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krelay

krelay is a drop-in replacement for kubectl port-forward with some enhanced features.

Table of Contents

✨Highlights

  • Supports UDP port forwarding
  • Supports simultaneous forwarding of data to multiple targets.
  • Forwarding data to the given IP or hostname that is accessible within the kubernetes cluster
    • You could forward a local port to a port in the Service or a workload like Deployment or StatefulSet, and the forwarding session will not be interfered even if you perform rolling updates.
    • The hostname is resolved inside the cluster, so you don't need to change your local nameserver or modify the /etc/hosts.

Demo

Forwarding UDP port

asciicast

Forwarding traffic to a Service

asciicast

Note

The forwarding session is not affected after rolling update.

Forwarding traffic to a IP or hostname

asciicast

Forwarding traffic to multiple targets

$ cat > targets.txt <<EOF
# Each line in the file represents a target, the syntax is the same as the command line.
# Empty line or line starts with '#' or '//' will be ignored.

# namespace of the object can be specified by the -n flag
-n kube-system svc/kube-dns 10053:53@udp

# The default namespace is used if no namespace is specified
svc/nginx 8080:80

host/redis.cn-north-1.cache.amazonaws.com 6379
EOF

$ kubectl relay -f targets.txt

Installation

Distribution Command / Link
Krew kubectl krew install relay
Homebrew brew install knight42/tap/krelay
Pre-built binaries for macOS, Linux GitHub releases

Note

If you only have limited access to the cluster, please make sure the permissions specified in rbac.yaml is granted:

wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/knight42/krelay/main/manifests/rbac.yaml
# Edit rbac.yaml to update the user name
vim rbac.yaml
kubectl create -f rbac.yaml

Build from source

git clone https://github.com/knight42/krelay
cd krelay
make krelay
cp krelay "$GOPATH/bin/kubectl-relay"
kubectl relay -V

Usage

# Listen on port 8080 locally, forwarding data to the port named "http" in the service
kubectl relay service/my-service 8080:http

# Listen on a random port locally, forwarding udp packets to port 53 in a pod selected by the deployment
kubectl relay -n kube-system deploy/kube-dns :53@udp

# Listen on port 5353 on all addresses, forwarding data to port 53 in the pod
kubectl relay --address 0.0.0.0 pod/my-pod 5353:53

# Listen on port 6379 locally, forwarding data to "redis.cn-north-1.cache.amazonaws.com:6379" from the cluster
kubectl relay host/redis.cn-north-1.cache.amazonaws.com 6379

# Listen on port 5000 and 6000 locally, forwarding data to "1.2.3.4:5000" and "1.2.3.4:6000" from the cluster
kubectl relay ip/1.2.3.4 5000@tcp 6000@udp

# Create the agent in the kube-public namespace, and forward local port 5000 to "1.2.3.4:5000"
kubectl relay --server.namespace kube-public ip/1.2.3.4 5000

Flags

flag default description
--address 127.0.0.1 Address to listen on. Only accepts IP addresses as a value.
-f/--file N/A Forward traffic to the targets specified in the given file.
--server.image ghcr.io/knight42/krelay-server:v0.0.1 The krelay-server image to use.
--server.namespace default The namespace in which krelay-server is located.

How It Works

krelay will install an agent(named krelay-server) to the kubernetes cluster, and the agent will forward the traffic to the target ip/hostname.

If the target is an object in the cluster, like Deployment, StatefulSet, krelay will automatically select a pod it managed like kubectl port-forward does. After that krelay will tell the destination IP(i.e. the pod's IP) and the destination port to the agent by sending a special Header first, and then the data will be forwarded to the agent and sent to the target address.

Specifically, if the target is a Service, krelay will try to determine the destination address automatically:

  • If the Service has a clusterIP, then the clusterIP is used as the destination IP.
  • If the type of Service is ExternalName, then the external name is used as the destination address.
  • If none of the above scenario is met, then krelay will choose a pod selected by this Service.

The Header looks like this:

Version Header Length Request ID Protocol Destination Port Address Type Address
Byte Count 1 2 5 1 2 1 Variable
  • Version: This field is preserved for future extension, and it is not in-use now.
  • Header Length: The total length of the Header in bytes.
  • Request ID: The ID of the request.
  • Protocol: The protocol of the request, 0 stands for TCP and 1 stands for UDP.
  • Destination Port: The destination port of the request.
  • Address Type: The type of the destination address, 0 stands for IP and 1 stands for hostname.
  • Address: The destination address of the request:
    • 4 bytes for IPv4 address
    • 16 bytes for IPv6 address
    • Variable bytes for hostname