This doc is about cluster troubleshooting; we assume you have already ruled out your application as the root cause of the
problem you are experiencing. See
the application troubleshooting guide for tips on application debugging.
You may also visit the troubleshooting overview document for more information.
The first thing to debug in your cluster is if your nodes are all registered correctly.
Run the following command:
kubectl get nodes
And verify that all of the nodes you expect to see are present and that they are all in the Ready state.
To get detailed information about the overall health of your cluster, you can run:
kubectl cluster-info dump
Example: debugging a down/unreachable node
Sometimes when debugging it can be useful to look at the status of a node -- for example, because
you've noticed strange behavior of a Pod that's running on the node, or to find out why a Pod
won't schedule onto the node. As with Pods, you can use kubectl describe node and kubectl get node -o yaml to retrieve detailed information about nodes. For example, here's what you'll see if
a node is down (disconnected from the network, or kubelet dies and won't restart, etc.). Notice
the events that show the node is NotReady, and also notice that the pods are no longer running
(they are evicted after five minutes of NotReady status).
kubectl get nodes
NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION
kube-worker-1 NotReady <none> 1h v1.23.3
kubernetes-node-bols Ready <none> 1h v1.23.3
kubernetes-node-st6x Ready <none> 1h v1.23.3
kubernetes-node-unaj Ready <none> 1h v1.23.3
kubectl describe node kube-worker-1
Name: kube-worker-1
Roles: <none>
Labels: beta.kubernetes.io/arch=amd64
beta.kubernetes.io/os=linux
kubernetes.io/arch=amd64
kubernetes.io/hostname=kube-worker-1
kubernetes.io/os=linux
Annotations: kubeadm.alpha.kubernetes.io/cri-socket: /run/containerd/containerd.sock
node.alpha.kubernetes.io/ttl: 0
volumes.kubernetes.io/controller-managed-attach-detach: true
CreationTimestamp: Thu, 17 Feb 2022 16:46:30 -0500
Taints: node.kubernetes.io/unreachable:NoExecute
node.kubernetes.io/unreachable:NoSchedule
Unschedulable: false
Lease:
HolderIdentity: kube-worker-1
AcquireTime: <unset>
RenewTime: Thu, 17 Feb 2022 17:13:09 -0500
Conditions:
Type Status LastHeartbeatTime LastTransitionTime Reason Message
---- ------ ----------------- ------------------ ------ -------
NetworkUnavailable False Thu, 17 Feb 2022 17:09:13 -0500 Thu, 17 Feb 2022 17:09:13 -0500 WeaveIsUp Weave pod has set this
MemoryPressure Unknown Thu, 17 Feb 2022 17:12:40 -0500 Thu, 17 Feb 2022 17:13:52 -0500 NodeStatusUnknown Kubelet stopped posting node status.
DiskPressure Unknown Thu, 17 Feb 2022 17:12:40 -0500 Thu, 17 Feb 2022 17:13:52 -0500 NodeStatusUnknown Kubelet stopped posting node status.
PIDPressure Unknown Thu, 17 Feb 2022 17:12:40 -0500 Thu, 17 Feb 2022 17:13:52 -0500 NodeStatusUnknown Kubelet stopped posting node status.
Ready Unknown Thu, 17 Feb 2022 17:12:40 -0500 Thu, 17 Feb 2022 17:13:52 -0500 NodeStatusUnknown Kubelet stopped posting node status.
Addresses:
InternalIP: 192.168.0.113
Hostname: kube-worker-1
Capacity:
cpu: 2
ephemeral-storage: 15372232Ki
hugepages-2Mi: 0
memory: 2025188Ki
pods: 110
Allocatable:
cpu: 2
ephemeral-storage: 14167048988
hugepages-2Mi: 0
memory: 1922788Ki
pods: 110
System Info:
Machine ID: 9384e2927f544209b5d7b67474bbf92b
System UUID: aa829ca9-73d7-064d-9019-df07404ad448
Boot ID: 5a295a03-aaca-4340-af20-1327fa5dab5c
Kernel Version: 5.13.0-28-generic
OS Image: Ubuntu 21.10
Operating System: linux
Architecture: amd64
Container Runtime Version: containerd://1.5.9
Kubelet Version: v1.23.3
Kube-Proxy Version: v1.23.3
Non-terminated Pods: (4 in total)
Namespace Name CPU Requests CPU Limits Memory Requests Memory Limits Age
--------- ---- ------------ ---------- --------------- ------------- ---
default nginx-deployment-67d4bdd6f5-cx2nz 500m (25%) 500m (25%) 128Mi (6%) 128Mi (6%) 23m
default nginx-deployment-67d4bdd6f5-w6kd7 500m (25%) 500m (25%) 128Mi (6%) 128Mi (6%) 23m
kube-system kube-proxy-dnxbz 0 (0%) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) 28m
kube-system weave-net-gjxxp 100m (5%) 0 (0%) 200Mi (10%) 0 (0%) 28m
Allocated resources:
(Total limits may be over 100 percent, i.e., overcommitted.)
Resource Requests Limits
-------- -------- ------
cpu 1100m (55%) 1 (50%)
memory 456Mi (24%) 256Mi (13%)
ephemeral-storage 0 (0%) 0 (0%)
hugepages-2Mi 0 (0%) 0 (0%)
Events:
...
