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On this page
  • Prerequisites
  • 1. Add the Kong Mesh Helm Repository
  • 2. Run Kong Mesh
  • 3. Verify the Installation
  • 4. Quickstart
Kong Mesh
1.0.x
  • Home
  • Kong Mesh
  • Installation
  • Kong Mesh with Helm
You are browsing documentation for an outdated version. See the latest documentation here.

Kong Mesh with Helm

To install and run Kong Mesh on Kubernetes using Helm, execute the following steps:

  • 1. Add the Kong Mesh Helm Repository
  • 2. Run Kong Mesh
  • 3. Verify the Installation

Finally, you can follow the Quickstart to take it from here and continue your Kong Mesh journey.

Prerequisites

You have a license for Kong Mesh.

1. Add the Kong Mesh Helm Repository

To start using Kong Mesh with Helm charts, first add the Kong Mesh charts repository to your local Helm deployment:

$ helm repo add kong-mesh https://kong.github.io/kong-mesh-charts

Once the repo is added, any following updates can be fetched with helm repo update.

2. Run Kong Mesh

Install and run Kong Mesh using the following commands. You can use any Kubernetes namespace to install Kuma, but as a default, we suggest kong-mesh-system.

  1. Create the kong-mesh-system namespace:

     $ kubectl create namespace kong-mesh-system
    
  2. Upload the license secret to the cluster:

     $ kubectl create secret generic kong-mesh-license -n kong-mesh-system --from-file=/path/to/license.json
    

    Where /path/to/license.json is the path to a valid Kong Mesh license file on the file system.

    Note:The name of the file should be license.json, unless otherwise specified in values.yaml.
  3. Deploy the Kong Mesh Helm chart:

     $ helm repo update
     $ helm upgrade -i -n kong-mesh-system kong-mesh kong-mesh/kong-mesh
    

    This example will run Kong Mesh in standalone mode for a flat deployment, but there are more advanced deployment modes like multi-zone.

3. Verify the Installation

Now that Kong Mesh (kuma-cp) has been installed in the newly created kong-mesh-system namespace, you can access the control plane using either the GUI, kubectl, the HTTP API, or the CLI:

GUI (Read-Only)
kubectl (Read & Write)
HTTP API (Read-Only)
kumactl (Read-Only)

Kong Mesh ships with a read-only GUI that you can use to retrieve Kong Mesh resources. By default, the GUI listens on the API port 5681.

To access Kong Mesh, port-forward the API service with:

$ kubectl port-forward svc/kuma-control-plane -n kuma-system 5681:5681

Now you can navigate to 127.0.0.1:5681/gui to see the GUI.

You can use Kong Mesh with kubectl to perform read and write operations on Kong Mesh resources. For example:

$ kubectl get meshes

NAME          AGE
default       1m

Or, you can enable mTLS on the default Mesh with:

$ echo "apiVersion: kuma.io/v1alpha1
  kind: Mesh
  metadata:
    name: default
  spec:
    mtls:
      enabledBackend: ca-1
      backends:
      - name: ca-1
        type: builtin" | kubectl apply -f -

Kong Mesh ships with a read-only HTTP API that you use to retrieve Kong Mesh resources. By default, the HTTP API listens on port 5681.

To access Kong Mesh, port-forward the API service with:

$ kubectl port-forward svc/kuma-control-plane -n kuma-system 5681:5681

Now you can navigate to 127.0.0.1:5681 to see the HTTP API.

You can use the kumactl CLI to perform read-only operations on Kong Mesh resources. The kumactl binary is a client to the Kong Mesh HTTP API. To use it, first port-forward the API service with:

$ kubectl port-forward svc/kuma-control-plane -n kuma-system 5681:5681

Then run kumactl. For example:

$ kumactl get meshes

NAME          mTLS      METRICS      LOGGING   TRACING
default       off       off          off       off

You can configure kumactl to point to any remote kuma-cp instance by running:

$ kumactl config control-planes add --name=XYZ --address=http://{address-to-kong-mesh}:5681

You will notice that Kong Mesh automatically creates a Mesh entity with the name default.

4. Quickstart

Congratulations! You have successfully installed Kong Mesh on Kubernetes.

After installation, the Kuma quickstart documentation is fully compatible with Kong Mesh, except that you are running Kong Mesh binaries instead of the vanilla Kuma ones.

To start using Kong Mesh, see the quickstart guide for Kubernetes deployments.

Thank you for your feedback.
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