AWS instances
Onboard a virtual machine in Amazon Web Services (AWS) to your Istio service mesh.
This guide walks you through the following general steps:
- Create compute resources: Create two Kubernetes clusters and a virtual machine. Additionally, configure IAM permissions for the SPIRE server you later deploy to the workload cluster.
- Set up the management cluster: Deploy the Gloo management plane to the management cluster. The installation settings enable the onboarding of external workloads to the service mesh.
- Set up the workload cluster: Set up your workload cluster to communicate with the management cluster and your VM, including deploying test apps, deploying Istio, and registering the workload cluster with the Gloo management plane. The registration settings include deploying a SPIRE server to the workload cluster, and using PostgreSQL as the default datastore for the SPIRE server.
- Onboard the VM: Onboard the VM to your Gloo Mesh environment by generating a bootstrap bundle that installs the Istio sidecar, OpenTelemetry (OTel) collector, and SPIRE agents on the VM.
- Test connectivity: Verify that the onboarding process was successful by testing the bi-directional connection between the apps that run in the service mesh in your workload cluster and a test app on your VM.
- Launch the UI (optional): To visualize the connection to your VM in your Gloo Mesh setup, you can launch the Gloo UI.
For more information about onboarding VMs to a service mesh, see the high-level architectural overview of Istio’s virtual machine integration.
Before you begin
Network considerations
When you have a multi-network environment, you have two options for onboarding a VM:
- Use a Kubernetes cluster and VM that are created in the same VPC network. In this network setup, Istio workloads on the cluster are able to communicate directly with Istio workloads on the VM.
- Use a Kubernetes cluster and VM that are created in different VPC networks. When your VM is in a different network, you must specify the following tags when you run the
meshctl external-workload-onboard
CLI command in step 4 of this guide:--network
: When you create a Kubernetes cluster, it is associated with a network tag. Workloads in the cluster inherit this tag by default, and Istio uses this tag to identify workloads as “local” to the cluster. When you onboard a VM that is in the same VPC subnet as the cluster, the workloads in this VM inherit this network tag too. However, if the VM is in a different subnet than the cluster, you must onboard the VM with a different network tag. Istio uses this VM network tag to identify workloads that are “remote”, and is then able to use the east-west gateway to send traffic requests to Istio services in the VM (“remote”) network. Because this tag is internal to Istio, it can be arbitrary, but you might want to use the same name of the VM’s actual infrastructure network for clarity.--external-ip
(optional): If your VM must accept inbound connections, you must specify the external IP address of the VM in the--external-ip
flag. All outbound communication from cluster to the VM goes through the cluster’s east-west gateway to this IP address.
Install CLI tools
Install the following CLI tools.
helm
, the Kubernetes package manager.kubectl
, the Kubernetes command line tool. Download thekubectl
version that is within one minor version of the Kubernetes clusters you plan to use.istioctl
, the Istio command line tool. Important: Versions 1.17.4 through 1.22.5-patch0 are supported in Gloo Mesh Enterprise for onboarding VMs.meshctl
, the Gloo command line tool for bootstrapping Gloo Mesh Enterprise, registering clusters, describing configured resources, and more. Be sure to download version2.6.6
, which uses the latest Gloo Mesh installation values.curl -sL https://run.solo.io/meshctl/install | GLOO_MESH_VERSION=v2.6.6 sh - export PATH=$HOME/.gloo-mesh/bin:$PATH
Step 1: Create compute resources
Create the virtual machine, management cluster, and at least one workload cluster, and configure IAM permissions for the SPIRE server.
Create or use existing Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS) clusters.
- Create or use at least two clusters. In subsequent steps, you deploy the Gloo management plane to one cluster, and the Gloo data plane and an Istio service mesh to the other cluster.
- Note: The cluster name must be alphanumeric with no special characters except a hyphen (-), lowercase, and begin with a letter (not a number).
- For more information, see the System requirements.
- Set the names of your clusters from your infrastructure provider.
export MGMT_CLUSTER=<mgmt-cluster-name> export REMOTE_CLUSTER=<workload-cluster-name>
- Save the kubeconfig contexts for your clusters. Run
kubectl config get-contexts
, look for your cluster in theCLUSTER
column, and get the context name in theNAME
column. Note: Do not use context names with underscores. The generated certificate that connects workload clusters to the management cluster uses the context name as a SAN specification, and underscores in SAN are not FQDN compliant. You can rename a context by runningkubectl config rename-context "<oldcontext>" <newcontext>
.export MGMT_CONTEXT=<management-cluster-context> export REMOTE_CONTEXT=<workload-cluster-context>
- Create an IAM OIDC provider for the workload cluster. The OIDC provider allows the Kubernetes service account for the SPIRE server in your workload cluster to act as an AWS IAM service account. The SPIRE server pod can then automatically authenticate as the IAM service account when accessing your VM.
