This example is part of a suite of examples showing the different ways you can use Skupper to connect services across cloud providers, data centers, and edge sites.
- Overview
- Prerequisites
- Step 1: Install the Skupper command-line tool
- Step 2: Set up your Kubernetes namespace
- Step 3: Set up your Podman network
- Step 4: Deploy the frontend and backend
- Step 5: Create your sites
- Step 6: Link your sites
- Step 7: Expose the backend
- Step 8: Access the frontend
- Cleaning up
- Summary
- Next steps
- About this example
This example is a basic multi-service HTTP application deployed across a Kubernetes cluster and a bare-metal host or VM running Podman containers.
It contains two services:
-
A backend service that exposes an
/api/helloendpoint. It returns greetings of the formHi, <your-name>. I am <my-name> (<container>). -
A frontend service that sends greetings to the backend and fetches new greetings in response.
With Skupper, you can run the backend as a container on your local machine and the frontend in Kubernetes and maintain connectivity between the two services without exposing the backend to the public internet.
-
A working installation of Podman (installation guide)
-
The
kubectlcommand-line tool, version 1.15 or later (installation guide) -
Access to a Kubernetes cluster, from any provider you choose
This example uses the Skupper command-line tool to deploy Skupper.
You need to install the skupper command only once for each
development environment.
On Linux or Mac, you can use the install script (inspect it here) to download and extract the command:
curl https://skupper.io/install.sh | shThe script installs the command under your home directory. It prompts you to add the command to your path if necessary.
For Windows and other installation options, see Installing Skupper.
Open a new terminal window and log in to your cluster. Then create the namespace you wish to use and set the namespace on your current context.
Note: The login procedure varies by provider. See the documentation for your chosen providers:
- Minikube
- Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS)
- Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS)
- Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE)
- IBM Kubernetes Service
- OpenShift
Kubernetes:
# Enter your provider-specific login command
kubectl create namespace hello-world
kubectl config set-context --current --namespace hello-worldOpen a new terminal window and set the SKUPPER_PLATFORM
environment variable to podman. This sets the Skupper platform
to Podman for this terminal session.
Use podman network create to create the Podman network that
Skupper will use.
Use systemctl to enable the Podman API service.
Podman:
export SKUPPER_PLATFORM=podman
podman network create skupper
systemctl --user enable --now podman.socketIf systemctl is not available, you can also use the following command:
podman system service --time=0 unix://$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/podman/podman.sock &
This example runs the frontend in Kubernetes and the backend as a local Podman container.
In Kubernetes, use kubectl create deployment to deploy the
frontend service in namespace hello-world.
In Podman, use podman run to start the backend service on your
local machine.
Note: It is important to name your running container using
--name to avoid a collision with the container that Skupper
creates for accessing the service.
Note: You must use --network skupper with the podman run
command.
Kubernetes:
kubectl create deployment frontend --image quay.io/skupper/hello-world-frontendPodman:
podman run --name backend-target --network skupper --detach --rm -p 8080:8080 quay.io/skupper/hello-world-backendA Skupper site is a location where components of your application are running. Sites are linked together to form a Skupper network for your application.
In Kubernetes, use skupper init to create a site. This
deploys the Skupper router and controller. Then use skupper status to see the outcome.
In Podman, use skupper init with the option --ingress none
and use skupper status to see the result.
Note: If you are using Minikube, you need to start minikube
tunnel before you run skupper init.
Kubernetes:
skupper initSample output:
$ skupper init
Waiting for LoadBalancer IP or hostname...
Waiting for status...
Skupper is now installed in namespace 'hello-world'. Use 'skupper status' to get more information.Podman:
skupper init --ingress noneSample output:
$ skupper init --ingress none
It is recommended to enable lingering for jross, otherwise Skupper may not start on boot.
Skupper is now installed for user 'jross'. Use 'skupper status' to get more information.As you move through the steps below, you can use skupper status at
any time to check your progress.
Creating a link requires use of two skupper commands in
conjunction, skupper token create and skupper link create.
The skupper token create command generates a secret token that
signifies permission to create a link. The token also carries the
link details. Then, in a remote site, The skupper link create command uses the token to create a link to the site
that generated it.
Note: The link token is truly a secret. Anyone who has the token can link to your site. Make sure that only those you trust have access to it.
First, use skupper token create in site Kubernetes to generate the
token. Then, use skupper link create in site Podman to link
the sites.
Kubernetes:
skupper token create ~/secret.tokenSample output:
$ skupper token create ~/secret.token
Token written to ~/secret.tokenPodman:
skupper link create ~/secret.tokenSample output:
$ skupper link create ~/secret.token
Site configured to link to https://10.105.193.154:8081/ed9c37f6-d78a-11ec-a8c7-04421a4c5042 (name=link1)
Check the status of the link using 'skupper link status'.If your terminal sessions are on different machines, you may need
to use scp or a similar tool to transfer the token securely. By
default, tokens expire after a single use or 15 minutes after
creation.
We now have our sites linked to form a Skupper network, but no
services are exposed on it. We can use the skupper service
commands to expose the backend service in Podman to the frontend
in Kubernetes.
In Kubernetes, use skupper service create to create a service
called backend.
In Podman, use skupper service create to create the same
service. Use skupper service bind to attach your running
backend process as a target for the service.
Note: Podman sites do not automatically replicate services
to remote sites. You need to use skupper service create on
each site where you wish to make a service available.
Kubernetes:
skupper service create backend 8080Podman:
skupper service create backend 8080
skupper service bind backend host backend-target --target-port 8080In order to use and test the application, we need external access to the frontend.
Use kubectl expose with --type LoadBalancer to open network
access to the frontend service.
Once the frontend is exposed, use kubectl get service/frontend
to look up the external IP of the frontend service. If the
external IP is <pending>, try again after a moment.
Once you have the external IP, use curl or a similar tool to
request the /api/health endpoint at that address.
Note: The <external-ip> field in the following commands is a
placeholder. The actual value is an IP address.
Kubernetes:
kubectl expose deployment/frontend --port 8080 --type LoadBalancer
kubectl get service/frontend
curl http://<external-ip>:8080/api/healthSample output:
$ kubectl expose deployment/frontend --port 8080 --type LoadBalancer
service/frontend exposed
$ kubectl get service/frontend
NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
frontend LoadBalancer 10.103.232.28 <external-ip> 8080:30407/TCP 15s
$ curl http://<external-ip>:8080/api/health
OKIf everything is in order, you can now access the web interface by
navigating to http://<external-ip>:8080/ in your browser.
To remove Skupper and the other resources from this exercise, use the following commands.
Kubernetes:
skupper delete
kubectl delete service/frontend
kubectl delete deployment/frontendPodman:
skupper delete
podman stop backend-targetCheck out the other examples on the Skupper website.
This example was produced using Skewer, a library for documenting and testing Skupper examples.
Skewer provides utility functions for generating the README and
running the example steps. Use the ./plano command in the project
root to see what is available.
To quickly stand up the example using Minikube, try the ./plano demo
command.