kubectl get node kube-worker-1 -o yaml
apiVersion:v1kind:Nodemetadata:annotations:kubeadm.alpha.kubernetes.io/cri-socket:/run/containerd/containerd.socknode.alpha.kubernetes.io/ttl:"0"volumes.kubernetes.io/controller-managed-attach-detach:"true"creationTimestamp:"2022-02-17T21:46:30Z"labels:beta.kubernetes.io/arch:amd64beta.kubernetes.io/os:linuxkubernetes.io/arch:amd64kubernetes.io/hostname:kube-worker-1kubernetes.io/os:linuxname:kube-worker-1resourceVersion:"4026"uid:98efe7cb-2978-4a0b-842a-1a7bf12c05f8spec:{}status:addresses:- address:192.168.0.113type:InternalIP- address:kube-worker-1type:Hostnameallocatable:cpu:"2"ephemeral-storage:"14167048988"hugepages-2Mi:"0"memory:1922788Kipods:"110"capacity:cpu:"2"ephemeral-storage:15372232Kihugepages-2Mi:"0"memory:2025188Kipods:"110"conditions:- lastHeartbeatTime:"2022-02-17T22:20:32Z"lastTransitionTime:"2022-02-17T22:20:32Z"message:Weave pod has set thisreason:WeaveIsUpstatus:"False"type:NetworkUnavailable- lastHeartbeatTime:"2022-02-17T22:20:15Z"lastTransitionTime:"2022-02-17T22:13:25Z"message:kubelet has sufficient memory availablereason:KubeletHasSufficientMemorystatus:"False"type:MemoryPressure- lastHeartbeatTime:"2022-02-17T22:20:15Z"lastTransitionTime:"2022-02-17T22:13:25Z"message:kubelet has no disk pressurereason:KubeletHasNoDiskPressurestatus:"False"type:DiskPressure- lastHeartbeatTime:"2022-02-17T22:20:15Z"lastTransitionTime:"2022-02-17T22:13:25Z"message:kubelet has sufficient PID availablereason:KubeletHasSufficientPIDstatus:"False"type:PIDPressure- lastHeartbeatTime:"2022-02-17T22:20:15Z"lastTransitionTime:"2022-02-17T22:15:15Z"message:kubelet is posting ready status. AppArmor enabledreason:KubeletReadystatus:"True"type:ReadydaemonEndpoints:kubeletEndpoint:Port:10250nodeInfo:architecture:amd64bootID:22333234-7a6b-44d4-9ce1-67e31dc7e369containerRuntimeVersion:containerd://1.5.9kernelVersion:5.13.0-28-generickubeProxyVersion:v1.23.3kubeletVersion:v1.23.3machineID:9384e2927f544209b5d7b67474bbf92boperatingSystem:linuxosImage:Ubuntu 21.10systemUUID:aa829ca9-73d7-064d-9019-df07404ad448
Looking at logs
For now, digging deeper into the cluster requires logging into the relevant machines. Here are the locations
of the relevant log files. On systemd-based systems, you may need to use journalctl instead of examining log files.
Control Plane nodes
/var/log/kube-apiserver.log - API Server, responsible for serving the API
/var/log/kube-scheduler.log - Scheduler, responsible for making scheduling decisions
/var/log/kube-controller-manager.log - a component that runs most Kubernetes built-in
controllers, with the notable exception of scheduling
(the kube-scheduler handles scheduling).
Worker Nodes
/var/log/kubelet.log - logs from the kubelet, responsible for running containers on the node
/var/log/kube-proxy.log - logs from kube-proxy, which is responsible for directing traffic to Service endpoints
Cluster failure modes
This is an incomplete list of things that could go wrong, and how to adjust your cluster setup to mitigate the problems.
Contributing causes
VM(s) shutdown
Network partition within cluster, or between cluster and users
Crashes in Kubernetes software
Data loss or unavailability of persistent storage (e.g. GCE PD or AWS EBS volume)
Operator error, for example, misconfigured Kubernetes software or application software
Specific scenarios
API server VM shutdown or apiserver crashing
Results
unable to stop, update, or start new pods, services, replication controller
existing pods and services should continue to work normally unless they depend on the Kubernetes API
API server backing storage lost
Results
the kube-apiserver component fails to start successfully and become healthy
kubelets will not be able to reach it but will continue to run the same pods and provide the same service proxying
manual recovery or recreation of apiserver state necessary before apiserver is restarted
Supporting services (node controller, replication controller manager, scheduler, etc) VM shutdown or crashes
currently those are colocated with the apiserver, and their unavailability has similar consequences as apiserver
in future, these will be replicated as well and may not be co-located
they do not have their own persistent state
Individual node (VM or physical machine) shuts down
Results
pods on that Node stop running
Network partition
Results
partition A thinks the nodes in partition B are down; partition B thinks the apiserver is down.
(Assuming the master VM ends up in partition A.)
Kubelet software fault
Results
crashing kubelet cannot start new pods on the node
kubelet might delete the pods or not
node marked unhealthy
replication controllers start new pods elsewhere
Cluster operator error
Results
loss of pods, services, etc
lost of apiserver backing store
users unable to read API
etc.
Mitigations
Action: Use the IaaS provider's automatic VM restarting feature for IaaS VMs
Mitigates: Apiserver VM shutdown or apiserver crashing
Mitigates: Supporting services VM shutdown or crashes
Action: Use IaaS providers reliable storage (e.g. GCE PD or AWS EBS volume) for VMs with apiserver+etcd
This documentation is about investigating and diagnosing
kubectl related issues.
If you encounter issues accessing kubectl or connecting to your cluster, this
document outlines various common scenarios and potential solutions to help
identify and address the likely cause.
Before you begin
You need to have a Kubernetes cluster.
You also need to have kubectl installed - see install tools
Verify kubectl setup
Make sure you have installed and configured kubectl correctly on your local machine.
Check the kubectl version to ensure it is up-to-date and compatible with your cluster.
If you see Unable to connect to the server: dial tcp <server-ip>:8443: i/o timeout,
instead of Server Version, you need to troubleshoot kubectl connectivity with your cluster.
The kubectl requires a kubeconfig file to connect to a Kubernetes cluster. The
kubeconfig file is usually located under the ~/.kube/config directory. Make sure
that you have a valid kubeconfig file. If you don't have a kubeconfig file, you can
obtain it from your Kubernetes administrator, or you can copy it from your Kubernetes
control plane's /etc/kubernetes/admin.conf directory. If you have deployed your
Kubernetes cluster on a cloud platform and lost your kubeconfig file, you can
re-generate it using your cloud provider's tools. Refer the cloud provider's
documentation for re-generating a kubeconfig file.
Check if the $KUBECONFIG environment variable is configured correctly. You can set
$KUBECONFIGenvironment variable or use the --kubeconfig parameter with the kubectl
to specify the directory of a kubeconfig file.
Check VPN connectivity
If you are using a Virtual Private Network (VPN) to access your Kubernetes cluster,
make sure that your VPN connection is active and stable. Sometimes, VPN disconnections
can lead to connection issues with the cluster. Reconnect to the VPN and try accessing
the cluster again.
Authentication and authorization
If you are using the token based authentication and the kubectl is returning an error
regarding the authentication token or authentication server address, validate the
Kubernetes authentication token and the authentication server address are configured
properly.
