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Multi-zone deployment
About
Kuma supports running your service mesh in multiple zones. It is even possible to run with a mix of Kubernetes and Universal zones. Your mesh environment can include multiple isolated service meshes (multi-tenancy), and workloads running in different regions, on different clouds, or in different datacenters. A zone can be a Kubernetes cluster, a VPC, or any other deployment you need to include in the same distributed mesh environment. The only condition is that all the data planes running within the zone must be able to connect to the other data planes in this same zone.
Or without the optional zone egress:
How it works
In Kuma, zones are abstracted away, meaning that your data plane proxies will find services wherever they run.
This way you can make a service multi-zone by having data planes using the same kuma.io/service
in different zones. This gives you automatic fail-over of services in case a specific zone fails.
Let’s look at how a service backend
in zone-b
is advertised to zone-a
and a request from the local zone zone-a
is routed to the remote
service in zone-b
.
Destination service zone
When the new service backend
joins the mesh in zone-b
, the zone-b
zone control plane adds this service to the availableServices
on the zone-b
ZoneIngress
resource.
The kuma-dp
proxy running as a zone ingress is configured with this list of
services so that it can route incoming requests.
This ZoneIngress
resource is then also synchronized to the global control plane.
The global control-plane will propagate the zone ingress resources and all policies to all other zones over Kuma Discovery Service (KDS), which is a protocol based on xDS.
Source service zone
The zone-b
ZoneIngress
resource is synchronized from the global control
plane to the zone-a
zone control plane.
Requests to the availableServices
from zone-a
are load balanced between local instances and remote instances of this service.
Requests send to zone-b
are routed to the zone ingress proxy of zone-b
.
For load-balancing, the zone ingress endpoints are weighted with the number of instances running behind them. So a zone with 2 instances will receive twice as much traffic than a zone with 1 instance. You can also favor local service instances with locality-aware load balancing.
In the presence of a zone egress, the traffic is routed through the local zone egress before being sent to the remote zone ingress.
When using transparent proxy (default in Kubernetes),
Kuma generates a VIP,
a DNS entry with the format <kuma.io/service>.mesh
, and will listen for traffic on port 80. The <kuma.io/service>.mesh:80
format is just a convention.
VirtualOutbounds
s enable you to customize the listening port and how the DNS name for these services looks.
A zone ingress is not an API gateway. It is only used for cross-zone communication within a mesh. API gateways are supported in Kuma gateway mode and can be deployed in addition to zone ingresses.
Components of a multi-zone deployment
A multi-zone deployment includes:
- The global control plane:
- Accept connections only from zone control planes.
- Accept creation and changes to policies that will be applied to the data plane proxies.
- Send policies down to zone control planes.
- Send zone ingresses down to zone control plane.
- Keep an inventory of all data plane proxies running in all zones (this is only done for observability but is not required for operations).
- Reject connections from data plane proxies.
- The zone control planes:
- Accept connections from data plane proxies started within this zone.
- Receive policy updates from the global control plane.
- Send data plane proxies and zone ingress changes to the global control plane.
- Compute and send configurations using XDS to the local data plane proxies.
- Update list of services which exist in the zone in the zone ingress.
- Reject policy changes that do not come from global.
- The data plane proxies:
- Connect to the local zone control plane.
- Receive configurations using XDS from the local zone control plane.
- Connect to other local data plane proxies.
- Connect to zone ingresses for sending cross zone traffic.
- Receive traffic from local data plane proxies and local zone ingresses.
- The zone ingress:
- Receive XDS configuration from the local zone control plane.
- Proxy traffic from other zone data plane proxies to local data plane proxies.
- (optional) The zone egress:
- Receive XDS configuration from the local zone control plane.
- Proxy traffic from local data plane proxies:
- to zone ingress proxies from other zones;
- to external services from local zone;
Usage
To set up a multi-zone deployment we will need to:
- Set up the global control plane
- Set up the zone control planes
- Verify control plane connectivity
- Ensure mTLS is enabled for the multi-zone meshes
Set up the global control plane
The global control plane must run on a dedicated cluster, and cannot be assigned to a zone.
