Kubernetes v1.16
alpha
IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack enables the allocation of both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses to PodsThe smallest and simplest Kubernetes object. A Pod represents a set of running containers on your cluster. and ServicesA way to expose an application running on a set of Pods as a network service. .
If you enable IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack networking for your Kubernetes cluster, the cluster will support the simultaneous assignment of both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.
Enabling IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack on your Kubernetes cluster provides the following features:
The following prerequisites are needed in order to utilize IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack Kubernetes clusters:
To enable IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack, enable the IPv6DualStack
feature gate for the relevant components of your cluster, and set dual-stack cluster network assignments:
--feature-gates="IPv6DualStack=true"
--cluster-cidr=<IPv4 CIDR>,<IPv6 CIDR>
eg. --cluster-cidr=10.244.0.0/16,fc00::/24
--service-cluster-ip-range=<IPv4 CIDR>,<IPv6 CIDR>
--feature-gates="IPv6DualStack=true"
--proxy-mode=ipvs
--cluster-cidrs=<IPv4 CIDR>,<IPv6 CIDR>
--feature-gates="IPv6DualStack=true"
Caution: If you specify an IPv6 address block larger than a /24 via--cluster-cidr
on the command line, that assignment will fail.
If your cluster has IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack networking enabled, you can create ServicesA way to expose an application running on a set of Pods as a network service.
with either an IPv4 or an IPv6 address. You can choose the address family for the Service’s cluster IP by setting a field, .spec.ipFamily
, on that Service.
You can only set this field when creating a new Service. Setting the .spec.ipFamily
field is optional and should only be used if you plan to enable IPv4 and IPv6 ServicesA way to expose an application running on a set of Pods as a network service.
and IngressesAn API object that manages external access to the services in a cluster, typically HTTP.
on your cluster. The configuration of this field not a requirement for egress traffic.
Note: The default address family for your cluster is the address family of the first service cluster IP range configured via the--service-cluster-ip-range
flag to the kube-controller-manager.
You can set .spec.ipFamily
to either:
IPv4
: The API server will assign an IP from a service-cluster-ip-range
that is ipv4
IPv6
: The API server will assign an IP from a service-cluster-ip-range
that is ipv6
The following Service specification does not include the ipFamily
field. Kubernetes will assign an IP address (also known as a “cluster IP”) from the first configured service-cluster-ip-range
to this Service.
service/networking/dual-stack-default-svc.yaml
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The following Service specification includes the ipFamily
field. Kubernetes will assign an IPv6 address (also known as a “cluster IP”) from the configured service-cluster-ip-range
to this Service.
service/networking/dual-stack-ipv6-svc.yaml
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For comparison, the following Service specification will be assigned an IPV4 address (also known as a “cluster IP”) from the configured service-cluster-ip-range
to this Service.
service/networking/dual-stack-ipv4-svc.yaml
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On cloud providers which support IPv6 enabled external load balancers, setting the type
field to LoadBalancer
in additional to setting ipFamily
field to IPv6
provisions a cloud load balancer for your Service.
The use of publicly routable and non-publicly routable IPv6 address blocks is acceptable provided the underlying CNIContainer network interface (CNI) plugins are a type of Network plugin that adheres to the appc/CNI specification. provider is able to implement the transport. If you have a Pod that uses non-publicly routable IPv6 and want that Pod to reach off-cluster destinations (eg. the public Internet), you must set up IP masquerading for the egress traffic and any replies. The ip-masq-agent is dual-stack aware, so you can use ip-masq-agent for IP masquerading on dual-stack clusters.
EndpointSlice
feature gate is enabled.Was this page helpful?
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