If kubectl is returning an error regarding the authorization, make sure that you are
using the valid user credentials. And you have the permission to access the resource
that you have requested.
Verify contexts
Kubernetes supports multiple clusters and contexts.
Ensure that you are using the correct context to interact with your cluster.
List available contexts:
kubectl config get-contexts
Switch to the appropriate context:
kubectl config use-context <context-name>
API server and load balancer
The kube-apiserver server is the
central component of a Kubernetes cluster. If the API server or the load balancer that
runs in front of your API servers is not reachable or not responding, you won't be able
to interact with the cluster.
Check the if the API server's host is reachable by using ping command. Check cluster's
network connectivity and firewall. If your are using a cloud provider for deploying
the cluster, check your cloud provider's health check status for the cluster's
API server.
Verify the status of the load balancer (if used) to ensure it is healthy and forwarding
traffic to the API server.
TLS problems
The Kubernetes API server only serves HTTPS requests by default. In that case TLS problems
may occur due to various reasons, such as certificate expiry or chain of trust validity.
You can find the TLS certificate in the kubeconfig file, located in the ~/.kube/config
directory. The certificate-authority attribute contains the CA certificate and the
client-certificate attribute contains the client certificate.
Some kubectl authentication helpers provide easy access to Kubernetes clusters. If you
have used such helpers and are facing connectivity issues, ensure that the necessary
configurations are still present.
Check kubectl configuration for authentication details:
kubectl config view
If you previously used a helper tool (for example, kubectl-oidc-login), ensure that it is still
installed and configured correctly.
2 - Resource metrics pipeline
For Kubernetes, the Metrics API offers a basic set of metrics to support automatic scaling and
similar use cases. This API makes information available about resource usage for node and pod,
including metrics for CPU and memory. If you deploy the Metrics API into your cluster, clients of
the Kubernetes API can then query for this information, and you can use Kubernetes' access control
mechanisms to manage permissions to do so.
You can also view the resource metrics using the
kubectl top
command.
Note: The Metrics API, and the metrics pipeline that it enables, only offers the minimum
CPU and memory metrics to enable automatic scaling using HPA and / or VPA.
If you would like to provide a more complete set of metrics, you can complement
the simpler Metrics API by deploying a second
metrics pipeline
that uses the Custom Metrics API.
Figure 1 illustrates the architecture of the resource metrics pipeline.
Figure 1. Resource Metrics Pipeline
The architecture components, from right to left in the figure, consist of the following:
cAdvisor: Daemon for collecting, aggregating and exposing
container metrics included in Kubelet.
kubelet: Node agent for managing container
resources. Resource metrics are accessible using the /metrics/resource and /stats kubelet
API endpoints.
node level resource metrics: API provided by the kubelet for discovering and retrieving
per-node summarized stats available through the /metrics/resource endpoint.
metrics-server: Cluster addon component that collects and aggregates resource
metrics pulled from each kubelet. The API server serves Metrics API for use by HPA, VPA, and by
the kubectl top command. Metrics Server is a reference implementation of the Metrics API.
Metrics API: Kubernetes API supporting access to CPU and memory used for
workload autoscaling. To make this work in your cluster, you need an API extension server that
provides the Metrics API.
Note: cAdvisor supports reading metrics from cgroups, which works with typical container runtimes on Linux.
If you use a container runtime that uses another resource isolation mechanism, for example
virtualization, then that container runtime must support
CRI Container Metrics
in order for metrics to be available to the kubelet.
Metrics API
FEATURE STATE:Kubernetes 1.8 [beta]
The metrics-server implements the Metrics API. This API allows you to access CPU and memory usage
for the nodes and pods in your cluster. Its primary role is to feed resource usage metrics to K8s
autoscaler components.
Here is an example of the Metrics API request for a minikube node piped through jq for easier
reading:
kubectl get --raw "/apis/metrics.k8s.io/v1beta1/nodes/minikube" | jq '.'
Here is an example of the Metrics API request for a kube-scheduler-minikube pod contained in the
kube-system namespace and piped through jq for easier reading:
kubectl get --raw "/apis/metrics.k8s.io/v1beta1/namespaces/kube-system/pods/kube-scheduler-minikube" | jq '.'
Note: You must deploy the metrics-server or alternative adapter that serves the Metrics API to be able
to access it.
Measuring resource usage
CPU
CPU is reported as the average core usage measured in cpu units. One cpu, in Kubernetes, is
equivalent to 1 vCPU/Core for cloud providers, and 1 hyper-thread on bare-metal Intel processors.
This value is derived by taking a rate over a cumulative CPU counter provided by the kernel (in
both Linux and Windows kernels). The time window used to calculate CPU is shown under window field
in Metrics API.
To learn more about how Kubernetes allocates and measures CPU resources, see
meaning of CPU.
Memory
Memory is reported as the working set, measured in bytes, at the instant the metric was collected.
In an ideal world, the "working set" is the amount of memory in-use that cannot be freed under
memory pressure. However, calculation of the working set varies by host OS, and generally makes
heavy use of heuristics to produce an estimate.
The Kubernetes model for a container's working set expects that the container runtime counts
anonymous memory associated with the container in question. The working set metric typically also
includes some cached (file-backed) memory, because the host OS cannot always reclaim pages.
To learn more about how Kubernetes allocates and measures memory resources, see
meaning of memory.
Metrics Server
The metrics-server fetches resource metrics from the kubelets and exposes them in the Kubernetes
API server through the Metrics API for use by the HPA and VPA. You can also view these metrics
using the kubectl top command.
The metrics-server uses the Kubernetes API to track nodes and pods in your cluster. The
metrics-server queries each node over HTTP to fetch metrics. The metrics-server also builds an
internal view of pod metadata, and keeps a cache of pod health. That cached pod health information
is available via the extension API that the metrics-server makes available.
For example with an HPA query, the metrics-server needs to identify which pods fulfill the label
selectors in the deployment.
The metrics-server calls the kubelet API
to collect metrics from each node. Depending on the metrics-server version it uses:
Metrics resource endpoint /metrics/resource in version v0.6.0+ or
Summary API endpoint /stats/summary in older versions
To learn about how the kubelet serves node metrics, and how you can access those via
the Kubernetes API, read Node Metrics Data.
