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Chapter 5. Using ingress control for a MicroShift node
Use the ingress controller options in the MicroShift configuration file to make pods and services accessible outside the node.
5.1. Using ingress control in MicroShift
				When you create your MicroShift node, each pod and service running on the node is allocated an IP address. These IP addresses are accessible to other pods and services running nearby by default, but are not accessible to external clients. MicroShift uses a minimal implementation of the OpenShift Container Platform IngressController API to enable external access to node services.
			
With more configuration options, you can fine-tune ingress to meet your specific needs. To use enhanced ingress control, update the parameters in the MicroShift configuration file and restart the service.
Ingress configuration is useful in a variety of ways, for example:
- Accommodate server response speed
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									If your application starts processing requests from clients but the connection closes before it can respond, you can set the ingress.tuningOptions.serverTimeoutparameter in the configuration file to a higher value to accommodate the speed of the response from the server.
 
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									If your application starts processing requests from clients but the connection closes before it can respond, you can set the 
- Closing router connections
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									If the router has many connections open because an application running on the node does not close connections properly, you can set the ingress.tuningOptions.serverTimeoutandspec.tuningOptions.serverFinTimeoutparameters to a lower value, forcing those connections to close sooner.
 
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									If the router has many connections open because an application running on the node does not close connections properly, you can set the 
- Verify client certificates
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									If you need to configure the ingress controller to verify client certificates, you can use the ingress.clientTLSparameter to set a clientCA value, which is a reference to a config map. The config map contains the PEM-encoded CA certificate bundle that is used to verify a client’s certificate. Optionally, you can also configure a list of certificate subject filters.
 
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									If you need to configure the ingress controller to verify client certificates, you can use the 
- Configure a TLS security profile
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									If you need to configure a TLS security profile for an ingress controller, you can use the ingress.tlsSecurityProfileparameter to specify a default or custom individual TLS security profiles. The TLS security profile defines the minimum TLS version and the TLS ciphers for TLS connections for the ingress controllers. If a TLS security profile is not configured, the default value is based on the TLS security profile set for the API server.
 
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									If you need to configure a TLS security profile for an ingress controller, you can use the 
- Create policies for new route claims
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									If you need to define a policy for handling new route claims, you can use the routeAdmissionparameter to allow or deny claims across namespaces. Set therouteAdmissionparameter to describe how hostname claims across namespaces should be handled and to describe how the ingress controller handles routes with wildcard policies.
 
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									If you need to define a policy for handling new route claims, you can use the 
- Customize error pages
- If you want more than the default error pages, which are usually empty and only return the HTTP status code, configure custom error pages.
 
- Capture HTTP headers or cookies
- If you want to include the capture of HTTP headers or cookies, configure them in the access logging.
 
5.2. Configuring ingress control in MicroShift
You can use detailed ingress control settings by updating the MicroShift service configuration file or using a configuration snippet.
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							A config.yamlconfiguration file takes precedence over built-in settings. Theconfig.yamlfile is read every time the MicroShift service starts.
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							Configuration snippet YAMLs take precedence over both built-in settings and the config.yamlconfiguration file.
Prerequisites
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						You installed the OpenShift CLI (oc).
- You have root access to the node.
- Your node uses the OVN-Kubernetes Container Network Interface (CNI) plugin.
Procedure
- Apply ingress control settings in one of the two following ways: - 
								Update the MicroShift config.yamlconfiguration file by making a copy of the providedconfig.yaml.defaultfile in the/etc/microshift/directory, naming itconfig.yamland keeping it in the source directory.
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								Use a configuration snippet to apply the ingress control settings you want. To do this, create a configuration snippet YAML file and put it in the /etc/microshift/config.d/configuration directory.
 
