Avi Kubernetes Operator Deployment Guide
Overview
The Avi Kubernetes Operator (AKO) is an operator which works as an Ingress controller and performs Avi-specific functions in a Kubernetes/ OpenShift environment with the Avi Controller. It translates Kubernetes/ OpenShift objects to Avi Controller APIs.
This guide helps you understand the architectural overview and design considerations for AKO deployment.
Architecture
The Avi Deployment in Kubernetes/ OpenShift for AKO comprises of the following main components:
- The Avi Controller
- The Service Engines (SE)
- The Avi Kubernetes Operator (AKO)
The Avi Controller
The Avi Controller which is the central component of the Avi architecture is responsible for the following:
- Control plane functionality like the:
- Infrastructure orchestration
- Centralized management
- Analytics dashboard
- Integration with the underlying ecosystem for managing the lifecycle of the data plane (Service Engines).
The Avi Controller does not handle any data plane traffic.
In Kubernetes/ OpenShift environments, the Avi Controller is deployed outside the Kubernetes/ OpenShift cluster, typically in the native type of the underlying infrastructure. However, it can be deployed anywhere as long as connectivity and latency requirements are satisfied.
The Avi Service Engines
The SEs implement data plane services of load balancing. For example, Web Application Firewall, DNS/GSLB, etc.
In Kubernetes/ OpenShift environments, the SEs are deployed external to the cluster and typically in the native type of the underlying infrastructure.
The Avi Kubernetes Operator (AKO)
AKO is an Avi pod running in Kubernetes that provides an Ingress controller and Avi-configuration functionality.
AKO remains in sync with the required Kubernetes/ OpenShift objects and calls the Avi Controller APIs to deploy the Ingresses and Services via the Avi Service Engines.
AKO is deployed as a pod via Helm.
Avi Cloud Considerations
Avi Cloud Type
The Avi Controller uses the Avi Cloud configuration to manage the SEs. This Avi Cloud is usually of the underlying infrastructure type, for ex. VMware vCenter Cloud, Azure Cloud, Linux Server Cloud etc.
Note: This deployment in Kubernetes/ OpenShift does not use the Kubernetes/ OpenShift cloud types. The integration with Kubernetes/ OpenShift and application-automation functions are handled by AKO and not by the Avi Controller.
Multiple Kubernetes/ OpenShift Clusters
A single Avi Cloud can be used for integration with multiple Kubernetes/ OpenShift clusters, with each cluster running its own instance of AKO. Clusters in the clusterIP
mode are separated on the data plane through unique SE groups per cluster.
IPAM and DNS
The IPAM and DNS functionality is handled by the Avi Controller via the Avi cloud configuration.
Refer to the Service Discovery Using IPAM and DNS article for more information on supported IPAM and DNS types per environment.
Service Engine Groups
AKO supports a separate SE group per Kubernetes/OpenShift cluster. Each cluster will need to be configured with a separate SE group. However, multiple SE groups within the same cluster is not supported. As a best practice, it is recommended to use non-default SE groups for every cluster. SE group per cluster is not a requirement if AKO runs in the nodeport
mode.
Avi Controller Version
AKO version 1.4.1 supports Avi Controller releases 20.1.4 and above only.
Network Considerations
Avi SE Placement / Pod Network Reachability
With AKO, the service engines are deployed outside the cluster. To be able to load balance requests directly to the pods, the pod CIDR must be routable from the SE. Depending on the routability of the Pod CNI used in the cluster, AKO can route using the following options:
Pods are not Externally Routable – Static Routing
For CNIs like Canal, Calico, Antrea, Flannel etc., the pod subnet is not externally routable. In these cases, the CNI assigns a pod CIDR to each node in the Kuberntes cluster. The pods on a node get IP assigned from the CIDR allocated for that node and is routable from within the node. In this scenario, the pod reachability depends on where the SE is placed.
If SE is placed on the same network as the Kubernetes/ OpenShift nodes, you can turn on static route programming in AKO. With this, AKO syncs the pod CIDR for each Kubernetes/ OpenShift node and programs static route on the Avi Controller for each Pod CIDR with the Kubernetes/ OpenShift node IP as the next hop. Static routing per cluster uses a new label-based routing scheme. No additional user configuration is required for this label-based scheme, however the upgrading AKO will be service impacting, requiring an AKO restart.
Pods are not externally routable – NodePort
In cases where direct load-balancing to the pods is not possible, NodePort based services can be used as the pool members in the Avi virtual service as end points. For this functionality, configure the services referenced by Ingresses/Routes as type NodePort and set the configs.serviceType
parameter to enable NodePort based Routes/Ingresses. The nodeSelectorLabels.key
and nodeSelectorLabels.value
parameters are specified during the AKO installation to select the required Nodes from the cluster for load balancing. The required nodes in the cluster need to be labelled with the configured key and value pair.
Pod Subnet is Routable
For CNIs like NSX-T CNI, AWS CNI (in EKS), Azure CNI (in AKS) etc., the pod subnet is externally routable. In this case no additional configuration is required to allow SEs to reach the Pod IPs. Set Static Route Programming to Off in the AKO configuration. SEs can be placed on any network and will be able to route the pods.
To know more about the CNIs supported, click here.
Deployment Modes
Single Arm Deployment
The deployment in which the virtual IP (VIP) address and the Kubernetes/ OpenShift cluster are in the same network subnet is called a Single Arm Deployment.
Two-Arm Deployment
When the virtual IP (VIP) address and the Kubernetes/ OpenShift cluster are in different network subnets, then the deployment is a Two-Arm deployment
AKO supports both Single-Arm and Two-Arm deployments with vCenter Cloud in write-access mode.
Annotations
AKO version 1.4.1 does not support annotations. However, the HTTPRule
and HostRule CRDs
can be leveraged to customize the Avi configuration. Refer to the Custom Resource Definitions article for more information on what parameters can be tweaked.
Multi-Tenancy
AKO supports multi-tenancy.
AKO Support
Refer to the the Compatibility Guide for information on supportability of features and environments with AKO.
Document Revision History
Date | Change Summary |
---|---|
February 12, 2021 | Updated the support of autoFQDN for AKO version 1.3.3 |
December 18, 2020 | Updated the Design Guide for AKO version 1.3.1 |
September 18, 2020 | Published the Design Guide for AKO version 1.2.1 |
July 20, 2020 | Published the Design Guide for AKO version 1.2.1 (Tech Preview) |