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This article explains how to configure multiple listeners in Kubernetes.

Multiple listeners allow to connect with different protocols and bind listeners to the specific network interface. You can find more details about how multiple listeners configured in HiveMq

Here we are taking the example of configuring TLS and Non-TLS clients to connect broker via Kubernetes.

Instructions

Step 1:

Add two ports (TLS and non-TLS) via the values.yaml file

Typically 1883 for plain TCP and 8883 for 8883 TLS secured TCP

Step 2:

After adding these ports next step is to have service(s) exposing those ports to the world

You can do this in two ways,

  1. Expose the ports directly via the use of the K8s operator patch. (You can export these configurations from full-values.yaml)

  ports:
    - name: "mqtt"
      port: 1883
      expose: true
      patch:
        - '[{"op":"add","path":"/spec/selector/hivemq.com~1node-offline","value":"false"},{"op":"add","path":"/metadata/annotations","value":{"service.spec.externalTrafficPolicy":"Local"}}]'
        # If you want Kubernetes to expose the MQTT port to external traffic
        - '[{"op":"add","path":"/spec/type","value":"LoadBalancer"}]'
    - name: "mqtt-tls"
      port: 8883
      expose: true
      patch:
        - '[{"op":"add","path":"/spec/selector/hivemq.com~1node-offline","value":"false"},{"op":"add","path":"/metadata/annotations","value":{"service.spec.externalTrafficPolicy":"Local"}}]'
        # If you want Kubernetes to expose the MQTT port to external traffic
        - '[{"op":"add","path":"/spec/type","value":"LoadBalancer"}]'

This will create two separate services for both the ports with the name you have given in configuration i.e mqtt and mqtt-tls

2. Create a “regular” service object to expose them instead of doing it by operator

  • set expose: false for the ports in values.yaml 

ports:
    - name: "mqtt"
      port: 1883
      expose: false
    - name: "mqtt-tls"
      port: 8883
      expose: false
  • Next, create a service to expose these ports. Add configurations in service.yaml

apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
  name: service-name
  labels:
    app: hivemq
    hivemq-cluster: my-cluster
spec:
  selector:
    hivemq-cluster: my-cluster
spec:
  ports:
  - name: mqtt
    port: 1883
    targetPort: 1883
  - name: mqtt-tls
    port: 8883
    targetPort: 8883
  selector:
    app: hivemq
  type: LoadBalancer

Your cluster name is the one you have used during HiveMQ deployment while installing the helm chart. 

For example: 

helm upgrade --install -f values.yaml hivemq-ss hivemq/hivemq-operator

here hivemq-ss is the cluster name

next step is to apply this service manually i.e 

kubectl apply -f service.yml

You can also verify if the service is up and running by checking logs.

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