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Deploy Kuma on Universal
This demo shows how to run Kuma in Universal mode on a single machine.
To start learning how Kuma works, you will run and secure a simple demo application that consists of two services:
demo-app
: a web application that lets you increment a numeric counter. It listens on port 5000redis
: data store for the counter
--- title: service graph of the demo app --- flowchart LR demo-app(demo-app :5000) redis(redis :6379) demo-app --> redis
Prerequisites
Install Kuma
To download Kuma we will use official installer, it will automatically detect the operating system (Amazon Linux, CentOS, RedHat, Debian, Ubuntu, and macOS) and download Kuma:
curl -L https://kuma.io/kuma/installer.sh | VERSION=2.7.8 sh -
To finish installation we need to add Kuma binaries to path:
export PATH=$PATH:$(pwd)/kuma-2.7.8/bin
Start control plane
Now we need to start control plane in background by running command:
kuma-cp run > cp-logs.txt 2>&1 &
To check if control plane started without issues you can check logs:
tail cp-logs.txt
Deploy demo application
Generate tokens for data plane proxies
On Universal we need to manually create tokens for data plane proxies. To do this need to run this commands (these tokens will be valid for 30 days):
kumactl generate dataplane-token --tag kuma.io/service=redis --valid-for=720h > /tmp/kuma-token-redis
kumactl generate dataplane-token --tag kuma.io/service=demo-app --valid-for=720h > /tmp/kuma-token-demo-app
After generating tokens we can start the data plane proxies that will be used for proxying traffic between demo-app
and redis
.
Start the data plane proxies
Because this is a quickstart, we don’t setup certificates for communication
between the data plane proxies and the control plane.
You’ll see a warning like the following in the kuma-dp
logs:
2024-07-25T20:06:36.082Z INFO dataplane [WARNING] The data plane proxy cannot verify the identity of the control plane because you are not setting the "--ca-cert-file" argument or setting the KUMA_CONTROL_PLANE_CA_CERT environment variable.
This isn’t related to mTLS between services.
First we can start the data plane proxy for redis
. On Universal we need to manually create Dataplane resources for data plane proxies, and
run kuma-dp manually, to do this run:
KUMA_READINESS_PORT=9901 \ kuma-dp run \
--cp-address=https://localhost:5678/ \
--dns-enabled=false \
--dataplane-token-file=/tmp/kuma-token-redis \
--dataplane="
type: Dataplane
mesh: default
name: redis
networking:
address: 127.0.0.1
inbound:
- port: 16379
servicePort: 26379
serviceAddress: 127.0.0.1
tags:
kuma.io/service: redis
kuma.io/protocol: tcp
admin:
port: 9903"
You can notice that we are manually specifying the readiness port with environment variable KUMA_READINESS_PORT
, when each data plane is
running on separate machines this is not required.
We need a separate terminal window, with the same binaries directory as above added to PATH
. So assuming the same initial directory:
export PATH=$PATH:$(pwd)/kuma-2.7.8/bin
Now we can start the data plane proxy for our demo-app, we can do this by running:
KUMA_READINESS_PORT=9904 \ kuma-dp run \
--cp-address=https://localhost:5678/ \
--dns-enabled=false \
--dataplane-token-file=/tmp/kuma-token-demo-app \
--dataplane="
type: Dataplane
mesh: default
name: demo-app
networking:
address: 127.0.0.1
outbound:
- port: 6379
tags:
kuma.io/service: redis
inbound:
- port: 15000
servicePort: 5000
serviceAddress: 127.0.0.1
tags:
kuma.io/service: demo-app
kuma.io/protocol: http
admin:
port: 9906"
Run kuma-counter-demo app
We will start the kuma-counter-demo in a new terminal window:
- With the data plane proxies running, we can start our apps, first we will start and configure
Redis
:redis-server --port 26379 --daemonize yes && redis-cli -p 26379 set zone local
You should see message
OK
fromRedis
if this operation was successful. - Now we can start our
demo-app
. To do this we need to download repository with its source code:git clone https://github.com/kumahq/kuma-counter-demo.git && cd kuma-counter-demo
- Now we need to run:
npm install --prefix=app/ && npm start --prefix=app/
If
demo-app
was started correctly you will see message:Server running on port 5000
In a browser, go to 127.0.0.1:5000 and increment the counter. demo-app
GUI should work without issues now.
Explore Kuma GUI
You can view the sidecar proxies that are connected to the Kuma control plane.
Kuma ships with a read-only GUI that you can use to retrieve Kuma resources.
By default, the GUI listens on the API port which defaults to 5681
.
To access Kuma we need to navigate to 127.0.0.1:5681/gui in your browser.
To learn more, read the documentation about the user interface.
Introduction to zero-trust security
By default, the network is insecure and not encrypted. We can change this with Kuma by enabling the Mutual TLS policy to provision a Certificate Authority (CA) that will automatically assign TLS certificates to our services (more specifically to the injected data plane proxies running alongside the services).
We can enable Mutual TLS with a builtin
CA backend by executing:
echo 'type: Mesh
name: default
mtls:
enabledBackend: ca-1
backends:
- name: ca-1
type: builtin' | kumactl apply -f -
The traffic is now encrypted and secure. Kuma does not define default traffic permissions, which means that no traffic will flow with mTLS enabled until we define a proper MeshTrafficPermission policy.
For now, the demo application won’t work.
You can verify this by clicking the increment button again and seeing the error message in the browser.
We can allow the traffic from the demo-app
to redis
by applying the following MeshTrafficPermission
:
echo 'type: MeshTrafficPermission
name: allow-from-demo-app
mesh: default
spec:
targetRef:
kind: MeshSubset
tags:
kuma.io/service: redis
from:
- targetRef:
kind: MeshSubset
tags:
kuma.io/service: demo-app
default:
action: Allow' | kumactl apply -f -
You can click the increment button, the application should function once again.
However, the traffic to redis
from any other service than demo-app
is not allowed.
Next steps
- Explore the Features available to govern and orchestrate your service traffic.
- Learn more about what you can do with the GUI.
- Explore further installation strategies for single-zone and multi-zone environments.
- Read the full documentation to learn about all the capabilities of Kuma.
- Chat with us at the official Kuma Slack for questions or feedback.