ework.nacos.nacos-istio.1.4.1.source-code.service_entry.proto Maven / Gradle / Ivy
// Copyright 2018 Istio Authors
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
syntax = "proto3";
option java_multiple_files = true;
option java_package = "com.alibaba.nacos.istio.model.naming";
package istio.networking.v1alpha3;
import "gateway.proto";
// $title: Service Entry
// $description: Configuration affecting service registry.
// $location: https://istio.io/docs/reference/config/networking/v1alpha3/service-entry.html
// `ServiceEntry` enables adding additional entries into Istio's internal
// service registry, so that auto-discovered services in the mesh can
// access/route to these manually specified services. A service entry
// describes the properties of a service (DNS name, VIPs, ports, protocols,
// endpoints). These services could be external to the mesh (e.g., web
// APIs) or mesh-internal services that are not part of the platform's
// service registry (e.g., a set of VMs talking to services in Kubernetes).
//
// The following example declares a few external APIs accessed by internal
// applications over HTTPS. The sidecar inspects the SNI value in the
// ClientHello message to route to the appropriate external service.
//
// ```yaml
// apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1alpha3
// kind: ServiceEntry
// metadata:
// name: external-svc-https
// spec:
// hosts:
// - api.dropboxapi.com
// - www.googleapis.com
// - api.facebook.com
// location: MESH_EXTERNAL
// ports:
// - number: 443
// name: https
// protocol: TLS
// resolution: DNS
// ```
//
// The following configuration adds a set of MongoDB instances running on
// unmanaged VMs to Istio's registry, so that these services can be treated
// as any other service in the mesh. The associated DestinationRule is used
// to initiate mTLS connections to the database instances.
//
// ```yaml
// apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1alpha3
// kind: ServiceEntry
// metadata:
// name: external-svc-mongocluster
// spec:
// hosts:
// - mymongodb.somedomain # not used
// addresses:
// - 192.192.192.192/24 # VIPs
// ports:
// - number: 27018
// name: mongodb
// protocol: MONGO
// location: MESH_INTERNAL
// resolution: STATIC
// endpoints:
// - address: 2.2.2.2
// - address: 3.3.3.3
// ```
//
// and the associated DestinationRule
//
// ```yaml
// apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1alpha3
// kind: DestinationRule
// metadata:
// name: mtls-mongocluster
// spec:
// host: mymongodb.somedomain
// trafficPolicy:
// tls:
// mode: MUTUAL
// clientCertificate: /etc/certs/myclientcert.pem
// privateKey: /etc/certs/client_private_key.pem
// caCertificates: /etc/certs/rootcacerts.pem
// ```
//
// The following example uses a combination of service entry and TLS
// routing in a virtual service to steer traffic based on the SNI value to
// an internal egress firewall.
//
// ```yaml
// apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1alpha3
// kind: ServiceEntry
// metadata:
// name: external-svc-redirect
// spec:
// hosts:
// - wikipedia.org
// - "*.wikipedia.org"
// location: MESH_EXTERNAL
// ports:
// - number: 443
// name: https
// protocol: TLS
// resolution: NONE
// ```
//
// And the associated VirtualService to route based on the SNI value.
//
// ```yaml
// apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1alpha3
// kind: VirtualService
// metadata:
// name: tls-routing
// spec:
// hosts:
// - wikipedia.org
// - "*.wikipedia.org"
// tls:
// - match:
// - sniHosts:
// - wikipedia.org
// - "*.wikipedia.org"
// route:
// - destination:
// host: internal-egress-firewall.ns1.svc.cluster.local
// ```
//
// The virtual service with TLS match serves to override the default SNI
// match. In the absence of a virtual service, traffic will be forwarded to
// the wikipedia domains.
//
// The following example demonstrates the use of a dedicated egress gateway
// through which all external service traffic is forwarded.
// The 'exportTo' field allows for control over the visibility of a service
// declaration to other namespaces in the mesh. By default, a service is exported
// to all namespaces. The following example restricts the visibility to the
// current namespace, represented by ".", so that it cannot be used by other
// namespaces.
