Inspektor Gadget is a collection of tools (or gadgets) to debug and inspect Kubernetes resources and applications. It manages the packaging, deployment and execution of eBPF programs in a Kubernetes cluster, including many based on BCC tools, as well as some developed specifically for use in Inspektor Gadget. It automatically maps low-level kernel primitives to high-level Kubernetes resources, making it easier and quicker to find the relevant information.
The Gadgets
Inspektor Gadget tools are known as gadgets. You can deploy one, two or many gadgets.
Explore the following documentation to find out which tools can help you in your investigations.
advise
:audit
:profile
:snapshot
:top
:trace
:traceloop
Installation
Install Inspektor Gadget (client-side):
Use krew plugin manager to install:
$ kubectl krew install gadget
Install Inspektor Gadget on Kubernetes:
$ kubectl gadget deploy
Read the detailed install instructions to find more information.
How to use
kubectl gadget --help
will provide you the list of supported commands and their flags.
$ kubectl gadget --help
Collection of gadgets for Kubernetes developers
Usage:
kubectl-gadget [command]
Available Commands:
advise Recommend system configurations based on collected information
audit Audit a subsystem
completion Generate the autocompletion script for the specified shell
deploy Deploy Inspektor Gadget on the cluster
help Help about any command
profile Profile different subsystems
snapshot Take a snapshot of a subsystem and print it
top Gather, sort and periodically report events according to a given criteria
trace Trace and print system events
traceloop Get strace-like logs of a container from the past
undeploy Undeploy Inspektor Gadget from cluster
version Show version
...
You can then get help for each subcommand:
$ kubectl gadget advise --help
Recommend system configurations based on collected information
Usage:
kubectl-gadget advise [command]
Available Commands:
network-policy Generate network policies based on recorded network activity
seccomp-profile Generate seccomp profiles based on recorded syscalls activity
...
$ kubectl gadget audit --help
Audit a subsystem
Usage:
kubectl-gadget audit [command]
Available Commands:
seccomp Audit syscalls according to the seccomp profile
...
$ kubectl gadget profile --help
Profile different subsystems
Usage:
kubectl-gadget profile [command]
Available Commands:
block-io Analyze block I/O performance through a latency distribution
cpu Analyze CPU performance by sampling stack traces
...
$ kubectl gadget snapshot --help
Take a snapshot of a subsystem and print it
Usage:
kubectl-gadget snapshot [command]
Available Commands:
process Gather information about running processes
socket Gather information about TCP and UDP sockets
...
$ kubectl gadget top --help
Gather, sort and periodically report events according to a given criteria
Usage:
kubectl-gadget top [command]
Available Commands:
block-io Periodically report block device I/O activity
ebpf Periodically report ebpf runtime stats
file Periodically report read/write activity by file
tcp Periodically report TCP activity
...
$ kubectl gadget trace --help
Trace and print system events
Usage:
kubectl-gadget trace [command]
Available Commands:
bind Trace the kernel functions performing socket binding
capabilities Trace security capability checks
dns Trace DNS requests
exec Trace new processes
fsslower Trace open, read, write and fsync operations slower than a threshold
mount Trace mount and umount system calls
network Trace network streams
oomkill Trace when OOM killer is triggered and kills a process
open Trace open system calls
signal Trace signals received by processes
sni Trace Server Name Indication (SNI) from TLS requests
tcp Trace TCP connect, accept and close
tcpconnect Trace connect system calls
...
How does it work?
Inspektor Gadget is deployed to each node as a privileged DaemonSet. It uses in-kernel eBPF helper programs to monitor events mainly related to syscalls from userspace programs in a pod. The eBPF programs are run by the kernel and gather the log data. Inspektor Gadget's userspace utilities fetch the log data from ring buffers and display it. What eBPF programs are and how Inspektor Gadget uses them is briefly explained here:
You can read further details about the architecture here.
local-gadget
Inspektor Gadget can also be used without Kubernetes to trace containers with
the local-gadget
tool.
Kernel requirements
The different gadgets shipped with Inspektor Gadget use a variety of eBPF capabilities. The capabilities available depend on the version and configuration of the kernel running in the node. To be able to run all the gadgets, you'll need to have at least 5.10 with BTF enabled.
See requirements for a detailed list of the requirements per gadget.
Code examples
There are some examples in this folder showing the usage
of the Golang packages provided by Inspektor Gadget. These examples are
designed for developers that want to use the Golang packages exposed by
Inspektor Gadget directly. End-users do not need this and can use
kubectl-gadget
or local-gadget
directly.
Contributing
Contributions are welcome, see CONTRIBUTING.
Discussions
Join the discussions on the #inspektor-gadget
channel in the Kubernetes Slack.
Talks
- Using the EBPF Superpowers To Generate Kubernetes Security Policies, KubeCon + CloudNativeCon North America 2022 (video, slides)
- Debug Your Clusters with eBPF-Powered Tools, Cloud Native eBPF Day North America 2022 (video, slides)
- Who Needs an API Server to Debug a Kubernetes Cluster?, Cloud Native eBPF Day North America 2022 (video, slides)
- Inspektor Gadget, introduction and demos, eCHO Livestream - September 2021 (video)
- OpenShift Commons Briefing: Unleash eBPF Superpowers with Kubectl Gadget, Openshift Commons 2020 (video)
- Tutorial: Understanding What Happens Inside Kubernetes Clusters Using BPF Tools, Open Source Summit EU 2020 (video)
- Inspektor Gadget and traceloop: Tracing containers syscalls using BPF, FOSDEM 2020 (video, slides)
- Traceloop for systemd and Kubernetes + Inspektor Gadget, All Systems Go 2019 (video)
Thanks
- BPF Compiler Collection (BCC): some of the gadgets are based on BCC tools.
- kubectl-trace: the Inspektor Gadget architecture was inspired from kubectl-trace.
- cilium/ebpf: the gadget tracer manager and some other gadgets use the cilium/ebpf library.
License
The Inspektor Gadget user space components are licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0. The BPF code templates are licensed under the General Public License, Version 2.0, with the Linux-syscall-note.