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AWS ELB uses DNS names, can't return an IP from CreateTCPLoadBalancer #5224
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Must be staffed and worked on either currently, or very soon, ideally in time for the next release.
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justinsb
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Some load balancers (particularly AWS ELB) define the public endpoint as a hostname (instead of using IP addresses). This is a partial fix for kubernetes#5224; there will also be some proxy work.
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AWS ELB uses hosts, can't return an IP from CreateTCPLoadBalancer
AWS ELB uses DNS names, can't return an IP from CreateTCPLoadBalancer
Mar 10, 2015
alex-mohr
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akram
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Some load balancers (particularly AWS ELB) define the public endpoint as a hostname (instead of using IP addresses). This is a partial fix for kubernetes#5224; there will also be some proxy work.
Yes, I believe this is fully implemented now (although we haven't merged ELB support itself quite yet). Closing - thanks! |
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Labels
priority/important-soon
Must be staffed and worked on either currently, or very soon, ideally in time for the next release.
AWS ELB produces an external endpoint which is not an IP address, but is instead a DNS name (e.g. myLB-1234567890.us-east-1.elb.amazonaws.com); more info here http://docs.aws.amazon.com/ElasticLoadBalancing/latest/DeveloperGuide/using-domain-names-with-elb.html
This is because (under the covers) ELB assigns multiple IP addresses, and it changes the IP addresses dynamically (e.g. in response to load).
Users must then either cname the name (which doesn't work for the apex, so www.foo.com is OK, foo.com is not). Or they can move their domain to Route53, which is ELB aware.
To make AWS ELB work, I think we have two choices:
We could change the return type of CreateTCPLoadBalancer from (net.IP, error) to (string, error). string would either be an IP address or a hostname. We could do something strongly typed, but I don't think this is necessary.
We could change things around so that we manage DNS as well, so that Kubernetes makes the mapping completely automatic.
Option 2 is a huge change, so I'm going to explore option 1 first.
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