
* clarify link * Add section headers * console blocks * grpc example json was not valid * multi-tls update text The preceding point 1 related to4f2cb51ef8/ingress/controllers/nginx/examples/ingress.yaml
and the deployments referenced in4f2cb51ef8/ingress/controllers/nginx/examples/README.md
They are not relevant to the current instructions. * add whitespace around parens * grammar setup would be a proper noun, but it is not the intended concept, which is a state * grammar * is-only * via * Use bullets for choices * ingress-controller nginx is a distinct brand. generally this repo talks about ingress-controller, although it is quite inconsistent about how... * drop stray paren * OAuth is a brand and needs an article here also GitHub is a brand * Indent text under numbered lists * use e.g. * Document that customer header config maps changes do not trigger updates This should be removed if https://github.com/kubernetes/ingress-nginx/issues/5238 is fixed. * article * period * infinitive verb + period * clarify that the gRPC server is responsible for listening for TCP traffic and not some other part of the backend application * avoid using ; and reword * whitespace * brand: gRPC * only-does is the right form `for` adds nothing here * spelling: GitHub * punctuation `;` is generally not the right punctuation... * drop stray `to` * sentence * backticks * fix link * Improve readability of compare/vs * Renumber list * punctuation * Favor Ingress-NGINX and Ingress NGINX * Simplify custom header restart text * Undo typo damage Co-authored-by: Josh Soref <jsoref@users.noreply.github.com>
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Custom Headers
Caveats
Changes to the custom header config maps do not force a reload of the ingress-nginx-controllers.
Workaround
To work around this limitation, perform a rolling restart of the deployment.
Example
This example demonstrates configuration of the nginx ingress controller via a ConfigMap to pass a custom list of headers to the upstream server.
custom-headers.yaml defines a ConfigMap in the ingress-nginx
namespace named custom-headers
, holding several custom X-prefixed HTTP headers.
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/ingress-nginx/main/docs/examples/customization/custom-headers/custom-headers.yaml
configmap.yaml defines a ConfigMap in the ingress-nginx
namespace named ingress-nginx-controller
. This controls the global configuration of the ingress controller, and already exists in a standard installation. The key proxy-set-headers
is set to cite the previously-created ingress-nginx/custom-headers
ConfigMap.
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/ingress-nginx/main/docs/examples/customization/custom-headers/configmap.yaml
The nginx ingress controller will read the ingress-nginx/ingress-nginx-controller
ConfigMap, find the proxy-set-headers
key, read HTTP headers from the ingress-nginx/custom-headers
ConfigMap, and include those HTTP headers in all requests flowing from nginx to the backends.
The above example was for passing a custom list of headers to the upstream server. To pass the custom headers before sending response traffic to the client, use the add-headers key:
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/ingress-nginx/main/docs/examples/customization/custom-headers/configmap-client-response.yaml
Test
Check the contents of the ConfigMaps are present in the nginx.conf file using:
kubectl exec ingress-nginx-controller-873061567-4n3k2 -n ingress-nginx -- cat /etc/nginx/nginx.conf