3 - Tools for Monitoring Resources
To scale an application and provide a reliable service, you need to
understand how the application behaves when it is deployed. You can examine
application performance in a Kubernetes cluster by examining the containers,
pods,
services, and
the characteristics of the overall cluster. Kubernetes provides detailed
information about an application's resource usage at each of these levels.
This information allows you to evaluate your application's performance and
where bottlenecks can be removed to improve overall performance.
In Kubernetes, application monitoring does not depend on a single monitoring solution.
On new clusters, you can use resource metrics or
full metrics pipelines to collect monitoring statistics.
Resource metrics pipeline
The resource metrics pipeline provides a limited set of metrics related to
cluster components such as the
Horizontal Pod Autoscaler
controller, as well as the kubectl top utility.
These metrics are collected by the lightweight, short-term, in-memory
metrics-server and
are exposed via the metrics.k8s.io API.
metrics-server discovers all nodes on the cluster and
queries each node's
kubelet for CPU and
memory usage. The kubelet acts as a bridge between the Kubernetes master and
the nodes, managing the pods and containers running on a machine. The kubelet
translates each pod into its constituent containers and fetches individual
container usage statistics from the container runtime through the container
runtime interface. If you use a container runtime that uses Linux cgroups and
namespaces to implement containers, and the container runtime does not publish
usage statistics, then the kubelet can look up those statistics directly
(using code from cAdvisor).
No matter how those statistics arrive, the kubelet then exposes the aggregated pod
resource usage statistics through the metrics-server Resource Metrics API.
This API is served at /metrics/resource/v1beta1 on the kubelet's authenticated and
read-only ports.
Full metrics pipeline
A full metrics pipeline gives you access to richer metrics. Kubernetes can
respond to these metrics by automatically scaling or adapting the cluster
based on its current state, using mechanisms such as the Horizontal Pod
Autoscaler. The monitoring pipeline fetches metrics from the kubelet and
then exposes them to Kubernetes via an adapter by implementing either the
custom.metrics.k8s.io or external.metrics.k8s.io API.
If you glance over at the
CNCF Landscape,
you can see a number of monitoring projects that can work with Kubernetes by scraping
metric data and using that to help you observe your cluster. It is up to you to select the tool
or tools that suit your needs. The CNCF landscape for observability and analytics includes a
mix of open-source software, paid-for software-as-a-service, and other commercial products.
When you design and implement a full metrics pipeline you can make that monitoring data
available back to Kubernetes. For example, a HorizontalPodAutoscaler can use the processed
metrics to work out how many Pods to run for a component of your workload.
Integration of a full metrics pipeline into your Kubernetes implementation is outside
the scope of Kubernetes documentation because of the very wide scope of possible
solutions.
The choice of monitoring platform depends heavily on your needs, budget, and technical resources.
Kubernetes does not recommend any specific metrics pipeline; many options are available.
Your monitoring system should be capable of handling the OpenMetrics metrics
transmission standard, and needs to chosen to best fit in to your overall design and deployment of
your infrastructure platform.
What's next
Learn about additional debugging tools, including:
Node Problem Detector is a daemon for monitoring and reporting about a node's health.
You can run Node Problem Detector as a DaemonSet or as a standalone daemon.
Node Problem Detector collects information about node problems from various daemons
and reports these conditions to the API server as Node Conditions
or as Events.
You need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl command-line tool must
be configured to communicate with your cluster. It is recommended to run this tutorial on a cluster with at least two nodes that are not acting as control plane hosts. If you do not already have a
cluster, you can create one by using
minikube
or you can use one of these Kubernetes playgrounds:
Node Problem Detector uses the kernel log format for reporting kernel issues.
To learn how to extend the kernel log format, see Add support for another log format.
Enabling Node Problem Detector
Some cloud providers enable Node Problem Detector as an Addon.
You can also enable Node Problem Detector with kubectl or by creating an Addon DaemonSet.
Using kubectl to enable Node Problem Detector
kubectl provides the most flexible management of Node Problem Detector.
You can overwrite the default configuration to fit it into your environment or
to detect customized node problems. For example:
Create a Node Problem Detector configuration similar to node-problem-detector.yaml:
Using an Addon pod to enable Node Problem Detector
If you are using a custom cluster bootstrap solution and don't need
to overwrite the default configuration, you can leverage the Addon pod to
further automate the deployment.
Create node-problem-detector.yaml, and save the configuration in the Addon pod's
directory /etc/kubernetes/addons/node-problem-detector on a control plane node.
Overwrite the configuration
The default configuration
is embedded when building the Docker image of Node Problem Detector.
However, you can use a ConfigMap
to overwrite the configuration:
apiVersion:apps/v1kind:DaemonSetmetadata:name:node-problem-detector-v0.1namespace:kube-systemlabels:k8s-app:node-problem-detectorversion:v0.1kubernetes.io/cluster-service:"true"spec:selector:matchLabels:k8s-app:node-problem-detector version:v0.1kubernetes.io/cluster-service:"true"template:metadata:labels:k8s-app:node-problem-detectorversion:v0.1kubernetes.io/cluster-service:"true"spec:hostNetwork:truecontainers:- name:node-problem-detectorimage:registry.k8s.io/node-problem-detector:v0.1securityContext:privileged:trueresources:limits:cpu:"200m"memory:"100Mi"requests:cpu:"20m"memory:"20Mi"volumeMounts:- name:logmountPath:/logreadOnly:true- name:config# Overwrite the config/ directory with ConfigMap volumemountPath:/configreadOnly:truevolumes:- name:loghostPath:path:/var/log/- name:config# Define ConfigMap volumeconfigMap:name:node-problem-detector-config
Recreate the Node Problem Detector with the new configuration file:
# If you have a node-problem-detector running, delete before recreatingkubectl delete -f https://k8s.io/examples/debug/node-problem-detector.yaml
kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/debug/node-problem-detector-configmap.yaml
Note: This approach only applies to a Node Problem Detector started with kubectl.
Overwriting a configuration is not supported if a Node Problem Detector runs as a cluster Addon.
The Addon manager does not support ConfigMap.
Problem Daemons
A problem daemon is a sub-daemon of the Node Problem Detector. It monitors specific kinds of node
problems and reports them to the Node Problem Detector.
There are several types of supported problem daemons.
