⚠️ This controller is published in multiple repos: Contributions to this Helm chart must be written to aws/aws-app-mesh-controller-for-k8s Github repo. PRs to other repos like aws/eks-charts may be closed or overwritten upon next controller release.
App Mesh controller Helm chart for Kubernetes
Note: If you wish to use App Mesh preview features, please refer to our preview version instructions.
- Kubernetes >= 1.14
- IAM permissions (see below)
Note: AppMesh controller v1.0.0+ is backwards incompatible with old versions(e.g. v0.5.0).
If you're running an older version of App Mesh controller, please go to the upgrade section below before you proceed. If you are unsure, please run the appmesh-controller/upgrade/pre_upgrade_check.sh
script to check if your cluster can be upgraded
Add the EKS repository to Helm:
helm repo add eks https://aws.github.io/eks-charts
Install the App Mesh CRDs:
kubectl apply -k "github.com/aws/eks-charts/stable/appmesh-controller//crds?ref=master"
Create namespace
kubectl create ns appmesh-system
The controller runs on the worker nodes, so it needs access to the AWS App Mesh / Cloud Map resources via IAM permissions. The IAM permissions can either be setup via IAM roles for service account or can be attached directly to the worker node IAM roles.
export CLUSTER_NAME=<eks-cluster-name>
export AWS_REGION=<aws-region e.g. us-east-1>
export AWS_ACCOUNT_ID=<AWS account ID>
Enable IAM OIDC provider
eksctl utils associate-iam-oidc-provider --region=$AWS_REGION \
--cluster=$CLUSTER_NAME \
--approve
Download the IAM policy for AWS App Mesh Kubernetes Controller
curl -o controller-iam-policy.json https://raw.githubusercontent.com/aws/aws-app-mesh-controller-for-k8s/master/config/iam/controller-iam-policy.json
Create an IAM policy called AWSAppMeshK8sControllerIAMPolicy
aws iam create-policy \
--policy-name AWSAppMeshK8sControllerIAMPolicy \
--policy-document file://controller-iam-policy.json
Take note of the policy ARN that is returned
Create an IAM role for service account for the App Mesh Kubernetes controller, use the ARN from the step above
Note: if you deleted
serviceaccount
in theappmesh-system
namespace, you will need to delete and re-createiamserviceaccount
.eksctl
does not override theiamserviceaccount
correctly (see this issue)
eksctl create iamserviceaccount --cluster $CLUSTER_NAME \
--namespace appmesh-system \
--name appmesh-controller \
--attach-policy-arn arn:aws:iam::$AWS_ACCOUNT_ID:policy/AWSAppMeshK8sControllerIAMPolicy \
--override-existing-serviceaccounts \
--approve
Deploy appmesh-controller
Note: To enable mTLS via SDS(SPIRE), please set "sds.enabled=true".
helm upgrade -i appmesh-controller eks/appmesh-controller \
--namespace appmesh-system \
--set region=$AWS_REGION \
--set serviceAccount.create=false \
--set serviceAccount.name=appmesh-controller
The configuration section lists the parameters that can be configured during installation.
Note Make sure that the Envoy proxies have the following IAM policies attached for the Envoy to authenticate with AWS App Mesh and fetch it's configuration
There are 2 ways you can attach the above policy to the Envoy Pod
Download the Envoy IAM policy
curl -o envoy-iam-policy.json https://raw.githubusercontent.com/aws/aws-app-mesh-controller-for-k8s/master/config/iam/envoy-iam-policy.json
Create an IAM policy called AWSAppMeshEnvoyIAMPolicy
aws iam create-policy \
--policy-name AWSAppMeshEnvoyIAMPolicy \
--policy-document file://envoy-iam-policy.json
Take note of the policy ARN that is returned
If your Mesh enabled applications are already using IRSA then you can attach the above policy to the role belonging to the existing IRSA or you can edit the Trust Relationship of the existing iam role which has this envoy policy so that some other service account in your mesh can also assume this role.
If not then you can create a service account for your application namespace and use the ARN from the step above. Ensure that Application Namespace already exists
eksctl create iamserviceaccount --cluster $CLUSTER_NAME \
--namespace <ApplicationNamespaceName to which Envoy gets Injected> \
--name envoy-proxy \
--attach-policy-arn arn:aws:iam::$AWS_ACCOUNT_ID:policy/AWSAppMeshEnvoyIAMPolicy \
--override-existing-serviceaccounts \
--approve
Reference this Service Account in your application pod spec. This should be the pod which would get injected with the Envoy. Refer below example:
https://github.com/aws/aws-app-mesh-examples/blob/5a2d04227593d292d52e5e2ca638d808ebed5e70/walkthroughs/howto-k8s-fargate/v1beta2/manifest.yaml.template#L220
Find the Node Instance IAM Role from your worker nodes and attach below policies to it. Note If you created service account for the controller as indicated above then you can skip attaching the Controller IAM policy to worker nodes. Instead attach only the Envoy IAM policy.