- Create or use at least two clusters. In subsequent steps, you deploy the Gloo management plane to one cluster, and the Gloo data plane and an Istio service mesh to the other cluster.
Install the required AWS add-ons in your workload cluster.
- Save your AWS account ID in an environment variable.
export ACCOUNT="$(aws sts get-caller-identity --query Account --output text)"
- Install the EBS CSI driver required by the persistent volume that the PostgreSQL database uses.
eksctl create iamserviceaccount \ --name ebs-csi-controller-sa \ --namespace kube-system \ --cluster "${REMOTE_CLUSTER}" \ --role-name AmazonEKS_EBS_CSI_DriverRole-${REMOTE_CLUSTER} \ --role-only \ --attach-policy-arn arn:aws:iam::aws:policy/service-role/AmazonEBSCSIDriverPolicy \ --approve \ --override-existing-serviceaccounts eksctl create addon \ --name aws-ebs-csi-driver \ --cluster "${REMOTE_CLUSTER}" \ --service-account-role-arn "arn:aws:iam::${ACCOUNT}:role/AmazonEKS_EBS_CSI_DriverRole-${REMOTE_CLUSTER}" \ --force
- Install the Load Balancer Controller required to expose load balancer services.
curl -o /tmp/aws_lb_iam_policy.json https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes-sigs/aws-load-balancer-controller/v2.4.7/docs/install/iam_policy.json aws iam create-policy --policy-name AWSLoadBalancerControllerIAMPolicy --policy-document file:///tmp/aws_lb_iam_policy.json eksctl create iamserviceaccount \ --name=aws-load-balancer-controller \ --cluster="${REMOTE_CLUSTER}" \ --namespace=kube-system \ --role-name AmazonEKSLoadBalancerControllerRole \ --attach-policy-arn="arn:aws:iam::${ACCOUNT}:policy/AWSLoadBalancerControllerIAMPolicy" \ --approve helm repo add eks https://aws.github.io/eks-charts helm repo update helm upgrade -i aws-load-balancer-controller eks/aws-load-balancer-controller \ --kube-context "${REMOTE_CONTEXT}" \ -n kube-system \ --set clusterName="${REMOTE_CLUSTER}" \ --set serviceAccount.create=false \ --set serviceAccount.name=aws-load-balancer-controller
- Save your AWS account ID in an environment variable.
Create an EKS security group for the VM.
- Get the ID of the AWS VPC that the VM is attached to.
- Create a security group for that VPC.
aws ec2 create-security-group --description "VM test" --group-name <name> --vpc-id <eks_cluster_VPC_ID>
- From the output, save the security group ID in an environment variable.
export VM_SG_ID=<security group ID>
- For testing connectivity, allow all outbound traffic, and permit TCP traffic on ports 22 (SSH access) and 5000 (sample app). Additionally, if your cluster exists on the same network as the VM, ensure that the cluster’s security group rules allow inbound traffic from VMs.
aws ec2 authorize-security-group-ingress --group-id ${VM_SG_ID} --protocol tcp --port 22 --cidr 0.0.0.0/0 aws ec2 authorize-security-group-ingress --group-id ${VM_SG_ID} --protocol tcp --port 5000 --cidr 0.0.0.0/0
Create the VM.
- Create an EC2 instance that uses either a Debian or RPM image. Example command:
# Create a key pair for SSH aws ec2 create-key-pair --key-name vmtest --query 'KeyMaterial' --output text > ~/vmtest.pem # Create the EC2 instance. Note that the instance is not required to be on the same subnet as the cluster. aws ec2 run-instances --image-id ami-03f65b8614a860c29 --instance-type t3.micro --count 1 --security-group-ids ${VM_SG_ID} --associate-public-ip-address --key-name vmtest --subnet-id <workload_cluster_subnet>
- Update the security group for the EKS cluster nodegroup to permit traffic from the VM’s security group.
- Create an EC2 instance that uses either a Debian or RPM image. Example command:
Create IAM permissions for the SPIRE server service account so that the server can perform node attestation of the VM instance.
