Like anycast, addresses IPs are advertised via BGP (/128+/32) and get
host routes via the AnycastReconciler. The sole difference: they are
assigned to pod eth0 instead of lo, so workloads that inspect their
primary interface (e.g. Plex remote-access detection) see the public IP
directly.
- annotations.go: annAddresses const, Addresses []net.IP in ParsedAnnotations
- state.go: Addresses []string persisted in allocations.json
- anycast.go: resolveAnycastTargets processes Anycast+Addresses together
- netns_linux.go: configurePodSide assigns Addresses to eth0
- netns_stub.go: mirror Addresses field for non-Linux builds
- handlers.go: thread Addresses through ADD path
Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
NodeConfig.Spec.Defaults adds per-node IPv6/IPv4 family defaults that pod
annotations can override; built-in baseline (v6=true, v4=false) still
applies when the field is omitted.
bird.Render now validates every operator-supplied value (peer addresses,
CIDRs, anycast IPs, source addresses) before templating — fuzz found a
peer address containing `}` produced unbalanced braces in bird.conf.
Failing input preserved as a regression seed.
Fuzz targets added for ParseAnnotations, ParseCNIArgs, HostIfaceName,
canonical, IPAM allocate sequences, embed.Embed, and bird.Render.
Hardened canonical/ipToU32 against nil and non-IPv4 inputs.
README rewritten for outside readers — quickstart, NodeConfig + annotation
reference with worked examples, anycast use cases, comparison vs Calico
and Cilium, requirements, limitations.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>