$ oc adm policy add-cluster-role-to-user cluster-admin username
OpenShift Container Platform provides methods for communicating from outside the cluster with services running in the cluster. This method uses an Ingress Controller.
The Ingress Operator manages Ingress Controllers and wildcard DNS.
Using an Ingress Controller is the most common way to allow external access to an OpenShift Container Platform cluster.
An Ingress Controller is configured to accept external requests and proxy them based on the configured routes. This is limited to HTTP, HTTPS using SNI, and TLS using SNI, which is sufficient for web applications and services that work over TLS with SNI.
Work with your administrator to configure an Ingress Controller to accept external requests and proxy them based on the configured routes.
The administrator can create a wildcard DNS entry and then set up an Ingress Controller. Then, you can work with the edge Ingress Controller without having to contact the administrators.
By default, every ingress controller in the cluster can admit any route created in any project in the cluster.
The Ingress Controller:
Has two replicas by default, which means it should be running on two worker nodes.
Can be scaled up to have more replicas on more nodes.
The procedures in this section require prerequisites performed by the cluster administrator. |
Before starting the following procedures, the administrator must:
Set up the external port to the cluster networking environment so that requests can reach the cluster.
Make sure there is at least one user with cluster admin role. To add this role to a user, run the following command:
$ oc adm policy add-cluster-role-to-user cluster-admin username
Have an OpenShift Container Platform cluster with at least one master and at least one node and a system outside the cluster that has network access to the cluster. This procedure assumes that the external system is on the same subnet as the cluster. The additional networking required for external systems on a different subnet is out-of-scope for this topic.
If the project and service that you want to expose do not exist, first create the project, then the service.
If the project and service already exist, skip to the procedure on exposing the service to create a route.
Install the oc
CLI and log in as a cluster administrator.
Create a new project for your service:
$ oc new-project <project_name>
For example:
$ oc new-project myproject
Use the oc new-app
command to create a service. For example:
$ oc new-app \
-e MYSQL_USeR=admin \
-e MYSQL_PASSWORD=redhat \
-e MYSQL_DATABASe=mysqldb \
registry.redhat.io/rhscl/mysql-80-rhel7
Run the following command to see that the new service is created:
$ oc get svc -n myproject
NAMe TYPe CLUSTeR-IP eXTeRNAL-IP PORT(S) AGe
mysql-80-rhel7 ClusterIP 172.30.63.31 <none> 3306/TCP 4m55s
By default, the new service does not have an external IP address.
You can expose the service as a route by using the oc expose
command.
To expose the service:
Log in to OpenShift Container Platform.
Log in to the project where the service you want to expose is located:
$ oc project myproject
Run the following command to expose the route:
$ oc expose service <service_name>
For example:
$ oc expose service mysql-80-rhel7
route "mysql-80-rhel7" exposed
Use a tool, such as cURL, to make sure you can reach the service using the cluster IP address for the service:
$ curl <pod_ip>:<port>
For example:
$ curl 172.30.131.89:3306
The examples in this section uses a MySQL service, which requires a client
application. If you get a string of characters with the Got packets out of order
message, you are connected to the service.
If you have a MySQL client, log in with the standard CLI command:
$ mysql -h 172.30.131.89 -u admin -p
enter password:
Welcome to the MariaDB monitor. Commands end with ; or \g.
MySQL [(none)]>
Ingress Controller sharding by using route labels means that the Ingress Controller serves any route in any namespace that is selected by the route selector.
Ingress Controller sharding is useful when balancing incoming traffic load among a set of Ingress Controllers and when isolating traffic to a specific Ingress Controller. For example, company A goes to one Ingress Controller and company B to another.
edit the router-internal.yaml
file:
# cat router-internal.yaml
apiVersion: v1
items:
- apiVersion: operator.openshift.io/v1
kind: IngressController
metadata:
name: sharded
namespace: openshift-ingress-operator
spec:
domain: <apps-sharded.basedomain.example.net>
nodePlacement:
nodeSelector:
matchLabels:
node-role.kubernetes.io/worker: ""
routeSelector:
matchLabels:
type: sharded
status: {}
kind: List
metadata:
resourceVersion: ""
selfLink: ""
Apply the Ingress Controller router-internal.yaml
file:
# oc apply -f router-internal.yaml
The Ingress Controller selects routes in any namespace that have the label
type: sharded
.
Ingress Controller sharding by using namespace labels means that the Ingress Controller serves any route in any namespace that is selected by the namespace selector.
Ingress Controller sharding is useful when balancing incoming traffic load among a set of Ingress Controllers and when isolating traffic to a specific Ingress Controller. For example, company A goes to one Ingress Controller and company B to another.
edit the router-internal.yaml
file:
# cat router-internal.yaml
apiVersion: v1
items:
- apiVersion: operator.openshift.io/v1
kind: IngressController
metadata:
name: sharded
namespace: openshift-ingress-operator
spec:
domain: <apps-sharded.basedomain.example.net>
nodePlacement:
nodeSelector:
matchLabels:
node-role.kubernetes.io/worker: ""
namespaceSelector:
matchLabels:
type: sharded
status: {}
kind: List
metadata:
resourceVersion: ""
selfLink: ""
Apply the Ingress Controller router-internal.yaml
file:
# oc apply -f router-internal.yaml
The Ingress Controller selects routes in any namespace that is selected by the
namespace selector that have the label type: sharded
.
The Ingress Operator manages wildcard DNS. For more information, see Ingress Operator in OpenShift Container Platform, Installing a cluster on bare metal, and Installing a cluster on vSphere.