2.6 KiB
2.6 KiB
This repository contains a manager which health-checks given endpoints and generates a iptables DNAT/SNAT loadbalancer from active endpoints.
Configuration
# ipt-loadbalancer --help
Usage of ipt-loadbalancer:
-c, --config string Configuration file to load (default "config.yaml")
-e, --enable-managed-chain Modify PREROUTING / POSTROUTING chain to contain a jump to managed chain
--log-level string Log level (debug, info, warn, error, fatal) (default "info")
--version Prints current version and exits
Main Configuration File
---
# Table prefix to manage (should not collide with existing tables in
# the system). Created tables in this case are named IPTLB_DNAT,
# IPTLB_SNAT and IPTLB_SERVICENAME_DNAT / IPTLB_SERVICENAME_SNAT.
managedChain: IPTLB
# Collection of services to expose on the host the ipt-loadbalancer
# runs on. Each service exposes one local port and forwards to N
# remote ports using DNAT/SNAT.
services:
- name: ... # See below for the service definition
...
Service Configuration
# The name should consist only of [a-z0-9_] character set and must be
# unique for the prefix given in the main configuration file
name: https
# The healthcheck defines how to verify the targets are up to include
# them into the loadbalancing
healthCheck:
# Type is required, currently supported: http, smtp, tcp
type: http
# Interval defines how often to check for the targets to be alive:
# 2s means from the start of the LB the targets are checked every 2s
# in parallel
interval: 2s
# Settings defines parameters for the given health-check and are
# individual to the type.
settings:
insecureTLS: true
path: /healthz
tls: true
# Local Address and Port describes the IP and Port to bind the service
# to. The Address given is used for the SNAT and therefore should for
# example be the public IP of the machine
localAddr: 203.0.113.1
localPort: 443
# Targets is a list of routing targets which are checked for their
# liveness status and if they are live, they are included in the NAT
# rulesets.
# Each target consists of an Address, a Port and a Weight. The weight
# is defined as an integer and increases / decreases the percentage
# of the traffic that specific target will receive. (For example
# setting all weights to 1 will distribute the traffic equally between
# them, setting one to 2 will double the traffic to that target.)
targets:
- addr: 10.1.2.4
port: 443
weight: 1
- addr: 10.1.2.5
port: 443
weight: 1
- addr: 10.1.2.6
port: 443
weight: 1