A SystemLogMonitor type of daemon monitors the system logs and reports problems and metrics
according to predefined rules. You can customize the configurations for different log sources
such as filelog,
kmsg,
kernel,
abrt,
and systemd.
A SystemStatsMonitor type of daemon collects various health-related system stats as metrics.
You can customize its behavior by updating its
configuration file.
A CustomPluginMonitor type of daemon invokes and checks various node problems by running
user-defined scripts. You can use different custom plugin monitors to monitor different
problems and customize the daemon behavior by updating the
configuration file.
A HealthChecker type of daemon checks the health of the kubelet and container runtime on a node.
Adding support for other log format
The system log monitor currently supports file-based logs, journald, and kmsg.
Additional sources can be added by implementing a new
log watcher.
Adding custom plugin monitors
You can extend the Node Problem Detector to execute any monitor scripts written in any language by
developing a custom plugin. The monitor scripts must conform to the plugin protocol in exit code
and standard output. For more information, please refer to the
plugin interface proposal.
Exporter
An exporter reports the node problems and/or metrics to certain backends.
The following exporters are supported:
Kubernetes exporter: this exporter reports node problems to the Kubernetes API server.
Temporary problems are reported as Events and permanent problems are reported as Node Conditions.
Prometheus exporter: this exporter reports node problems and metrics locally as Prometheus
(or OpenMetrics) metrics. You can specify the IP address and port for the exporter using command
line arguments.
Stackdriver exporter: this exporter reports node problems and metrics to the Stackdriver
Monitoring API. The exporting behavior can be customized using a
configuration file.
Recommendations and restrictions
It is recommended to run the Node Problem Detector in your cluster to monitor node health.
When running the Node Problem Detector, you can expect extra resource overhead on each node.
Usually this is fine, because:
The kernel log grows relatively slowly.
A resource limit is set for the Node Problem Detector.
Even under high load, the resource usage is acceptable. For more information, see the Node Problem Detector
benchmark result.
5 - Debugging Kubernetes nodes with crictl
FEATURE STATE:Kubernetes v1.11 [stable]
crictl is a command-line interface for CRI-compatible container runtimes.
You can use it to inspect and debug container runtimes and applications on a
Kubernetes node. crictl and its source are hosted in the
cri-tools repository.
Before you begin
crictl requires a Linux operating system with a CRI runtime.
Installing crictl
You can download a compressed archive crictl from the cri-tools
release page, for several
different architectures. Download the version that corresponds to your version
of Kubernetes. Extract it and move it to a location on your system path, such as
/usr/local/bin/.
General usage
The crictl command has several subcommands and runtime flags. Use
crictl help or crictl <subcommand> help for more details.
You can set the endpoint for crictl by doing one of the following:
Set the --runtime-endpoint and --image-endpoint flags.
Set the CONTAINER_RUNTIME_ENDPOINT and IMAGE_SERVICE_ENDPOINT environment
variables.
Set the endpoint in the configuration file /etc/crictl.yaml. To specify a
different file, use the --config=PATH_TO_FILE flag when you run crictl.
Note: If you don't set an endpoint, crictl attempts to connect to a list of known
endpoints, which might result in an impact to performance.
You can also specify timeout values when connecting to the server and enable or
disable debugging, by specifying timeout or debug values in the configuration
file or using the --timeout and --debug command-line flags.
To view or edit the current configuration, view or edit the contents of
/etc/crictl.yaml. For example, the configuration when using the containerd
container runtime would be similar to this:
The following examples show some crictl commands and example output.
Warning: If you use crictl to create pod sandboxes or containers on a running
Kubernetes cluster, the Kubelet will eventually delete them. crictl is not a
general purpose workflow tool, but a tool that is useful for debugging.
List pods
List all pods:
crictl pods
The output is similar to this:
POD ID CREATED STATE NAME NAMESPACE ATTEMPT
926f1b5a1d33a About a minute ago Ready sh-84d7dcf559-4r2gq default 0
4dccb216c4adb About a minute ago Ready nginx-65899c769f-wv2gp default 0
a86316e96fa89 17 hours ago Ready kube-proxy-gblk4 kube-system 0
919630b8f81f1 17 hours ago Ready nvidia-device-plugin-zgbbv kube-system 0
List pods by name:
crictl pods --name nginx-65899c769f-wv2gp
The output is similar to this:
POD ID CREATED STATE NAME NAMESPACE ATTEMPT
4dccb216c4adb 2 minutes ago Ready nginx-65899c769f-wv2gp default 0
List pods by label:
crictl pods --label run=nginx
The output is similar to this:
POD ID CREATED STATE NAME NAMESPACE ATTEMPT
4dccb216c4adb 2 minutes ago Ready nginx-65899c769f-wv2gp default 0
CONTAINER ID IMAGE CREATED STATE NAME ATTEMPT
1f73f2d81bf98 busybox@sha256:141c253bc4c3fd0a201d32dc1f493bcf3fff003b6df416dea4f41046e0f37d47 7 minutes ago Running sh 1
9c5951df22c78 busybox@sha256:141c253bc4c3fd0a201d32dc1f493bcf3fff003b6df416dea4f41046e0f37d47 8 minutes ago Exited sh 0
87d3992f84f74 nginx@sha256:d0a8828cccb73397acb0073bf34f4d7d8aa315263f1e7806bf8c55d8ac139d5f 8 minutes ago Running nginx 0
1941fb4da154f k8s-gcrio.azureedge.net/hyperkube-amd64@sha256:00d814b1f7763f4ab5be80c58e98140dfc69df107f253d7fdd714b30a714260a 18 hours ago Running kube-proxy 0
List running containers:
crictl ps
The output is similar to this:
CONTAINER ID IMAGE CREATED STATE NAME ATTEMPT
1f73f2d81bf98 busybox@sha256:141c253bc4c3fd0a201d32dc1f493bcf3fff003b6df416dea4f41046e0f37d47 6 minutes ago Running sh 1
87d3992f84f74 nginx@sha256:d0a8828cccb73397acb0073bf34f4d7d8aa315263f1e7806bf8c55d8ac139d5f 7 minutes ago Running nginx 0
1941fb4da154f k8s-gcrio.azureedge.net/hyperkube-amd64@sha256:00d814b1f7763f4ab5be80c58e98140dfc69df107f253d7fdd714b30a714260a 17 hours ago Running kube-proxy 0
Using crictl to run a pod sandbox is useful for debugging container runtimes.
