$ oc annotate knativeserving <your_knative_CR> -n knative-serving serverless.openshift.io/default-enable-http2=true
OpenShift Serverless supports only insecure or edge-terminated routes. Insecure or edge-terminated routes do not support HTTP2 on OpenShift Container Platform. These routes also do not support gRPC because gRPC is transported by HTTP2. If you use these protocols in your application, you must call the application using the ingress gateway directly. To do this you must find the ingress gateway’s public address and the application’s specific host.
This method applies to OpenShift Container Platform 4.10 and later. For older versions, see the following section. |
Install OpenShift Serverless Operator and Knative Serving on your cluster.
Install the OpenShift CLI (oc
).
Create a Knative service.
upgrade OpenShift Container Platform 4.10 or later.
Enable HTTP/2 on OpenShift Ingress controller.
Add the serverless.openshift.io/default-enable-http2=true
annotation to the KnativeServing
Custom Resource:
$ oc annotate knativeserving <your_knative_CR> -n knative-serving serverless.openshift.io/default-enable-http2=true
After the annotation is added, you can verify that the appProtocol
value of the Kourier service is h2c
:
$ oc get svc -n knative-serving-ingress kourier -o jsonpath="{.spec.ports[0].appProtocol}"
h2c
Now you can use the gRPC framework over the HTTP/2 protocol for external traffic, for example:
import "google.golang.org/grpc"
grpc.Dial(
YOUR_URL, (1)
grpc.WithTransportCredentials(insecure.NewCredentials())), (2)
)
1 | Your ksvc URL. |
2 | Your certificate. |
This method needs to expose Kourier Gateway using the
|
Install OpenShift Serverless Operator and Knative Serving on your cluster.
Install the OpenShift CLI (oc
).
Create a Knative service.
Find the application host. See the instructions in Verifying your serverless application deployment.
Find the ingress gateway’s public address:
$ oc -n knative-serving-ingress get svc kourier
NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
kourier LoadBalancer 172.30.51.103 a83e86291bcdd11e993af02b7a65e514-33544245.us-east-1.elb.amazonaws.com 80:31380/TCP,443:31390/TCP 67m
The public address is surfaced in the EXTERNAL-IP
field, and in this case is a83e86291bcdd11e993af02b7a65e514-33544245.us-east-1.elb.amazonaws.com
.
Manually set the host header of your HTTP request to the application’s host, but direct the request itself against the public address of the ingress gateway.
$ curl -H "Host: hello-default.example.com" a83e86291bcdd11e993af02b7a65e514-33544245.us-east-1.elb.amazonaws.com
Hello Serverless!
You can also make a direct gRPC request against the ingress gateway:
import "google.golang.org/grpc"
grpc.Dial(
"a83e86291bcdd11e993af02b7a65e514-33544245.us-east-1.elb.amazonaws.com:80",
grpc.WithAuthority("hello-default.example.com:80"),
grpc.WithInsecure(),
)
Ensure that you append the respective port, 80 by default, to both hosts as shown in the previous example. |