//
// ```yaml
// apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1alpha3
// kind: ServiceEntry
// metadata:
// name: external-svc-httpbin
// namespace : egress
// spec:
// hosts:
// - httpbin.com
// exportTo:
// - "."
// location: MESH_EXTERNAL
// ports:
// - number: 80
// name: http
// protocol: HTTP
// resolution: DNS
// ```
//
// Define a gateway to handle all egress traffic.
//
// ```yaml
// apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1alpha3
// kind: Gateway
// metadata:
// name: istio-egressgateway
// namespace: istio-system
// spec:
// selector:
// istio: egressgateway
// servers:
// - port:
// number: 80
// name: http
// protocol: HTTP
// hosts:
// - "*"
// ```
//
// And the associated `VirtualService` to route from the sidecar to the
// gateway service (`istio-egressgateway.istio-system.svc.cluster.local`), as
// well as route from the gateway to the external service. Note that the
// virtual service is exported to all namespaces enabling them to route traffic
// through the gateway to the external service. Forcing traffic to go through
// a managed middle proxy like this is a common practice.
//
// ```yaml
// apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1alpha3
// kind: VirtualService
// metadata:
// name: gateway-routing
// namespace: egress
// spec:
// hosts:
// - httpbin.com
// exportTo:
// - "*"
// gateways:
// - mesh
// - istio-egressgateway
// http:
// - match:
// - port: 80
// gateways:
// - mesh
// route:
// - destination:
// host: istio-egressgateway.istio-system.svc.cluster.local
// - match:
// - port: 80
// gateways:
// - istio-egressgateway
// route:
// - destination:
// host: httpbin.com
// ```
//
// The following example demonstrates the use of wildcards in the hosts for
// external services. If the connection has to be routed to the IP address
// requested by the application (i.e. application resolves DNS and attempts
// to connect to a specific IP), the discovery mode must be set to `NONE`.
//
// ```yaml
// apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1alpha3
// kind: ServiceEntry
// metadata:
// name: external-svc-wildcard-example
// spec:
// hosts:
// - "*.bar.com"
// location: MESH_EXTERNAL
// ports:
// - number: 80
// name: http
// protocol: HTTP
// resolution: NONE
// ```
//
// The following example demonstrates a service that is available via a
// Unix Domain Socket on the host of the client. The resolution must be
// set to STATIC to use Unix address endpoints.
//
// ```yaml
// apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1alpha3
// kind: ServiceEntry
// metadata:
// name: unix-domain-socket-example
// spec:
// hosts:
// - "example.unix.local"
// location: MESH_EXTERNAL
// ports:
// - number: 80
// name: http
// protocol: HTTP
// resolution: STATIC
// endpoints:
// - address: unix:///var/run/example/socket
// ```
//
// For HTTP-based services, it is possible to create a `VirtualService`
// backed by multiple DNS addressable endpoints. In such a scenario, the
// application can use the `HTTP_PROXY` environment variable to transparently
// reroute API calls for the `VirtualService` to a chosen backend. For
// example, the following configuration creates a non-existent external
// service called foo.bar.com backed by three domains: us.foo.bar.com:8080,
// uk.foo.bar.com:9080, and in.foo.bar.com:7080
//
// ```yaml
// apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1alpha3
// kind: ServiceEntry
// metadata:
// name: external-svc-dns
// spec:
// hosts:
// - foo.bar.com
// location: MESH_EXTERNAL
// ports:
// - number: 80
// name: http
// protocol: HTTP
// resolution: DNS
// endpoints:
// - address: us.foo.bar.com
// ports:
// https: 8080
// - address: uk.foo.bar.com
// ports:
// https: 9080
// - address: in.foo.bar.com
// ports:
// https: 7080
// ```
//
// With `HTTP_PROXY=http://localhost/`, calls from the application to
// `http://foo.bar.com` will be load balanced across the three domains
// specified above. In other words, a call to `http://foo.bar.com/baz` would
// be translated to `http://uk.foo.bar.com/baz`.
