Updated on 2024-12-04 GMT+08:00

Configuring SNI for a Service

An SNI certificate is an extended server certificate that allows the same IP address and port number to provide multiple access domain names for external systems. Different security certificates can be used based on the domain names requested by clients to ensure HTTPS communication security.

When configuring SNI, you need to add a certificate associated with a domain name. The client submits the requested domain name information when initiating an SSL handshake request. After receiving the SSL request, the load balancer searches for the certificate based on the domain name. If the certificate is found, the load balancer will return it to the client. If the certificate is not found, the load balancer will return the default server certificate.

If the SNI or the target annotation is deleted, the ELB configuration will not be modified.

Prerequisites

  • A Kubernetes cluster is available and the cluster version meets the following requirements:
    • v1.23: v1.23.13-r0 or later
    • v1.25: v1.25.8-r0 or later
    • v1.27: v1.27.5-r0 or later
    • v1.28: v1.28.3-r0 or later
    • Other clusters of later versions
  • You have created one or more SNI certificates in ELB and specified a domain name in these certificates.
  • Before creating a certificate using commands, ensure kubectl is used to access the cluster. For details, see Connecting to a Cluster Using kubectl.

Using the CCE Console

  1. Log in to the CCE console and click the cluster name to access the cluster console.
  2. In the navigation pane, choose Services & Ingresses. In the upper right corner, click Create Service.
  3. Configure Service parameters. In this example, only mandatory parameters required for using SNI are listed. For details about how to configure other parameters, see Creating a LoadBalancer Service.

    • Service Name: can be the same as the workload name.
    • Service Type: Select LoadBalancer.
    • Selector: Add a label and click Confirm. The Service will use this label to select pods. You can also click Reference Workload Label to use the label of an existing workload. In the dialog box that is displayed, select a workload and click OK.
    • Load Balancer: Select a load balancer type and creation mode.
      • A load balancer can be dedicated or shared. To enable HTTP/HTTPS on the listener port of a dedicated load balancer, the type of the load balancer must be Application (HTTP/HTTPS) or Network (TCP/UDP) & Application (HTTP/HTTPS).
      • This section uses an existing load balancer as an example. For details about the parameters for automatically creating a load balancer, see Table 1.
    • Ports
      • Protocol: Select TCP. If you select UDP, HTTP and HTTPS will be unavailable.
      • Service Port: port used by the Service. The port number ranges from 1 to 65535.
      • Container Port: listener port of the workload. For example, Nginx uses port 80 by default.
      • Frontend Protocol: In this example, HTTPS must be enabled for the Service to use SNI. For a dedicated load balancer, to use HTTP/HTTPS, the type of the load balancer must be Application (HTTP/HTTPS).
    • Listener
      • Server Certificate: Select a server certificate as the default certificate.
      • SNI: Add an SNI certificate containing a domain name.

        If an SNI certificate cannot be found based on the domain name requested by the client, the server certificate will be returned by default.

  4. Click OK.

Using kubectl

This section uses an existing load balancer as an example. An example YAML file of a SNI-compliant Service is as follows:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
  name: test
  labels:
    app: test
  namespace: default
  annotations:
    kubernetes.io/elb.class: performance        # Load balancer type
    kubernetes.io/elb.id: 65318265-4f01-4541-a654-fa74e439dfd3  # ID of an existing load balancer
    kubernetes.io/elb.protocol-port: https:80    # Port where SNI is to be enabled
    kubernetes.io/elb.cert-id: b64ab636f1614e1a960b5249c497a880    # HTTPS server certificate
    kubernetes.io/elb.tls-certificate-ids: 5196aa70b0f143189e4cb54991ba2286,8125d71fcc124aabbe007610cba42d60    # SNI certificate IDs
    kubernetes.io/elb.lb-algorithm: ROUND_ROBIN
spec:
  selector:
    app: test
  externalTrafficPolicy: Cluster
  ports:
    - name: cce-service-0
      targetPort: 80
      nodePort: 0
      port: 80
      protocol: TCP
  type: LoadBalancer
  loadBalancerIP: **.**.**.**       #  Private IP address of the load balancer
Table 1 Key parameters

Parameter

Type

Description

kubernetes.io/elb.protocol-port

String

If a Service is HTTP/HTTPS-compliant, configure the protocol and port number in the format of "protocol:port",

where,

  • protocol: specifies the protocol used by the listener port. The value can be http or https.
  • ports: service ports specified by spec.ports[].port.

For example, to use SNI, the Service protocol must be https and the Service port must be 80. Therefore, the parameter value is https:80.

kubernetes.io/elb.cert-id

String

ID of an ELB certificate, which is used as the HTTPS server certificate.

To obtain the certificate, log in to the CCE console, choose Service List > Networking > Elastic Load Balance, and click Certificates in the navigation pane. In the load balancer list, copy the ID under the target certificate name.

kubernetes.io/elb.tls-certificate-ids

String

In ELB, the IDs of SNI certificates that must contain a domain name are separated by commas (,).

If an SNI certificate cannot be found based on the domain name requested by the client, the server certificate will be returned by default.

To obtain the certificate, log in to the CCE console, choose Service List > Networking > Elastic Load Balance, and click Certificates in the navigation pane. In the load balancer list, copy the ID under the target certificate name.