On a running Kubernetes cluster, the sandbox will eventually be stopped and
deleted by the Kubelet.
Use the crictl runp command to apply the JSON and run the sandbox.
crictl runp pod-config.json
The ID of the sandbox is returned.
Create a container
Using crictl to create a container is useful for debugging container runtimes.
On a running Kubernetes cluster, the container will eventually be stopped and
deleted by the Kubelet.
Pull a busybox image
crictl pull busybox
Image is up to date for busybox@sha256:141c253bc4c3fd0a201d32dc1f493bcf3fff003b6df416dea4f41046e0f37d47
Create the container, passing the ID of the previously-created pod, the
container config file, and the pod config file. The ID of the container is
returned.
Kubernetes auditing provides a security-relevant, chronological set of records documenting
the sequence of actions in a cluster. The cluster audits the activities generated by users,
by applications that use the Kubernetes API, and by the control plane itself.
Auditing allows cluster administrators to answer the following questions:
what happened?
when did it happen?
who initiated it?
on what did it happen?
where was it observed?
from where was it initiated?
to where was it going?
Audit records begin their lifecycle inside the
kube-apiserver
component. Each request on each stage
of its execution generates an audit event, which is then pre-processed according to
a certain policy and written to a backend. The policy determines what's recorded
and the backends persist the records. The current backend implementations
include logs files and webhooks.
Each request can be recorded with an associated stage. The defined stages are:
RequestReceived - The stage for events generated as soon as the audit
handler receives the request, and before it is delegated down the handler
chain.
ResponseStarted - Once the response headers are sent, but before the
response body is sent. This stage is only generated for long-running requests
(e.g. watch).
ResponseComplete - The response body has been completed and no more bytes
will be sent.
The audit logging feature increases the memory consumption of the API server
because some context required for auditing is stored for each request.
Memory consumption depends on the audit logging configuration.
Audit policy
Audit policy defines rules about what events should be recorded and what data
they should include. The audit policy object structure is defined in the
audit.k8s.io API group.
When an event is processed, it's
compared against the list of rules in order. The first matching rule sets the
audit level of the event. The defined audit levels are:
None - don't log events that match this rule.
Metadata - log request metadata (requesting user, timestamp, resource,
verb, etc.) but not request or response body.
Request - log event metadata and request body but not response body.
This does not apply for non-resource requests.
RequestResponse - log event metadata, request and response bodies.
This does not apply for non-resource requests.
You can pass a file with the policy to kube-apiserver
using the --audit-policy-file flag. If the flag is omitted, no events are logged.
Note that the rules field must be provided in the audit policy file.
A policy with no (0) rules is treated as illegal.
apiVersion:audit.k8s.io/v1# This is required.kind:Policy# Don't generate audit events for all requests in RequestReceived stage.omitStages:- "RequestReceived"rules:# Log pod changes at RequestResponse level- level:RequestResponseresources:- group:""# Resource "pods" doesn't match requests to any subresource of pods,# which is consistent with the RBAC policy.resources:["pods"]# Log "pods/log", "pods/status" at Metadata level- level:Metadataresources:- group:""resources:["pods/log","pods/status"]# Don't log requests to a configmap called "controller-leader"- level:Noneresources:- group:""resources:["configmaps"]resourceNames:["controller-leader"]# Don't log watch requests by the "system:kube-proxy" on endpoints or services- level:Noneusers:["system:kube-proxy"]verbs:["watch"]resources:- group:""# core API groupresources:["endpoints","services"]# Don't log authenticated requests to certain non-resource URL paths.- level:NoneuserGroups:["system:authenticated"]nonResourceURLs:- "/api*"# Wildcard matching.- "/version"# Log the request body of configmap changes in kube-system.- level:Requestresources:- group:""# core API groupresources:["configmaps"]# This rule only applies to resources in the "kube-system" namespace.# The empty string "" can be used to select non-namespaced resources.namespaces:["kube-system"]# Log configmap and secret changes in all other namespaces at the Metadata level.- level:Metadataresources:- group:""# core API groupresources:["secrets","configmaps"]# Log all other resources in core and extensions at the Request level.- level:Requestresources:- group:""# core API group- group:"extensions"# Version of group should NOT be included.# A catch-all rule to log all other requests at the Metadata level.- level:Metadata# Long-running requests like watches that fall under this rule will not# generate an audit event in RequestReceived.omitStages:- "RequestReceived"
You can use a minimal audit policy file to log all requests at the Metadata level:
# Log all requests at the Metadata level.apiVersion:audit.k8s.io/v1kind:Policyrules:- level:Metadata
If you're crafting your own audit profile, you can use the audit profile for Google Container-Optimized OS as a starting point. You can check the
configure-helper.sh
script, which generates an audit policy file. You can see most of the audit policy file by looking directly at the script.
Audit backends persist audit events to an external storage.
Out of the box, the kube-apiserver provides two backends:
Log backend, which writes events into the filesystem
Webhook backend, which sends events to an external HTTP API
In all cases, audit events follow a structure defined by the Kubernetes API in the
audit.k8s.io API group.
Note:
In case of patches, request body is a JSON array with patch operations, not a JSON object
with an appropriate Kubernetes API object. For example, the following request body is a valid patch
request to /apis/batch/v1/namespaces/some-namespace/jobs/some-job-name:
The log backend writes audit events to a file in JSONlines format.
You can configure the log audit backend using the following kube-apiserver flags:
--audit-log-path specifies the log file path that log backend uses to write
audit events. Not specifying this flag disables log backend. - means standard out
--audit-log-maxage defined the maximum number of days to retain old audit log files
--audit-log-maxbackup defines the maximum number of audit log files to retain
--audit-log-maxsize defines the maximum size in megabytes of the audit log file before it gets rotated
If your cluster's control plane runs the kube-apiserver as a Pod, remember to mount the hostPath
to the location of the policy file and log file, so that audit records are persisted. For example:
The webhook audit backend sends audit events to a remote web API, which is assumed to
be a form of the Kubernetes API, including means of authentication. You can configure
a webhook audit backend using the following kube-apiserver flags:
--audit-webhook-config-file specifies the path to a file with a webhook
configuration. The webhook configuration is effectively a specialized
kubeconfig.