Controller IAM policy
- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/aws/aws-app-mesh-controller-for-k8s/master/config/iam/controller-iam-policy.json Use below command to download the policy if not already
curl -o controller-iam-policy.json https://raw.githubusercontent.com/aws/aws-app-mesh-controller-for-k8s/master/config/iam/controller-iam-policy.json
Envoy IAM policy Attach the below envoy policy to your Worker Nodes (Node Instance IAM Role)
- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/aws/aws-app-mesh-controller-for-k8s/master/config/iam/envoy-iam-policy.json
Use below command to download the policy if not already
curl -o envoy-iam-policy.json https://raw.githubusercontent.com/aws/aws-app-mesh-controller-for-k8s/master/config/iam/envoy-iam-policy.json
Apply the IAM policy directly to the worker nodes by replacing the <NODE_INSTANCE_IAM_ROLE_NAME>
, <policy-name>
, and <policy-filename>
in below command:
aws iam put-role-policy --role-name <NODE_INSTANCE_IAM_ROLE_NAME> --policy-name <policy-name> --policy-document file://<policy-filename>
Deploy appmesh-controller
helm upgrade -i appmesh-controller eks/appmesh-controller \
--namespace appmesh-system
The configuration section lists the parameters that can be configured during installation.
export CLUSTER_NAME=<eks-cluster-name>
export AWS_REGION=<aws-region e.g. us-east-1>
export AWS_ACCOUNT_ID=<AWS account ID>
Create namespace
kubectl create ns appmesh-system
Setup EKS Fargate profile
eksctl create fargateprofile --cluster $CLUSTER_NAME --namespace appmesh-system
Enable IAM OIDC provider
eksctl utils associate-iam-oidc-provider --region=$AWS_REGION --cluster=$CLUSTER_NAME --approve
Download the IAM policy for AWS App Mesh Kubernetes Controller
curl -o controller-iam-policy.json https://raw.githubusercontent.com/aws/aws-app-mesh-controller-for-k8s/master/config/iam/controller-iam-policy.json
Create an IAM policy called AWSAppMeshK8sControllerIAMPolicy
aws iam create-policy \
--policy-name AWSAppMeshK8sControllerIAMPolicy \
--policy-document file://controller-iam-policy.json
Take note of the policy ARN that is returned
Create an IAM role for service account for the App Mesh Kubernetes controller, use the ARN from the step above
Note: if you deleted
serviceaccount
in theappmesh-system
namespace, you will need to delete and re-createiamserviceaccount
.eksctl
does not override theiamserviceaccount
correctly (see this issue)
eksctl create iamserviceaccount --cluster $CLUSTER_NAME \
--namespace appmesh-system \
--name appmesh-controller \
--attach-policy-arn arn:aws:iam::$AWS_ACCOUNT_ID:policy/AWSAppMeshK8sControllerIAMPolicy \
--override-existing-serviceaccounts \
--approve
Deploy appmesh-controller
Note: mTLS via SDS(SPIRE) is not supported on Fargate.
helm upgrade -i appmesh-controller eks/appmesh-controller \
--namespace appmesh-system \
--set region=$AWS_REGION \
--set serviceAccount.create=false \
--set serviceAccount.name=appmesh-controller
This section will assist you in upgrading the appmesh-controller from <=v0.5.0 version to >=v1.0.0 version.
You can either build new CRDs from scratch or migrate existing CRDs to the new schema. Please refer to the documentation here for the new API spec. Also, you can find several examples here with v1beta2 spec to help you get started.
Starting v1.0.0, Mesh resource supports namespaceSelectors, where you can either select namespace based on labels (recommended option) or select all namespaces. To select a namespace in a Mesh, you will need to define namespaceSelector
:
apiVersion: appmesh.k8s.aws/v1beta2
kind: Mesh
metadata:
name: <mesh-name>
spec:
namespaceSelector:
matchLabels:
mesh: <mesh-name> // any string value
Note: If you set namespaceSelector: {}
, mesh will select all the namespace in your cluster. Labels on your namespace spec is a no-op when selecting all namespaces.
In the namespace spec, you will need to add a label mesh: <mesh-name>
. Here's a sample namespace spec:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Namespace
metadata:
name: ns
labels:
mesh: <mesh-name>
appmesh.k8s.aws/sidecarInjectorWebhook: enabled
For more examples, please refer to the walkthroughs here. If you don't find an example that fits your use-case, please read the API spec here. If you find an issue in the documentation or the examples, please open an issue and we'll help resolve it.
