> ## Documentation Index
> Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://ngrok.com/docs/llms.txt
> Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

# Kubernetes ingress to services hosted on EKS

> Learn how to get started running the ngrok Kubernetes Operator on AWS EKS.

This guide explains how to run the ngrok Kubernetes Operator on AWS EKS to add secure ingress to your services.

The [ngrok Kubernetes Operator](https://github.com/ngrok/ngrok-operator) is the official open-source controller for adding public and secure ingress traffic to your k8s services.
It works with an AWS EKS Kubernetes cluster to provide ingress to your services as long as the cluster has outbound access to the ngrok service.

## What you'll need

* An AWS EKS cluster.
* An ngrok account.
* kubectl and Helm 3.0.0+ installed on your local workstation.
* The [ngrok Kubernetes Operator](/k8s/) installed on your cluster.
* A reserved domain from the ngrok [dashboard](https://dashboard.ngrok.com/domains) or [API](/api-reference/reserveddomains/list); this guide refers to it as `<NGROK_DOMAIN>`.

## Ensure `kubectl` can speak with your cluster

With an AWS EKS cluster, authentication for `kubectl` uses a credential helper.
To deploy the ngrok Kubernetes Operator, ensure you can use the `aws` CLI and that the credential helper is available.

Recent versions of `eksctl` rely on the `aws eks get-token` command, which requires the `aws` CLI to be at least version `1.16.156`.

Ensure that you have the `aws` CLI installed and configured with your AWS credentials.
You can confirm this works and you're authenticated correctly by running the following command:

```bash theme={null}
aws --version
aws sts get-caller-identity
```

If this works, you can now request a kubeconfig:

```bash theme={null}
# This will merge the cluster into your $KUBECONFIG or ~/.kube/config
aws eks update-kubeconfig --region <region-code> --name <my-cluster>

# To keep your kubeconfig isolated, use:
aws eks update-kubeconfig --kubeconfig kubeconfig --region <region-code> --name <my-cluster>
export KUBECONFIG=$(pwd)/kubeconfig
```

## Install a sample application and Kubernetes ingress

Create a manifest file (for example `ngrok-manifest.yaml`) with the following contents.
This deploys the tinyllama demo LLM application from [ngrok-samples/tinyllama](https://github.com/ngrok-samples/tinyllama).
You will need to replace the `NGROK_DOMAIN` on line 50 with your own custom value.
This is the URL you will use to access your service from anywhere.
If you're on a free account, it must be on a static subdomain which you can claim by logging into your account and following the instructions on the claim static subdomain banner.
For paid accounts, you can use a custom domain or a subdomain of `ngrok.app` or `ngrok.dev` (for example, `username-loves-ingress.ngrok.app` or `k8s.example.com`).

```yaml showLineNumbers theme={null}
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
  name: tinyllama
spec:
  ports:
    - name: http
      port: 80
      targetPort: 8080
  selector:
    app: tinyllama
---
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
  name: tinyllama
spec:
  replicas: 1
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: tinyllama
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: tinyllama
    spec:
      containers:
        - name: tinyllama
          image: ghcr.io/ngrok-samples/tinyllama:main
          ports:
            - name: http
              containerPort: 8080
---
# Configuration for ngrok's Kubernetes Operator
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
  name: tinyllama-ingress
  namespace: default
spec:
  ingressClassName: ngrok
  rules:
    - host: <NGROK_DOMAIN>
      http:
        paths:
          - path: /
            pathType: Prefix
            backend:
              service:
                name: tinyllama
                port:
                  number: 80
```

Apply the manifest file to your cluster.

```bash theme={null}
kubectl apply -f ngrok-manifest.yaml
```

<Note>
  **Troubleshooting:** If you get an error when applying the manifest, double-check that you've updated the `NGROK_DOMAIN` value and try again.
</Note>

Access your ingress URL using the subdomain you chose in the manifest (for example, `https://my-awesome-k8s-cluster.ngrok.app`) to confirm the tinyllama app is accessible from the internet.

## Add security to your app

With the [Traffic Policy system](/traffic-policy/) and the [`oauth` action](/traffic-policy/actions/oauth), ngrok manages OAuth protection entirely at ngrok.
ngrok's network authenticates and authorizes all requests before allowing ingress and access to your endpoint, meaning you don't need to add any additional services to your cluster, or alter any routes.

To enable the `oauth` action, you'll create a new `NgrokTrafficPolicy` custom resource and apply it to your entire `Ingress` with an annotation.
You can apply the policy to just a specific backend or as the default backend for an `Ingress`.
See the documentation on using the [Operator with Ingresses](/k8s/guides/using-ingresses/#using-ngroktrafficpolicy-with-ingress).

Edit your existing `ngrok-manifest.yaml` manifest with the following, leaving the `Service` and `Deployment` as they were.
Note the new `annotations` field and the `NgrokTrafficPolicy` CR.

```yaml theme={null}
 ...
---
# Configuration for ngrok's Kubernetes Operator
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
  name: tinyllama-ingress
  namespace: default
  annotations:
    k8s.ngrok.com/traffic-policy: oauth
spec:
  ingressClassName: ngrok
  rules:
    - host: <NGROK_DOMAIN>
      http:
        paths:
          - path: /
            pathType: Prefix
            backend:
              service:
                name: tinyllama
                port:
                  number: 80
---
# Traffic Policy configuration for OAuth
apiVersion: ngrok.k8s.ngrok.com/v1alpha1
kind: NgrokTrafficPolicy
metadata:
  name: oauth
  namespace: default
spec:
   policy:
     on_http_request:
       - type: oauth
         config:
           provider: google
```

Re-apply your `ngrok-manifest.yaml` configuration.

```bash theme={null}
kubectl apply -f ngrok-manifest.yaml
```

When you open your demo app again, you'll be asked to log in via Google.
That's a start, but what if you want to authenticate only yourself or colleagues?

You can use [expressions](/traffic-policy/how-it-works#expressions) and [CEL interpolation](/traffic-policy/how-it-works#cel-interpolation) to filter out and reject OAuth logins that don't contain `example.com`.
Update the `NgrokTrafficPolicy` portion of your manifest after changing `example.com` to your domain.

```yaml theme={null}
# Traffic Policy configuration for OAuth
apiVersion: ngrok.k8s.ngrok.com/v1alpha1
kind: NgrokTrafficPolicy
metadata:
  name: oauth
  namespace: default
spec:
  policy:
    on_http_request:
      - type: oauth
        config:
          provider: google
      - expressions:
          - "!actions.ngrok.oauth.identity.email.endsWith('@example.com')"
        actions:
          - type: custom-response
            config:
              body: Hey, no auth for you ${actions.ngrok.oauth.identity.name}!
              status_code: 400
```

Check out your deployed tinyllama app once again.
If you log in with an email that doesn't match your domain, ngrok rejects your request.