- Save the following policy configration files.
cat >spire-server-delegate.json <<EOF { "Version": "2012-10-17", "Statement": [ { "Sid": "SpireServerDelegate", "Effect": "Allow", "Action": [ "ec2:DescribeInstances", "iam:GetInstanceProfile" ], "Resource": "*" } ] } EOF cat >spire-trust.json <<EOF { "Version": "2012-10-17", "Statement": [ { "Effect": "Allow", "Principal": { "AWS": "arn:aws:iam::${ACCOUNT}:root" }, "Action": "sts:AssumeRole", "Condition": {} } ] } EOF cat >spire-server.json <<EOF { "Version": "2012-10-17", "Statement": [ { "Sid": "SpireServer", "Effect": "Allow", "Action": "sts:AssumeRole", "Resource": "arn:aws:iam::${ACCOUNT}:role/SpireServerDelegate" } ] } EOF
- Create an IAM role that allows the SPIRE server to describe the EC2 instances in your account.
aws iam create-policy --policy-name SpireServerDelegate --policy-document file://spire-server-delegate.json aws iam create-role --role-name SpireServerDelegate --assume-role-policy-document file://spire-trust.json aws iam attach-role-policy --policy-arn arn:aws:iam::${ACCOUNT}:policy/SpireServerDelegate --role-name SpireServerDelegate
- Create an IAM policy to bind the role to the SPIRE service account that you create in subsequent steps.
aws iam create-policy --policy-name SpireServer --policy-document file://spire-server.json
- Save the following policy configration files.
Step 2: Set up the management cluster
Install the Gloo management plane in the management cluster. Note that the installation settings included in these steps are tailored for basic setups. For more information about advanced settings, see the setup documentation.
Set your Gloo Mesh Enterprise license key as an environment variable. If you do not have one, contact an account representative. If you prefer to specify license keys in a secret instead, see Licensing. To check your license’s validity, you can run
meshctl license check --key $(echo ${GLOO_MESH_LICENSE_KEY} | base64 -w0)
.export GLOO_MESH_LICENSE_KEY=<license_key>
If you plan to deploy an ingress gateway to manage ingress traffic to mesh workloads and you want to apply policies, such as rate limits, external authentication, or Web Application Firewalls to that gateway, you must also have a Gloo Mesh Gateway license. Without a Gloo Mesh Gateway license, you can only set up simple routing rules to match and forward traffic to mesh workloads. Save the Gloo Mesh Gateway license key as an additional environment variable.
export GLOO_MESH_GATEWAY_LICENSE_KEY=<license-key>
Save the following settings in a
mgmt-plane.yaml
Helm values file.cat >mgmt-plane.yaml <<EOF common: cluster: ${MGMT_CLUSTER} glooMgmtServer: serviceOverrides: metadata: annotations: # AWS-specific annotations for load balancers service.beta.kubernetes.io/aws-load-balancer-cross-zone-load-balancing-enabled: "true" service.beta.kubernetes.io/aws-load-balancer-nlb-target-type: instance service.beta.kubernetes.io/aws-load-balancer-scheme: internet-facing service.beta.kubernetes.io/aws-load-balancer-type: external licensing: glooMeshLicenseKey: ${GLOO_MESH_LICENSE_KEY} EOF
Install the Gloo management plane in your management cluster. This command uses a basic profile to create a
gloo-mesh
namespace, install the management plane components in your management cluster, such as the management server, and enable the ability to add external workloads to your Gloo environment.meshctl install \ --kubecontext ${MGMT_CONTEXT} \ --version 2.6.6 \ --profiles mgmt-server \ --chart-values-file mgmt-plane.yaml \ --set featureGates.ExternalWorkloads=true
Verify that the management plane pods are running.
kubectl get pods -n gloo-mesh --context ${MGMT_CONTEXT}
Save the external address and port that were assigned by AWS to the Gloo OpenTelemetry (OTel) gateway load balancer service. The OTel collector agents that collect logs in the workload cluster and in the VM send metrics to this address.
