Inject sidecar proxies with Cloud Service Mesh
This document covers how to configure sidecar proxy injection with Cloud Service Mesh to enhance network security, reliability, and observability. These functions are abstracted away from the application's primary container and implemented in a common out-of-process proxy (the sidecar), delivered as a separate container in the same Pod. This provides the Cloud Service Mesh's features without redesigning your production applications to participate in a service mesh.
Automatic sidecar proxy injection (auto-injection) occurs when Cloud Service Mesh detects a namespace label you configure for the workload's Pod. The proxy intercepts all inbound and outbound traffic to the workloads and communicates with Cloud Service Mesh.
Enabling automatic sidecar injection
The recommended way to inject sidecar proxies is to use the webhooks-based automatic sidecar injector, although you can manually update your Pods' Kubernetes configuration.
To enable auto-injection, you label your namespaces with the default injection labels if the default tag is set up, or with the revision label to your namespace. The label is used by the sidecar injector webhook to associate injected sidecars with a particular control plane revision.
To enable auto-injection:
Use the following command to locate the revision label on
istiod
:kubectl -n istio-system get pods -l app=istiod --show-labels
The output looks similar to the following:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE LABELS istiod-asm-1233-2-5788d57586-bljj4 1/1 Running 0 23h app=istiod,istio.io/rev=asm-1233-2,istio=istiod,pod-template-hash=5788d57586 istiod-asm-1233-2-5788d57586-vsklm 1/1 Running 1 23h app=istiod,istio.io/rev=asm-1233-2,istio=istiod,pod-template-hash=5788d57586
In the output, under the
LABELS
column, note the value of theistiod
revision label, which follows the prefixistio.io/rev=
. In this example, the value isasm-1233-2
.Apply the revision label to namespaces and remove the istio-injection label (if it exists). In the following command,
NAMESPACE
is the name of the namespace where you want to enable auto-injection, andREVISION
is the revision label you noted in the previous step.kubectl label namespace NAMESPACE istio-injection- istio.io/rev=REVISION --overwrite
You can ignore the message
"istio-injection not found"
in the output. That means that the namespace didn't previously have theistio-injection
label, which you should expect in new installations of Cloud Service Mesh or new deployments. Because auto-injection behavior is undefined when a namespace has both theistio-injection
and the revision label, allkubectl label
commands in the Cloud Service Mesh documentation explicitly ensure that only one is set.Restart the affected pods, using the steps in the next section.
Restart Pods to update sidecar proxies
With automatic sidecar injection, you can update the sidecars for existing Pods with a Pod restart:
How you restart Pods depends on if they were created as part of a Deployment.
If you used a Deployment, restart the Deployment, which restarts all Pods with sidecars:
kubectl rollout restart deployment -n YOUR_NAMESPACE
If you didn't use a Deployment, delete the Pods, and they are automatically recreated with sidecars:
kubectl delete pod -n YOUR_NAMESPACE --all
Check that all the Pods in the namespace have sidecars injected:
kubectl get pod -n YOUR_NAMESPACE
In the following example output from the previous command, notice that the
READY
column indicates there are two containers for each of your workloads: the primary container and the container for the sidecar proxy.NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE YOUR_WORKLOAD 2/2 Running 0 20s ...
What's next
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