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								Update the MicroShift 
- Replace the default values in the - ingresssection of the MicroShift YAML with your valid values, or create a configuration snippet file with the sections you need.- Ingress controller configuration fields with default values - Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Expand - Table 5.1. Ingress controller configuration fields definitions table - Parameter - Description - ingress- The - ingresssection of the MicroShift- config.yamlfile defines the configurable parameters for the implementation of the OpenShift Container Platform- IngressControllerAPI. All of the following parameters in this table are subsections in the- ingresssection of the MicroShift- config.yaml.- accessLogging- This - ingresssubsection describes how client requests are logged. If the- statusfield is empty, access logging is disabled. When the status field is set to- Enabled, access requests are logged as configured with the- accessLoggingparameters and the- accessLogging.destination.typeis automatically set to- Container.- 
												When enabled, access logging is part of the openshift-routerlogs. The sos report procedure for MicroShift captures logs from this pod.
 - accessLogging.destination- A destination for logs. The destination for logs can be a local sidecar container or remote. Default value is null. - accessLogging.destination.type- The type of destination for logs. Valid values are - Containeror- Syslog.- 
												Setting this value to Containerspecifies that logs should go to a sidecar container. When the destination type is set toContainer, a container calledlogsis automatically created. Using container logs means that logs might be dropped if the rate of logs exceeds the container runtime capacity or the custom logging solution capacity. You must have a custom logging solution that reads logs from this sidecar.
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												Setting this value to Syslogspecifies that logs are sent to a Syslog endpoint. You must configure a custom Syslog instance and specify an endpoint that can receive Syslog messages. You must have a custom Syslog instance. For example, Getting started with kernel logging.
 - accessLogging.destination.container- Describes parameters for the - Containerlogging destination type. You must configure a custom logging solution that reads logs from this sidecar.- accessLogging.destination.container.maxLength- Optional configuration. The default value is - 1024bytes. Message length must be at least- 480and not greater than- 8192bytes.- accessLogging.destination.syslog- Describes parameters for the - Sysloglogging destination type. You must configure a custom Syslog instance with an endpoint that can receive Syslog messages.- accessLogging.destination.syslog.address- Required configuration when the - Syslogdestination type is set. Valid value is the IP address of the syslog endpoint that receives log messages.- accessLogging.destination.syslog.facility- Optional configuration when the - Syslogdestination type is set. Specifies the syslog facility of log messages. If this field is empty, the facility is- local1. Otherwise, the field must specify one of the following valid syslog facilities:- kern,- user,- mail,- daemon,- auth,- syslog,- lpr,- news,- uucp,- cron, auth2`,- ftp,- ntp,- audit,- alert,- cron2,- local0,- local1,- local2,- local3,- local4,- local5,- local6, or- local7.- accessLogging.destination.syslog.maxLength- Optional configuration when the - Syslogdestination type is set. The maximum length of the- Syslogmessage. Message length must be at least- 480and not greater than- 4096bytes. If this field is empty, the maximum length is set to the default value of- 1024bytes.- accessLogging.destination.syslog.port- Required configuration when the - Syslogdestination type is set. The UDP port number of the syslog endpoint that receives log messages. The default value is- 0.- httpCaptureCookies- Specifies HTTP cookies that you want to capture in access logs. If the - httpCaptureCookiesfield is empty, access logs do not capture the cookies. Default value is empty. Configuring- ingress.accessLogging.httpCaptureCookiesautomatically enables ingress access logging. For any cookie that you want to capture, you must also set the- matchTypeand- maxLengthparameters.- For example: - httpCaptureCookies: - matchType: Exact maxLength: 128 name: MYCOOKIE- httpCaptureCookies: - matchType: Exact maxLength: 128 name: MYCOOKIE- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
 - httpCaptureCookies.matchType- Specifies whether the field name of the cookie exactly matches the capture cookie setting or is a prefix of the capture cookie setting. Valid values are - Exactfor an exact string match and- Prefixfor a string prefix match.- 
												If you use the Exactsetting, you must also specify a name in thehttpCaptureCookies.namefield.
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												If you use the Prefixsetting, you must also specify a prefix in thehttpCaptureCookies.namePrefixfield. For example, the settings ofmatchType: Prefixwhen thenamePrefixis "mush" captures a cookie named "mush" or "mushroom" but not one named "room". The first matching cookie is captured.
 - httpCaptureCookies.maxLength- Specifies the maximum length of the cookie that is logged, which includes the cookie name, cookie value, and one-character delimiter. If the log entry exceeds this length, the value is truncated in the log message. The ingress controller might impose a separate bound on the total length of HTTP headers in a request. The minimum value is - 1byte, maximum value is- 1024bytes. The default value is- 0.- httpCaptureCookies.name- Specifies the exact name used for a cookie name match as set in the - httpCaptureCookies.matchTypeparameter. The value must be a valid HTTP cookie name as defined in RFC 6265 section 4.1. The minimum length is- 1byte and the maximum length is- 1024bytes.- httpCaptureCookies.namePrefix- Specifies the prefix for a cookie name match as set in the - httpCaptureCookies.matchTypeparameter. The value must be a valid HTTP cookie name as defined in RFC 6265 section 4.1. The minimum length is- 1byte and the maximum length is- 1024bytes.