How to use go-plugin-runner with APISIX Ingress
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DescriptionBased on version 0.3 of the go-plugin-runner plugin and version 1.4.0 of APISIX Ingress, this document walks through how you can use the go plugin runner in the APISIX ingress controller. This article goes through steps as follows:
- Prepare the environment.
- Create the cluster.
- Build a container image that includes the go-plugin-runner.
- Customize the Helm chart package.
- Install and deploy.
- Verify the function.
It is guaranteed that the final result can be derived in full based on this environment example as follows:
go-plugin-runner: 0.3
APISIX Ingress: 1.4.0
kind: v0.12.0
kubectl version(Client/Server): v1.23.5/v1.23.4
golang: 1.18
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Build a cluster environmentSelect kind
to build a local cluster environment. The command is as follows:
cat <<EOF | kind create cluster --config=-
kind: Cluster
apiVersion: kind.x-k8s.io/v1alpha4
nodes:
- role: control-plane
extraPortMappings:
- containerPort: 80
hostPort: 80
protocol: TCP
- containerPort: 443
hostPort: 443
protocol: TCP
EOF
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Build the go-plugin-runner executableChoose a folder address /home/chever/api7/cloud_native/tasks/plugin-runner
and place our apisix-go-plugin-runner
project in this folder. Then you need to go to the apisix-go-plugin-runner/cmd/go-runner/plugins
directory and write the plugins you need in that directory.
After writing the plugins, start compiling the executable formally, and note here that you should build static executables, not dynamic ones.
The package compile command is as follows.
CGO_ENABLED=0 go build -a -ldflags '-extldflags "-static"' .
This successfully packages a statically compiled go-runner
executable in the apisix-go-plugin-runner/cmd/go-runner/
directory.
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Build Docker ImageThe image is built here in preparation for installing APISIX later using helm
.
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Write DockerfileReturn to the path /home/chever/api7/cloud_native/tasks/plugin-runner
and create a Dockerfile in that directory, a demonstration of which is given here.
# DockerfileForRunner
FROM apache/apisix:2.13.1-alpine
COPY ./apisix-go-plugin-runner /usr/local/apisix-go-plugin-runner
Here I will again emphasize the path address as follows where the executable file is located.
/usr/local/apisix-go-plugin-runner/cmd/go-runner/go-runner
Please make a note of this address. We will use it in the rest of the configuration.
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Begin to build Docker ImageStart building a Docker image based on the Dockerfile. The command is executed in the /home/chever/api7/cloud_native/tasks/plugin-runner
directory. The command is as follows:
docker build -t apisix/forrunner:0.1 .
Command Explanation: Build an image with the name apisix/forrunner
and mark it as version 0.1.
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Load the image to the cluster environmentkind load docker-image apisix/forrunner:0.1
Load the image into the kind cluster environment to pull the custom local image for installation during the helm installation.
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Install APISIX IngressThen install APISIX using helm with the following command in the directory of Apache APISIX Helm Chart:
helm install apisix apisix/apisix --set gateway.type=NodePort --set apisix.image.repository=custom/apisix --set apisix.image.tag=v0.1 --set extPlugin.enabled=true --set extPlugin.cmd='{"/usr/local/apisix-go-plugin-runner/go-runner", "run"}' --set ingress-controller.enabled=true --set ingress-controller.config.apisix.serviceNamespace=apisix --namespace apisix --create-namespace --set ingress-controller.config.apisix.serviceName=apisix-admin
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Create httpbin service and ApisixRoute resourcesCreate an httpbin backend resource to run with the deployed ApisixRoute resource to test that the functionality is working correctly.
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Create httpbin serviceCreate an httpbin service with the following command:
kubectl run httpbin --image kennethreitz/httpbin --port 80
Expose the port with the following command:
kubectl expose pod httpbin --port 80
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Create ApisixRoute ResourceCreate the go-plugin-runner-route.yaml
file to enable the ApisixRoute resource, with the following configuration file:
apiVersion: apisix.apache.org/v2
kind: ApisixRoute
metadata:
name: plugin-runner-demo
spec:
http:
- name: rule1
match:
hosts:
- local.httpbin.org
paths:
- /get
backends:
- serviceName: httpbin
servicePort: 80
plugins:
- name: ext-plugin-pre-req
enable: true
config:
conf:
- name: "say"
value: "{\"body\": \"hello\"}"
The create resource command is as follows:
kubectl apply -f go-plugin-runner-route.yaml
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TestThe command is as follows to test if the plugin written in Golang is working correctly:
kubectl exec -it -n ${namespace of Apache APISIX} ${Pod name of Apache APISIX} -- curl http://127.0.0.1:9080/get -H 'Host: local.httpbin.org'
And you will see the result as follows:
Defaulted container "apisix" out of: apisix, wait-etcd (init)
hello