Search the Docs

Install with Bare Metal

In cloud environments, provisioning a readily available network load balancer with Ambassador is the best option for handling ingress into your Kubernetes cluster. When running Kubernetes on a bare metal setup, where network load balancers are not available by default, we need to consider different options for exposing Ambassador.

Exposing Ambassador via NodePort

The simplest way to expose an application in Kubernetes is via a NodePort service. In this configuration, we create the Ambassador service] and identify type: NodePort instead of LoadBalancer. Kubernetes will then create a service and assign that service a port to be exposed externally and direct traffic to Ambassador via the defined port.

---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: ambassador
spec:
type: NodePort
ports:
- name: http
port: 8088
targetPort: 8080
nodePort: 30036 # Optional: Define the port you would like exposed
protocol: TCP
selector:
service: ambassador

Using a NodePort leaves Ambassador isolated from the host network, allowing the Kubernetes service to handle routing to Ambassador pods. You can drop-in this YAML to replace the LoadBalancer service in the YAML installation guide and use http://<External-Node-IP>:<NodePort>/ as the host for requests.

Exposing Ambassador via Host Network

When running Ambassador on a bare metal install of Kubernetes, you have the option to configure Ambassador pods to use the network of the host they are running on. This method allows you to bind Ambassador directly to port 80 or 443 so you won't need to identify the port in requests.

i.e http://<External-Node-IP>:<NodePort>/ becomes http://<External-Node-IP>/

This can be configured by setting hostNetwork: true in the Ambassador deployment. dnsPolicy: ClusterFirstWithHostNet will also need to set to tell Ambassador to use KubeDNS when attempting to resolve mappings.

---
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: ambassador
spec:
replicas: 1
selector:
matchLabels:
service: ambassador
template:
metadata:
annotations:
sidecar.istio.io/inject: "false"
labels:
service: ambassador
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: getambassador.io
spec:
+ hostNetwork: true
+ dnsPolicy: ClusterFirstWithHostNet
serviceAccountName: ambassador
containers:
- name: ambassador
image: docker.io/datawire/ambassador:1.11.1
resources:
limits:
cpu: 1
memory: 400Mi
requests:
cpu: 200m
memory: 100Mi
env:
- name: AMBASSADOR_NAMESPACE
valueFrom:
fieldRef:
fieldPath: metadata.namespace
livenessProbe:
httpGet:
path: /ambassador/v0/check_alive
port: 8877
initialDelaySeconds: 30
periodSeconds: 3
readinessProbe:
httpGet:
path: /ambassador/v0/check_ready
port: 8877
initialDelaySeconds: 30
periodSeconds: 3
restartPolicy: Always

This configuration does not require a defined Ambassador service, so you can remove that service if you have defined one.

Note: Before configuring Ambassador with this method, consider some of the functionality that is lost by bypassing the Kubernetes service including only having one Ambassador able to bind to port 8080 or 8443 per node and losing any load balancing that is typically performed by Kubernetes services.

Questions?

We’re here to help. If you have questions, join our Slack or contact us.