- httpCaptureHeaders- Defines the HTTP headers that should be captured in the access logs. This field is a list and allows capturing request and response headers independently. When this field is empty, headers are not captured. This option only applies to plain text HTTP connections and to secure HTTP connections for which the ingress controller terminates encryption: for example, edge-terminated or reencrypt connections. Headers cannot be captured for TLS - passthroughconnections. Configuring the- ingress.accessLogging.httpCaptureHeadersparameter automatically enables ingress access logging.- httpCaptureHeaders.request- Specifies which HTTP request headers to capture. When this field is empty, no request headers are captured. - httpCaptureHeaders.request.maxLength- Specifies a maximum length for the header value. When a header value exceeds this length, the value is truncated in the log message. The minimum required value is - 1byte. The ingress controller might impose a separate bound on the total length of HTTP headers in a request.- httpCaptureHeaders.request.name- Specifies a header name. The value must be a valid HTTP header name as defined in RFC 2616 section 4.2. If you configure this value, you must specify - maxLengthand- namevalues.- httpCaptureHeaders.response- Specifies which HTTP response headers to capture. If this field is empty, no response headers are captured. - httpCaptureHeaders.response.maxLength- Specifies a maximum length for the header value. If a header value exceeds this length, the value is truncated in the log message. The ingress controller might impose a separate bound on the total length of HTTP headers in a request. - httpCaptureHeaders.response.name- Specifies a header name. The value must be a valid HTTP header name as defined in RFC 2616 section 4.2. - httpLogFormat- Specifies the format of the log message for an HTTP request. If this field is empty, log messages use the default HTTP log format. For HAProxy default HTTP log format, see the HAProxy documentation. - status- Specifies whether access is logged or not. Valid values are - Enabledand- Disabled. Default value is- Disabled.- 
												When you configure either ingress.accessLogging.httpCaptureHeadersoringress.accessLogging.httpCaptureCookies, you must setingress.accessLogging.statustoEnabled.
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												When you set the ingress.statusfield toEnabled, theaccessLogging.destination.typeis automatically set toContainerand the router logs all requests in thelogscontainer.
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												If you set this value to Disabled, the router does not log any requests in the access log.
 - certificateSecret- A reference to a - kubernetes.io/tlstype of secret that contains the default certificate that the MicroShift ingress controller serves. When routes do not specify their own certificate, the- certificateSecretparameter is used. All secrets used must contain- tls.keykey file contents and- tls.crtcertificate file contents.- 
												When the certificateSecretparameter is not set, a wildcard certificate is automatically generated and used. The wildcard certificate is valid for the ingress controller defaultdomainand itssubdomains. The generated certificate authority (CA) is automatically integrated with the truststore of the node.
- In-use generated and user-specified certificates are automatically integrated with the MicroShift built-in OAuth server.
 - clientTLS- Authenticates client access to the node and services. As a result, mutual TLS authentication is enabled. If this parameter is not set, then client TLS is not enabled. You must set the - spec.clientTLS.clientCertificatePolicyand- spec.clientTLS.clientCAparameters to use client TLS.- clientTLS.AllowedSubjectPatterns- Optional subfield that specifies a list of regular expressions that are matched against the distinguished name on a valid client certificate to filter requests. This parameter is useful when you have client authentication. Use this parameter to cause the ingress controller to reject certificates based on the distinguished name. The Perl Compatible Regular Expressions (PCRE) syntax is required. You must set the - spec.clientTLS.clientCertificatePolicyand- spec.clientTLS.clientCAparameters to use- clientTLS.AllowedSubjectPatterns.Important- When configured, this field must contain a valid expression or the MicroShift service fails. At least one pattern must match a client certificate’s distinguished name; otherwise, the ingress controller rejects the certificate and denies the connection. - clientTLS.clientCA- Specifies a required config map that is in the - openshift-ingressnamespace. Required to enable client TLS. The config map must contain a certificate authority (CA) bundle named- ca-bundle.pemor the deployment of the default router fails.- clientTLS.clientCA.name- The - metadata.nameof the config map referenced in the- clientTLS.clientCAvalue.- clientTLS.ClientCertificatePolicy- Requiredor- Optionalare valid values. Set to- Requiredto enable client TLS. The ingress controller only checks client certificates for edge-terminated and re-encrypted TLS routes. The ingress controller cannot check certificates for plain text HTTP or passthrough TLS routes.- defaultHTTPVersion- Sets the HTTP version for the ingress controller. The default value is - 1for HTTP 1.1. Setting up a load balancer for HTTP 2 and 3 is recommended.- forwardedHeaderPolicy- Specifies when and how the ingress controller sets the - Forwarded,- X-Forwarded-For,- X-Forwarded-Host,- X-Forwarded-Port,- X-Forwarded-Proto, and- X-Forwarded-Proto-VersionHTTP headers. The following values are valid:- 
												Appendpreserves any existing headers by specifying that the ingress controller appends them. 'Append` is the default value.
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												Replaceremoves any existing headers by specifying that the ingress controller sets the headers.
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												IfNonesets the headers set by specifying that the ingress controller sets the headers if they are not already set.
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												Neverpreserves any existing headers by specifying that the ingress controller never sets the headers.
 - httpCompression- Defines the policy for HTTP traffic compression. - httpCompression.mimeTypes- Defines a list of MIME types to which compression should be applied. - 
