ingress-nginx-helm/controllers
Kwok-kuen Cheung a83f17c716 Set $proxy_upstream_name before location directive
When nginx performs ssl redirect, $proxy_upstream_name used in log
is not initialized because it is set after nginx matched a location directive,
which is not the case when performing a ssl redirect.

refs #711
2017-05-14 08:59:30 +08:00
..
gce [GLBC] Set Description field for backend services (#681) 2017-05-05 11:34:40 -07:00
nginx Set $proxy_upstream_name before location directive 2017-05-14 08:59:30 +08:00
README.md Minor text fix for "ApiServer" 2017-03-04 00:40:07 +08:00

Ingress controllers

This directory contains ingress controllers.

Ingress Controllers

Configuring a webserver or loadbalancer is harder than it should be. Most webserver configuration files are very similar. There are some applications that have weird little quirks that tend to throw a wrench in things, but for the most part you can apply the same logic to them and achieve a desired result. The Ingress resource embodies this idea, and an Ingress controller is meant to handle all the quirks associated with a specific "class" of Ingress (be it a single instance of a loadbalancer, or a more complicated setup of frontends that provide GSLB, DDoS protection etc).

What is an Ingress Controller?

An Ingress Controller is a daemon, deployed as a Kubernetes Pod, that watches the apiserver's /ingresses endpoint for updates to the Ingress resource. Its job is to satisfy requests for ingress.