There are multiple ways to install the NGINX ingress controller:
- with Helm, using the project repository chart;
- with
kubectl apply
, using YAML manifests; - with specific addons (e.g. for minikube or MicroK8s).
On most Kubernetes clusters, the ingress controller will work without requiring any extra configuration. If you want to get started as fast as possible, you can check the quick start instructions. However, in many environments, you can improve the performance or get better logs by enabling extra features. we recommend that you check the environment-specific instructions for details about optimizing the ingress controller for your particular environment or cloud provider.
-
Environment-specific instructions
- ... Docker Desktop
- ... minikube
- ... MicroK8s
- ... AWS
- ... GCE - GKE
- ... Azure
- ... Digital Ocean
- ... Scaleway
- ... Exoscale
- ... Oracle Cloud Infrastructure
- ... Bare-metal
If you have Helm, you can deploy the ingress controller with the following command:
helm upgrade --install ingress-nginx ingress-nginx \
--repo https://kubernetes.github.io/ingress-nginx \
--namespace ingress-nginx --create-namespace
It will install the controller in the ingress-nginx
namespace, creating that namespace if it doesn't already exist.
!!! info This command is idempotent:
- if the ingress controller is not installed, it will install it,
- if the ingress controller is already installed, it will upgrade it.
If you don't have Helm or if you prefer to use a YAML manifest, you can run the following command instead:
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/ingress-nginx/controller-v1.1.1/deploy/static/provider/cloud/deploy.yaml
!!! info
The YAML manifest in the command above was generated with helm template
, so you will end up with almost the same resources as if you had used Helm to install the controller.
If you are running an old version of Kubernetes (1.18 or earlier), please read this paragraph for specific instructions.
A few pods should start in the ingress-nginx
namespace:
kubectl get pods --namespace=ingress-nginx
After a while, they should all be running. The following command will wait for the ingress controller pod to be up, running, and ready:
kubectl wait --namespace ingress-nginx \
--for=condition=ready pod \
--selector=app.kubernetes.io/component=controller \
--timeout=120s
Let's create a simple web server and the associated service:
kubectl create deployment demo --image=httpd --port=80
kubectl expose deployment demo
Then create an ingress resource. The following example uses an host that maps to localhost
:
kubectl create ingress demo-localhost --class=nginx \
--rule=demo.localdev.me/*=demo:80
Now, forward a local port to the ingress controller:
kubectl port-forward --namespace=ingress-nginx service/ingress-nginx-controller 8080:80
At this point, if you access http://demo.localdev.me:8080/, you should see an HTML page telling you "It works!".
If your Kubernetes cluster is a "real" cluster that supports services of type LoadBalancer
, it will have allocated an external IP address or FQDN to the ingress controller.
You can see that IP address or FQDN with the following command:
kubectl get service ingress-nginx-controller --namespace=ingress-nginx
It will be the EXTERNAL-IP
field. If that field shows <pending>
, this means that your Kubernetes cluster wasn't able to provision the load balancer (generally, this is because it doesn't support services of type LoadBalancer
).
Once you have the external IP address (or FQDN), set up a DNS record pointing to it. Then you can create an ingress resource. The following example assumes that you have set up a DNS record for www.demo.io
:
kubectl create ingress demo --class=nginx \
--rule="www.demo.io/*=demo:80"
Alternatively, the above command can be rewritten as follows for the --rule
command and below.
kubectl create ingress demo --class=nginx \
--rule www.demo.io/=demo:80
You should then be able to see the "It works!" page when you connect to http://www.demo.io/. Congratulations, you are serving a public web site hosted on a Kubernetes cluster! 🎉
The ingress controller can be installed through minikube's addons system:
minikube addons enable ingress
The ingress controller can be installed through MicroK8s's addons system:
microk8s enable ingress
Please check the MicroK8s documentation page for details.
Kubernetes is available in Docker Desktop:
- Mac, from version 18.06.0-ce
- Windows, from version 18.06.0-ce
First, make sure that Kubernetes is enabled in the Docker settings. The command kubectl get nodes
should show a single node called docker-destkop
.
The ingress controller can be installed on Docker Desktop using the default quick start instructions.
On most systems, if you don't have any other service of type LoadBalancer
bound to port 80, the ingress controller will be assigned the EXTERNAL-IP
of localhost
, which means that it will be reachable on localhost:80. If that doesn't work, you might have to fall back to the kubectl port-forward
method described in the local testing section.
If the load balancers of your cloud provider do active healthchecks on their backends (most do), you can change the externalTrafficPolicy
of the ingress controller Service to Local
(instead of the default Cluster
) to save an extra hop in some cases. If you're installing with Helm, this can be done by adding --set controller.service.externalTrafficPolicy=Local
to the helm install
or helm upgrade
command.
Furthermore, if the load balancers of your cloud provider support the PROXY protocol, you can enable it, and it will let the ingress controller see the real IP address of the clients. Otherwise, it will generally see the IP address of the upstream load balancer. This must be done both in the ingress controller (with e.g. --set controller.config.use-proxy-protocol=true
) and in the cloud provider's load balancer configuration to function correctly.
In the following sections, we provide YAML manifests that enable these options when possible, using the specific options of various cloud providers.
In AWS we use a Network load balancer (NLB) to expose the NGINX Ingress controller behind a Service of Type=LoadBalancer
.
!!! info The provided templates illustrate the setup for legacy in-tree service load balancer for AWS NLB. AWS provides the documentation on how to use Network load balancing on Amazon EKS with AWS Load Balancer Controller.
