Currently Ingress does not support HTTPS. To bypass this the controller will check if there's a certificate for the the host in Spec.Rules.Host checking for a certificate in each of the mounted secrets. If exists it will create a nginx server listening in the port 443.

Examples:

First we need to deploy some application to publish. To keep this simple we will use the echoheaders app that just returns information about the http request as output

kubectl run echoheaders --image=gcr.io/google_containers/echoserver:1.0 --replicas=1 --port=8080

Now we expose the same application in two different services (so we can create different Ingress rules)

kubectl expose rc echoheaders --port=80 --target-port=8080 --name=echoheaders-x 
kubectl expose rc echoheaders --port=80 --target-port=8080 --name=echoheaders-y

Next we create a couple of Ingress rules

kubectl create -f examples/ingress.yaml

we check that ingress rules are defined:

$ kubectl get ing
NAME      RULE          BACKEND   ADDRESS
echomap   -
          foo.bar.com
          /foo          echoheaders-x:80
          bar.baz.com
          /bar          echoheaders-y:80
          /foo          echoheaders-x:80

Before the deploy of nginx we need a default backend 404-server (or a compatible custom image)

kubectl create -f examples/default-backend.yaml
kubectl expose rc default-http-backend --port=80 --target-port=8080 --name=default-http-backend

Default configuration

The last step is the deploy of nginx Ingress rc (from the examples directory)

kubectl create -f examples/rc-default.yaml

To test if evertyhing is working correctly:

curl -v http://<node IP address>:80/foo -H 'Host: foo.bar.com'

You should see an output similar to

*   Trying 172.17.4.99...
* Connected to 172.17.4.99 (172.17.4.99) port 80 (#0)
> GET /foo HTTP/1.1
> Host: foo.bar.com
> User-Agent: curl/7.43.0
> Accept: */*
>
< HTTP/1.1 200 OK
< Server: nginx/1.9.8
< Date: Tue, 15 Dec 2015 13:45:13 GMT
< Content-Type: text/plain
< Transfer-Encoding: chunked
< Connection: keep-alive
< Vary: Accept-Encoding
<
CLIENT VALUES:
client_address=10.2.84.43
command=GET
real path=/foo
query=nil
request_version=1.1
request_uri=http://foo.bar.com:8080/foo

SERVER VALUES:
server_version=nginx: 1.9.7 - lua: 9019

HEADERS RECEIVED:
accept=*/*
connection=close
host=foo.bar.com
user-agent=curl/7.43.0
x-forwarded-for=172.17.4.1
x-forwarded-host=foo.bar.com
x-forwarded-server=foo.bar.com
x-real-ip=172.17.4.1
BODY:
* Connection #0 to host 172.17.4.99 left intact

If we try to get a non exising route like /foobar we should see

$ curl -v 172.17.4.99/foobar -H 'Host: foo.bar.com'
*   Trying 172.17.4.99...
* Connected to 172.17.4.99 (172.17.4.99) port 80 (#0)
> GET /foobar HTTP/1.1
> Host: foo.bar.com
> User-Agent: curl/7.43.0
> Accept: */*
>
< HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found
< Server: nginx/1.9.8
< Date: Tue, 15 Dec 2015 13:48:18 GMT
< Content-Type: text/html
< Transfer-Encoding: chunked
< Connection: keep-alive
< Vary: Accept-Encoding
<
default backend - 404
* Connection #0 to host 172.17.4.99 left intact

(this test checked that the default backend is properly working)

Replacing the default backend with a custom one we can change the default error pages provided by nginx

Exposing TCP services

First we need to remove the running

kubectl delete rc nginx-ingress-3rdpartycfg
kubectl create -f examples/rc-tcp.yaml

Now we add the annotation to the replication controller that indicates with services should be exposed as TCP: The annotation key is nginx-ingress.kubernetes.io/tcpservices. You can expose more than one service using comma as separator. Each service must contain the namespace, service name and port to be use as public port

kubectl annotate rc nginx-ingress-3rdpartycfg "nginx-ingress.kubernetes.io/tcpservices=default/echoheaders-x:9000"

Note: the only reason to remove and create a new rc is that we cannot open new ports dynamically once the pod is running.

