Installing and upgrading gateways
Cloud Service Mesh gives you the option to deploy and manage gateways as part of your service mesh. A gateway describes a load balancer operating at the edge of the mesh receiving incoming or outgoing HTTP/TCP connections. Gateways are Envoy proxies that provide you with fine-grained control over traffic entering and leaving the mesh. Gateways are primarily used to manage ingress traffic, but you can also configure gateways to manage other types of traffic. For example:
Egress gateways: An egress gateway lets you configure a dedicated exit node for the traffic leaving the mesh, letting you limit which services can or should access external networks, or to enable secure control of egress traffic to add security to your mesh, for example.
East-west gateways: A proxy for east-west traffic to allow service workloads to communicate across cluster boundaries in a multi-primary mesh on different networks. By default, this gateway will be public on the Internet.
This page describes best practices for deploying and upgrading the gateway
proxies as well as examples of configuring your own istio-ingressgateway
and
istio-egressgateway
gateway proxies.
Things like traffic splitting, redirects, and retry logic are possible by
applying a
Gateway
configuration to the gateway proxies. Then instead of adding application-layer
traffic routing (L7) to the same API resource, you bind a
Virtual Service
to the Gateway. This lets you manage gateway traffic like any other data plane
traffic in the service mesh.
You can deploy gateways in different ways and you can choose to use more than one topology within the same cluster. Refer to Gateway deployment topologies in the Istio documentation to learn more about these topologies.
Best practices for deploying gateways
The best practices for deploying gateways depend on whether you are using the managed data plane or the unmanaged data plane.
Best practices for managed data plane
- Enable the managed data plane.
- Add a managed revision label to a namespace.
- Deploy and manage the control plane and gateways separately.
- As a security best practice, we recommended that you deploy gateways in a different namespace from the control plane.
- Use automatic sidecar injection (auto-injection) to inject the proxy configuration for the gateways similar to how you would inject the sidecar proxies for your services.
These best practices:
- Ensure your managed gateways are automatically kept up-to-date with the latest enhancements and security updates.
- Offloads management and maintenance of gateway instances to Cloud Service Mesh managed data plane.
Best practices for unmanaged data plane
- Deploy and manage the control plane and gateways separately.
- As a security best practice, we recommended that you deploy gateways in a different namespace from the control plane.
- Use automatic sidecar injection (auto-injection) to inject the proxy configuration for the gateways similar to how you would inject the sidecar proxies for your services.
These best practices:
- Let your namespace administrators manage gateways without needing elevated privileges to your entire cluster.
- Let your administrators use the same deployment tooling or mechanism that they use to manage Kubernetes applications to deploy and manage gateways.
- Give administrators full control over the gateway Deployment, and also simplify operations. When a new upgrade is available or a configuration has changed, administrators update gateway Pods by simply restarting them. This makes the experience of operating a gateway Deployment the same as operating sidecar proxies for your services.
Deploy gateways
To support users with existing deployment tools, Cloud Service Mesh supports the
same ways to deploy a gateway as
Istio:
IstioOperator
, Helm, and Kubernetes YAML. Each method produces the same
result. Although you can choose the method you are most familiar with, we
recommend that you use the Kubernetes YAML method because it is easier to
modify and you can store hydrated manifests in source control.
Create a namespace for the gateway if you don't already have one. Replace
GATEWAY_NAMESPACE
with the name of your namespace.kubectl create namespace GATEWAY_NAMESPACE
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 that you add also depends on whether you deployed managed Cloud Service Mesh or installed the in-cluster control plane. The label is used by the sidecar injector webhook to associate injected sidecars with a particular control plane revision.
Select the tab below according to your installation type (either managed or in-cluster).
Managed
Use the following command to locate the available release channels:
kubectl -n istio-system get controlplanerevision
The output is similar to the following:
NAME AGE asm-managed 6d7h asm-managed-rapid 6d7h
In the output, the value under the
NAME
column is the revision label that corresponds to the available release channel for the Cloud Service Mesh version.In-cluster
For in-cluster control planes, the
istiod
Service and Deployment typically have a revision label similar toistio.io/rev=asm-1233-2
, whereasm-1233-2
identifies the Cloud Service Mesh version. The revision becomes part of theistiod
Service name, for example:istiod-asm-1233-2.istio-system
Use the following command to locate the revision label on
istiod
for the in-cluster control plane:kubectl get deploy -n istio-system -l app=istiod \ -o=jsonpath='{.items[*].metadata.labels.istio\.io\/rev}''{"\n"}'
Enable the namespace for injection. Replace and
REVISION
with the value for the revision label.kubectl label namespace GATEWAY_NAMESPACE istio-injection- istio.io/rev=REVISION --overwrite
If you installed Cloud Service Mesh using
asmcli
, change to the directory that you specified in--output_dir
, thencd
to thesamples
directory.If you didn't install using
asmcli
, copy the configuration files for the gateways from theanthos-service-mesh
repository.You can deploy the example gateway configuration located in the
samples/gateways/
directory as is, or modify it as needed.Ingress
kubectl apply -n GATEWAY_NAMESPACE -f gateways/istio-ingressgateway
Egress
kubectl apply -n GATEWAY_NAMESPACE -f gateways/istio-egressgateway
After you create the deployment, verify that the new services are working correctly:
kubectl get pod,service -n GATEWAY_NAMESPACE
Verify the output is similar to the following:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE pod/istio-ingressgateway-856b7c77-bdb77 1/1 Running 0 3s NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE service/istio-ingressgateway LoadBalancer 10.24.5.129 34.82.157.6 80:31904/TCP 3s
Gateway selectors
You apply a
Gateway
configuration to the istio-ingressgateway
and istio-egressgateway
proxies to
manage inbound and outbound traffic for your mesh, letting you specify which
traffic you want to enter or leave the mesh. The labels on a gateway
deployment's Pods are used by Gateway configuration resources, so it's important
that your Gateway selector matches these labels.
