Signed-off-by: Lucas Servén Marín <lserven@gmail.com>
3.2 KiB
VPN
Kilo enables peers outside of a Kubernetes cluster to connect to the created WireGuard network. This enables several use cases, for example:
- giving cluster applications secure access to external services, e.g. services behind a corporate VPN;
- improving the development flow of applications by running them locally and connecting them to the cluster;
- allowing external services to access the cluster; and
- enabling developers and support to securely debug cluster resources.
In order to declare a peer, start by defining a Kilo Peer resource.
See the following peer.yaml
, where the publicKey
field holds a generated WireGuard public key:
apiVersion: kilo.squat.ai/v1alpha1
kind: Peer
metadata:
name: squat
spec:
allowedIPs:
- 10.5.0.1/32 # Example IP address on the peer's interface.
publicKey: GY5aT1N9dTR/nJnT1N2f4ClZWVj0jOAld0r8ysWLyjg=
persistentKeepalive: 10
Then, apply the resource to the cluster:
kubectl apply -f peer.yaml
Now, the kgctl
tool can be used to generate the WireGuard configuration for the newly defined peer:
PEER=squat
kgctl showconf peer $PEER
This will produce some output like:
[Peer]
PublicKey = 2/xU029dz/WtvMZAbnSzmhicl8U1/Y3NYmunRr8EJ0Q=
AllowedIPs = 10.4.0.2/32, 10.2.3.0/24, 10.1.0.3/32
Endpoint = 108.61.142.123:51820
The configuration can then be applied to a local WireGuard interface, e.g. wg0
:
IFACE=wg0
kgctl showconf peer $PEER > peer.ini
sudo wg setconf $IFACE peer.ini
Finally, in order to access the cluster, the client will need appropriate routes for the new configuration. For example, on a Linux machine, the creation of these routes could be automated by running:
for ip in $(kgctl showconf peer $PEER | grep AllowedIPs | cut -f 3- -d ' ' | tr -d ','); do
sudo ip route add $ip dev $IFACE
done
Once the routes are in place, the connection to the cluster can be tested. For example, try connecting to the API server:
curl -k https://$(kubectl get endpoints kubernetes | tail -n +2 | tr , \\t | awk '{print $2}')
Likewise, the cluster now also has layer 3 access to the newly added peer. From any node or Pod on the cluster, one can now ping the peer:
ping 10.5.0.1
If the peer exposes a layer 4 service, for example an HTTP server listening on TCP port 80, then one could also make requests against that endpoint from the cluster:
curl http://10.5.0.1
Kubernetes Services can be created to provide better discoverability to cluster workloads for services exposed by peers, for example:
cat <<'EOF' | kubectl apply -f -
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: important-service
spec:
ports:
- port: 80
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Endpoints
metadata:
name: important-service
subsets:
- addresses:
- ip: 10.5.0.1
ports:
- port: 80
EOF
See the multi-cluster services docs for more details on connecting clusters to external services.
Although it is not a primary goal of the project, the VPN created by Kilo can also be used by peers as a gateway to the Internet; for more details, see the VPN server docs.