export TELEMETRY_GATEWAY_HOSTNAME=$(kubectl get svc -n gloo-mesh gloo-telemetry-gateway --context ${MGMT_CONTEXT} -o jsonpath='{.status.loadBalancer.ingress[0].hostname}') export TELEMETRY_GATEWAY_PORT=$(kubectl -n gloo-mesh get service gloo-telemetry-gateway --context ${MGMT_CONTEXT} -o jsonpath='{.spec.ports[?(@.name=="otlp")].port}') export TELEMETRY_GATEWAY_ADDRESS=${TELEMETRY_GATEWAY_HOSTNAME}:${TELEMETRY_GATEWAY_PORT} echo $TELEMETRY_GATEWAY_ADDRESS
Create a workspace that includes relevant namespaces in all clusters, and create workspace settings that enable communication through the east-west gateway. If you do not want to include the
gloo-mesh
namespace in thisdemo
workspace, create a separateadmin
workspace for thegloo-mesh
namespace, and use the workspace import-export functionality to import thegloo-telemetry-collector
Kubernetes service in thegloo-mesh
namespace to the application workspace. For more information, see Organize team resources with workspaces.kubectl apply --context ${MGMT_CONTEXT} -f- <<EOF apiVersion: admin.gloo.solo.io/v2 kind: Workspace metadata: name: demo namespace: gloo-mesh spec: workloadClusters: - name: '*' namespaces: - name: sleep - name: httpbin - name: vm-config - name: istio-eastwest - name: gloo-mesh --- apiVersion: admin.gloo.solo.io/v2 kind: WorkspaceSettings metadata: name: demo namespace: gloo-mesh spec: options: eastWestGateways: - selector: labels: istio: eastwestgateway EOF
Decide on the type of certificates for the Istio installations you deploy to your workload cluster in the next section.
- Default Istio certificates: To use the default self-signed certificates, no further steps are required. When you deploy Istio in the next section, the Istio components use the self-signed certificates by default.
- Custom Istio certificates: To set up your own certificates to deploy Istio, complete the following example steps. These steps show how to use Istio’s certificate generator tool to quickly generate self-signed root and intermediate CA certificates and keys. For more information and advanced certificate setup options, see Istio certificates.
Create the
istio-system
namespace on the workload cluster, so that the certificate secret can be created in that namespace.kubectl create namespace istio-system --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT}
Navigate to the Istio certs directory.
cd istio-${ISTIO_VERSION}/tools/certs
Generate a self-signed root CA certificate and private key.
make -f Makefile.selfsigned.mk \ ROOTCA_CN="Solo Root CA" \ ROOTCA_ORG=Istio \ root-ca
Store the root CA certificate, private key and certificate chain in a Kubernetes secret on the management cluster.
cp root-cert.pem ca-cert.pem cp root-key.pem ca-key.pem cp root-cert.pem cert-chain.pem kubectl --context ${MGMT_CONTEXT} -n gloo-mesh create secret generic my-root-trust-policy.gloo-mesh \ --from-file=./ca-cert.pem \ --from-file=./ca-key.pem \ --from-file=./cert-chain.pem \ --from-file=./root-cert.pem
Create the root trust policy in the management cluster and reference the root CA Kubernetes secret in the
spec.config.mgmtServerCa.secretRef
section. You can optionally customize the number of days the root and derived intermediate CA certificates are valid for by specifying thettlDays
in themgmtServerCA
(root CA) andintermediateCertOptions
(intermediate CA) of your root trust policy.The following example policy sets up the root CA with the credentials that you stored in the
my-root-trust-policy.gloo-mesh
secret. The root CA certificate is valid for 730 days. The intermediate CA certificates that are automatically created by Gloo Mesh are valid for 1 day.kubectl apply --context ${MGMT_CONTEXT} -f- << EOF apiVersion: admin.gloo.solo.io/v2 kind: RootTrustPolicy metadata: name: root-trust-policy namespace: gloo-mesh spec: config: intermediateCertOptions: secretRotationGracePeriodRatio: 0.1 ttlDays: 1 mgmtServerCa: generated: ttlDays: 730 secretRef: name: my-root-trust-policy.gloo-mesh namespace: gloo-mesh EOF
Verify that the
cacerts
Kubernetes secret was created in theistio-system
namespace on the workload cluster. This secret represents the intermediate CA and is used by the Istio control plane istiod to issue leaf certificates to the workloads in your service mesh.kubectl get secret cacerts -n istio-system --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT}
Verify the certificate chain for the intermediate CA. Because the intermediate CA was derived from the root CA, the root CA must be listed as the
root-cert
in thecacerts
Kubernetes secret.- Get the root CA certificate from the
my-root-trust-policy.gloo-mesh
secret on the management cluster.kubectl get secret my-root-trust-policy.gloo-mesh -n gloo-mesh -o jsonpath='{.data.ca-cert\.pem}' --context ${MGMT_CONTEXT}| base64 --decode
- In each workload cluster, get the root CA certificate that is listed as the
root-cert
in thecacerts
Kubernetes secret.kubectl get secret cacerts -n istio-system --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} -o jsonpath='{.data.root-cert\.pem}' | base64 --decode
- Verify that the root CA certificate that is listed in the intermediate CA secret (8.2) matches the root CA certificate that was created by the Gloo root trust policy (8.1).