//
// The following example illustrates the usage of a `ServiceEntry`
// containing a subject alternate name
// whose format conforms to the [SPIFFE standard](https://github.com/spiffe/spiffe/blob/master/standards/SPIFFE-ID.md):
//
// ```yaml
// apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1alpha3
// kind: ServiceEntry
// metadata:
// name: httpbin
// namespace : httpbin-ns
// spec:
// hosts:
// - httpbin.com
// location: MESH_INTERNAL
// ports:
// - number: 80
// name: http
// protocol: HTTP
// resolution: STATIC
// endpoints:
// - address: 2.2.2.2
// - address: 3.3.3.3
// subjectAltNames:
// - "spiffe://cluster.local/ns/httpbin-ns/sa/httpbin-service-account"
// ```
//
// ServiceEntry enables adding additional entries into Istio's internal
// service registry.
//
//
message ServiceEntry {
// REQUIRED. The hosts associated with the ServiceEntry. Could be a DNS
// name with wildcard prefix.
//
// 1. The hosts field is used to select matching hosts in VirtualServices and DestinationRules.
// 2. For HTTP traffic the HTTP Host/Authority header will be matched against the hosts field.
// 3. For HTTPs or TLS traffic containing Server Name Indication (SNI), the SNI value
// will be matched against the hosts field.
//
// Note that when resolution is set to type DNS
// and no endpoints are specified, the host field will be used as the DNS name
// of the endpoint to route traffic to.
repeated string hosts = 1;
// The virtual IP addresses associated with the service. Could be CIDR
// prefix. For HTTP traffic, generated route configurations will include http route
// domains for both the `addresses` and `hosts` field values and the destination will
// be identified based on the HTTP Host/Authority header.
// If one or more IP addresses are specified,
// the incoming traffic will be identified as belonging to this service
// if the destination IP matches the IP/CIDRs specified in the addresses
// field. If the Addresses field is empty, traffic will be identified
// solely based on the destination port. In such scenarios, the port on
// which the service is being accessed must not be shared by any other
// service in the mesh. In other words, the sidecar will behave as a
// simple TCP proxy, forwarding incoming traffic on a specified port to
// the specified destination endpoint IP/host. Unix domain socket
// addresses are not supported in this field.
repeated string addresses = 2;
// REQUIRED. The ports associated with the external service. If the
// Endpoints are Unix domain socket addresses, there must be exactly one
// port.
repeated Port ports = 3;
// Location specifies whether the service is part of Istio mesh or
// outside the mesh. Location determines the behavior of several
// features, such as service-to-service mTLS authentication, policy
// enforcement, etc. When communicating with services outside the mesh,
// Istio's mTLS authentication is disabled, and policy enforcement is
// performed on the client-side as opposed to server-side.
enum Location {
// Signifies that the service is external to the mesh. Typically used
// to indicate external services consumed through APIs.
MESH_EXTERNAL = 0;
// Signifies that the service is part of the mesh. Typically used to
// indicate services added explicitly as part of expanding the service
// mesh to include unmanaged infrastructure (e.g., VMs added to a
// Kubernetes based service mesh).
MESH_INTERNAL = 1;
};
// Specify whether the service should be considered external to the mesh
// or part of the mesh.
Location location = 4;
// Resolution determines how the proxy will resolve the IP addresses of
// the network endpoints associated with the service, so that it can
// route to one of them. The resolution mode specified here has no impact
// on how the application resolves the IP address associated with the
// service. The application may still have to use DNS to resolve the
// service to an IP so that the outbound traffic can be captured by the
// Proxy. Alternatively, for HTTP services, the application could
// directly communicate with the proxy (e.g., by setting HTTP_PROXY) to
// talk to these services.
enum Resolution {
// Assume that incoming connections have already been resolved (to a
// specific destination IP address). Such connections are typically
// routed via the proxy using mechanisms such as IP table REDIRECT/
// eBPF. After performing any routing related transformations, the
// proxy will forward the connection to the IP address to which the
// connection was bound.
NONE = 0;
// Use the static IP addresses specified in endpoints (see below) as the
// backing instances associated with the service.