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/ingress-nginx/controller-v1.1.1/deploy/static/provider/aws/deploy.yaml
By default, TLS is terminated in the ingress controller. But it is also possible to terminate TLS in the Load Balancer. This section explains how to do that on AWS with using an NLB.
-
Download the the deploy-tls-termination.yaml template:
wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/ingress-nginx/controller-v1.1.1/deploy/static/provider/aws/deploy-tls-termination.yaml
-
Edit the file and change the VPC CIDR in use for the Kubernetes cluster:
proxy-real-ip-cidr: XXX.XXX.XXX/XX
-
Change the AWS Certificate Manager (ACM) ID as well:
arn:aws:acm:us-west-2:XXXXXXXX:certificate/XXXXXX-XXXXXXX-XXXXXXX-XXXXXXXX
-
Deploy the manifest:
kubectl apply -f deploy-tls-termination.yaml
Idle timeout value for TCP flows is 350 seconds and cannot be modified.
For this reason, you need to ensure the keepalive_timeout value is configured less than 350 seconds to work as expected.
By default NGINX keepalive_timeout
is set to 75s
.
More information with regards to timeouts can be found in the official AWS documentation
First, your user needs to have cluster-admin
permissions on the cluster. This can be done with the following command:
kubectl create clusterrolebinding cluster-admin-binding \
--clusterrole cluster-admin \
--user $(gcloud config get-value account)
Then, the ingress controller can be installed like this:
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/ingress-nginx/controller-v1.1.1/deploy/static/provider/cloud/deploy.yaml
!!! warning
For private clusters, you will need to either add an additional firewall rule that allows master nodes access to port 8443/tcp
on worker nodes, or change the existing rule that allows access to ports 80/tcp
, 443/tcp
and 10254/tcp
to also allow access to port 8443/tcp
.
See the [GKE documentation](https://cloud.google.com/kubernetes-engine/docs/how-to/private-clusters#add_firewall_rules) on adding rules and the [Kubernetes issue](https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/issues/79739) for more detail.
!!! warning Proxy protocol is not supported in GCE/GKE.
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/ingress-nginx/controller-v1.1.1/deploy/static/provider/cloud/deploy.yaml
More information with regards to Azure annotations for ingress controller can be found in the official AKS documentation.
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/ingress-nginx/controller-v1.1.1/deploy/static/provider/do/deploy.yaml
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/ingress-nginx/controller-v1.1.1/deploy/static/provider/scw/deploy.yaml
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/ingress-nginx/main/deploy/static/provider/exoscale/deploy.yaml
The full list of annotations supported by Exoscale is available in the Exoscale Cloud Controller Manager documentation.
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/ingress-nginx/controller-v1.1.1/deploy/static/provider/cloud/deploy.yaml
A complete list of available annotations for Oracle Cloud Infrastructure can be found in the OCI Cloud Controller Manager documentation.
This section is applicable to Kubernetes clusters deployed on bare metal servers, as well as "raw" VMs where Kubernetes was installed manually, using generic Linux distros (like CentOS, Ubuntu...)
For quick testing, you can use a NodePort. This should work on almost every cluster, but it will typically use a port in the range 30000-32767.
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/ingress-nginx/controller-v1.1.1/deploy/static/provider/baremetal/deploy.yaml
For more information about bare metal deployments (and how to use port 80 instead of a random port in the 30000-32767 range), see bare-metal considerations.
Run /nginx-ingress-controller --version
within the pod, for instance with kubectl exec
:
POD_NAMESPACE=ingress-nginx
POD_NAME=$(kubectl get pods -n $POD_NAMESPACE -l app.kubernetes.io/name=ingress-nginx --field-selector=status.phase=Running -o name)
kubectl exec $POD_NAME -n $POD_NAMESPACE -- /nginx-ingress-controller --version
By default, the controller watches Ingress objects from all namespaces. If you want to change this behavior, use the flag --watch-namespace
or check the Helm chart value controller.scope
to limit the controller to a single namespace.
See also “How to easily install multiple instances of the Ingress NGINX controller in the same cluster” for more details.
!!! warning
The controller uses an admission webhook to validate Ingress definitions. Make sure that you don't have Network policies or additional firewalls preventing connections from the API server to the ingress-nginx-controller-admission
service.
!!! attention The first time the ingress controller starts, two Jobs create the SSL Certificate used by the admission webhook.
THis can cause an initial delay of up to two minutes until it is possible to create and validate Ingress definitions.
You can wait until it is ready to run the next command:
kubectl wait --namespace ingress-nginx \
--for=condition=ready pod \
--selector=app.kubernetes.io/component=controller \
--timeout=120s
Ingress resources evolved over time. They started with apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
, then moved to apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1beta1
and more recently to apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
.
Here is how these Ingress versions are supported in Kubernetes:
- before Kubernetes 1.19, only
v1beta1
Ingress resources are supported - from Kubernetes 1.19 to 1.21, both
v1beta1
andv1
Ingress resources are supported - in Kubernetes 1.22 and above, only
v1
Ingress resources are supported
And here is how these Ingress versions are supported in NGINX Ingress Controller:
- before version 1.0, only
v1beta1
Ingress resources are supported - in version 1.0 and above, only
v1
Ingress resources are
As a result, if you're running Kubernetes 1.19 or later, you should be able to use the latest version of the NGINX Ingress Controller; but if you're using an old version of Kubernetes (1.18 or earlier) you will have to use version 0.X of the NGINX Ingress Controller (e.g. version 0.49).
The Helm chart of the NGINX Ingress Controller switched to version 1 in version 4 of the chart. In other words, if you're running Kubernetes 1.19 or earlier, you should use version 3.X of the chart (this can be done by adding --version='<4'
to the helm install
command).