For example, in the above deployments, the istio=ingressgateway
label is set
on the gateway Pods. To apply a Gateway configuration to these deployments, you
need to select the same label:
apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1beta1
kind: Gateway
metadata:
name: gateway
spec:
selector:
istio: ingressgateway
...
For an example of a Gateway configuration and Virtual Service, see frontend.yaml in the Online Boutique sample application.
Upgrade gateways
In-place upgrades
For most use cases, you should upgrade your gateways following the in-place upgrade pattern. Because gateways utilize Pod injection, new gateway Pods that are created will automatically be injected with the latest configuration, which includes the version.
If you would like to change the control plane revision in use by the gateway,
you can set the istio.io/rev
label on the gateway Deployment, which will also
trigger a rolling restart.
Managed control plane
Since Google manages the control plane upgrades for the managed control plane, you can simply restart the gateway Deployment and the new pods will automatically be injected with the latest configuration and version.
kubectl rollout restart deployment istio-ingressgateway \
-n GATEWAY_NAMESPACE
In-cluster control plane
To apply the same pattern to your gateways when you have the in-cluster control
plane, you will need to change the control plane revision in use by the gateway.
Set the istio.io/rev
label on the gateway Deployment which will trigger a
rolling restart. The steps required depend on whether you need to update the
revision label on namespace and/or the gateway pod.
If you labeled the namespace for injection, set the
istio.io/rev
label on the namespace to the new revision value:kubectl label namespace GATEWAY_NAMESPACE \ istio-injection- istio.io/rev=REVISION \ --overwrite
If you enabled injection only for the gateway pod, set the
istio.io/rev
label on the Deployment to the new revision value like the following Kubernetes YAML file:cat <<EOF > gateway-deployment.yaml apiVersion: apps/v1 kind: Deployment metadata: name: istio-ingressgateway namespace: GATEWAY_NAMESPACE spec: selector: matchLabels: istio: ingressgateway template: metadata: annotations: # This is required to tell Anthos Service Mesh to inject the gateway with the # required configuration. inject.istio.io/templates: gateway labels: istio: ingressgateway istio.io/rev: REVISION spec: containers: - name: istio-proxy image: auto # The image will automatically update each time the pod starts. EOF kubectl apply -f gateway-deployment.yaml
Canary upgrades (advanced)
If you are using the in-cluster control plane and would like to more slowly
control the rollout of a new control plane revision, you can follow the canary
upgrade pattern. You can run multiple versions of a gateway Deployment and
ensure everything works as expected with a subset of your traffic. For example,
if you want to roll out a new revision, canary, create a copy of your gateway
Deployment with the istio.io/rev=REVISION
label set to the
new revision and a new name, for example istio-ingressgateway-canary
:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: istio-ingressgateway-canary
namespace: GATEWAY_NAMESPACE
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
istio: ingressgateway
template:
metadata:
annotations:
inject.istio.io/templates: gateway
labels:
istio: ingressgateway
istio.io/rev: REVISION # Set to the control plane revision you want to deploy
spec:
containers:
- name: istio-proxy
image: auto
When this Deployment is created, you will then have two versions of the gateway, both selected by the same Service:
kubectl get endpoints \
-o "custom-columns=NAME:.metadata.name,PODS:.subsets[*].addresses[*].targetRef.name" \
-n GATEWAY_NAMESPACE
The output is similar to the following:
NAME PODS
istio-ingressgateway istio-ingressgateway-788854c955-8gv96,istio-ingressgateway-canary-b78944cbd-mq2qf
If you are satisfied that your applications are working as expected, run this command to transition to the new version by deleting the Deployment with the old istio.io/rev label set:
kubectl delete deploy/istio-ingressgateway -n GATEWAY_NAMESPACE
If you encountered an issue when testing your application with the new version of the gateway, run this command to transition back to the old version by deleting the Deployment with the new istio.io/rev label set:
kubectl delete deploy/istio-ingressgateway-canary -n GATEWAY_NAMESPACE
Advanced configuration
Configure gateway minimum TLS version
For Cloud Service Mesh version 1.14 and later, the default minimum TLS version for
gateway servers is 1.2. You can configure the minimum TLS version using the
minProtocolVersion
field. For more information, see
ServerTLSSettings.
Troubleshoot gateways
Failed to update gateway image from auto
When you deploy or upgrade a gateway, Cloud Service Mesh inserts auto
as a
placeholder in the image
field. After the call to mutating webhook,
Cloud Service Mesh automatically replaces this placeholder with the actual
Cloud Service Mesh proxy image. If the call to mutating webhook fails, the auto
placeholder remains, and the container will not be found. This is typically
caused by an incorrect namespace label. Ensure you have configured the correct
namespace and then deploy or upgrade the gateway again.