title | keywords | description | |||||
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K3s and RKE (Rancher) |
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Guide to install APISIX ingress controller on K3s and Rancher Kubernetes Engine(RKE). |
This document explains how you can install APISIX ingress on k3S and Rancher RKE.
:::tip
K3s is built for IoT and edge computing applications. Apache APISIX also supports an MQTT Plugin and runs well on ARM processors. APISIX ingress is therefore a good choice to handle North-South traffic in K3s.
:::
- Install K3S or Rancher RKE.
- Install Helm.
The script below installs APISIX and the ingress controller:
helm repo add apisix https://charts.apiseven.com
helm repo add bitnami https://charts.bitnami.com/bitnami
helm repo update
kubectl create ns ingress-apisix
helm install apisix apisix/apisix \
--set gateway.type=NodePort \
--set ingress-controller.enabled=true \
--namespace ingress-apisix \
--set ingress-controller.config.apisix.serviceNamespace=ingress-apisix \
--kubeconfig /etc/rancher/k3s/k3s.yaml
kubectl get service --namespace ingress-apisix
:::info IMPORTANT
If you are using K3s, the default kube config file is located in /etc/rancher/k3s/
and you make require root permission.
:::
This will create the five resources mentioned below:
apisix-gateway
: dataplane the process the traffic.apisix-admin
: control plane that processes all configuration changes.apisix-ingress-controller
: ingress controller which exposes APISIX.apisix-etcd
andapisix-etcd-headless
: stores configuration and handles internal communication.
The gateway service type is set to NodePort
. Clients can access APISIX through the Node IPs and the assigned port. To use a service of type LoadBalancer
with K3s, use a bare-metal load balancer implementation like Klipper.
You should now be able to use APISIX ingress controller. You can try running this minimal example to see if everything is working perfectly.