I have created a cluster of three nodes: one master, two minions. How to check the cluster IP in Kubernetes? Is it the IP of the master node?
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What do you mean by the "cluster IP"? What is your use case?– Tim AllclairOct 30, 2015 at 23:47
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Was trying to implement service type load-balancer from following link: kubernetes.io/v1.0/docs/user-guide/services.html ,there it asked for cluster-ip .– Madhurima MishraNov 2, 2015 at 16:04
5 Answers
ClusterIP can mean 2 things: a type of service which is only accessible within a Kubernetes cluster, or the internal ("virtual") IP of components within a Kubernetes cluster. Assuming you're asking about finding the internal IP of a cluster, it can be accessed in 3 ways (using the simple-nginx example):
Via command line
kubectl
utility:$ kubectl describe service my-nginx Name: my-nginx Namespace: default Labels: run=my-nginx Selector: run=my-nginx Type: LoadBalancer IP: 10.123.253.27 LoadBalancer Ingress: 104.197.129.240 Port: <unnamed> 80/TCP NodePort: <unnamed> 30723/TCP Endpoints: 10.120.0.6:80 Session Affinity: None No events.
Via the kubernetes API (here I've used
kubectl proxy
to route through localhost to my cluster):$ kubectl proxy & $ curl -G http://localhost:8001/api/v1/namespaces/default/services/my-nginx { "kind": "Service", "apiVersion": "v1", "metadata": <omitted>, "spec": { "ports": [ { "protocol": "TCP", "port": 80, "targetPort": 80, "nodePort": 30723 } ], "selector": { "run": "my-nginx" }, "clusterIP": "10.123.253.27", "type": "LoadBalancer", "sessionAffinity": "None" }, "status": { "loadBalancer": { "ingress": [ { "ip": "104.197.129.240" } ] } } }
Via the
$<NAME>_SERVICE_HOST
environment variable within a Kubernetes container (in this examplemy-nginx-yczg9
is the name of a pod in the cluster):$ kubectl exec my-nginx-yczg9 -- sh -c 'echo $MY_NGINX_SERVICE_HOST' 10.123.253.27
More details on service IPs can be found in the Services in Kubernetes documentation, and the previously mentioned simple-nginx example is a good example of exposing a service outside your cluster with the LoadBalancer
service type.
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What are the service endpoints than? We get them by
kubectl get endpoints
? Dec 6, 2018 at 10:46 -
1@IvanAracki kubectl get endpoints gives you the pod IP not the service endpoints, Mar 9, 2020 at 9:10
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presumably the second link (now broken) should be updated to kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/service– YakovLNov 27, 2021 at 9:24
Run this
$ kubectl cluster-info
It shows result like this where you can see the Kubernetes master IP
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2
Cluster IP is a virtual IP that is allocated by the K8s to a service. It is K8s internal IP.
A Cluster IP makes it accessible from any of the Kubernetes cluster’s nodes. The use of virtual IP addresses for this purpose makes it possible to have several pods expose the same port on the same node – All of these pods will be accessible via a unique IP address.
This IP is stable and never changes in the service lifecycle(unless deleted explicitly).
2 different pods can communicate using this IP, though I recommend using cluster DNS service.
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Can we assign name to cluster IP without purchasing external dns name ? Could suggest you can we achieve this ? May 10, 2020 at 16:47
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I tried to ping & traceroute to cluster-ip from one of my pod in minikube, but neither of the commands are successful. I also tried doing "minikube ssh" and then ran ping & traceroute (after installing iputils-ping & traceroute packages), but no success either. Am I missing anything here? Nov 30, 2021 at 5:35
The ClusterIP provides a load-balanced IP address. One or more pods that match a label selector can forward traffic to the IP address. The ClusterIP service must define one or more ports to listen on with target ports to forward TCP/UDP traffic to containers.