- Get the root CA certificate from the
Step 3: Set up the workload cluster
Set up your workload cluster to communicate with the management cluster and your VM, including deploying test apps, deploying Istio, and registering the workload cluster with the Gloo management plane.
Deploy test apps
To verify connectivity from the external workload to services that run in the workload cluster, deploy the sleep
and test
sample applications to your workload cluster.
Create the
sleep
app, and label thesleep
namespace for Istio sidecar injection.kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} create namespace sleep kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} label ns sleep istio-injection=enabled kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} apply -n sleep -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/istio/istio/1.22.5/samples/sleep/sleep.yaml
Create the
httpbin
app, and label thehttpbin
namespace for Istio sidecar injection.kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} create namespace httpbin kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} label ns httpbin istio-injection=enabled kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} apply -n httpbin -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/istio/istio/1.22.5/samples/httpbin/httpbin.yaml
Get the IP address of the
httpbin
pod.kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} get pods -n httpbin -o wide
Log in to your VM, and curl the pod IP address. This ensures that the VM and workload cluster are available to each other, before you deploy Istio sidecars to either.
curl -s <httpbin_pod_ip>:80
Note: If the curl is unsuccessful, verify that the security rules that you created for the VM allow outbound traffic and permit TCP traffic on ports 22 and 5000.
Deploy Istio
Set up the Istio control plane and gateways in the workload cluster. Note that the installation settings included in these steps are tailored for basic setups.
Create the following Istio namespaces, and label the
istio-system
namespace withtopology.istio.io/network=${REMOTE_CLUSTER}
.kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} create namespace istio-eastwest kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} create namespace istio-system kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} label namespace istio-system topology.istio.io/network=${REMOTE_CLUSTER}
Download the IstioOperator resource, which contains Istio installation settings that are required for onboarding an VM to the service mesh.
curl -0L https://raw.githubusercontent.com/solo-io/gloo-mesh-use-cases/main/gloo-mesh/istio-install/vm-agent/aws.yaml > aws.yaml
Update the file with your workload cluster name, and install the control plane and gateways.
export CLUSTER_NAME=${REMOTE_CLUSTER} envsubst < aws.yaml | istioctl install --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} -y -f -
Verify that the Istio pods are healthy.
kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} get pods -n istio-system
Verify that the load balancer service for the east-west gateway is created. Note that it might take a few minutes for an external IP address to be assigned. When your VM and workload cluster are in different VPC networks, the LoadBalancer service that exposes the east-west gateway allows the VM to access the cluster’s service mesh and be onboarded into the mesh. After the VM is onboarded, all traffic sent to and from the VM goes through the east-west gateway.
kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} get svc -n istio-eastwest
Rollout a restart to the test apps that you deployed prior to the Istio installation, so that they are re-deployed with an Istio sidecar.
kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} rollout restart deploy/sleep -n sleep kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} rollout restart deploy/httpbin -n httpbin
Enable telemetry for all workloads in the workload cluster.
kubectl apply --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} -f - <<EOF apiVersion: telemetry.istio.io/v1alpha1 kind: Telemetry metadata: name: demo namespace: istio-system spec: # no selector specified, applies to all workloads metrics: - providers: - name: prometheus EOF
Register the workload cluster
Register the workload cluster with the Gloo management server. Note that the registration settings included in these steps are tailored for basic setups. For more information about advanced settings, see the setup documentation.
Save the settings that are required to deploy SPIRE and PostgreSQL when you register your workload cluster. The steps vary based on the certificates you used to deploy Istio.
Register the workload cluster with the management server. This command uses basic profiles to install the Gloo agent, rate limit server, and external auth server, as well the values file to install the SPIRE and PostgreSQL deployments.
meshctl cluster register ${REMOTE_CLUSTER} \ --kubecontext ${MGMT_CONTEXT} \ --remote-context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} \ --version 2.6.6 \ --profiles agent,ratelimit,extauth \ --telemetry-server-address ${TELEMETRY_GATEWAY_ADDRESS} \ --gloo-mesh-agent-chart-values data-plane.yaml \ --set featureGates.ExternalWorkloads=true
Verify that the Gloo data plane components are healthy, and that your Gloo Mesh setup is correctly installed.
meshctl check --kubecontext ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} meshctl check --kubecontext ${MGMT_CONTEXT}
Annotate the Kubernetes service account for the SPIRE server with its AWS IAM role.
