coredns/plugin/kubernetes/README.md
Miek Gieben d8714e64e4 Remove the word middleware (#1067)
* Rename middleware to plugin

first pass; mostly used 'sed', few spots where I manually changed
text.

This still builds a coredns binary.

* fmt error

* Rename AddMiddleware to AddPlugin

* Readd AddMiddleware to remain backwards compat
2017-09-14 09:36:06 +01:00

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Markdown

# kubernetes
The *kubernetes* plugin enables the reading zone data from a Kubernetes cluster. It implements
the [Kubernetes DNS-Based Service Discovery
Specification](https://github.com/kubernetes/dns/blob/master/docs/specification.md).
CoreDNS running the kubernetes plugin can be used as a replacement of kube-dns in a kubernetes
cluster. See the [deployment](https://github.com/coredns/deployment) repository for details on [how
to deploy CoreDNS in Kubernetes](https://github.com/coredns/deployment/tree/master/kubernetes).
[stubDomains](http://blog.kubernetes.io/2017/04/configuring-private-dns-zones-upstream-nameservers-kubernetes.html)
are implemented via the *proxy* plugin.
## Syntax
~~~
kubernetes [ZONES...]
~~~
With only the directive specified, the *kubernetes* plugin will default to the zone specified in
the server's block. It will handle all queries in that zone and connect to Kubernetes in-cluster. It
will not provide PTR records for services, or A records for pods. If **ZONES** is used it specifies
all the zones the plugin should be authoritative for.
```
kubernetes [ZONES...] {
resyncperiod DURATION
endpoint URL
tls CERT KEY CACERT
namespaces NAMESPACE...
labels EXPRESSION
pods POD-MODE
upstream ADDRESS...
ttl TTL
fallthrough
}
```
* `resyncperiod` specifies the Kubernetes data API **DURATION** period.
* `endpoint` specifies the **URL** for a remove k8s API endpoint.
If omitted, it will connect to k8s in-cluster using the cluster service account.
Multiple k8s API endpoints could be specified, separated by `,`s, e.g.
`endpoint http://k8s-endpoint1:8080,http://k8s-endpoint2:8080`. CoreDNS
will automatically perform a healthcheck and proxy to the healthy k8s API endpoint.
* `tls` **CERT** **KEY** **CACERT** are the TLS cert, key and the CA cert file names for remote k8s connection.
This option is ignored if connecting in-cluster (i.e. endpoint is not specified).
* `namespaces` **NAMESPACE [NAMESPACE...]**, exposed only the k8s namespaces listed.
If this option is omitted all namespaces are exposed
* `labels` **EXPRESSION** only exposes the records for Kubernetes objects that match this label selector.
The label selector syntax is described in the
[Kubernetes User Guide - Labels](http://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/labels/). An example that
only exposes objects labeled as "application=nginx" in the "staging" or "qa" environments, would
use: `labels environment in (staging, qa),application=nginx`.
* `pods` **POD-MODE** sets the mode for handling IP-based pod A records, e.g.
`1-2-3-4.ns.pod.cluster.local. in A 1.2.3.4`.
This option is provided to facilitate use of SSL certs when connecting directly to pods. Valid
values for **POD-MODE**:
* `disabled`: Default. Do not process pod requests, always returning `NXDOMAIN`
* `insecure`: Always return an A record with IP from request (without checking k8s). This option
is is vulnerable to abuse if used maliciously in conjunction with wildcard SSL certs. This
option is provided for backward compatibility with kube-dns.
* `verified`: Return an A record if there exists a pod in same namespace with matching IP. This
option requires substantially more memory than in insecure mode, since it will maintain a watch
on all pods.
* `upstream` **ADDRESS [ADDRESS...]** defines the upstream resolvers used for resolving services
that point to external hosts (External Services). **ADDRESS** can be an ip, an ip:port, or a path
to a file structured like resolv.conf.
* `ttl` allows you to set a custom TTL for responses. The default (and allowed minimum) is to use
5 seconds, the maximum is capped at 3600 seconds.
* `fallthrough` If a query for a record in the cluster zone results in NXDOMAIN, normally that is
what the response will be. However, if you specify this option, the query will instead be passed
on down the plugin chain, which can include another plugin to handle the query.
## Examples
Handle all queries in the `cluster.local` zone. Connect to Kubernetes in-cluster.
Also handle all `PTR` requests for `10.0.0.0/16` . Verify the existence of pods when answering pod
requests. Resolve upstream records against `10.102.3.10`. Note we show the entire server block
here:
~~~ txt
10.0.0.0/16 cluster.local {
kubernetes {
pods verified
upstream 10.102.3.10:53
}
}
~~~
Or you can selectively expose some namespaces:
~~~ txt
kubernetes cluster.local {
namespaces test staging
}
~~~
Connect to Kubernetes with CoreDNS running outside the cluster:
~~~ txt
kubernetes cluster.local {
endpoint https://k8s-endpoint:8443
tls cert key cacert
}
~~~
Here we use the *proxy* plugin to implement stubDomains that forwards `example.org` and
`example.com` to another nameserver.
~~~ txt
cluster.local {
kubernetes {
endpoint https://k8s-endpoint:8443
tls cert key cacert
}
}
example.org {
proxy . 8.8.8.8:53
}
example.com {
proxy . 8.8.8.8:53
}
~~~
## AutoPath
The *kubernetes* plugin can be used in conjunction with the *autopath* plugin. Using this
feature enables server-side domain search path completion in kubernetes clusters. Note: `pods` must
be set to `verified` for this to function properly.
cluster.local {
autopath @kubernetes
kubernetes {
pods verified
}
}
## Federation
The *kubernetes* plugin can be used in conjunction with the *federation* plugin. Using this
feature enables serving federated domains from the kubernetes clusters.
cluster.local {
federation {
fallthrough
prod prod.example.org
staging staging.example.org
}
kubernetes
}
## Wildcards
Some query labels accept a wildcard value to match any value. If a label is a valid wildcard (\*,
or the word "any"), then that label will match all values. The labels that accept wildcards are:
* _service_ in an `A` record request: _service_.namespace.svc.zone.
* e.g. `*.ns.svc.myzone.local`
* _namespace_ in an `A` record request: service._namespace_.svc.zone.
* e.g. `nginx.*.svc.myzone.local`
* _port and/or protocol_ in an `SRV` request: __port_.__protocol_.service.namespace.svc.zone.
* e.g. `_http.*.service.ns.svc.`
* multiple wild cards are allowed in a single query.
* e.g. `A` Request `*.*.svc.zone.` or `SRV` request `*.*.*.*.svc.zone.`