--audit-webhook-initial-backoff specifies the amount of time to wait after the first failed
request before retrying. Subsequent requests are retried with exponential backoff.
The webhook config file uses the kubeconfig format to specify the remote address of
the service and credentials used to connect to it.
Event batching
Both log and webhook backends support batching. Using webhook as an example, here's the list of
available flags. To get the same flag for log backend, replace webhook with log in the flag
name. By default, batching is enabled in webhook and disabled in log. Similarly, by default
throttling is enabled in webhook and disabled in log.
--audit-webhook-mode defines the buffering strategy. One of the following:
batch - buffer events and asynchronously process them in batches. This is the default.
blocking - block API server responses on processing each individual event.
blocking-strict - Same as blocking, but when there is a failure during audit logging at the
RequestReceived stage, the whole request to the kube-apiserver fails.
The following flags are used only in the batch mode:
--audit-webhook-batch-buffer-size defines the number of events to buffer before batching.
If the rate of incoming events overflows the buffer, events are dropped.
--audit-webhook-batch-max-size defines the maximum number of events in one batch.
--audit-webhook-batch-max-wait defines the maximum amount of time to wait before unconditionally
batching events in the queue.
--audit-webhook-batch-throttle-qps defines the maximum average number of batches generated
per second.
--audit-webhook-batch-throttle-burst defines the maximum number of batches generated at the same
moment if the allowed QPS was underutilized previously.
Parameter tuning
Parameters should be set to accommodate the load on the API server.
For example, if kube-apiserver receives 100 requests each second, and each request is audited only
on ResponseStarted and ResponseComplete stages, you should account for ≅200 audit
events being generated each second. Assuming that there are up to 100 events in a batch,
you should set throttling level at least 2 queries per second. Assuming that the backend can take up to
5 seconds to write events, you should set the buffer size to hold up to 5 seconds of events;
that is: 10 batches, or 1000 events.
In most cases however, the default parameters should be sufficient and you don't have to worry about
setting them manually. You can look at the following Prometheus metrics exposed by kube-apiserver
and in the logs to monitor the state of the auditing subsystem.
apiserver_audit_event_total metric contains the total number of audit events exported.
apiserver_audit_error_total metric contains the total number of events dropped due to an error
during exporting.
Log entry truncation
Both log and webhook backends support limiting the size of events that are logged.
As an example, the following is the list of flags available for the log backend:
audit-log-truncate-enabled whether event and batch truncating is enabled.
audit-log-truncate-max-batch-size maximum size in bytes of the batch sent to the underlying backend.
audit-log-truncate-max-event-size maximum size in bytes of the audit event sent to the underlying backend.
By default truncate is disabled in both webhook and log, a cluster administrator should set
audit-log-truncate-enabled or audit-webhook-truncate-enabled to enable the feature.
Learn more about Event
and the Policy
resource types by reading the Audit configuration reference.
7 - Debugging Kubernetes Nodes With Kubectl
This page shows how to debug a node
running on the Kubernetes cluster using kubectl debug command.
Before you begin
You need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl command-line tool must
be configured to communicate with your cluster. It is recommended to run this tutorial on a cluster with at least two nodes that are not acting as control plane hosts. If you do not already have a
cluster, you can create one by using
minikube
or you can use one of these Kubernetes playgrounds:
Your Kubernetes server must be at or later than version 1.2.
To check the version, enter kubectl version.
You need to have permission to create Pods and to assign those new Pods to arbitrary nodes.
You also need to be authorized to create Pods that access filesystems from the host.
Debugging a Node using kubectl debug node
Use the kubectl debug node command to deploy a Pod to a Node that you want to troubleshoot.
This command is helpful in scenarios where you can't access your Node by using an SSH connection.
When the Pod is created, the Pod opens an interactive shell on the Node.
To create an interactive shell on a Node named “mynode”, run:
kubectl debug node/mynode -it --image=ubuntu
Creating debugging pod node-debugger-mynode-pdx84 with container debugger on node mynode.
If you don't see a command prompt, try pressing enter.
root@mynode:/#
The debug command helps to gather information and troubleshoot issues. Commands
that you might use include ip, ifconfig, nc, ping, and ps and so on. You can also
install other tools, such as mtr, tcpdump, and curl, from the respective package manager.
Note: The debug commands may differ based on the image the debugging pod is using and
these commands might need to be installed.
The debugging Pod can access the root filesystem of the Node, mounted at /host in the Pod.
If you run your kubelet in a filesystem namespace,
the debugging Pod sees the root for that namespace, not for the entire node. For a typical Linux node,
you can look at the following paths to find relevant logs:
/host/var/log/kubelet.log
Logs from the kubelet, responsible for running containers on the node.
/host/var/log/kube-proxy.log
Logs from kube-proxy, which is responsible for directing traffic to Service endpoints.
/host/var/log/containerd.log
Logs from the containerd process running on the node.
/host/var/log/syslog
Shows general messages and information regarding the system.
/host/var/log/kern.log
Shows kernel logs.
When creating a debugging session on a Node, keep in mind that:
kubectl debug automatically generates the name of the new pod, based on
the name of the node.
The root filesystem of the Node will be mounted at /host.
Although the container runs in the host IPC, Network, and PID namespaces,
the pod isn't privileged. This means that reading some process information might fail
because access to that information is restricted to superusers. For example, chroot /host will fail.
If you need a privileged pod, create it manually.
Cleaning up
When you finish using the debugging Pod, delete it:
kubectl get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
node-debugger-mynode-pdx84 0/1 Completed 0 8m1s
# Change the pod name accordinglykubectl delete pod node-debugger-mynode-pdx84 --now
pod "node-debugger-mynode-pdx84" deleted
Note: The kubectl debug node command won't work if the Node is down (disconnected
from the network, or kubelet dies and won't restart, etc.).
Check debugging a down/unreachable node
in that case.
8 - Developing and debugging services locally using telepresence
Note:This section links to third party projects that provide functionality required by Kubernetes. The Kubernetes project authors aren't responsible for these projects, which are listed alphabetically. To add a project to this list, read the content guide before submitting a change. More information.