# Keep old App Mesh controller running, it is responsible to cleanup App Mesh resources in AWS
# Delete all existing App Mesh custom resources (CRs)
kubectl delete virtualservices --all --all-namespaces
kubectl delete virtualnodes --all --all-namespaces
kubectl delete meshes --all --all-namespaces
# Delete all existing App Mesh CRDs
kubectl delete customresourcedefinition/virtualservices.appmesh.k8s.aws
kubectl delete customresourcedefinition/virtualnodes.appmesh.k8s.aws
kubectl delete customresourcedefinition/meshes.appmesh.k8s.aws
# Note: If a CRD stuck in deletion, it means there still exists some App Mesh custom resources, please check and delete them.
# Delete App Mesh controller
helm delete appmesh-controller -n appmesh-system
# Delete App Mesh injector
helm delete appmesh-inject -n appmesh-system
Run the appmesh-controller/upgrade/pre_upgrade_check.sh
script and make sure it passes before you proceed
Now you can proceed with the installation steps described above
# Save manifests of all existing App Mesh custom resources
kubectl get virtualservices --all-namespaces -o yaml > virtualservices.yaml
kubectl get virtualnodes --all-namespaces -o yaml > virtualnodes.yaml
kubectl get meshes --all-namespaces -o yaml > meshes.yaml
# Delete App Mesh controller, so it won’t clean up App Mesh resources in AWS while we deleting App Mesh CRs later.
helm delete appmesh-controller -n appmesh-system
# Delete App Mesh injector.
helm delete appmesh-inject -n appmesh-system
# Remove finalizers from all existing App Mesh CRs. Otherwise, you won’t be able to delete them
# To remove the finalizers, you could kubectl edit resource, and delete the finalizers attribute from the spec or run the following command to override finalizers. e.g for virtualnodes
# kubectl get virtualnodes --all-namespaces -o=jsonpath='{range .items[*]}{.metadata.namespace}{"\t"}{.metadata.name}{"\n"}{end}' | xargs -n2 sh -c 'kubectl patch virtualnode/$1 -n $0 -p '\''{"metadata":{"finalizers":null}}'\'' --type=merge'
# Alternatively, you could modify one resource at a time using
# kubectl get <RESOURCE_TYPE> <RESOURCE_NAME> -n <NAMESPACE> -o=json | jq '.metadata.finalizers = null' | kubectl apply -f -
# Delete all existing App Mesh CRs:
kubectl delete virtualservices --all --all-namespaces
kubectl delete virtualnodes --all --all-namespaces
kubectl delete meshes --all --all-namespaces
# Delete all existing App Mesh CRDs.
kubectl delete customresourcedefinition/virtualservices.appmesh.k8s.aws
kubectl delete customresourcedefinition/virtualnodes.appmesh.k8s.aws
kubectl delete customresourcedefinition/meshes.appmesh.k8s.aws
# Note: If CRDs are stuck in deletion, it means there still exists some App Mesh CRs, please check and delete them.
Run the appmesh-controller/upgrade/pre_upgrade_check.sh
script and make sure it passes before you proceed
Translate the saved old YAML manifests using v1beta1 App Mesh CRD into v1beta2 App Mesh CRD format. Please refer to CRD types ( https://github.com/aws/aws-app-mesh-controller-for-k8s/tree/master/config/crd/bases) and Go types (https://github.com/aws/aws-app-mesh-controller-for-k8s/tree/master/apis/appmesh/v1beta2) for the CRD Documentation. Samples applications are in the repo https://github.com/aws/aws-app-mesh-examples for reference.
Note: Please specify the current appmesh resource names in the awsName field of the translated specs.
Install the appmesh-controller, label the namespace with values that mesh is selecting on and apply the translated manifest
If you've installed the App Mesh controllers with scripts, you can remove the controllers with the steps below.
# remove injector objects
kubectl delete ns appmesh-inject
kubectl delete ClusterRoleBinding aws-app-mesh-inject-binding
kubectl delete ClusterRole aws-app-mesh-inject-cr
kubectl delete MutatingWebhookConfiguration aws-app-mesh-inject
# remove controller objects
kubectl delete ns appmesh-system
kubectl delete ClusterRoleBinding app-mesh-controller-binding
kubectl delete ClusterRole app-mesh-controller
Run the appmesh-controller/upgrade/pre_upgrade_check.sh
script and make sure it passes before you proceed
For handling the existing custom resources and the CRDs please refer to either of the previous upgrade sections as relevant.
To uninstall/delete the appmesh-controller
deployment:
$ helm delete appmesh-controller -n appmesh-system
The command removes all the Kubernetes components associated with the chart and deletes the release.