Once we run the kubectl annotate command nginx will reload.

Now we can test the new service:

$ (sleep 1; echo "GET / HTTP/1.1"; echo "Host: 172.17.4.99:9000"; echo;echo;sleep 2) | telnet 172.17.4.99 9000

Trying 172.17.4.99...
Connected to 172.17.4.99.
Escape character is '^]'.
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Server: nginx/1.9.7
Date: Tue, 15 Dec 2015 14:46:28 GMT
Content-Type: text/plain
Transfer-Encoding: chunked
Connection: keep-alive

f
CLIENT VALUES:

1a
client_address=10.2.84.45

c
command=GET

c
real path=/

a
query=nil

14
request_version=1.1

25
request_uri=http://172.17.4.99:8080/

1


f
SERVER VALUES:

28
server_version=nginx: 1.9.7 - lua: 9019

1


12
HEADERS RECEIVED:

16
host=172.17.4.99:9000

6
BODY:

14
-no body in request-
0

SSL

Currently Ingress rules does not contains SSL definitions. In order to support SSL in nginx this controller uses secrets mounted inside the directory /etc/nginx-ssl to detect if some Ingress rule contains a host for which it is possible the creation of an SSL server.

First create a secret containing the ssl certificate and key. This example creates the certificate and the secret (json):

SECRET_NAME=secret-echoheaders-1 HOSTS=foo.bar.com ./examples/certs.sh

Create the secret:

kubectl create -f secret-secret-echoheaders-1-foo.bar.com.json

Check if the secret was created:

$ kubectl get secrets
NAME                   TYPE                                  DATA      AGE
secret-echoheaders-1   Opaque                                2         9m

Like before we need to remove the running nginx rc

kubectl delete rc nginx-ingress-3rdpartycfg

Next create a new rc that uses the secret

kubectl create -f examples/rc-ssl.yaml

Note: this example uses a self signed certificate.

Example output:

$ curl -v https://172.17.4.99/foo -H 'Host: bar.baz.com' -k
*   Trying 172.17.4.99...
* Connected to 172.17.4.99 (172.17.4.99) port 4444 (#0)
* TLS 1.2 connection using TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256
* Server certificate: foo.bar.com
> GET /foo HTTP/1.1
> Host: bar.baz.com
> User-Agent: curl/7.43.0
> Accept: */*
>
< HTTP/1.1 200 OK
< Server: nginx/1.9.8
< Date: Thu, 17 Dec 2015 14:57:03 GMT
< Content-Type: text/plain
< Transfer-Encoding: chunked
< Connection: keep-alive
< Vary: Accept-Encoding
<
CLIENT VALUES:
client_address=10.2.84.34
command=GET
real path=/foo
query=nil
request_version=1.1
request_uri=http://bar.baz.com:8080/foo

SERVER VALUES:
server_version=nginx: 1.9.7 - lua: 9019

HEADERS RECEIVED:
accept=*/*
connection=close
host=bar.baz.com
user-agent=curl/7.43.0
x-forwarded-for=172.17.4.1
x-forwarded-host=bar.baz.com
x-forwarded-server=bar.baz.com
x-real-ip=172.17.4.1
BODY:
* Connection #0 to host 172.17.4.99 left intact
-no body in request-

Custom errors

The default backend provides a way to customize the default 404 page. This helps but sometimes is not enough. Using the flag --custom-error-service is possible to use an image that must be 404 compatible and provide the route /error Here there is an example of the the image

The route /error expects two arguments: code and format

  • code defines the wich error code is expected to be returned (502,503,etc.)
  • format the format that should be returned For instance /error?code=504&format=json or /error?code=502&format=html

Using a volume pointing to /var/www/html directory is possible to use a custom error

TODO:

  • multiple SSL certificates
  • custom nginx configuration using ConfigMap

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