Documentation
Introduction
- Overview
- Getting Started
- Support for K8s Installers
- Deploying on Kind
- Deploying on Minikube
- Configuration
- Installing with Helm
Cloud Deployment
Reference
- Antrea Network Policy
- Antctl
- Architecture
- Traffic Encryption (Ipsec / WireGuard)
- Securing Control Plane
- Security considerations
- Troubleshooting
- OS-specific Known Issues
- OVS Pipeline
- Feature Gates
- Antrea Proxy
- Network Flow Visibility
- Traceflow Guide
- NoEncap and Hybrid Traffic Modes
- Egress Guide
- NodePortLocal Guide
- Antrea IPAM Guide
- Exposing Services of type LoadBalancer
- Traffic Control
- Versioning
- Antrea API Groups
- Antrea API Reference
Windows
Integrations
Cookbooks
Multicluster
Developer Guide
Project Information
NoEncap and Hybrid Traffic Modes of Antrea
Besides the default Encap
mode, in which Pod traffic across Nodes will be
encapsulated and sent over tunnels, Antrea also supports NoEncap
and Hybrid
traffic modes. In NoEncap
mode, Antrea does not encapsulate Pod traffic, but
relies on the Node network to route the traffic across Nodes. In Hybrid
mode,
Antrea encapsulates Pod traffic when the source Node and the destination Node
are in different subnets, but does not encapsulate when the source and the
destination Nodes are in the same subnet. This document describes how to
configure Antrea with the NoEncap
and Hybrid
modes.
The NoEncap and Hybrid traffic modes require AntreaProxy to support correct NetworkPolicy enforcement, which is why trying to disable AntreaProxy in these modes will normally cause the Antrea Agent to fail. It is possible to override this behavior and force AntreaProxy to be disabled by setting the ALLOW_NO_ENCAP_WITHOUT_ANTREA_PROXY environment variable to true for the Antrea Agent. For example:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: DaemonSet
metadata:
name: antrea-agent
labels:
component: antrea-agent
spec:
containers:
- name: antrea-agent
... ...
env:
- name: ALLOW_NO_ENCAP_WITHOUT_ANTREA_PROXY
value: "true"
... ...
Hybrid Mode
Let us start from Hybrid
mode which is simpler to configure. Hybrid
mode
does not encapsulate Pod traffic when the source and the destination Nodes are
in the same subnet. Thus it requires the Node network to allow Pod IP addresses
to be sent out from the Nodes' NICs. This requirement is not supported in all
the networks and clouds, or in some cases it might require specific
configuration of the Node network. For example:
-
On AWS, the source/destination checks must be disabled on the EC2 instances of the Kubernetes Nodes, as described in the AWS documentation.
-
On Google Compute Engine, IP forwarding must be enabled on the VM instances as described in the Google Cloud documentation.
-
On Azure, there is no way to let VNet forward unknown IPs, hence Antrea
Hybrid
mode cannot work on Azure.
If the Node network does allow Pod IPs sent out from the Nodes, you can
configure Antrea to run in the Hybrid
mode by setting the trafficEncapMode
config parameter of antrea-agent
to hybrid
. The trafficEncapMode
config
parameter is defined in antrea-agent.conf
of the antrea
ConfigMap in the
Antrea deployment yaml.
antrea-agent.conf: |
... ...
trafficEncapMode: hybrid
... ...
After changing the config parameter, you can deploy Antrea in Hybrid
mode with
the usual command:
kubectl apply -f antrea.yml
NoEncap Mode
In NoEncap
mode, Antrea never encapsulates Pod traffic. Just like Hybrid
mode, the Node network needs to allow Pod IP addresses sent out from Nodes. When
the Nodes are not in the same subnet, NoEncap
mode additionally requires the
Node network be able to route the Pod traffic from the source Node to the
destination Node. There are two possibilities to enable this routing by Node
network:
-
Leverage Route Controller of Kubernetes Cloud Controller Manager. The Kubernetes Cloud Providers that implement Route Controller can add routes to the cloud network routers for the Pod CIDRs of Nodes, and then the cloud network is able to route Pod traffic between Nodes. This Route Controller functionality is supported by the Cloud Provider implementations of the major clouds, including: AWS, Azure, GCE, and vSphere (with NSX-T).
-
Run a routing protocol or even manually configure routers to add routes to the Node network routers. For example, Antrea can work with kube-router and leverage kube-router to advertise Pod CIDRs to routers using BGP. Section Using kube-router for BGP describes how to configure Antrea and kube-router to work together.
When the Node network can support forwarding and routing of Pod traffic, Antrea
can be configured to run in the NoEncap
mode, by setting the trafficEncapMode
config parameter of antrea-agent
to noEncap
. By default, Antrea performs SNAT
(source network address translation) for the outbound connections from a Pod to
outside of the Pod network, using the Node’s IP address as the SNAT IP. In the
NoEncap
mode, as the Node network knows about Pod IP addresses, the SNAT by
Antrea might be unnecessary. In this case, you can disable it by setting the
noSNAT
config parameter to true
. The trafficEncapMode
and noSNAT
config
parameters are defined in antrea-agent.conf
of the antrea
ConfigMap in the
Antrea deployment yaml.
antrea-agent.conf: |
... ...
trafficEncapMode: noEncap
noSNAT: false # Set to true to disable Antrea SNAT for external traffic
... ...
After changing the parameters, you can deploy Antrea in noEncap
mode by applying
the deployment yaml.
Using kube-router for BGP
We can run kube-router in advertisement-only mode to advertise Pod CIDRs to the peered routers, so the routers can know how to route Pod traffic to the Nodes. To deploy kube-router in advertisement-only mode, first download the kube-router DaemonSet template:
curl -LO https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cloudnativelabs/kube-router/v0.4.0/daemonset/generic-kuberouter-only-advertise-routes.yaml
Then edit the yaml file and set the following kube-router arguments:
- "--run-router=true"
- "--run-firewall=false"
- "--run-service-proxy=false"
- "--enable-cni=false"
- "--enable-ibgp=false"
- "--enable-overlay=false"
- "--enable-pod-egress=false"
- "--peer-router-ips=<CHANGE ME>"
- "--peer-router-asns=<CHANGE ME>"
The BGP peers should be configured by specifying the --peer-router-asns
and
--peer-router-ips
parameters. Note, the ASNs and IPs must match the
configuration on the peered routers. For example:
- "--peer-router-ips=192.168.1.99,192.168.1.100
- "--peer-router-asns=65000,65000"
Then you can deploy the kube-router DaemonSet with:
kubectl apply -f generic-kuberouter-only-advertise-routes.yaml
You can verify that the kube-router Pods are running on the Nodes of your Kubernetes cluster by (the cluster in the following example has only two Nodes):
$ kubectl -n kube-system get pods -l k8s-app=kube-router
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
kube-router-rn4xc 1/1 Running 0 1m
kube-router-vhrf5 1/1 Running 0 1m
Antrea can be deployed either before or after kube-router, with the NoEncap
mode.