The following tables lists the configurable parameters of the chart and their default values.
Parameter | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
image.repository |
image repository | 602401143452.dkr.ecr.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/amazon/appmesh-controller |
image.tag |
image tag | <VERSION> |
image.pullPolicy |
image pull policy | IfNotPresent |
log.level |
controller log level, possible values are info and debug |
info |
sds.enabled |
If true , SDS will be enabled in Envoy |
false |
sds.udsPath |
Unix Domain Socket Path of the SDS Provider(SPIRE in the current release) | /run/spire/sockets/agent.sock |
resources.requests/cpu |
pod CPU request | 100m |
resources.requests/memory |
pod memory request | 64Mi |
resources.limits/cpu |
pod CPU limit | 2000m |
resources.limits/memory |
pod memory limit | 1Gi |
affinity |
node/pod affinities | None |
nodeSelector |
node labels for pod assignment | {} |
podAnnotations |
annotations to add to each pod | {} |
podLabels |
labels to add to each pod | {} |
tolerations |
list of node taints to tolerate | [] |
rbac.create |
if true , create and use RBAC resources |
true |
rbac.pspEnabled |
If true , create and use a restricted pod security policy |
false |
serviceAccount.annotations |
optional annotations to add to service account | {} |
serviceAccount.create |
If true , create a new service account |
true |
serviceAccount.name |
Service account to be used | None |
sidecar.image.repository |
Envoy image repository. If you override with non-Amazon built Envoy image, you will need to test/ensure it works with the App Mesh | 840364872350.dkr.ecr.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/aws-appmesh-envoy |
sidecar.image.tag |
Envoy image tag | <VERSION> |
sidecar.logLevel |
Envoy log level | info |
sidecar.envoyAdminAccessPort |
Envoy Admin Access Port | 9901 |
sidecar.envoyAdminAccessLogFile |
Envoy Admin Access Log File | /tmp/envoy_admin_access.log |
sidecar.resources.requests |
Envoy container resource requests | requests: cpu 10m memory 32Mi |
sidecar.resources.limits |
Envoy container resource limits | limits: cpu "" memory "" |
sidecar.lifecycleHooks.preStopDelay |
Envoy container PreStop Hook Delay Value | 20s |
sidecar.probes.readinessProbeInitialDelay |
Envoy container Readiness Probe Initial Delay | 1s |
sidecar.probes.readinessProbePeriod |
Envoy container Readiness Probe Period | 10s |
init.image.repository |
Route manager image repository | 840364872350.dkr.ecr.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/aws-appmesh-proxy-route-manager |
init.image.tag |
Route manager image tag | <VERSION> |
stats.tagsEnabled |
If true , Envoy should include app-mesh tags |
false |
stats.statsdEnabled |
If true , Envoy should publish stats to statsd endpoint @ 127.0.0.1:8125 |
false |
stats.statsdAddress |
DogStatsD daemon IP address. This will be overridden if stats.statsdSocketPath is specified |
127.0.0.1 |
stats.statsdPort |
DogStatsD daemon port. This will be overridden if stats.statsdSocketPath is specified |
8125 |
stats.statsdSocketPath |
DogStatsD Unix domain socket path. If statsd is enabled but this value is not specified then we will use combination of statsAddress:statsPort as the default | None |
cloudMapCustomHealthCheck.enabled |
If true , CustomHealthCheck will be enabled for CloudMap Services |
false |
cloudMapDNS.ttl |
Sets CloudMap DNS TTL. Will set value for new CloudMap services, but will not update existing CloudMap services. Existing CloudMap services can be updated using the AWS CloudMap API | 300 |
tracing.enabled |
If true , Envoy will be configured with tracing |
false |
tracing.provider |
The tracing provider can be x-ray, jaeger or datadog | x-ray |
tracing.address |
Jaeger or Datadog agent server address (ignored for X-Ray) | appmesh-jaeger.appmesh-system |
tracing.port |
Jaeger or Datadog agent port (ignored for X-Ray) | 9411 |
tracing.samplingRate |
X-Ray tracer sampling rate. Value can be a decimal number between 0 and 1.00 (100%) | 0.05 |
enableCertManager |
Enable Cert-Manager | false |
xray.image.repository |
X-Ray image repository | public.ecr.aws/xray/aws-xray-daemon |
xray.image.tag |
X-Ray image tag | latest |
accountId |
AWS Account ID for the Kubernetes cluster | None |
env |
environment variables to be injected into the appmesh-controller pod | {} |
livenessProbe |
Liveness probe settings for the controller | (see values.yaml ) |
podDisruptionBudget |
PodDisruptionBudget | {} |