# Egress routes for Project "Test", version 3 80 tcp 203.0.113.25 8080 tcp 203.0.113.26 80 8443 tcp 203.0.113.26 443 # Fallback 203.0.113.27
As a cluster administrator, you can define a ConfigMap
object that specifies destination mappings for an egress router pod. The specific format of the configuration depends on the type of egress router pod. For details on the format, refer to the documentation for the specific egress router pod.
For a large or frequently-changing set of destination mappings, you can use a config map to externally maintain the list.
An advantage of this approach is that permission to edit the config map can be delegated to users without cluster-admin
privileges. Because the egress router pod requires a privileged container, it is not possible for users without cluster-admin
privileges to edit the pod definition directly.
The egress router pod does not automatically update when the config map changes. You must restart the egress router pod to get updates. |
Install the OpenShift CLI (oc
).
Log in as a user with cluster-admin
privileges.
Create a file containing the mapping data for the egress router pod, as in the following example:
# Egress routes for Project "Test", version 3 80 tcp 203.0.113.25 8080 tcp 203.0.113.26 80 8443 tcp 203.0.113.26 443 # Fallback 203.0.113.27
You can put blank lines and comments into this file.
Create a ConfigMap
object from the file:
$ oc delete configmap egress-routes --ignore-not-found
$ oc create configmap egress-routes \
--from-file=destination=my-egress-destination.txt
In the previous command, the egress-routes
value is the name of the ConfigMap
object to create and my-egress-destination.txt
is the name of the file that the data is read from.
Create an egress router pod definition and specify the configMapKeyRef
stanza for the EGRESS_DESTINATION
field in the environment stanza:
...
env:
- name: EGRESS_DESTINATION
valueFrom:
configMapKeyRef:
name: egress-routes
key: destination
...