In the workload cluster, create an EKS IAM service account, and attach the policy for the SPIRE server’s IAM role that you previously created.
eksctl create iamserviceaccount \ --name gloo-spire-server --namespace gloo-mesh \ --cluster ${REMOTE_CLUSTER} --role-name SpireServer \ --attach-policy-arn arn:aws:iam::${ACCOUNT}:policy/SpireServer \ --override-existing-serviceaccounts --approve
Verify that the IAM role is associated with the SPIRE server’s service account.
aws iam list-attached-role-policies --role-name SpireServer --query AttachedPolicies[].PolicyArn --output text
Example output:
arn:aws:iam::802411188784:policy/SpireServer
Verify that the SPIRE Kubernetes service account is annotated with the IAM role.
kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} describe sa gloo-spire-server -n gloo-mesh
Example output:
Name: gloo-spire-server Namespace: gloo-mesh Labels: app.kubernetes.io/managed-by=eksctl Annotations: eks.amazonaws.com/role-arn: arn:aws:iam::802411188784:role/SpireServer Image pull secrets: <none> Mountable secrets: <none> Tokens: <none> Events: <none>
Restart the SPIRE deployment to apply the change.
kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} rollout restart deploy/gloo-spire-server -n gloo-mesh
Verify that the pods in your workload cluster are healthy.
kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} get pods -n gloo-mesh
Example output:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE gloo-mesh-agent-d689d4544-g8fzn 1/1 Running 0 4m29s gloo-spire-server-cd88fb77d-jk7mr 2/2 Running 0 53s gloo-telemetry-collector-agent-7jzl4 1/1 Running 0 4m29s gloo-telemetry-collector-agent-86ktk 1/1 Running 0 4m28s gloo-telemetry-collector-agent-l8c99 1/1 Running 0 4m29s gloo-telemetry-collector-agent-pkh2v 1/1 Running 0 4m28s gloo-telemetry-collector-agent-pmqrh 1/1 Running 0 4m29s gloo-telemetry-collector-agent-wnq7d 1/1 Running 0 4m28s postgresql-0 1/1 Running 0 4m28s
Step 4: Onboard the VM
Onboard the VM to your Gloo Mesh setup by installing the Istio sidecar, OpenTelemetry (OTel) collector, and SPIRE agents on the VM.
On the workload cluster, create a namespace for the external workload configuration that you set up in subsequent steps.
kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} create namespace vm-config
Save the following
ExternalWorkload
Gloo resource to create an identity for apps that run on the VM. The following example resource provisions an identity in thevm-config
namespace of the workload cluster, for services that listen on port 5000 and that run on an VM of the specified identity selector. For more information and available options, see the API reference documentation.This example creates an identity for only the test app that you create on the VM in subsequent steps, which you select by specifying port5000
. If you run multiple apps on your VM that you want to include in the service mesh, you can specify multiple ports to select each app. Then, when you create a virtual destination for the test app in subsequent steps, you can create additional virtual destinations for each of your other apps.cat >externalworkload.yaml <<EOF apiVersion: networking.gloo.solo.io/v2alpha1 kind: ExternalWorkload metadata: labels: # Label to use later when you create a virtual destination for the test app app: vm-ext-workload version: v1 name: vm-ext-workload namespace: vm-config spec: connectedClusters: # Map of workload cluster name to VM configuration namespace ${REMOTE_CLUSTER}: vm-config identitySelector: aws: # ID of the security group for the VM - securityGroupId: ${VM_SG_ID} # Port for each app to include ports: # Test app port - name: http number: 5000 EOF
Create the
ExternalWorkload
resource in the workload cluster.kubectl apply --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} -f externalworkload.yaml
Confirm that a
WorkloadGroup
Istio resource is created in your VM configuration namespace. This resource summarizes all workloads on the VM that you selected by port number in theExternalWorkload
.kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} get workloadgroup -n vm-config
Example output:
NAME AGE vm-ext-workload 10s
Get the address of the east-west gateway in the workload cluster.
kubectl get svc --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} -n gloo-mesh-gateways istio-eastwestgateway -o jsonpath="{.status.loadBalancer.ingress[0]['hostname','ip']}"
On your VM, save the following environment variables. Later in this section, you use these variables in a command to connect the VM to the workload cluster through the cluster’s east-west gateway.
export EW_GW_ADDR=<eastwest_gateway_address> export REMOTE_CLUSTER=<workload_cluster_name>
Get the URLs for the packages to install the Istio sidecar agent and Gloo workload agent on your VM, and save them as environment variables on the VM.
