Name
kf map-route
- Grant an App access to receive traffic from the Route
Synopsis
kf map-route APP_NAME DOMAIN [--hostname HOSTNAME] [--path PATH] [--weight WEIGHT] [flags]
Description
Mapping an App to a Route will cause traffic to be forwarded to the App if the App has instances that are running and healthy.
If multiple Apps are mapped to the same Route they will split traffic between them roughly evenly. Incoming network traffic is handled by multiple gateways which update their routing tables with slight delays and route independently. Because of this, traffic routing may not appear even but it will converge over time.
Examples
kf map-route myapp example.com --hostname myapp # myapp.example.com kf map-route myapp example.com --hostname myapp --weight 2 # myapp.example.com, myapp receives 2x traffic kf map-route --space myspace myapp example.com --hostname myapp # myapp.example.com kf map-route myapp example.com --hostname myapp --path /mypath # myapp.example.com/mypath
Flags
--async
- Don't wait for the action to complete on the server before returning
--destination-port=int32
- Port on the App the route will connect to
-h, --help
- help for map-route
--hostname=string
- Hostname for the route
--path=string
- URL Path for the route
--weight=int32
- Weight for the route (default 1)
Inherited flags
These flags are inherited from parent commands.
--config=string
- Config file (default is $HOME/.kf)
--kubeconfig=string
- Kubectl config file (default is $HOME/.kube/config)
--log-http
- Log HTTP requests to stderr
--space=string
- Space to run the command against. This overrides the currently targeted space