If you install Longhorn on a Kubernetes cluster with kubectl or Helm, you will need to create an Ingress controller to allow external traffic to reach the Longhorn UI.

Authentication is not enabled by default for kubectl and Helm installations. In these steps, you’ll learn how to create an Ingress controller with basic authentication.

  1. Create a basic auth file auth. It’s important the file generated is named auth (actually - that the secret has a key data.auth), otherwise the ingress-controller returns a 503.

    1. $ USER=<USERNAME_HERE>; PASSWORD=<PASSWORD_HERE>; echo "${USER}:$(openssl passwd -stdin -apr1 <<< ${PASSWORD})" >> auth
  2. Create a secret:

    1. $ kubectl -n longhorn-system create secret generic basic-auth --from-file=auth
  3. Create an NGINX Ingress controller manifest longhorn-ingress.yml :

    1. apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1beta1
    2. kind: Ingress
    3. metadata:
    4. name: longhorn-ingress
    5. namespace: longhorn-system
    6. annotations:
    7. # type of authentication
    8. nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/auth-type: basic
    9. # name of the secret that contains the user/password definitions
    10. nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/auth-secret: basic-auth
    11. # message to display with an appropriate context why the authentication is required
    12. nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/auth-realm: 'Authentication Required '
    13. spec:
    14. rules:
    15. - http:
    16. paths:
    17. - path: /
    18. backend:
    19. serviceName: longhorn-frontend
    20. servicePort: 80
  4. Create the ingress controller:

    1. $ kubectl -n longhorn-system apply -f longhorn-ingress.yml

Additional Steps for AWS EKS Kubernetes Clusters

You will need to create an ELB (Elastic Load Balancer) to expose the NGINX Ingress controller to the Internet. Additional costs may apply.

  1. Create pre-requisite resources according to the NGINX Ingress Controller documentation.

  2. Create an ELB by following these steps.