HTTP/3 configuration
HTTP/3 in Emissary
HTTP/3 is the third version of the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP). It is built on the QUIC network protocol rather than Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) like previous versions.
The changes and challenges of HTTP/3
Since the QUIC network protocol is built on UDP, most clients will require Emissary to advertise its support for HTTP/3 using the alt-svc
response header. This header is added to the response of the HTTP/2 and HTTP/1.1 connections. When the client sees the alt-svc
it can choose to upgrade to HTTP/3 and connect to Emissary using the QUIC protocol.
QUIC requires Transport Layer Security (TLS) version 1.3 to communicate. Otherwise, Emissary will fall back to HTTP/2 or HTTP/1.1, both of which support other TLS versions if client does not support TLS v1.3. Due to this restriction, some clients also require valid certificatesand will not upgrade to HTTP/3 traffic with self-signed certificates.
Because HTTP/3 adoption is still growing and and changing, the Emissary team will continue update this documentation as features change and mature.
Setting up HTTP/3 with Emissary
To configure Emissary for HTTP/3 you need to do the following:
- Configure
Listener
resources. - Configure a
Host
. - Have a valid certificate.
- Setup an external load balancer.
Configuring the Listener resources
To make Emissary listen for HTTP/3 connections over the QUIC network protocol, you need to configure a Listener
with TLS
, HTTP
, and UDP
configured within protocolStack
.
protocolStack
elements need to be entered in the specific order of TLS, HTTP, UDP.
The Listener
configured for HTTP/3 can be bound to the same address and port (0.0.0.0:8443
) as the Listener
that supports HTTP/2 and HTTP/1.1. This is not required, but it allows Emissary to inject the default alt-svc: h3=":443"; ma=86400, h3-29=":443"; ma=86400
header into the responses returned over the TCP connection with no additional configuration needed. Most clients such as browsers require the alt-svc
header to upgrade to HTTP/3.
alt-svc: h3=":443"; ma=86400, h3-29=":443"; ma=86400
means that the external load balancer must be configured to accept traffic on port :443
for the client to upgrade the request.
# This is a standard Listener that leverages TCP to serve HTTP/2 and HTTP/1.1 traffic.
# It is bound to the same address and port (0.0.0.0:8443) as the UDP listener.
apiVersion: getambassador.io/v3alpha1
kind: Listener
metadata:
name: $productDeploymentName$-https-listener
namespace: $productNamespace$
spec:
port: 8443
protocol: HTTPS
securityModel: XFP
hostBinding:
namespace:
from: ALL
---
# This is a Listener that leverages UDP and HTTP to serve HTTP/3 traffic.
# NOTE: Raw UDP traffic is not supported. UDP and HTTP must be used together.
apiVersion: getambassador.io/v3alpha1
kind: Listener
metadata:
name: $productDeploymentName$-https-listener-udp
namespace: $productNamespace$
spec:
port: 8443
# Order is important here. HTTP is required.
protocolStack:
- TLS
- HTTP
- UDP
securityModel: XFP
hostBinding:
namespace:
from: ALL
Configuring the Host resource
Because the QUIC network requires TLS, the certificate needs to be valid so the client can upgrade a connection to HTTP/3. See the Host documentation for more information on how to configure TLS for a Host
.
Certificate verification
Clients can only upgrade to an HTTP/3 connection with a valid certificate. If the client won’t upgrade to HTTP/3, verify that you have a valid TLS certificate and that your client can speak TLS v1.3. Your Host
resource should be configured similar to the following:
apiVersion: getambassador.io/v3alpha1
kind: Host
metadata:
name: my-domain-host
spec:
hostname: your-hostname
# acme isn't required but just shown as an example of how to manage a valid TLS cert
acmeProvider:
email: your-email@example.com
authority: https://acme-v02.api.letsencrypt.org/directory
tls:
# QUIC requires TLS v1.3 version. Verify your client supports it.
min_tls_version: v1.3
# Either protocol can be upgraded, but http/2 is recommended.
alpn_protocols: h2,http/1.1
External load balancers
The two most common service types to expose traffic outside of a Kubernetes cluster are:
LoadBalancer
: A load balancer controller generates and manages the cloud provider-specific external load balancer.NodePort
: The platform administrator has to manually set up things like the external load balancer, firewall rules, and health checks.
LoadBalancer setup
The ideal setup would be to configure a single service of type LoadBalancer
, but this comes with some current restrictions:
- You need version 1.24 or later of Kubernetes with the
MixedProtocolLBService
feature enabled. - Your cloud service provider needs to support the creation of an external load balancer with mixed protocol types (TCP/UDP), port reuse, and port forwarding. Support for Kubernetes feature flags may vary between cloud service providers. Refer to your provider’s documentation to see if they support this scenario.
An example LoadBalancer
configuration that fits the criteria listed above:
# note: extra fields such as labels and selectors removed for clarity
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: $productDeploymentName$
namespace: $productNamespace$
spec:
ports:
- name: http
port: 80
targetPort: 8080
protocol: TCP
- name: https
port: 443
targetPort: 8443
protocol: TCP
- name: http3
port: 443
targetPort: 8443
protocol: UDP
type: LoadBalancer
Cloud service provider setup
Once you’ve completed the steps above, you need to configure HTTP/3 support through your cloud service provider. The configuration processes for each provider can be found here:
- HTTP/3 setup for Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS)
- HTTP/3 setup for Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS)
- HTTP/3 setup for Google Kubernetes Engine (GKE)
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