Fix references in IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack

pull/46791/head
Aaina26 2024-06-12 10:06:52 +05:30
parent 095bca359f
commit 5ead326713
1 changed files with 14 additions and 14 deletions

View File

@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ set the `.spec.ipFamilyPolicy` field to one of the following values:
using the first configured service cluster IP range.
* `PreferDualStack`: Allocates both IPv4 and IPv6 cluster IPs for the Service when dual-stack is enabled. If dual-stack is not enabled or supported, it falls back to single-stack behavior.
* `RequireDualStack`: Allocates Service `.spec.clusterIPs` from both IPv4 and IPv6 address ranges when dual-stack is enabled. If dual-stack is not enabled or supported, the Service API object creation fails.
* Selects the `.spec.ClusterIP` from the list of `.spec.ClusterIPs` based on the address family
* Selects the `.spec.clusterIP` from the list of `.spec.clusterIPs` based on the address family
of the first element in the `.spec.ipFamilies` array.
If you would like to define which IP family to use for single stack or define the order of IP
@ -112,7 +112,7 @@ You can set `.spec.ipFamilies` to any of the following array values:
- `["IPv4","IPv6"]` (dual stack)
- `["IPv6","IPv4"]` (dual stack)
The first family you list is used for the legacy `.spec.ClusterIP` field.
The first family you list is used for the legacy `.spec.clusterIP` field.
### Dual-stack Service configuration scenarios
@ -132,13 +132,13 @@ These examples demonstrate the behavior of various dual-stack Service configurat
1. This Service specification explicitly defines `PreferDualStack` in `.spec.ipFamilyPolicy`. When
you create this Service on a dual-stack cluster, Kubernetes assigns both IPv4 and IPv6
addresses for the service. The control plane updates the `.spec` for the Service to record the IP
address assignments. The field `.spec.ClusterIPs` is the primary field, and contains both assigned
IP addresses; `.spec.ClusterIP` is a secondary field with its value calculated from
`.spec.ClusterIPs`.
address assignments. The field `.spec.clusterIPs` is the primary field, and contains both assigned
IP addresses; `.spec.clusterIP` is a secondary field with its value calculated from
`.spec.clusterIPs`.
* For the `.spec.ClusterIP` field, the control plane records the IP address that is from the
* For the `.spec.clusterIP` field, the control plane records the IP address that is from the
same address family as the first service cluster IP range.
* On a single-stack cluster, the `.spec.ClusterIPs` and `.spec.ClusterIP` fields both only list
* On a single-stack cluster, the `.spec.clusterIPs` and `.spec.clusterIP` fields both only list
one address.
* On a cluster with dual-stack enabled, specifying `RequireDualStack` in `.spec.ipFamilyPolicy`
behaves the same as `PreferDualStack`.
@ -147,8 +147,8 @@ These examples demonstrate the behavior of various dual-stack Service configurat
1. This Service specification explicitly defines `IPv6` and `IPv4` in `.spec.ipFamilies` as well
as defining `PreferDualStack` in `.spec.ipFamilyPolicy`. When Kubernetes assigns an IPv6 and
IPv4 address in `.spec.ClusterIPs`, `.spec.ClusterIP` is set to the IPv6 address because that is
the first element in the `.spec.ClusterIPs` array, overriding the default.
IPv4 address in `.spec.clusterIPs`, `.spec.clusterIP` is set to the IPv6 address because that is
the first element in the `.spec.clusterIPs` array, overriding the default.
{{% code_sample file="service/networking/dual-stack-preferred-ipfamilies-svc.yaml" %}}
@ -161,7 +161,7 @@ dual-stack.)
1. When dual-stack is enabled on a cluster, existing Services (whether `IPv4` or `IPv6`) are
configured by the control plane to set `.spec.ipFamilyPolicy` to `SingleStack` and set
`.spec.ipFamilies` to the address family of the existing Service. The existing Service cluster IP
will be stored in `.spec.ClusterIPs`.
will be stored in `.spec.clusterIPs`.
{{% code_sample file="service/networking/dual-stack-default-svc.yaml" %}}
@ -200,7 +200,7 @@ dual-stack.)
[headless Services](/docs/concepts/services-networking/service/#headless-services) with selectors are
configured by the control plane to set `.spec.ipFamilyPolicy` to `SingleStack` and set
`.spec.ipFamilies` to the address family of the first service cluster IP range (configured via the
`--service-cluster-ip-range` flag to the kube-apiserver) even though `.spec.ClusterIP` is set to
`--service-cluster-ip-range` flag to the kube-apiserver) even though `.spec.clusterIP` is set to
`None`.
{{% code_sample file="service/networking/dual-stack-default-svc.yaml" %}}
@ -260,9 +260,9 @@ Services can be changed from single-stack to dual-stack and from dual-stack to s
1. To change a Service from dual-stack to single-stack, change `.spec.ipFamilyPolicy` from
`PreferDualStack` or `RequireDualStack` to `SingleStack`. When you change this Service from
dual-stack to single-stack, Kubernetes retains only the first element in the `.spec.ClusterIPs`
array, and sets `.spec.ClusterIP` to that IP address and sets `.spec.ipFamilies` to the address
family of `.spec.ClusterIPs`.
dual-stack to single-stack, Kubernetes retains only the first element in the `.spec.clusterIPs`
array, and sets `.spec.clusterIP` to that IP address and sets `.spec.ipFamilies` to the address
family of `.spec.clusterIPs`.
### Headless Services without selector