Updated on 2022-09-24 GMT+08:00

Overview

The container network assigns IP addresses to pods in a cluster and provides networking services. In CCE, you can select the following network models for your cluster:

  • Container tunnel network
  • VPC network

Network Model Comparison

Table 1 describes the differences of network models supported by CCE.

After a cluster is created, the network model cannot be changed.

Table 1 Network model comparison

Dimension

Tunnel Network

VPC Network

Core technology

OVS

IPvlan and VPC route

Applicable clusters

CCE cluster

CCE cluster

Network isolation

Yes. For details, see Network Policies.

No

Passthrough networking

No

No

IP address management

  • The container CIDR block is allocated separately.
  • CIDR blocks are divided by node and can be dynamically allocated (CIDR blocks can be dynamically added after being allocated.)
  • The container CIDR block is allocated separately.
  • CIDR blocks are divided by node and statically allocated (the CIDR block cannot be changed after a node is created).

Network performance

Performance loss due to VXLAN encapsulation

No tunnel encapsulation. Cross-node packets are forwarded through VPC routers, delivering performance equivalent to that of the host network.

Networking scale

A maximum of 2,000 nodes are supported.

By default, 200 nodes are supported.

Each time a node is added to the cluster, a route is added to the VPC routing table. Therefore, the cluster scale is limited by the VPC route table.

Application scenarios

  • Common container service scenarios
  • Scenarios that do not have high requirements on network latency and bandwidth
  • Scenarios that have high requirements on network latency and bandwidth
  • Containers can communicate with VMs using a microservice registration framework, such as Dubbo and CSE.
  1. The scale of a cluster that uses the VPC network model is limited by the custom routes of the VPC. Therefore, you need to estimate the number of required nodes before creating a cluster.
  2. By default, VPC routing network supports direct communication between containers and hosts in the same VPC. If a peering connection policy is configured between the VPC and another VPC, the containers can directly communicate with hosts on the peer VPC. In addition, in hybrid networking scenarios such as Direct Connect and VPN, communication between containers and hosts on the peer end can also be achieved with proper planning.