- Log in to the Support Center and review the Solo packages for external workload integration support article.
- Save the package URL for the Istio sidecar agent.
- For the same Istio version that you previously downloaded, open the link for cloud storage bucket of the Solo distribution of Istio.
- In the storage bucket, open the
-solo
directory for the version you want to use, such as1.22.5-patch0-solo/
. - Depending on your VM image type, open either the
deb/
orrpm/
directory. - On either the
istio-sidecar
oristio-sidecar-arm64
binary package, click the menu button, and click Copy Public URL. - On your VM, save the URL as an environment variable.
export ISTIO_URL=<istio_package_url>
- Save the package URL for the Gloo workload agent.
- Open the link for the Solo cloud storage bucket.
- In the storage bucket, open the directory for the Gloo Mesh version that you use.
- On the package for your VM type, click the menu button, and click Copy Public URL.
- On your VM, save the URL as an environment variable.
export GLOO_AGENT_URL=<gloo_agent_package_url>
On your VM, download
meshctl
. Be sure to download the same version that you use on your local machine, such as2.6.6
(latest).curl -sL https://run.solo.io/meshctl/install | GLOO_MESH_VERSION=v2.6.6 sh - export PATH=$HOME/.gloo-mesh/bin:$PATH
On your VM, use
meshctl
to install the Istio sidecar agent and Gloo workload agent. For more information about the options for this command, see the CLI reference. Note that this process will continue to execute even if the SSH session is accidentally terminated.If your VM and workload cluster are in different networks, you must specify a tag in the--network
flag so that Istio can group workloads on the VM as "remote" workloads. This tag is different from the network tag for the cluster's "local" workloads, so that Istio can differentiate between local (cluster) and remote (VM) workloads, and use the east-west gateway to send traffic between the networks.Additionally, if your VM must accept inbound connections, you must specify the external IP address of the VM in the--external-ip
flag.nohup meshctl external-workload onboard --install \ --attestor aws \ --cluster ${REMOTE_CLUSTER} \ --gateway-addr ${EW_GW_ADDR} \ --gateway istio-eastwest/istio-eastwestgateway \ --trust-domain cluster.local \ -i ${ISTIO_URL} -g ${GLOO_AGENT_URL} \ --ext-workload vm-config/vm-ext-workload \ > /tmp/onboard.log 2>&1 </dev/null &
You can monitor the progress of the onboarding by checking the log file.
tail -f /tmp/onboard.log
Step 5: Test connectivity
Verify that the onboarding process was successful by testing the bi-directional connection between the apps that run in the service mesh in your workload cluster and a test app on your VM.
On your VM, deploy a simple HTTP server that listens on port 5000. This app is represented by the
ExternalWorkload
identity that you previously created.nohup python3 -m http.server 5000 &
From the VM, curl the httpbin service in your workload cluster. Note that this curl command uses the app’s cluster DNS name instead of its pod IP address, because the VM is now connected to the Istio service mesh that runs in your workload cluster.
curl -s httpbin.httpbin:8000 -v
Example output:
* Trying 10.XX.XXX.XXX:8000... * Connected to httpbin.httpbin (10.XX.XXX.XXX) port 8000 (#0) > GET / HTTP/1.1 > Host: httpbin.httpbin:8000 > User-Agent: curl/7.74.0 > Accept: */* > * Mark bundle as not supporting multiuse < HTTP/1.1 200 OK < server: envoy < date: Mon, 10 Jul 2023 18:00:32 GMT < content-type: text/html; charset=utf-8 < content-length: 9593 < access-control-allow-origin: * < access-control-allow-credentials: true < x-envoy-upstream-service-time: 4 < <!DOCTYPE html> ...
