Install on Amazon EKS
This guide shows you how to install HAProxy Kubernetes Ingress Controller in Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service. We will use the Helm package manager.
Pre-installation checklist
- A running EKS Kubernetes cluster with a configured node group
- The AWS CLI
- The helm command-line tool
- The kubectl command-line tool
Connect to your EKS cluster
-
If you created your EKS cluster using the AWS Console, you were logged into the AWS Console as a certain user. Unless you’ve already configured additional RBAC users inside of your Kubernetes cluster, you must connect to the cluster using this same user. Follow these steps to connect to the cluster as that user:
- In the AWS Console, expand your account menu, located in the upper right, and select My Security Credentials.
- On the Your Security Credentials page, expand the Access keys section and create a new access key if you do not already have one stored. This will give you an Access Key ID and Secret Access key. Store these somewhere so that you have them later.
-
On your local workstation, configure a named profile for the AWS CLI to use when connecting to AWS. You can accomplish this by calling the
aws configure
command, which will prompt you for the necessary values, including your user’s Access Key ID and Secret Access key.$ aws configure
-
Connect to your Kubernetes cluster using the AWS CLI. This will create a ~/.kube/config file:
$ aws eks --region [Your region] update-kubeconfig --name [Your cluster name]
-
Check that you can access the cluster by calling
kubectl get pods
$ kubectl get pods No resources found in default namespace.
Install
Choose one of the following installation methods:
Install with Helm
-
Add the HAProxy Technologies Helm repository:
$ helm repo add haproxytech https://haproxytech.github.io/helm-charts
-
Update your list of charts:
$ helm repo update
-
Install the latest version of the ingress controller with
type
set to LoadBalancer:$ helm install haproxy-kubernetes-ingress haproxytech/kubernetes-ingress \ --create-namespace \ --namespace haproxy-controller \ --set controller.service.type=LoadBalancer
This will create an EC2 Classic Load Balancer that routes traffic to the ingress controller service. You can map the load balancer’s IP address to your public DNS domain name.
Install with kubectl
- Download the deployment YAML file
-
Edit the haproxy-ingress Service object in the YAML file, setting its
type
field toLoadBalancer
:apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: labels: run: haproxy-ingress name: haproxy-ingress namespace: haproxy-controller spec: selector: run: haproxy-ingress type: LoadBalancer ports: - name: http port: 80 protocol: TCP targetPort: 80 - name: https port: 443 protocol: TCP targetPort: 443 - name: stat port: 1024 protocol: TCP targetPort: 1024
-
Use the
kubectl apply
command to deploy the controller:$ kubectl apply -f haproxy-ingress.yaml
This will create an EC2 Classic Load Balancer that routes traffic to the ingress controller service. You can map the load balancer’s IP address to your public DNS domain name.
Check your installation
Verify that the controller is installed into your Kubernetes cluster by using the command kubectl get pods
:
$ kubectl get pods --namespace haproxy-controller
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
haproxy-kubernetes-ingress-7dd4cc4b-x5fkv 1/1 Running 0 1m
Get the External IP, which you can use to access your cluster:
$ kubectl get services --namespace haproxy-controller
NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
haproxy-kubernetes-ingress LoadBalancer 10.104.173.167 a1234-5678-9012.us-east-2.elb.amazonaws.com 80:30264/TCP,443:31575/TCP,1024:31785/TCP 157m
Next up
Install on Azure AKS