Kubernetes applications usually consist of multiple, separate services,
each running in its own container. Developing and debugging these services
on a remote Kubernetes cluster can be cumbersome, requiring you to
get a shell on a running container
in order to run debugging tools.
telepresence is a tool to ease the process of developing and debugging
services locally while proxying the service to a remote Kubernetes cluster.
Using telepresence allows you to use custom tools, such as a debugger and
IDE, for a local service and provides the service full access to ConfigMap,
secrets, and the services running on the remote cluster.
This document describes using telepresence to develop and debug services
running on a remote cluster locally.
Before you begin
Kubernetes cluster is installed
kubectl is configured to communicate with the cluster
Connecting your local machine to a remote Kubernetes cluster
After installing telepresence, run telepresence connect to launch
its Daemon and connect your local workstation to the cluster.
$ telepresence connect
Launching Telepresence Daemon
...
Connected to context default (https://<cluster public IP>)
You can curl services using the Kubernetes syntax e.g. curl -ik https://kubernetes.default
Developing or debugging an existing service
When developing an application on Kubernetes, you typically program
or debug a single service. The service might require access to other
services for testing and debugging. One option is to use the continuous
deployment pipeline, but even the fastest deployment pipeline introduces
a delay in the program or debug cycle.
Use the telepresence intercept $SERVICE_NAME --port $LOCAL_PORT:$REMOTE_PORT
command to create an "intercept" for rerouting remote service traffic.
Where:
$SERVICE_NAME is the name of your local service
$LOCAL_PORT is the port that your service is running on your local workstation
And $REMOTE_PORT is the port your service listens to in the cluster
Running this command tells Telepresence to send remote traffic to your
local service instead of the service in the remote Kubernetes cluster.
Make edits to your service source code locally, save, and see the corresponding
changes when accessing your remote application take effect immediately.
You can also run your local service using a debugger or any other local development tool.
How does Telepresence work?
Telepresence installs a traffic-agent sidecar next to your existing
application's container running in the remote cluster. It then captures
all traffic requests going into the Pod, and instead of forwarding this
to the application in the remote cluster, it routes all traffic (when you
create a global intercept
or a subset of the traffic (when you create a
personal intercept)
to your local development environment.
What's next
If you're interested in a hands-on tutorial, check out
this tutorial
that walks through locally developing the Guestbook application on Google Kubernetes Engine.
My Pods are stuck at "Container Creating" or restarting over and over
Ensure that your pause image is compatible with your Windows OS version.
See Pause container
to see the latest / recommended pause image and/or get more information.
Note: If using containerd as your container runtime the pause image is specified in the
plugins.plugins.cri.sandbox_image field of the of config.toml configuration file.
My pods show status as ErrImgPull or ImagePullBackOff
Ensure that your Pod is getting scheduled to a
compatible
Windows Node.
More information on how to specify a compatible node for your Pod can be found in
this guide.
Network troubleshooting
My Windows Pods do not have network connectivity
If you are using virtual machines, ensure that MAC spoofing is enabled on all
the VM network adapter(s).
My Windows Pods cannot ping external resources
Windows Pods do not have outbound rules programmed for the ICMP protocol. However,
TCP/UDP is supported. When trying to demonstrate connectivity to resources
outside of the cluster, substitute ping <IP> with corresponding
curl <IP> commands.
If you are still facing problems, most likely your network configuration in
cni.conf
deserves some extra attention. You can always edit this static file. The
configuration update will apply to any new Kubernetes resources.
One of the Kubernetes networking requirements
(see Kubernetes model) is
for cluster communication to occur without
NAT internally. To honor this requirement, there is an
ExceptionList
for all the communication where you do not want outbound NAT to occur. However,
this also means that you need to exclude the external IP you are trying to query
from the ExceptionList. Only then will the traffic originating from your Windows
pods be SNAT'ed correctly to receive a response from the outside world. In this
regard, your ExceptionList in cni.conf should look as follows:
My Windows node cannot access NodePort type Services
Local NodePort access from the node itself fails. This is a known
limitation. NodePort access works from other nodes or external clients.
vNICs and HNS endpoints of containers are being deleted
This issue can be caused when the hostname-override parameter is not passed to
kube-proxy. To resolve
it, users need to pass the hostname to kube-proxy as follows:
My Windows node cannot access my services using the service IP
This is a known limitation of the networking stack on Windows. However, Windows Pods can access the Service IP.
No network adapter is found when starting the kubelet
The Windows networking stack needs a virtual adapter for Kubernetes networking to work.
If the following commands return no results (in an admin shell),
virtual network creation — a necessary prerequisite for the kubelet to work — has failed:
Get-HnsNetwork | ? Name -ieq"cbr0"Get-NetAdapter | ? Name -Like"vEthernet (Ethernet*"
Often it is worthwhile to modify the InterfaceName
parameter of the start.ps1 script, in cases where the host's network adapter isn't "Ethernet".
Otherwise, consult the output of the start-kubelet.ps1 script to see if there are errors during virtual network creation.
DNS resolution is not properly working
Check the DNS limitations for Windows in this section.
kubectl port-forward fails with "unable to do port forwarding: wincat not found"
This was implemented in Kubernetes 1.15 by including wincat.exe in the pause infrastructure container
mcr.microsoft.com/oss/kubernetes/pause:3.6.
Be sure to use a supported version of Kubernetes.
If you would like to build your own pause infrastructure container be sure to include
wincat.
My Kubernetes installation is failing because my Windows Server node is behind a proxy
If you are behind a proxy, the following PowerShell environment variables must be defined:
With Flannel, my nodes are having issues after rejoining a cluster
Whenever a previously deleted node is being re-joined to the cluster, flannelD
tries to assign a new pod subnet to the node. Users should remove the old pod
subnet configuration files in the following paths:
Flanneld is stuck in "Waiting for the Network to be created"
There are numerous reports of this issue;
most likely it is a timing issue for when the management IP of the flannel network is set.
A workaround is to relaunch start.ps1 or relaunch it manually as follows:
My Windows Pods cannot launch because of missing /run/flannel/subnet.env
This indicates that Flannel didn't launch correctly. You can either try
to restart flanneld.exe or you can copy the files over manually from
/run/flannel/subnet.env on the Kubernetes master to C:\run\flannel\subnet.env
on the Windows worker node and modify the FLANNEL_SUBNET row to a different
number. For example, if node subnet 10.244.4.1/24 is desired: