Host DNS
Talos Linux starting with 1.7.0 provides a caching DNS resolver for host workloads (including host networking pods). Host DNS resolver is enabled by default for clusters created with Talos 1.7, and it can be enabled manually on upgrade.
Enabling Host DNS
Use the following machine configuration patch to enable host DNS resolver:
machine:
features:
hostDNS:
enabled: true
Host DNS can be disabled by setting enabled: false
as well.
Operations
When enabled, Talos Linux starts a DNS caching server on the host, listening on address 127.0.0.53:53
(both TCP and UDP protocols).
The host /etc/resolv.conf
file is rewritten to point to the host DNS server:
$ talosctl read /etc/resolv.conf
nameserver 127.0.0.53
All host-based workloads will use the host DNS server for name resolution. Host DNS server forwards requests to the upstream DNS servers, which are either acquired automatically (DHCP, platform sources, kernel args), or specified in the machine configuration.
The upstream DNS servers can be observed with:
$ talosctl get resolvers
NODE NAMESPACE TYPE ID VERSION RESOLVERS
172.20.0.2 network ResolverStatus resolvers 2 ["8.8.8.8","1.1.1.1"]
Logs of the host DNS resolver can be queried with:
talosctl logs dns-resolve-cache
Upstream server status can be observed with:
$ talosctl get dnsupstream
NODE NAMESPACE TYPE ID VERSION HEALTHY ADDRESS
172.20.0.2 network DNSUpstream 1.1.1.1 1 true 1.1.1.1:53
172.20.0.2 network DNSUpstream 8.8.8.8 1 true 8.8.8.8:53
Forwarding kube-dns
to Host DNS
Note: This feature is enabled by default for new clusters created with Talos 1.8.0 and later.
When host DNS is enabled, by default, kube-dns
service (CoreDNS
in Kubernetes) uses host DNS server to resolve external names.
This way the cache is shared between the host DNS and kube-dns
.
Talos allows forwarding kube-dns
to the host DNS resolver to be disabled with:
machine:
features:
hostDNS:
enabled: true
forwardKubeDNSToHost: false
This configuration should be applied to all nodes in the cluster, if applied after cluster creation, restart coredns
pods in Kubernetes to pick up changes.
When forwardKubeDNSToHost
is enabled, Talos Linux allocates IP address 169.254.116.108
for the host DNS server, and kube-dns
service is configured to use this IP address as the upstream DNS server:
This way kube-dns
service forwards all DNS requests to the host DNS server, and the cache is shared between the host and kube-dns
.
Resolving Talos Cluster Member Names
Host DNS can be configured to resolve Talos cluster member names to IP addresses, so that the host can communicate with the cluster members by name. Sometimes machine hostnames are already resolvable by the upstream DNS, but this might not always be the case.
Enabling the feature:
machine:
features:
hostDNS:
enabled: true
resolveMemberNames: true
When enabled, Talos Linux uses discovery data to resolve Talos cluster member names to IP addresses:
$ talosctl get members
NODE NAMESPACE TYPE ID VERSION HOSTNAME MACHINE TYPE OS ADDRESSES
172.20.0.2 cluster Member talos-default-controlplane-1 1 talos-default-controlplane-1 controlplane Talos (v1.10.0-alpha.0) ["172.20.0.2"]
172.20.0.2 cluster Member talos-default-worker-1 1 talos-default-worker-1 worker Talos (v1.10.0-alpha.0) ["172.20.0.3"]
With the example output above, talos-default-worker-1
name will resolve to 127.0.0.3
.
Example usage:
talosctl -n talos-default-worker-1 version
When combined with forwardKubeDNSToHost
, kube-dns
service will also resolve Talos cluster member names to IP addresses.