Class Route
- java.lang.Object
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- io.fabric8.openshift.api.model.Route
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- All Implemented Interfaces:
io.fabric8.kubernetes.api.builder.Editable<RouteBuilder>,io.fabric8.kubernetes.api.model.HasMetadata,io.fabric8.kubernetes.api.model.KubernetesResource,io.fabric8.kubernetes.api.model.Namespaced,Serializable
@Generated("io.fabric8.kubernetes.schema.generator.model.ModelGenerator") public class Route extends Object implements io.fabric8.kubernetes.api.builder.Editable<RouteBuilder>, io.fabric8.kubernetes.api.model.HasMetadata, io.fabric8.kubernetes.api.model.Namespaced
A route allows developers to expose services through an HTTP(S) aware load balancing and proxy layer via a public DNS entry. The route may further specify TLS options and a certificate, or specify a public CNAME that the router should also accept for HTTP and HTTPS traffic. An administrator typically configures their router to be visible outside the cluster firewall, and may also add additional security, caching, or traffic controls on the service content. Routers usually talk directly to the service endpoints.Once a route is created, the `host` field may not be changed. Generally, routers use the oldest route with a given host when resolving conflicts.
Routers are subject to additional customization and may support additional controls via the annotations field.
Because administrators may configure multiple routers, the route status field is used to return information to clients about the names and states of the route under each router. If a client chooses a duplicate name, for instance, the route status conditions are used to indicate the route cannot be chosen.
To enable HTTP/2 ALPN on a route it requires a custom (non-wildcard) certificate. This prevents connection coalescing by clients, notably web browsers. We do not support HTTP/2 ALPN on routes that use the default certificate because of the risk of connection re-use/coalescing. Routes that do not have their own custom certificate will not be HTTP/2 ALPN-enabled on either the frontend or the backend.
Compatibility level 1: Stable within a major release for a minimum of 12 months or 3 minor releases (whichever is longer).
- See Also:
- Serialized Form
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Method Summary
All Methods Instance Methods Concrete Methods Modifier and Type Method Description RouteBuilderedit()Map<String,Object>getAdditionalProperties()StringgetApiVersion()APIVersion defines the versioned schema of this representation of an object.StringgetKind()Kind is a string value representing the REST resource this object represents.io.fabric8.kubernetes.api.model.ObjectMetagetMetadata()A route allows developers to expose services through an HTTP(S) aware load balancing and proxy layer via a public DNS entry.RouteSpecgetSpec()A route allows developers to expose services through an HTTP(S) aware load balancing and proxy layer via a public DNS entry.RouteStatusgetStatus()A route allows developers to expose services through an HTTP(S) aware load balancing and proxy layer via a public DNS entry.voidsetAdditionalProperties(Map<String,Object> additionalProperties)voidsetAdditionalProperty(String name, Object value)voidsetApiVersion(String apiVersion)APIVersion defines the versioned schema of this representation of an object.voidsetKind(String kind)Kind is a string value representing the REST resource this object represents.voidsetMetadata(io.fabric8.kubernetes.api.model.ObjectMeta metadata)A route allows developers to expose services through an HTTP(S) aware load balancing and proxy layer via a public DNS entry.voidsetSpec(RouteSpec spec)A route allows developers to expose services through an HTTP(S) aware load balancing and proxy layer via a public DNS entry.voidsetStatus(RouteStatus status)A route allows developers to expose services through an HTTP(S) aware load balancing and proxy layer via a public DNS entry.RouteBuildertoBuilder()-
Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object
clone, equals, finalize, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString, wait, wait, wait
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Methods inherited from interface io.fabric8.kubernetes.api.model.HasMetadata
addFinalizer, addOwnerReference, addOwnerReference, getFinalizers, getFullResourceName, getOwnerReferenceFor, getOwnerReferenceFor, getPlural, getSingular, hasFinalizer, hasOwnerReferenceFor, hasOwnerReferenceFor, initNameAndNamespaceFrom, isFinalizerValid, isMarkedForDeletion, optionalMetadata, removeFinalizer, removeOwnerReference, removeOwnerReference
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Constructor Detail
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Route
public Route()
No args constructor for use in serialization
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Route
public Route(String apiVersion, String kind, io.fabric8.kubernetes.api.model.ObjectMeta metadata, RouteSpec spec, RouteStatus status)
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Method Detail
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getApiVersion
public String getApiVersion()
APIVersion defines the versioned schema of this representation of an object. Servers should convert recognized schemas to the latest internal value, and may reject unrecognized values. More info: https://git.k8s.io/community/contributors/devel/sig-architecture/api-conventions.md#resources- Specified by:
getApiVersionin interfaceio.fabric8.kubernetes.api.model.HasMetadata
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setApiVersion
public void setApiVersion(String apiVersion)
APIVersion defines the versioned schema of this representation of an object. Servers should convert recognized schemas to the latest internal value, and may reject unrecognized values. More info: https://git.k8s.io/community/contributors/devel/sig-architecture/api-conventions.md#resources- Specified by:
setApiVersionin interfaceio.fabric8.kubernetes.api.model.HasMetadata
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getKind
public String getKind()
Kind is a string value representing the REST resource this object represents. Servers may infer this from the endpoint the client submits requests to. Cannot be updated. In CamelCase. More info: https://git.k8s.io/community/contributors/devel/sig-architecture/api-conventions.md#types-kinds- Specified by:
getKindin interfaceio.fabric8.kubernetes.api.model.HasMetadata
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setKind
public void setKind(String kind)
Kind is a string value representing the REST resource this object represents. Servers may infer this from the endpoint the client submits requests to. Cannot be updated. In CamelCase. More info: https://git.k8s.io/community/contributors/devel/sig-architecture/api-conventions.md#types-kinds
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getMetadata
public io.fabric8.kubernetes.api.model.ObjectMeta getMetadata()
A route allows developers to expose services through an HTTP(S) aware load balancing and proxy layer via a public DNS entry. The route may further specify TLS options and a certificate, or specify a public CNAME that the router should also accept for HTTP and HTTPS traffic. An administrator typically configures their router to be visible outside the cluster firewall, and may also add additional security, caching, or traffic controls on the service content. Routers usually talk directly to the service endpoints.Once a route is created, the `host` field may not be changed. Generally, routers use the oldest route with a given host when resolving conflicts.
Routers are subject to additional customization and may support additional controls via the annotations field.
Because administrators may configure multiple routers, the route status field is used to return information to clients about the names and states of the route under each router. If a client chooses a duplicate name, for instance, the route status conditions are used to indicate the route cannot be chosen.
To enable HTTP/2 ALPN on a route it requires a custom (non-wildcard) certificate. This prevents connection coalescing by clients, notably web browsers. We do not support HTTP/2 ALPN on routes that use the default certificate because of the risk of connection re-use/coalescing. Routes that do not have their own custom certificate will not be HTTP/2 ALPN-enabled on either the frontend or the backend.
Compatibility level 1: Stable within a major release for a minimum of 12 months or 3 minor releases (whichever is longer).
- Specified by:
getMetadatain interfaceio.fabric8.kubernetes.api.model.HasMetadata
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setMetadata
public void setMetadata(io.fabric8.kubernetes.api.model.ObjectMeta metadata)
A route allows developers to expose services through an HTTP(S) aware load balancing and proxy layer via a public DNS entry. The route may further specify TLS options and a certificate, or specify a public CNAME that the router should also accept for HTTP and HTTPS traffic. An administrator typically configures their router to be visible outside the cluster firewall, and may also add additional security, caching, or traffic controls on the service content. Routers usually talk directly to the service endpoints.Once a route is created, the `host` field may not be changed. Generally, routers use the oldest route with a given host when resolving conflicts.
Routers are subject to additional customization and may support additional controls via the annotations field.
Because administrators may configure multiple routers, the route status field is used to return information to clients about the names and states of the route under each router. If a client chooses a duplicate name, for instance, the route status conditions are used to indicate the route cannot be chosen.
To enable HTTP/2 ALPN on a route it requires a custom (non-wildcard) certificate. This prevents connection coalescing by clients, notably web browsers. We do not support HTTP/2 ALPN on routes that use the default certificate because of the risk of connection re-use/coalescing. Routes that do not have their own custom certificate will not be HTTP/2 ALPN-enabled on either the frontend or the backend.
Compatibility level 1: Stable within a major release for a minimum of 12 months or 3 minor releases (whichever is longer).
- Specified by:
setMetadatain interfaceio.fabric8.kubernetes.api.model.HasMetadata
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getSpec
public RouteSpec getSpec()
A route allows developers to expose services through an HTTP(S) aware load balancing and proxy layer via a public DNS entry. The route may further specify TLS options and a certificate, or specify a public CNAME that the router should also accept for HTTP and HTTPS traffic. An administrator typically configures their router to be visible outside the cluster firewall, and may also add additional security, caching, or traffic controls on the service content. Routers usually talk directly to the service endpoints.Once a route is created, the `host` field may not be changed. Generally, routers use the oldest route with a given host when resolving conflicts.
Routers are subject to additional customization and may support additional controls via the annotations field.