In the workload cluster, create a Gloo
VirtualDestination
resource so that apps in the service mesh can also access the HTTP server test app that runs on the VM through thetestapp.vd
hostname. Note that if you selected multiple apps that run on the VM in yourExternalWorkload
resource, you can create a virtual destination for each app by using the app’s port that you specified.kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} apply -f - <<EOF apiVersion: networking.gloo.solo.io/v2 kind: VirtualDestination metadata: labels: app: testapp name: testapp-vd namespace: vm-config spec: externalWorkloads: - labels: # Label that you gave to the ExternalWorkload resource app: vm-ext-workload hosts: # Hostname to use for the app - testapp.vd ports: # Port that you specified in the ExternalWorkload resource to select the test app - number: 5000 protocol: HTTP targetPort: name: http EOF
From the sleep app in your workload cluster, curl the HTTP server on the VM by using the
testapp.vd
hostname.kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} exec deploy/sleep -n sleep -- curl -s testapp.vd:5000 -v
Example output:
* Trying 244.XXX.XXX.XX:5000... * Connected to testapp.vd (244.XXX.XXX.XX) port 5000 (#0) > GET / HTTP/1.1 > Host: testapp.vd:5000 > User-Agent: curl/8.1.2 > Accept: */* > <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd"> <html> <head> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"> <title>Directory listing for /</title> </head> <body> <h1>Directory listing for /</h1> <hr> <ul> <li><a href=".bash_history">.bash_history</a></li> <li><a href=".bash_logout">.bash_logout</a></li> <li><a href=".bashrc">.bashrc</a></li> <li><a href=".profile">.profile</a></li> <li><a href=".ssh/">.ssh/</a></li> <li><a href="gm-config/">gm-config/</a></li> <li><a href="nohup.out">nohup.out</a></li> </ul> <hr> </body> </html> < HTTP/1.1 200 OK < server: envoy < date: Mon, 10 Jul 2023 18:00:50 GMT < content-type: text/html; charset=utf-8 < content-length: 600 < x-envoy-upstream-service-time: 3 < { [600 bytes data] * Connection #0 to host testapp.vd left intact
Step 6 (optional): Launch the UI
As part of redesigning the UI, viewing the boundaries of the underlying network infrastructure provider of your VMs in the Graph UI is deprecated and will be removed in version 2.7 and later.
To visualize the connection to your VM in your Gloo Mesh setup, you can launch the Gloo UI.
Access the Gloo UI.
meshctl dashboard --kubecontext ${MGMT_CONTEXT}
Click the Graph tab to open the network visualization graph for your Gloo Mesh setup.
From the footer toolbar, click Layout Settings.
Toggle Group By to
INFRA
to review the clusters, virtual machines, and Kubernetes namespaces that your app nodes are organized in. This view also shows details for the cloud provider infrastructure, such as the VPCs and subnets that your resources are deployed to.Verify that you see your VM connection to your workload cluster. In this example graph, the VM instance connects to the
httpbin
app in the workload cluster.You can also see more information about the VM instance by clicking on its icon, which opens the details pane for the connection. In this example details pane, the title
helloworld -> httpbin
demonstrates that an external workload namedhelloworld
, which represents apps on the VM, connects to thehttpbin
app in the workload cluster.
Congratulations! Your VM is now registered with Gloo Mesh. You can now create Gloo resources for the workloads that you run on the VM, such as Gloo traffic policies. For example, if you selected multiple apps in your ExternalWorkload
resource and want to apply a policy to all of those apps, you can use the label on the ExternalWorkload
in the policy selector. Or, for policies that apply to destinations, you can select only the virtual destination for one of the apps. For more information, see Policy enforcement.
Uninstall
On the VM:
- Remove the Istio sidecar, OTel collector, and SPIRE agents.
sudo ./bootstrap.sh --uninstall
- Remove the bootstrap script and bundle, the agent packages, and the test app data.
cd .. rm -r gloo-mesh-config
- Remove the Istio sidecar, OTel collector, and SPIRE agents.
On the workload cluster:
- Delete the
vm-config
,sleep
, andhttpbin
namespaces.kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} delete namespace vm-config kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} delete namespace sleep kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} delete namespace httpbin
- Delete the
Gateway
andVirtualService
resources from theistio-eastwest
namespace.kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} delete Gateway istiod-gateway -n istio-eastwest kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} delete Gateway spire-gateway -n istio-eastwest kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} delete VirtualService istiod-vs -n istio-eastwest kubectl --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} delete VirtualService spire-vs -n istio-eastwest
- Delete the
Continue to use your Gloo Mesh setup, or uninstall it.
- To continue to use your Gloo Mesh setup, you can optionally remove the SPIRE and PostgreSQL servers by following the upgrade guide to remove their settings from the Helm values for your workload cluster.
- To uninstall your Gloo Mesh setup:
- Uninstall the Istio service mesh.
istioctl uninstall --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} --purge
- Remove the Istio namespaces.
kubectl delete ns --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} istio-system kubectl delete ns --context ${REMOTE_CONTEXT} istio-eastwest
- Follow the steps in Uninstall Gloo Mesh to deregister the workload cluster and uninstall the Gloo management plane.
- Uninstall the Istio service mesh.