This is a cache of https://docs.okd.io/latest/virt/vm_networking/virt-connecting-vm-to-service-mesh.html. It is a snapshot of the page at 2024-11-23T20:07:31.169+0000.
Connecting a VM to a <strong>service</strong> mesh - Networking | Virtualization | OKD 4
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OKD Virtualization is now integrated with OpenShift service Mesh. You can monitor, visualize, and control traffic between pods that run virtual machine workloads on the default pod network with IPv4.

Adding a virtual machine to a service mesh

To add a virtual machine (VM) workload to a service mesh, enable automatic sidecar injection in the VM configuration file by setting the sidecar.istio.io/inject annotation to true. Then expose your VM as a service to view your application in the mesh.

To avoid port conflicts, do not use ports used by the Istio sidecar proxy. These include ports 15000, 15001, 15006, 15008, 15020, 15021, and 15090.

Prerequisites
  • You installed the service Mesh Operators.

  • You created the service Mesh control plane.

  • You added the VM project to the service Mesh member roll.

Procedure
  1. Edit the VM configuration file to add the sidecar.istio.io/inject: "true" annotation:

    Example configuration file
    apiVersion: kubevirt.io/v1
    kind: VirtualMachine
    metadata:
      labels:
        kubevirt.io/vm: vm-istio
      name: vm-istio
    spec:
      runStrategy: Always
      template:
        metadata:
          labels:
            kubevirt.io/vm: vm-istio
            app: vm-istio (1)
          annotations:
            sidecar.istio.io/inject: "true" (2)
        spec:
          domain:
            devices:
              interfaces:
              - name: default
                masquerade: {} (3)
              disks:
              - disk:
                  bus: virtio
                name: containerdisk
              - disk:
                  bus: virtio
                name: cloudinitdisk
            resources:
              requests:
                memory: 1024M
          networks:
          - name: default
            pod: {}
          terminationGracePeriodSeconds: 180
          volumes:
          - containerDisk:
              image: registry:5000/kubevirt/fedora-cloud-container-disk-demo:devel
            name: containerdisk
    1 The key/value pair (label) that must be matched to the service selector attribute.
    2 The annotation to enable automatic sidecar injection.
    3 The binding method (masquerade mode) for use with the default pod network.
  2. Apply the VM configuration:

    $ oc apply -f <vm_name>.yaml (1)
    1 The name of the virtual machine YAML file.
  3. Create a service object to expose your VM to the service mesh.

    apiVersion: v1
    kind: service
    metadata:
      name: vm-istio
    spec:
      selector:
        app: vm-istio (1)
      ports:
        - port: 8080
          name: http
          protocol: TCP
    1 The service selector that determines the set of pods targeted by a service. This attribute corresponds to the spec.metadata.labels field in the VM configuration file. In the above example, the service object named vm-istio targets TCP port 8080 on any pod with the label app=vm-istio.
  4. Create the service:

    $ oc create -f <service_name>.yaml (1)
    1 The name of the service YAML file.