DocsTelepresence2.2Telepresence Architecture
Telepresence Architecture
Telepresence CLI
The Telepresence CLI orchestrates all the moving parts: it starts the Telepresence Daemon, installs the Traffic Manager in your cluster, authenticates against Ambassador Cloud and configure all those elements to communicate with one another.
Telepresence Daemon
The Telepresence Daemon runs on a developer's workstation and is its main point of communication with the cluster's network. All requests from and to the cluster go through the Daemon, which communicates with the Traffic Manager.
Traffic Manager
The Traffic Manager is the central point of communication between Traffic Agents in the cluster and Telepresence Daemons
on developer workstations, proxying all relevant inbound and outbound traffic and tracking active intercepts. When
Telepresence is run with either the connect
, intercept
, or list
commands, the Telepresence CLI first checks the
cluster for the Traffic Manager deployment, and if missing it creates it.
When an intercept gets created with a Preview URL, the Traffic Manager will establish a connection with Ambassador Cloud so that Preview URL requests can be routed to the cluster. This allows Ambassador Cloud to reach the Traffic Manager without requiring the Traffic Manager to be publicly exposed. Once the Traffic Manager receives a request from a Preview URL, it forwards the request to the ingress service specified at the Preview URL creation.
Traffic Agent
The Traffic Agent is a sidecar container that facilitates intercepts. When an intercept is started, the Traffic Agent
container is injected into the workload's pod(s). You can see the Traffic Agent's status by running kubectl describe
pod <pod-name>
.
Depending on the type of intercept that gets created, the Traffic Agent will either route the incoming request to the Traffic Manager so that it gets routed to a developer's workstation, or it will pass it along to the container in the pod usually handling requests on that port.
Ambassador Cloud
Ambassador Cloud enables Preview URLs by generating random ephemeral domain names and routing requests received on those domains from authorized users to the appropriate Traffic Manager.
Ambassador Cloud also lets users manage their Preview URLs: making them publicly accessible, seeing users who have accessed them and deleting them.
Changes from Service Preview
Using Ambassador's previous offering, Service Preview, the Traffic Agent had to be manually added to a pod by an annotation. This is no longer required as the Traffic Agent is automatically injected when an intercept is started.
Service Preview also started an intercept via edgectl intercept
. The edgectl
CLI is no longer required to intercept
as this functionality has been moved to the Telepresence CLI.
For both the Traffic Manager and Traffic Agents, configuring Kubernetes ClusterRoles and ClusterRoleBindings is not required as it was in Service Preview. Instead, the user running Telepresence must already have sufficient permissions in the cluster to add and modify deployments in the cluster.