A container tunnel network creates a separate network plane for containers by using tunnel encapsulation on the host network plane. The container tunnel network of a CCE cluster uses VXLAN for tunnel encapsulation and Open vSwitch as the virtual switch backend. VXLAN is a protocol that encapsulates Ethernet packets into UDP packets to transmit them through tunnels. Open vSwitch is an open-source virtual switch software that provides functions such as network isolation and data forwarding.

In a cluster using the container tunnel model, the communication paths between pods on the same node and between pods on different nodes are different.
Advantages
Disadvantages
The container tunnel network allocates container IP addresses according to the following rules:

Maximum number of nodes that can be created in the cluster using the container tunnel network = Number of IP addresses in the container CIDR block/Size of the IP CIDR block allocated to the node by the container CIDR block at a time (16 by default)
For example, if the container CIDR block is 172.16.0.0/16, the number of IP addresses is 65536. The mask of the container CIDR block allocated to a node is 28. That is, a total of 16 container IP addresses are allocated each time. Therefore, a maximum of 4096 (65536/16) nodes can be created. This is an extreme case. If 4096 nodes are created, a maximum of 16 pods can be created for each node because only a CIDR block with 16 IP addresses is allocated to each node. The number of nodes that can be added to a cluster is also determined by the available IP addresses in the node subnet and the scale of the cluster.
As explained in Cluster Network Structure, network addresses in a cluster are divided into the cluster network, container network, and service network. When planning network addresses, consider the following factors:
The following is an example of creating a workload in a cluster using the container tunnel network model:
Create the deployment.yaml file. The following shows an example:
kind: Deployment
apiVersion: apps/v1
metadata:
name: example
namespace: default
spec:
replicas: 4
selector:
matchLabels:
app: example
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: example
spec:
containers:
- name: container-0
image: 'nginx:perl'
resources:
limits:
cpu: 250m
memory: 512Mi
requests:
cpu: 250m
memory: 512Mi
imagePullSecrets:
- name: default-secret
Create the workload.
kubectl apply -f deployment.yaml
kubectl get pod -owide
Command output:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE IP NODE NOMINATED NODE READINESS GATES example-5bdc5699b7-5rvq4 1/1 Running 0 3m28s 10.0.0.20 192.168.0.42 <none> <none> example-5bdc5699b7-984j9 1/1 Running 0 3m28s 10.0.0.21 192.168.0.42 <none> <none> example-5bdc5699b7-lfxkm 1/1 Running 0 3m28s 10.0.0.22 192.168.0.42 <none> <none> example-5bdc5699b7-wjcmg 1/1 Running 0 3m28s 10.0.0.52 192.168.0.64 <none> <none>
kubectl exec -it example-5bdc5699b7-5rvq4 -- curl 10.0.0.21
If the following information is displayed, the workload can be properly accessed:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Welcome to nginx!</title>
<style>
body {
width: 35em;
margin: 0 auto;
font-family: Tahoma, Verdana, Arial, sans-serif;
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<h1>Welcome to nginx!</h1>
<p>If you see this page, the nginx web server is successfully installed and
working. Further configuration is required.</p>
<p>For online documentation and support please refer to
<a href="http://nginx.org/">nginx.org</a>.<br/>
Commercial support is available at
<a href="http://nginx.com/">nginx.com</a>.</p>
<p><em>Thank you for using nginx.</em></p>
</body>
</html>