STATIC = 1;
// Attempt to resolve the IP address by querying the ambient DNS,
// during request processing. If no endpoints are specified, the proxy
// will resolve the DNS address specified in the hosts field, if
// wildcards are not used. If endpoints are specified, the DNS
// addresses specified in the endpoints will be resolved to determine
// the destination IP address. DNS resolution cannot be used with Unix
// domain socket endpoints.
DNS = 2;
};
// REQUIRED: Service discovery mode for the hosts. Care must be taken
// when setting the resolution mode to NONE for a TCP port without
// accompanying IP addresses. In such cases, traffic to any IP on
// said port will be allowed (i.e. 0.0.0.0:).
Resolution resolution = 5;
// Endpoint defines a network address (IP or hostname) associated with
// the mesh service.
message Endpoint {
// REQUIRED: Address associated with the network endpoint without the
// port. Domain names can be used if and only if the resolution is set
// to DNS, and must be fully-qualified without wildcards. Use the form
// unix:///absolute/path/to/socket for Unix domain socket endpoints.
string address = 1;
// Set of ports associated with the endpoint. The ports must be
// associated with a port name that was declared as part of the
// service. Do not use for `unix://` addresses.
map ports = 2;
// One or more labels associated with the endpoint.
map labels = 3;
// Network enables Istio to group endpoints resident in the same L3
// domain/network. All endpoints in the same network are assumed to be
// directly reachable from one another. When endpoints in different
// networks cannot reach each other directly, an Istio Gateway can be
// used to establish connectivity (usually using the
// AUTO_PASSTHROUGH mode in a Gateway Server). This is
// an advanced configuration used typically for spanning an Istio mesh
// over multiple clusters.
string network = 4;
// The locality associated with the endpoint. A locality corresponds
// to a failure domain (e.g., country/region/zone). Arbitrary failure
// domain hierarchies can be represented by separating each
// encapsulating failure domain by /. For example, the locality of an
// an endpoint in US, in US-East-1 region, within availability zone
// az-1, in data center rack r11 can be represented as
// us/us-east-1/az-1/r11. Istio will configure the sidecar to route to
// endpoints within the same locality as the sidecar. If none of the
// endpoints in the locality are available, endpoints parent locality
// (but within the same network ID) will be chosen. For example, if
// there are two endpoints in same network (networkID "n1"), say e1
// with locality us/us-east-1/az-1/r11 and e2 with locality
// us/us-east-1/az-2/r12, a sidecar from us/us-east-1/az-1/r11 locality
// will prefer e1 from the same locality over e2 from a different
// locality. Endpoint e2 could be the IP associated with a gateway
// (that bridges networks n1 and n2), or the IP associated with a
// standard service endpoint.
string locality = 5;
// The load balancing weight associated with the endpoint. Endpoints
// with higher weights will receive proportionally higher traffic.
uint32 weight = 6;
};
// One or more endpoints associated with the service.
repeated Endpoint endpoints = 6;
// A list of namespaces to which this service is exported. Exporting a service
// allows it to be used by sidecars, gateways and virtual services defined in
// other namespaces. This feature provides a mechanism for service owners
// and mesh administrators to control the visibility of services across
// namespace boundaries.
//
// If no namespaces are specified then the service is exported to all
// namespaces by default.
//
// The value "." is reserved and defines an export to the same namespace that
// the service is declared in. Similarly the value "*" is reserved and
// defines an export to all namespaces.
//
// For a Kubernetes Service, the equivalent effect can be achieved by setting
// the annotation "networking.istio.io/exportTo" to a comma-separated list
// of namespace names.
//
// NOTE: in the current release, the `exportTo` value is restricted to
// "." or "*" (i.e., the current namespace or all namespaces).
repeated string export_to = 7;
// The list of subject alternate names allowed for workload instances that
// implement this service. This information is used to enforce
// [secure-naming](https://istio.io/docs/concepts/security/#secure-naming).
// If specified, the proxy will verify that the server
// certificate's subject alternate name matches one of the specified values.
repeated string subject_alt_names = 8;
}
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