Ingress Access Control
This task shows you how to enforce IP-based access control on an Istio ingress gateway using an authorization policy.
Before you begin
Before you begin this task, do the following:
Read the Istio authorization concepts.
Install Istio using the Istio installation guide.
Deploy a workload,
httpbin
, in namespacefoo
with sidecar injection enabled:$ kubectl create ns foo $ kubectl label namespace foo istio-injection=enabled $ kubectl apply -f @samples/httpbin/httpbin.yaml@ -n foo
Expose
httpbin
through an ingress gateway:
Verify that the
httpbin
workload and ingress gateway are working as expected using this command:$ curl "$INGRESS_HOST:$INGRESS_PORT"/headers -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}\n" 200
Getting traffic into Kubernetes and Istio
All methods of getting traffic into Kubernetes involve opening a port on all worker nodes.
The main features that accomplish this are the NodePort
service and the LoadBalancer
service.
Even the Kubernetes Ingress
resource must be backed by an Ingress controller that will create
either a NodePort
or a LoadBalancer
service.
A
NodePort
just opens up a port in the range 30000-32767 on each worker node and uses a label selector to identify which Pods to send the traffic to. You have to manually create some kind of load balancer in front of your worker nodes or use Round-Robin DNS.A
LoadBalancer
is just like aNodePort
, except it also creates an environment specific external load balancer to handle distributing traffic to the worker nodes. For example, in AWS EKS, theLoadBalancer
service will create a Classic ELB with your worker nodes as targets. If your Kubernetes environment does not have aLoadBalancer
implementation, then it will just behave like aNodePort
. An Istio ingress gateway creates aLoadBalancer
service.
What if the Pod that is handling traffic from the NodePort
or LoadBalancer
isn’t running on
the worker node that received the traffic? Kubernetes has its own internal proxy called kube-proxy
that receives the packets and forwards them to the correct node.
Source IP address of the original client
If a packet goes through an external proxy load balancer and/or kube-proxy, then the original source IP address of the client is lost. The following subsections describe some strategies for preserving the original client IP for logging or security purpose for different load balancer types:
For reference, here are the types of load balancers created by Istio with a LoadBalancer
service on popular managed Kubernetes environments:
Cloud Provider | Load Balancer Name | Load Balancer Type |
---|---|---|
AWS EKS | Classic Elastic Load Balancer | TCP Proxy |
GCP GKE | TCP/UDP Network Load Balancer | Network |
Azure AKS | Azure Load Balancer | Network |
IBM IKS/ROKS | Network Load Balancer | Network |
DO DOKS | Load Balancer | Network |
TCP/UDP Proxy Load Balancer
If you are using a TCP/UDP Proxy external load balancer (AWS Classic ELB), it can use the Proxy Protocol to embed the original client IP address in the packet data. Both the external load balancer and the Istio ingress gateway must support the proxy protocol for it to work. In Istio, you can enable it with an EnvoyFilter
like below:
Here is a sample configuration that shows how to make an ingress gateway on AWS EKS support the Proxy Protocol:
Network Load Balancer
If you are using a TCP/UDP network load balancer that preserves the client IP address (AWS Network Load Balancer, GCP External Network Load Balancer, Azure Load Balancer) or you are using Round-Robin DNS, then you can use the externalTrafficPolicy: Local
setting to also preserve the client IP inside Kubernetes by bypassing kube-proxy and preventing it from sending traffic to other nodes.
Update the ingress gateway to set externalTrafficPolicy: Local
to preserve the
original client source IP on the ingress gateway using the following command:
HTTP/HTTPS Load Balancer
If you are using an HTTP/HTTPS external load balancer (AWS ALB, GCP ), it can put the original client IP address in the X-Forwarded-For header. Istio can extract the client IP address from this header with some configuration. See Configuring Gateway Network Topology. Quick example if using a single load balancer in front of Kubernetes:
apiVersion: install.istio.io/v1alpha1
kind: IstioOperator
spec:
meshConfig:
accessLogEncoding: JSON
accessLogFile: /dev/stdout
defaultConfig:
gatewayTopology:
numTrustedProxies: 1
IP-based allow list and deny list
When to use ipBlocks
vs. remoteIpBlocks
: If you are using the X-Forwarded-For HTTP header or the Proxy Protocol to determine the original client IP address, then you should use remoteIpBlocks
in your AuthorizationPolicy
. If you are using externalTrafficPolicy: Local
, then you should use ipBlocks
in your AuthorizationPolicy
.
Load Balancer Type | Source of Client IP | ipBlocks vs. remoteIpBlocks |
---|---|---|
TCP Proxy | Proxy Protocol | remoteIpBlocks |
Network | packet source address | ipBlocks |
HTTP/HTTPS | X-Forwarded-For | remoteIpBlocks |
- The following command creates the authorization policy,
ingress-policy
, for the Istio ingress gateway. The following policy sets theaction
field toALLOW
to allow the IP addresses specified in theipBlocks
to access the ingress gateway. IP addresses not in the list will be denied. TheipBlocks
supports both single IP address and CIDR notation.
Verify that a request to the ingress gateway is denied:
$ curl "$INGRESS_HOST:$INGRESS_PORT"/headers -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}\n" 403
Assign your original client IP address to an env variable. If you don’t know it, you can an find it in the Envoy logs using the following command:
- Update the
ingress-policy
to include your client IP address:
Verify that a request to the ingress gateway is allowed:
$ curl "$INGRESS_HOST:$INGRESS_PORT"/headers -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}\n" 200
Update the
ingress-policy
authorization policy to set theaction
key toDENY
so that the IP addresses specified in theipBlocks
are not allowed to access the ingress gateway:
Verify that a request to the ingress gateway is denied:
$ curl "$INGRESS_HOST:$INGRESS_PORT"/headers -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}\n" 403
You could use an online proxy service to access the ingress gateway using a different client IP to verify the request is allowed.
If you are not getting the responses you expect, view the ingress gateway logs which should show RBAC debugging information:
Clean up
- Remove the authorization policy:
Remove the namespace
foo
:$ kubectl delete namespace foo