												For example, text/css; charset=utf-8,text/html,text/*,image/svg+xml,application/octet-stream,X-custom/customsub, in the,type/subtype; [;attribute=value]format.
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												Valid typesare: application, image, message, multipart, text, video, or a custom type prefaced byX-. To see the full notation for MIME types and subtypes, see RFC1341 (IETF Datatracker documentation).
 - httpEmptyRequestsPolicy- Describes how HTTP connections are handled if the connection times out before a request is received. Allowed values for this field are - Respondand- Ignore. The default value is- Respond. Empty requests typically come from load-balancer health probes or preconnects and can often be safely ignored. However, network errors and port scans can also cause these requests. Therefore, setting this field to- Ignorecan impede detection or diagnosis of network problems and detecting intrusion attempts.- 
												When the policy is set to Respond, the ingress controller sends an HTTP400or408response, logs the connection if access logging is enabled, and counts the connection in the appropriate metrics.
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												When the policy is set to Ignore, thehttp-ignore-probesparameter is added to theHAproxyprocess configuration. After this parameter is added, the ingress controller closes the connection without sending a response, then either logs the connection or incrementing metrics.
 - logEmptyRequests- Specifies connections for which no request is received and logged. - Logand- Ignoreare valid values. Empty requests typically come from load-balancer health probes or preconnects and can often be safely ignored. However, network errors and port scans can also cause these requests. Therefore, setting this field to- Ignorecan impede detection or diagnosis of network problems and detecting intrusion attempts. The default value is- Log.- 
												Setting this value to Logindicates that an event should be logged.
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												Setting this value to Ignoresets thedontlognulloption in theHAproxyconfiguration.
 - httpErrorCodePages- Describes custom error code pages. To use this setting, you must configure the - httpErrorCodePages.nameparameter.- httpErrorCodePages.name- Specifies custom error code pages. You can only customize errors for - 503and- 404page codes. To customize error code pages, specify a- ConfigMapname. The- ConfigMapobject must be in the- openshift-ingressnamespace and contain keys in the- error-page-<error code>.httpformat where- <error code>is an HTTP status code. Each value in the- ConfigMapmust be the full response, including HTTP headers. The default value of this parameter is null.- ports- Defines default router ports. - ports.http- Default router http port. Must be in range 1-65535. Default value is - 80.- ports.https- Default router https port. Must be in range 1-65535. Default value is - 443.- routeAdmission- Defines a policy for handling new route claims, such as allowing or denying claims across namespaces. - routeAdmission.namespaceOwnership- Describes how hostname claims across namespaces are handled. The default is - InterNamespaceAllowed. The following are valid values:- 
												Strictdoes not allow routes to claim the same hostname across namespaces.
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												InterNamespaceAllowedallows routes to claim different paths of the same hostname across namespaces.
 - routeAdmission.wildcardPolicy- Controls how the ingress controller handles routes with configured wildcard policies. - WildcardsAllowedand- WildcardsDisallowedare valid values. Default value is- WildcardsDisallowed.- 
												WildcardPolicyAllowedmeans that the ingress controller admits routes with any wildcard policy.
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												WildcardPolicyDisallowedmeans that the ingress controller admits only routes with a wildcard policy ofNone.
 Important- Changing the wildcard policy from - WildcardsAllowedto- WildcardsDisallowedcauses admitted routes with a wildcard policy of- subdomainto stop working. The ingress controller only readmits these routes after they are recreated with a wildcard policy of- None.- status- Default router status. - Managedor- Removedare valid values.- tlsSecurityProfile- tlsSecurityProfilespecifies settings for TLS connections for ingress controllers. If not set, the default value is based on the- apiservers.config.openshift.io/clusterresource. The TLS- 1.0version of an- Oldor- Customprofile is automatically converted to- 1.1by the ingress controller.- Intermediateis the default setting.- 
												The minimum TLS version for ingress controllers is 1.1. The maximum TLS version is1.3.
 Note- The - TLSProfilestatus shows the ciphers and the minimum TLS version of the configured security profile. Profiles are intent-based and change over time when new ciphers are developed and existing ciphers are found to be insecure. The usable list can be reduced depending on which ciphers are available to a specific process.- tlsSecurityProfile.custom- User-defined TLS security profile. If you configure this parameter and related parameters, use extreme caution. - tlsSecurityProfile.custom.ciphers- Specifies the cipher algorithms that are negotiated during the TLS handshake. Operators might remove entries their operands do not support. - tlsSecurityProfile.custom.minTLSVersion- Specifies the minimal version of the TLS protocol that is negotiated during the TLS handshake. For example, to use TLS versions 1.1, 1.2 and 1.3, set the value to - VersionTLS11. The highest valid value for- minTLSVersionis- VersionTLS12.- tlsSecurityProfile.intermediate- You can use this TLS profile for a majority of services. Intermediate compatibility (recommended). - tlsSecurityProfile.old- Used for backward compatibility. Old backward compatibility. - tlsSecurityProfile.type- Valid values are - Intermediate,- Old, or- Custom. The- Modernvalue is not supported.- tuningOptions- Specifies options for tuning the performance of ingress controller pods. - tuningOptions.clientFinTimeout- Specifies how long the ingress controller holds a connection open while waiting for a client response before the server closes the connection. The default timeout is - 1s.- tuningOptions.clientTimeout- Specifies how long the ingress controller holds a connection open while waiting for a client response. The default timeout is - 30s.- tuningOptions.headerBufferBytes- Specifies how much memory is reserved, in bytes, for ingress controller connection sessions. This value must be at least - 16384if HTTP/2 is enabled for the ingress controller. If not set, the default value is- 32768bytes.Important- Setting this field not recommended because - headerBufferMaxRewriteBytesparameter values that are too small can break the ingress controller. Conversely, values for- headerBufferMaxRewriteBytesthat are too large could cause the ingress controller to use significantly more memory than necessary.- tuningOptions.headerBufferMaxRewriteBytes- Specifies how much memory should be reserved, in bytes, from - headerBufferBytesfor HTTP header rewriting and appending for ingress controller connection sessions. The minimum value for- headerBufferMaxRewriteBytesis- 4096.- headerBufferBytesmust be greater than the- headerBufferMaxRewriteBytesvalue for incoming HTTP requests. If not set, the default value is- 8192bytes.Important- Setting this field is not recommended because - headerBufferMaxRewriteBytesvalues that are too small can break the ingress controller and- headerBufferMaxRewriteBytesthat are too large could cause the ingress controller to use significantly more memory than necessary.- tuningOptions.healthCheckInterval- Specifies how long the router waits between health checks, set in seconds. The default is - 5s.- tuningOptions.maxConnections- Specifies the maximum number of simultaneous connections that can be established for each - HAProxyprocess. Increasing this value allows each ingress controller pod to handle more connections at the cost of additional system resources. Permitted values are- 0,- -1, any value within the range- 2000and- 2000000, or the field can be left empty.- 
												If this field is empty or has the value 0, the ingress controller uses the default value of50000.
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												If the field has the value of -1, then theHAProxyprocess dynamically computes a maximum value based on the availableulimitsin the running container. This process results in a large computed value that incurs significant memory usage compared to the current default value of50000.
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												If the field has a value that is greater than the current operating system limit, the HAProxyprocesses do not start.
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												If you choose a discrete value and the router pod is migrated to a new node, it is possible that the new node does not have an identical ulimitconfigured. In such cases, the pod fails to start.
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												You can monitor memory usage for router containers with the container_memory_working_set_bytes{container="router",namespace="openshift-ingress"}metric.
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												You can monitor memory usage of individual HAProxyprocesses in router containers with thecontainer_memory_working_set_bytes{container="router",namespace="openshift-ingress"}/container_processes{container="router",namespace="openshift-ingress"}metric.
 - tuningOptions.serverFinTimeout- Specifies how long a connection is held open while waiting for the server response to the client that is closing the connection. The default timeout is - 1s.- tuningOptions.serverTimeout- Specifies how long a connection is held open while waiting for a server response. The default timeout is - 30s.- tuningOptions.threadCount- Specifies the number of threads to create per HAProxy process. Creating more threads allows each ingress controller pod to handle more connections, at the cost of using more system resources. The HAProxy load balancer supports up to - 64threads. If this field is empty, the ingress controller uses the default value of- 4threads.Important- Setting this field is not recommended because increasing the number of - HAProxythreads allows ingress controller pods to use more CPU time under load, and prevent other pods from receiving the CPU resources they need to perform. Reducing the number of threads can cause the ingress controller to perform poorly.- tuningOptions.tlsInspectDelay- Specifies how long the router can hold data to find a matching route. Setting this value too low can cause the router to fall back to the default certificate for edge-terminated, re-encrypted, or passthrough routes, even when using a better-matched certificate. The default inspect delay is - 5s.- tuningOptions.tunnelTimeout- Specifies how long a tunnel connection, including websockets, remains open while the tunnel is idle. The default timeout is - 1h.
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												When enabled, access logging is part of the 
- Complete any other configurations you require, then start or restart MicroShift by running one the following commands: - sudo systemctl start microshift - $ sudo systemctl start microshift- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - sudo systemctl restart microshift - $ sudo systemctl restart microshift- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
Verification
After making ingress configuration changes and restarting MicroShift, you can check the age of the router pod to ensure that changes are applied.
- To check the status of the router pod, run the following command: - oc get pods -n openshift-ingress - $ oc get pods -n openshift-ingress- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - Example output - NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE router-default-8649b5bf65-w29cn 1/1 Running 0 6m10s - NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE router-default-8649b5bf65-w29cn 1/1 Running 0 6m10s- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
5.2.1. Creating a secret for the ingress controller certificateSecret
					Use this procedure to create a secret that is referenced by the certificateSecret parameter value in the MicroShift configuration file. This secret contains the default certificate served by the ingress controller.
				
