Consul
Enable transparent proxy mode
This topic describes how to use transparent proxy mode in your service mesh. Transparent proxy allows applications to communicate through the service mesh without modifying their configurations. Transparent proxy also hardens application security by preventing direct inbound connections that bypass the mesh. Refer to Transparent proxy overview for additional information.
Requirements
Your network must meet the following environment and software requirements to use transparent proxy.
Transparent proxy is available for Kubernetes environments.
Consul 1.10.0+
Consul Helm chart 0.32.0+. If you want to use the Consul CNI plugin to redirect traffic, Helm chart 0.48.0+ is required. Refer to Enable the Consul CNI plugin for additional information.
You must create service intentions that explicitly allow communication between services. Consul uses service intentions to infer upstream connections and route messages appropriately between sidecar proxies.
The
ip_tables
kernel module must be running on all worker nodes within a Kubernetes cluster. If you are using themodprobe
Linux utility, for example, issue the following command:$ modprobe ip_tables
Upgrading to a supported version: Always follow the proper upgrade path when upgrading to a supported version of Consul, Consul on Kubernetes (consul-k8s
), and the Consul Helm chart.
Enable transparent proxy
Transparent proxy mode is enabled for the entire cluster by default when you install Consul on Kubernetes using the Consul Helm chart. Refer to the Consul Helm chart reference for information about all default configurations.
You can explicitly enable transparent proxy for the entire cluster, individual namespaces, and individual services.
Entire cluster
Use the connectInject.transparentProxy.defaultEnabled
Helm value to enable or disable transparent proxy for the entire cluster:
connectInject:
transparentProxy:
defaultEnabled: true
Kubernetes namespace
Apply the consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy=true
label to enable transparent proxy for a Kubernetes namespace. The label overrides the connectInject.transparentProxy.defaultEnabled
Helm value and defines the default behavior of Pods in the namespace. The following example enables transparent proxy for Pods in the my-app
namespace:
$ kubectl label namespaces my-app "consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy=true"
Individual service
Apply the consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy=true
annotation to enable transparent proxy on the Pod for each service. The annotation overrides the Helm value and the namespace label. The following example enables transparent proxy for the static-server
service:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: static-server
spec:
selector:
app: static-server
ports:
- protocol: TCP
port: 80
targetPort: 8080
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: ServiceAccount
metadata:
name: static-server
---
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: static-server
spec:
replicas: 1
selector:
matchLabels:
app: static-server
template:
metadata:
name: static-server
labels:
app: static-server
annotations:
'consul.hashicorp.com/connect-inject': 'true'
'consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy': 'true'
spec:
containers:
- name: static-server
image: hashicorp/http-echo:latest
args:
- -text="hello world"
- -listen=:8080
ports:
- containerPort: 8080
name: http
serviceAccountName: static-server
Enable the Consul CNI plugin
By default, Consul generates a connect-inject init
container as part of the Kubernetes Pod startup process. The container configures traffic redirection in the service mesh through the sidecar proxy. To configure redirection, the container requires elevated CAP_NET_ADMIN privileges, which may not be compatible with security policies in your organization.
Instead, you can enable the Consul container network interface (CNI) plugin to perform traffic redirection. Because the plugin is executed by the Kubernetes kubelet, it already has the elevated privileges necessary to configure the network. Additionally, you do not need to specify annotations that automatically overwrite Kubernetes HTTP health probes when the plugin is enabled (see Overwrite Kubernetes HTTP health probes).
The Consul Helm chart installs the CNI plugin, but it is disabled by default. Refer to the instructions for enabling the CNI plugin in the Consul on Kubernetes installation documentation for additional information.
Traffic redirection
There are two mechanisms for redirecting traffic through the sidecar proxies. By default, Consul injects an init container that redirects all inbound and outbound traffic. The default mechanism requires elevated permissions (CAP_NET_ADMIN) in order to redirect traffic to the service mesh.
Alternatively, you can enable the Consul CNI plugin to handle traffic redirection. Because the Kubernetes kubelet runs CNI plugins, the Consul CNI plugin has the necessary privileges to apply routing tables in the network.
Both mechanisms redirect all inbound and outbound traffic, but you can configure exceptions for specific Pods or groups of Pods. The following annotations enable you to exclude certain traffic from being redirected to sidecar proxies.
Exclude inbound ports
The consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy-exclude-inbound-ports
annotation defines a comma-separated list of inbound ports to exclude from traffic redirection when running in transparent proxy mode. The port numbers are string data values. In the following example, services in the pod at port 8200
and 8201
are not redirected through the transparent proxy:
Exclude inbound port numbers from redirection
metadata:
annotations:
consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy-exclude-inbound-ports: "8200, 8201"
Exclude outbound ports
The consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy-exclude-outbound-ports
annotation defines a comma-separated list of outbound ports to exclude from traffic redirection when running in transparent proxy mode. The port numbers are string data values. In the following example, services in the pod at port 8200
and 8201
are not redirected through the transparent proxy:
Exclude outbound port numbers from redirection
metadata:
annotations":
consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy-exclude-outbound-ports: "8200, 8201"
Exclude outbound CIDR blocks
The consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy-exclude-outbound-cidrs
annotation
defines a comma-separated list of outbound CIDR blocks to exclude from traffic redirection when running in transparent proxy mode. The CIDR blocks are string data values.