The global control plane on Kubernetes must reside on its own Kubernetes cluster, to keep its resources separate from the resources the zone control planes create during synchronization.
-
Run:
kumactl install control-plane --mode=global | kubectl apply -f -
-
Find the external IP and port of the
kuma-global-zone-sync
service in thekuma-system
namespace:kubectl get services -n kuma-system NAMESPACE NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE kuma-system kuma-global-zone-sync LoadBalancer 10.105.9.10 35.226.196.103 5685:30685/TCP 89s kuma-system kuma-control-plane ClusterIP 10.105.12.133 <none> 5681/TCP,443/TCP,5676/TCP,5677/TCP,5678/TCP,5679/TCP,5682/TCP,5653/UDP 90s
In this example the value is
35.226.196.103:5685
. You pass this as the value of<global-kds-address>
when you set up the zone control planes.
Set up the zone control planes
You need the following values to pass to each zone control plane setup:
zone
– the zone name. An arbitrary string. This value registers the zone control plane with the global control plane.kds-global-address
– the external IP and port of the global control plane.
Without zone egress:
-
On each zone control plane, run:
kumactl install control-plane \ --mode=zone \ --zone=<zone name> \ --ingress-enabled \ --kds-global-address grpcs://<global-kds-address>:5685 | kubectl apply -f -
where
zone
is the same value for all zone control planes in the same zone.
With zone egress:
-
On each zone control plane, run:
kumactl install control-plane \ --mode=zone \ --zone=<zone-name> \ --ingress-enabled \ --egress-enabled \ --kds-global-address grpcs://<global-kds-address>:5685 | kubectl apply -f -
where
zone
is the same value for all zone control planes in the same zone.
Verify control plane connectivity
If your global control plane is installed on Kubernetes, you’ll need to configure your kumactl
like so:
# forward traffic from local pc into global control plane in the cluster
kubectl -n kuma-system port-forward svc/kuma-control-plane 5681:5681 &
# configure control plane for kumactl
kumactl config control-planes add \
--name global-control-plane \
--address http://localhost:5681 \
--skip-verify
You can run kumactl get zones
, or check the list of zones in the web UI for the global control plane, to verify zone control plane connections.
When a zone control plane connects to the global control plane, the Zone
resource is created automatically in the global control plane.
The Zone Ingress tab of the web UI also lists zone control planes that you deployed with zone ingress.
Ensure mTLS is enabled on the multi-zone meshes
MTLS is mandatory to enable cross-zone service communication. mTLS can be configured in your mesh configuration as indicated in the mTLS section. This is required because Kuma uses the Server Name Indication field, part of the TLS protocol, as a way to pass routing information cross zones.
Cross-zone communication details
For this example we will assume we have a service running in a Kubernetes zone exposing a kuma.io/service
with value echo-server_echo-example_svc_1010
.
The following examples are running in the remote zone trying to access the previously mentioned service.
To view the list of service names available, run:
kubectl get serviceinsight all-services-default -oyaml
apiVersion: kuma.io/v1alpha1
kind: ServiceInsight
mesh: default
metadata:
name: all-services-default
spec:
services:
echo-server_echo-example_svc_1010:
dataplanes:
online: 1
total: 1
issuedBackends:
ca-1: 1
status: online
The following are some examples of different ways to address echo-server
in the
echo-example
Namespace
in a multi-zone mesh.
To send a request in the same zone, you can rely on Kubernetes DNS and use the usual Kubernetes hostnames and ports:
curl http://echo-server:1010
Requests are distributed round robin between zones. You can use locality-aware load balancing to keep requests in the same zone.