Any in-use certificates is automatically integrated with the MicroShift built-in OAuth server.
Prerequisites
- You have root access to MicroShift.
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							You installed the OpenShift CLI (oc).
- Your private key is not encrypted or you have decrypted it for importing into MicroShift.
Procedure
- Create a secret that contains the wildcard certificate chain and key: - oc create secret tls <secret> - $ oc create secret tls <secret>- 1 - --cert=</path/to/cert.crt>- 2 - --key=</path/to/cert.key>- 3 - -n openshift-ingress- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Important- The certificate must include the - subjectAltNameextension showing- *.apps.<nodename>.<domain>.
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							Update the certificateSecretparameter value in the MicroShift configuration YAML with the newly created secret.
- Complete any other configurations you require, then start or restart MicroShift by running one the following commands: - sudo systemctl start microshift - $ sudo systemctl start microshift- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - sudo systemctl restart microshift - $ sudo systemctl restart microshift- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow 
5.2.2. Configuring the TLS security profile for the ingress controller
You can configure the TLS security profile for the ingress controller to use by setting the type in MicroShift configuration YAML.
Prerequisites
- You have root access to the MicroShift node.
Procedure
- Add the - spec.tlsSecurityProfilefield to the MicroShift YAML configuration file.- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow - 1
- Specify the TLS security profile type (Old,Intermediate, orCustom). The default isIntermediate.
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- Specify the appropriate field for the selected type:- 
											old: {}
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											intermediate: {}
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											custom:
 
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- For thecustomtype, specify a list of TLS ciphers and minimum accepted TLS version.WarningIf you choose a customTLS configuration, use extreme caution. Using self-signed TLS certificates can introduce security risks.
 
- Save the file to apply the changes.
- Restart MicroShift by running the following command: - sudo systemctl restart microshift - $ sudo systemctl restart microshift- Copy to Clipboard Copied! - Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow