Manage load balancers
- 1 Introduction to load balancers
- 2 Display load balancers
- 3 Create a load balancer
- 4 Manage load balancers with the API
- 5 Edit load balancers
- 6 Add tags to a load balancer
- 7 Edit VMs to assign or unassign to load balancersÂ
- 8 Onboard and synchronize load balancers from public cloud
- 9 Delete or release load balancers
Introduction to load balancers
The load balancer feature aims to simplify the creation of load balancers across all providers in the multi-cloud platform, providing a unified interface.
In AWS, Abiquo supports Application load balancers (see Manage application load balancers) and Classic load balancers (described on this page).Â
Please refer to cloud provider documentation as the definitive guide to the load balancing features.  And remember to check your cloud provider's pricing before you begin.
In vCloud Director, load balancers belong to a public cloud region, not a virtual datacenter. This means that in vCloud Director, you can attach VMs from more than one virtual datacenter to the same load balancer, and these load balancers do not work with private networks, which belong to only one virtual datacenter.
Display load balancers
You can display and manage load balancers in the platform at the level of the virtual datacenter or the location (public cloud region or datacenter).
To display load balancers in virtual datacenters:
Go to Cloud virtual datacenters view
Select a virtual datacenter
Go to Network → Load balancers.
To display load balancers in a region, including those that do not exist in the provider.
Go to Cloud virtual datacenters view
Click the Locations button and select a location
Go to Network → Load balancers
Display load balancers in a cloud locationÂ
Load balancers that do not exist in the provider are displayed in light gray text and you should delete these load balancers.
To display load balancers in an Azure Resource Group:
Go to Cloud virtual datacenters view
Go to Global → Azure → Resource Groups → select a resource group
To display the details of the load balancer, edit the load balancer
Create a load balancer
This document describes how to create a standard load balancer. See also:
Before you begin:
Synchronize your virtual datacenters (including VMs, networks, firewalls, firewall rules, and load balancers)
If required by your provider, create firewalls for your VMs to allow your load balancers to access the VMs
In Azure make sure that your VMs belong to availability sets
Privileges: Manage load balancers, Assign load balancers
To create a load balancer:
Go to Virtual datacenters → select a virtual datacenter → Network → Load balancersÂ
For vCloud, select All virtual datacenters → Network → Load balancers → Region
Click the + add button and complete the following dialogs according to your cloud provider's documentation
Load balancer general information
The following screenshots are from AWS or Azure
Field | Value |
---|---|
Name | The name of the load balancer.
|
Type | In Azure, select the SKU, which can be standard or basic |
Algorithm | See cloud provider documentation for more information |
Resource group | The platform will create the load balancer in the selected resource group |
Addresses |
|
Subnets | In providers that support subnets, the subnets to which the load balancer will connect |
Load balancer routing rules
Field | Value |
---|---|
Common protocols | Select one of the common protocols to load presets |
Protocol in | The incoming protocol to the load balancer. See cloud provider documentation for accepted values. |
Port in | The incoming port to the load balancer. See cloud provider documentation for accepted values. |
Protocol out | The outgoing protocol from the load balancer. |
Port out | The outgoing port from the load balancer |
SSL Certificate | For secure connections (e.g. HTTPS), you can add an SSL certificate.
Select an existing certificate or add a new one. Cannot be used in platform-only load balancers and some providers |
Add | Click Add to save a routing rule for the load balancer |
To delete a routing rule, click the delete button beside the name of the routing rule in the list
Load balancer SSL certificate
Some providers support TLS certificate
Field | Value |
---|---|
Name | Name of the certificate |
Certificate | The certificate contents |
Intermediate certificate | An intermediate certificate can be issued by a provider to support older browsers that may not have all of the trusted root certificates for that provider, so that users will not receive invalid TLS warnings. If you have an intermediate certificate, add it at the same time as the certificate to ensure that a trusted-chain certificate is configured. |
Private key | The RSA private key for the certificate |
Load balancer health check
The health check is optional in some providers.
Field | Value |
---|---|
Common protocols | Select one of the most common protocols to load presets |
Name | Name of the health check |
Protocol | The protocol with which the health check will be performed |
Port | The port to which the health check will be performed |
Path | The server path to ping (for supported protocols) |
Interval (sec) | The interval in seconds between health checks |
Timeout (sec) | The timeout in seconds after which an attempted health check will be considered unsuccessful |
Attempts | The number of attempts before the health check will be considered unsuccessful |
Add | Add the current health check to the load balancer |
Load balancer firewalls
If your provider supports firewalls, to add a firewall to your load balancer, select your firewall from the list of Firewalls that are in your provider.Â
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If a firewall is not on the list, it may not have been properly synchronized. In this case, click Cancel, synchronize firewalls, then start again to create a new load balancer.
Assign load balancer nodes
To assign your load balancer to VMs, drag and drop the VMs from the Available Nodes list into the Attached Nodes list.
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The VMs to be load balanced can be in the same or different virtual appliances in the same virtual datacenter
You can also attach VMs by selecting load balancers when configuring the VM.Â
The platform will display the Status of the load balancer nodes on the Nodes tab, if status information is available from the provider.
You can also check the status using the Abiquo API.
Manage load balancers with the API
API Documentation
For the Abiquo API documentation of this feature, see Abiquo API Resources and the page for this resource LoadBalancersResource.
Edit load balancers
The cloud provider determines which elements of a load balancer that you can modify. Due to different provider support for load balancer features, it may be possible to make modifications in the platform that will later be rejected by the cloud provider, triggering an error. Check your cloud provider documentation for supported modifications.
Add tags to a load balancer
To manage tags for a load balancer, edit the load balancer and add tags as described here.
To add a tag, enter the Key and Value, then click Add.Â
For providers that support tags:
If you have invalid tags, optionally select the checkbox to Create local tags if tags are invalid in the provider
To onboard or update tags with changes from the provider, click the round arrow Synchronize button.
To delete a tag, select the tag, then click the Delete button.
To save your changes, click Save.
Edit VMs to assign or unassign to load balancersÂ
Privileges: Assign load balancers
To assign a VM to a load balancer, select the load balancer from the list.
Onboard and synchronize load balancers from public cloud
When you onboard a VDC from a public cloud provider, the load balancers associated with the VDC and its VMs will be onboarded into the platform.
To access vCloud load balancers, and provider-only load balancers
Go to Virtual datacenters → All virtual datacenters
Go to Network → Load balancers → select region
To synchronize all load balancers in a VDC or region:
Go to Virtual datacenters
Select the VDC or region
Click the arrow synchronize button.
Load balancers that have been deleted directly in the provider are displayed in light gray text. You can edit these load balancers to recreate them in the provider, or delete them.
Delete or release load balancers
To delete a load balancer:
Go to myCloudÂ
In public cloud, depending on the provider, go to Virtual datacenters (AWS, Azure, OCI), Locations (GCP regional), or Global (GCP)
Select a VDC, location, or provider
Go to Network → Load balancers
Select the load balancer
Click the delete button
In public cloud, you can select the checkbox to delete the load balancer only in Abiquo and not in the provider
In public cloud, also delete the target groups
In public cloud, if your enterprise does not have credentials in the provider, then the load balancer will be released (it will be deleted in the platform but it will remain in cloud provider).
In private cloud with NSX-T, you can delete network resources by deleting the virtual datacenters. The platform will automatically remove VMs, virtual appliances, load balancers, public IPs, and firewalls from the virtual datacenter. The firewalls will remain in the enterprise and you can reuse them. When you delete a virtual datacenter, public IPs that are not used by VMs will remain in the provider and the synchronization process will delete them.
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