In the following example, services in the 3.3.3.3/24
IP range are not redirected through the transparent proxy:
Exclude outbound CIDR blocks from redirection
metadata:
annotations:
consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy-exclude-outbound-cidrs: "3.3.3.3,3.3.3.3/24"
Exclude user IDs
The consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy-exclude-uids
annotation
defines a comma-separated list of additional user IDs to exclude from traffic redirection when running in transparent proxy mode. The user IDs are string data values.
In the following example, services with the IDs 4444
and 44444
are not redirected through the transparent proxy:
Exclude user IDs from redirection
metadata:
annotations:
consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy-exclude-uids: "4444,44444"
}
}
Kubernetes HTTP health probes configuration
By default, connect-inject
is disabled. As a result, Consul on Kubernetes uses a mechanism for traffic redirection that interferes with Kubernetes HTTP health
probes. This is because probes expect the kubelet to reach the application container on the probe's endpoint. Instead, traffic is redirected through the sidecar proxy. As a result, health probes return errors because the kubelet does not encrypt that traffic using a mesh proxy.
There are two methods for solving this issue. The first method is to set the connectInject.transparentProxy.defaultOverwriteProbes
annotation to overwrite the Kubernetes HTTP health probes so that they point to the proxy. The second method is to enable the Consul container network interface (CNI) plugin to perform traffic redirection. Refer to the Consul on Kubernetes installation instructions for additional information.
Overwrite Kubernetes HTTP health probes
You can either include the connectInject.transparentProxy.defaultOverwriteProbes
Helm value to your command or add the consul.hashicorp.com/transparent-proxy-overwrite-probes
Kubernetes annotation to your pod configuration to overwrite health probes.
Refer to Kubernetes Health Checks in Consul on Kubernetes for additional information.
Dial services across Kubernetes cluster
If your Consul servers are federated between Kubernetes clusters,
then you must configure services in one Kubernetes cluster to explicitly dial a service in the datacenter of another Kubernetes cluster using the
consul.hashicorp.com/connect-service-upstreams annotation.
The following example configures the service to dial an upstream service called my-service
in datacenter dc2
on port 1234
:
consul.hashicorp.com/connect-service-upstreams: "my-service:1234:dc2"
If your Consul cluster is deployed to a single datacenter spanning multiple Kubernetes clusters,
then you must configure services in one Kubernetes cluster to explicitly dial a service in another Kubernetes cluster using the
consul.hashicorp.com/connect-service-upstreams annotation.
The following example configures the service to dial an upstream service called my-service
in another Kubernetes cluster on port 1234
:
consul.hashicorp.com/connect-service-upstreams: "my-service:1234"
You do not need to configure services to explicitly dial upstream services if your Consul clusters are connected with a peering connection.
Configure service selectors
When transparent proxy is enabled, traffic sent to KubeDNS
or Pod IP addresses is redirected through the proxy. You must use a selector to bind Kubernetes Services to Pods as you define Kubernetes Services in the mesh.
The Kubernetes Service name must match the Consul service name to use KubeDNS. This is the default behavior unless you have applied the consul.hashicorp.com/connect-service
Kubernetes annotation to the service pods. The annotation overrides the Consul service name.
Consul configures redirection for each Pod bound to the Kubernetes Service using iptables
rules. The rules redirect all inbound and outbound traffic through an inbound and outbound listener on the sidecar proxy. Consul configures the proxy to route traffic to the appropriate upstream services based on service
intentions, which address the upstream services using KubeDNS.
In the following example, the Kubernetes service selects sample-app
application Pods so that they can be reached within the mesh.
Example service selector
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: sample-app
namespace: default
spec:
selector:
app: sample-app
ports:
- protocol: TCP
port: 80
Additional services can query the KubeDNS at sample-app.default.svc.cluster.local
to reach sample-app
. If ACLs are enabled and configured with default deny
policies, the configuration also requires a ServiceIntention
to allow it to talk to sample-app
.
You can query the KubeDNS for a service that belongs to a sameness group at sample-app.virtual.group-name.sg.consul
. This syntax is required when failover is desired. To use KubeDNS with sameness groups, spec.defaultForFailover
must be set to true
in the sameness group CRD. Refer to sameness group configuration entry reference for more information.
Headless services
For services that are not addressed using a virtual cluster IP, you must configure the upstream service using the DialedDirectly option. Then, use DNS to discover individual instance addresses and dial them through the transparent proxy. When this mode is enabled on the upstream, services present service mesh certificates for mTLS and intentions are enforced at the destination.
Note that when dialing individual instances, Consul ignores the HTTP routing rules configured with configuration entries. The transparent proxy acts as a TCP proxy to the original destination IP address.
Known limitations
Deployment configurations with federation across or a single datacenter spanning multiple clusters must explicitly dial a service in another datacenter or cluster using annotations.
When dialing headless services, the request is proxied using a plain TCP proxy. Consul does not take into consideration the upstream's protocol.