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Use a SOCKS5 Proxy to Access the Kubernetes API
Kubernetes v1.24 [stable]
This page shows how to use a SOCKS5 proxy to access the API of a remote Kubernetes cluster. This is useful when the cluster you want to access does not expose its API directly on the public internet.
Before you begin
You need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl command-line tool must be configured to communicate with your cluster. It is recommended to run this tutorial on a cluster with at least two nodes that are not acting as control plane hosts. If you do not already have a cluster, you can create one by using minikube or you can use one of these Kubernetes playgrounds:
Your Kubernetes server must be at or later than version v1.24. To check the version, enterkubectl version
.You need SSH client software (the ssh
tool), and an SSH service running on the remote server.
You must be able to log in to the SSH service on the remote server.
Task context
Figure 1 represents what you're going to achieve in this task.
- You have a client computer, referred to as local in the steps ahead, from where you're going to create requests to talk to the Kubernetes API.
- The Kubernetes server/API is hosted on a remote server.
- You will use SSH client and server software to create a secure SOCKS5 tunnel between the local and the remote server. The HTTPS traffic between the client and the Kubernetes API will flow over the SOCKS5 tunnel, which is itself tunnelled over SSH.
Figure 1. SOCKS5 tutorial components
Using ssh to create a SOCKS5 proxy
This command starts a SOCKS5 proxy between your client machine and the remote server. The SOCKS5 proxy lets you connect to your cluster's API server.
# The SSH tunnel continues running in the foreground after you run this
ssh -D 1080 -q -N username@kubernetes-remote-server.example
-D 1080
: opens a SOCKS proxy on local port :1080.-q
: quiet mode. Causes most warning and diagnostic messages to be suppressed.-N
: Do not execute a remote command. Useful for just forwarding ports.username@kubernetes-remote-server.example
: the remote SSH server where the Kubernetes cluster is running.
Client configuration
To explore the Kubernetes API you'll first need to instruct your clients to send their queries through the SOCKS5 proxy we created earlier.
For command-line tools, set the https_proxy
environment variable and pass it to commands that you run.
export https_proxy=socks5h://localhost:1080
When you set the https_proxy
variable, tools such as curl
route HTTPS traffic through the proxy
you configured. For this to work, the tool must support SOCKS5 proxying.
localhost
does not refer to your local client computer.
Instead, it refers to the endpoint on the remote server known as localhost
.
The curl
tool sends the hostname from the HTTPS URL over SOCKS, and the remote server
resolves that locally (to an address that belongs to its loopback interface).curl -k -v https://localhost:6443/api
To use the official Kubernetes client kubectl
with a proxy, set the proxy-url
element
for the relevant cluster
entry within your ~/.kube/config
file. For example:
apiVersion: v1
clusters:
- cluster:
certificate-authority-data: LRMEMMW2 # shortened for readability
server: https://<API_SERVER_IP_ADRESS>:6443 # the "Kubernetes API" server, in other words the IP address of kubernetes-remote-server.example
proxy-url: socks5://localhost:1080 # the "SSH SOCKS5 proxy" in the diagram above (DNS resolution over socks is built-in)
name: default
contexts:
- context:
cluster: default
user: default
name: default
current-context: default
kind: Config
preferences: {}
users:
- name: default
user:
client-certificate-data: LS0tLS1CR== # shortened for readability
client-key-data: LS0tLS1CRUdJT= # shortened for readability
If the tunnel is operating and you use kubectl
with a context that uses this cluster, you can interact with your cluster through that proxy. For example:
kubectl get pods
NAMESPACE NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
kube-system coredns-85cb69466-klwq8 1/1 Running 0 5m46s
Clean up
Stop the ssh port-forwarding process by pressing CTRL+C
on the terminal where it is running.
Type unset https_proxy
in a terminal to stop forwarding http traffic through the proxy.