Building a CD Pipeline Using LKE (Part 9): Installing Traefik

Traducciones al Español
Estamos traduciendo nuestros guías y tutoriales al Español. Es posible que usted esté viendo una traducción generada automáticamente. Estamos trabajando con traductores profesionales para verificar las traducciones de nuestro sitio web. Este proyecto es un trabajo en curso.
Create a Linode account to try this guide with a $ credit.
This credit will be applied to any valid services used during your first  days.

Watch the Presentation: Register to watch this workshop , free of charge.

Slide deck: Cloud Native Continuous Deployment with GitLab, Helm, and Linode Kubernetes Engine: Installing Traefik (Slide #143)

Installing Traefik

Traefik is a popular Ingress Controller for Kubernetes, which manages external access to the cluster and provides load balancing functionality. This section discusses installing Traefik, configuring an Ingress within our YAML file, and testing things out.

Presentation Text

Here’s a copy of the text contained within this section of the presentation. A link to the source file can be found within each slide of the presentation. Some formatting may have been changed.

Installing Traefik

  • Traefik is going to be our Ingress Controller

  • Let’s install it with a Helm chart, in its own namespace

  • First, let’s add the Traefik chart repository:

    helm repo add traefik https://helm.traefik.io/traefik
    
  • Then, install the chart:

    helm upgrade --install traefik traefik/traefik \ --create-namespace --namespace traefik \ --set "ports.websecure.tls.enabled=true"
    

(that option that we added enables HTTPS, it will be useful later!)

Testing Traefik

  • Let’s create an Ingress resource!

  • If we’re using Kubernetes 1.20 or later, we can simply do this:

    kubectl create ingress web \--rule=ingress-is-fun.cloudnative.party/*=web:80
    

    (make sure to update and use your own domain)

  • Check that the Ingress was correctly created:

    kubectl get ingress
    kubectl describe ingress
    

If we’re using Kubernetes 1.19 or earlier, we’ll need some YAML

Creating an Ingress with YAML

  • This is how we do it with YAML:

    kubectl apply -f- <<EOF
    apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
    kind: Ingress
    metadata:
      name: web
    spec:
      rules:
      - host: ingress-is-fun.cloudnative.party
        http:
          paths:
          - path: /
            backend:
              serviceName: web
              servicePort: 80
    EOF
    

Ingress versions…

  • Note how we used the latest v1 Ingress version on the previous YAML, as the vibeta1 api version has been deprecated.

Does it work?

  • Try to connect to the Ingress host name (in my example, http://ingress-is-fun.cloudnative.party/ )
  • Normally, it doesn’t work (yet) 🤔
  • Let’s look at kubectl get ingress again
  • ExternalDNS is trying to create records mapping HOSTS to ADDRESS
  • But the ADDRESS field is currently empty!
  • We need to tell Traefik to fill that ADDRESS field

Reconfiguring Traefik

  • There is a “magic” flag to tell Traefik to update the address status field

  • Let’s update our Traefik install:

    helm upgrade --install traefik traefik/traefik \
        --create-namespace --namespace traefik \
        --set "ports.websecure.tls.enabled=true" \
        --set "providers.kubernetesIngress.publishedService.enabled=true"
    

Checking what we did

  • Check the output of kubectl get ingress (there should be an address now)
  • Check the logs of ExternalDNS (there should be a mention of the new DNS record)
  • Try again to connect to the HTTP address (now it should work)
  • Note that some of these operations might take a minute or two (be patient!)

This page was originally published on


Your Feedback Is Important

Let us know if this guide was helpful to you.


Join the conversation.
Read other comments or post your own below. Comments must be respectful, constructive, and relevant to the topic of the guide. Do not post external links or advertisements. Before posting, consider if your comment would be better addressed by contacting our Support team or asking on our Community Site.
The Disqus commenting system for Linode Docs requires the acceptance of Functional Cookies, which allow us to analyze site usage so we can measure and improve performance. To view and create comments for this article, please update your Cookie Preferences on this website and refresh this web page. Please note: You must have JavaScript enabled in your browser.