Because administrators may configure multiple routers, the route status field is used to return information to clients about the names and states of the route under each router. If a client chooses a duplicate name, for instance, the route status conditions are used to indicate the route cannot be chosen.
To enable HTTP/2 ALPN on a route it requires a custom (non-wildcard) certificate. This prevents connection coalescing by clients, notably web browsers. We do not support HTTP/2 ALPN on routes that use the default certificate because of the risk of connection re-use/coalescing. Routes that do not have their own custom certificate will not be HTTP/2 ALPN-enabled on either the frontend or the backend.
Compatibility level 1: Stable within a major release for a minimum of 12 months or 3 minor releases (whichever is longer).
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setSpec
public void setSpec(RouteSpec spec)
A route allows developers to expose services through an HTTP(S) aware load balancing and proxy layer via a public DNS entry. The route may further specify TLS options and a certificate, or specify a public CNAME that the router should also accept for HTTP and HTTPS traffic. An administrator typically configures their router to be visible outside the cluster firewall, and may also add additional security, caching, or traffic controls on the service content. Routers usually talk directly to the service endpoints.Once a route is created, the `host` field may not be changed. Generally, routers use the oldest route with a given host when resolving conflicts.
Routers are subject to additional customization and may support additional controls via the annotations field.
Because administrators may configure multiple routers, the route status field is used to return information to clients about the names and states of the route under each router. If a client chooses a duplicate name, for instance, the route status conditions are used to indicate the route cannot be chosen.
To enable HTTP/2 ALPN on a route it requires a custom (non-wildcard) certificate. This prevents connection coalescing by clients, notably web browsers. We do not support HTTP/2 ALPN on routes that use the default certificate because of the risk of connection re-use/coalescing. Routes that do not have their own custom certificate will not be HTTP/2 ALPN-enabled on either the frontend or the backend.
Compatibility level 1: Stable within a major release for a minimum of 12 months or 3 minor releases (whichever is longer).
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getStatus
public RouteStatus getStatus()
A route allows developers to expose services through an HTTP(S) aware load balancing and proxy layer via a public DNS entry. The route may further specify TLS options and a certificate, or specify a public CNAME that the router should also accept for HTTP and HTTPS traffic. An administrator typically configures their router to be visible outside the cluster firewall, and may also add additional security, caching, or traffic controls on the service content. Routers usually talk directly to the service endpoints.Once a route is created, the `host` field may not be changed. Generally, routers use the oldest route with a given host when resolving conflicts.
Routers are subject to additional customization and may support additional controls via the annotations field.
Because administrators may configure multiple routers, the route status field is used to return information to clients about the names and states of the route under each router. If a client chooses a duplicate name, for instance, the route status conditions are used to indicate the route cannot be chosen.
To enable HTTP/2 ALPN on a route it requires a custom (non-wildcard) certificate. This prevents connection coalescing by clients, notably web browsers. We do not support HTTP/2 ALPN on routes that use the default certificate because of the risk of connection re-use/coalescing. Routes that do not have their own custom certificate will not be HTTP/2 ALPN-enabled on either the frontend or the backend.
Compatibility level 1: Stable within a major release for a minimum of 12 months or 3 minor releases (whichever is longer).
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setStatus
public void setStatus(RouteStatus status)
A route allows developers to expose services through an HTTP(S) aware load balancing and proxy layer via a public DNS entry. The route may further specify TLS options and a certificate, or specify a public CNAME that the router should also accept for HTTP and HTTPS traffic. An administrator typically configures their router to be visible outside the cluster firewall, and may also add additional security, caching, or traffic controls on the service content. Routers usually talk directly to the service endpoints.Once a route is created, the `host` field may not be changed. Generally, routers use the oldest route with a given host when resolving conflicts.
Routers are subject to additional customization and may support additional controls via the annotations field.
Because administrators may configure multiple routers, the route status field is used to return information to clients about the names and states of the route under each router. If a client chooses a duplicate name, for instance, the route status conditions are used to indicate the route cannot be chosen.
To enable HTTP/2 ALPN on a route it requires a custom (non-wildcard) certificate. This prevents connection coalescing by clients, notably web browsers. We do not support HTTP/2 ALPN on routes that use the default certificate because of the risk of connection re-use/coalescing. Routes that do not have their own custom certificate will not be HTTP/2 ALPN-enabled on either the frontend or the backend.
Compatibility level 1: Stable within a major release for a minimum of 12 months or 3 minor releases (whichever is longer).
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edit
public RouteBuilder edit()
- Specified by:
editin interfaceio.fabric8.kubernetes.api.builder.Editable<RouteBuilder>
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toBuilder
public RouteBuilder toBuilder()
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