/k8s-netchecker-server

Basic network checker service to check DNS and connectivity in kubernetes cluster

Primary LanguageGoApache License 2.0Apache-2.0

Status

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What it is and how it works

Diagram

Network checker is a Kubernetes application. Its main purpose is checking of connectivity between the cluster's nodes. Network checker consists of two parts: server (this repository) and agent (developed here). Agents are deployed on every Kubernetes node using Daemonset. Agents come in two flavors - and default setup includes two corresponding daemonsets. The difference between them is that "Agent-hostnet" is tapped into host network namespace via supplying hostNetwork: True key-value for the corresponding Pod's specification. As shown on the diagram, both daemonsets are enabled for each node meaning exactly one pod of each kind will be deployed on each node.

The agents periodically gather network related information (e.g. interfaces' info, results of nslookup, results of latencies measurement, etc.) and send it to the server as periodic agent reports. Report includes agent pod name and its node name so that the report is uniquely identified using them.

The server is deployed in a dedicated pod using Deployment and exposed inside of the cluster via Kubernetes service resource. Thus, every agent can access the server by the service's DNS name.

Server processes the incoming agent data (agents' reports) and store it in a persistent data storage. Server is capable to use either Kubernetes third party resources (TPR) or etcd as a persistent data storage:

  • TPR. New data type called agent was added into TPR, Kubernetes API was extended with this new type, and all agent data is stored using it. When using TPR, the server is vulnerable to date change issue. The issue was solved by using etcd and its TTL feature. Please also note that TPR is deprecated starting from Kubernetes v.1.7 and can be removed in future Kubrenetes versions. It will not be supported in Netchecker then. No migration to Kubernetes CRD (substitution for TPR) is planned either.
  • etcd. The recommended storage provider. When using etcd, the server is resistant to issues described in TPR section. Agent data is stored in etcd in this case, under /netchecker path.

Server also calculates metrics based on agent data. Metrics data is stored in server's memory for now - this implicates loss of metrics data when server application is shutdown or restarted; it is going to be reworked by moving to a persistent storage (to etcd only) in future.

Server provides HTTP RESTful interface which currently includes the following requests (verb - URI designator - meaning of the operation):

  • GET/POST - /api/v1/agents/{agent_name} - get, create/update agent's data record in a persistant storage.
  • GET - /api/v1/agents/ - get the whole agent data dump.
  • GET - /api/v1/connectivity_check - get result of connectivity check between the server and the agents.
  • GET - /metrics - get the network checker metrics.

The main logic of network checking is implemented behind connectivity_check endpoint. It is the only user-facing URI. In order to determine whether connectivity is present between the server and agents, former retrieves the list of pods using Kubernetes API (filtering by labels netchecker-agent and netchecker-agent-hostnet), then analyses stored agent data. Success of the checking is determined based on two criteria. First - there is an entry in the stored data for the each retrieved agent's pod; it means an agent request has got through the network to the server. Consequently, link is established and active within the agent-server pair. Second - difference between the time of the check and the time when the data was received from particular agent must not exceed two periods of agent's reporting (there is a field in the payload holding the report interval). In opposite case, it will indicate that connection is lost and requests are not coming through. In case of using etcd, period of agent's data obsolescence is set explicitly in parameters to the server (-report-ttl parameter, in seconds). Let us remember that each agent corresponds to one particular pod, unique for particular node, so connection between agents and server means connection between the corresponding nodes.

Results of the connectivity check which are represented in response from the endpoint particularly indicate possible connectivity issue (e.g. there is an Absent field listing agents which haven't reported at all and Outdated one listing those which reports are out of data obsolescence period).

One aspect of functioning of network checker is worth mentioning. Payloads sent by the agents are of relatively small byte size which in some cases can be less than MTU value set for the cluster's network links. When this happens, the network checker will not catch problems with network packet's fragmentation. For that reason, special option can be used with the agent application - -zeroextenderlength. By default, it has value of 1500. The parameter tells the agent to extend each payload by given length to exceed packet fragmentation trigger threshold. This dummy data has no effect on the server's processing of the agent's requests (reports).

Usage

To start the server inside Kubernetes pod using Kubernetes TPR as a persistent storage and listen on port 8081, use the following command:

server -v 5 -logtostderr -kubeproxyinit -endpoint 0.0.0.0:8081

To start the server using etcd as a persistent storage, use the following setting:

-kubeproxyinit=false

Also, a few parameters are required to establish the connection with etcd:

-etcd-endpoints=https://192.0.10.11:4001,https://192.0.10.12:4001
-etcd-key=/var/lib/etcd/client.key (optional, ommited when using http)
-etcd-cert=/var/lib/etcd/client.pem (optional, ommited when using http)
-etcd-ca=/var/lib/etcd/ca.pem (optional, can be ommited even when using https)

For other possibilities regarding testing, code and Docker images building etc. please refer to the Makefile.

Deployment in Kubernetes cluster

In order to deploy the application, two options can be used.

First - using ./examples/deploy.sh script. Users must provide all the needed environment variables (e.g. name and tag for Docker images) before running the script.

Second - deploy as a helm chart. If users have Helm installed on their Kubernetes cluster they can build the chart from its description (./helm-chart/) and then deploy it (please, use Helm's documentation for details).

Additional documentation

  • Metrics - metrics and Prometheus configuration how to.