To send a request to any zone, you can use the generated kuma.io/service
and Kuma DNS:
curl http://echo-server_echo-example_svc_1010.mesh:80
Kuma DNS also supports RFC 1123 compatible names, where underscores are replaced with dots:
curl http://echo-server.echo-example.svc.1010.mesh:80
For security reasons it’s not possible to customize the kuma.io/service
in Kubernetes.
If you want to have the same service running on both Universal and Kubernetes make sure to align the Universal’s data plane inbound to have the same kuma.io/service
as the one in Kubernetes or leverage TrafficRoute.
Failure modes
Global control plane offline
- Policy updates will be impossible
- Change in service list between zones will not propagate:
- New services will not be discoverable in other zones.
- Services removed from a zone will still appear available in other zones.
- You won’t be able to disable or delete a zone.
Note that both local and cross-zone application traffic is not impacted by this failure case. Data plane proxy changes will be propagated within their zones.
Zone control plane offline
- New data plane proxies won’t be able to join the mesh. This includes new instances (Pod/VM) that are newly created by automatic deployment mechanisms (for example, a rolling update process), meaning a control plane connection failure could block updates of applications and events that involves new instances to be created.
- On mTLS enabled meshes, a data plane proxy may fail to refresh its client certificate prior to expiry (defaults to 24 hours), thus causing traffic from/to this data plane to fail.
- Data plane proxy configuration will not be updated.
- Communication between data plane proxies will still work.
- Cross zone communication will still work.
- Other zones are unaffected.
You can think of this failure case as “Freezing” the zone mesh configuration. Communication will still work but changes will not be reflected on existing data plane proxies.
Communication between Global and Zone control plane failing
This can happen with misconfiguration or network connectivity issues between control planes.
- Operations inside the zone will happen correctly (data plane proxies can join, leave and all configuration will be updated and sent correctly).
- Policy changes will not be propagated to the zone control plane.
ZoneIngress
,ZoneEgress
andDataplane
changes will not be propagated to the global control plane:- The global inventory view of the data plane proxies will be outdated (this only impacts observability).
- Other zones will not see new services registered inside this zone.
- Other zones will not see services no longer running inside this zone.
- Other zones will not see changes in number of instances of each service running in the local zone.
- Global control plane will not send changes from other zone ingress to the zone:
- Local data plane proxies will not see new services registered in other zones.
- Local data plane proxies will not see services no longer running in other zones.
- Local data plane proxies will not see changes in number of instances of each service running in other zones.
- Global control plane will not send changes from other zone ingress to the zone.
Note that both local and cross-zone application traffic is not impacted by this failure case.
Communication between 2 zones failing
This can happen if there are network connectivity issues:
- Between control plane and zone ingress from other zone.
- Between control plane and zone egress (when present).
- Between zone egress (when present) and zone ingress from other zone.
- All Zone egress instances of a zone (when present) are down.
- All zone ingress instances of a zone are down.
When it happens:
- Communication and operation within each zone is unaffected.
- Communication across each zone will fail.
With the right resiliency setup (Retries, Probes, Locality Aware LoadBalancing, Circuit Breakers) the failing zone can be quickly severed and traffic re-routed to another zone.
Delete a zone
To delete a Zone
we must first shut down the corresponding Kuma zone control plane instances. As long as the Zone CP is running this will not be possible, and Kuma returns a validation error like:
zone: unable to delete Zone, Zone CP is still connected, please shut it down first
When the Zone CP is fully disconnected and shut down, then the Zone
can be deleted. All corresponding resources (like Dataplane
and DataplaneInsight
) will be deleted automatically as well.
kubectl delete zone zone-1
Disable a zone
Change the enabled
property value to false
in the global control plane:
apiVersion: kuma.io/v1alpha1
kind: Zone
metadata:
name: zone-1
spec:
enabled: false
With this setting, the global control plane will stop exchanging configuration with this zone. As a result, the zone’s ingress from zone-1 will be deleted from other zone and traffic won’t be routed to it anymore. The zone will show as Offline in the GUI and CLI.