README ¶
cni-metrics-helper
The cni-metrics-helper
is a tool that can be used to scrape ENI and IP information, aggregate it on a cluster
level and publish the metrics to CloudWatch. The following IAM permission is required by the worker nodes to
publish metrics:
"cloudwatch:PutMetricData"
By default, IPAM will publish prometheus metrics on :61678/metrics
.
The following diagram shows how cni-metrics-helper
works in a cluster:
As you can see in the diagram, the cni-metrics-helper
connects to the API Server over https (tcp/443
), and another connection is created from the API Server to the worker node over http (tcp/61678
). If you deploy Amazon EKS with the recommended security groups from Restricting cluster traffic, then make sure that a security group is in place that allows the inbound connection from the API Server to the worker nodes over tcp/61678
.
Adding the CNI metrics helper will publish the following metrics to CloudWatch:
Metric | Description | Statistic[^1] |
---|---|---|
addReqCount | The number of CNI ADD requests that require an IP address | Sum |
assignIPAddresses | The number of IP addresses assigned to pods | Sum |
awsAPIErr | The number of times AWS API returns an error | Sum |
awsAPILatency | AWS API call latency in ms | Max |
awsUtilErr | The number of errors not handled in awsutils library | Sum |
delReqCount | The number of CNI DEL requests | Sum |
eniAllocated | The number of ENIs allocated | Sum |
eniMaxAvailable | The maximum number of ENIs that can be attached to this instance, accounting for unmanaged ENIs | Sum |
ipamdActionInProgress | The number of ipamd actions in progress | Sum |
ipamdErr | The number of errors encountered in ipamd | Sum |
maxIPAddresses | The maximum number of IP addresses that can be allocated to the instance | Sum |
podENIErr | The number of errors encountered while managing ENIs for pods | Sum |
reconcileCount | The number of times ipamd reconciles on ENIs and IP/Prefix addresses | Sum |
totalIPAddresses | The number of IPs allocated for pods | Sum |
totalIPv4Prefixes | The total number of IPv4 prefixes | Sum |
totalAssignedIPv4sPerCidr | The total number of IP addresses assigned per cidr | Sum |
forceRemoveENI | The number of ENIs force removed while they had assigned pods | Sum |
forceRemoveIPs | The number of IPs force removed while they had assigned pods | Sum |
ec2ApiReqCount | The number of requests made to EC2 APIs by CNI | Sum |
ec2ApiErrCount | The number of failed EC2 API requests | Sum |
[^1]: This column indicates how the metric has been aggregated across all nodes Sum: For datapoints from all nodes, this is the summation of those datapoints Max: For datapoints from all nodes, this is the maximum value of those datapoints
Using IRSA
As per AWS EKS Security Best Practice, if you are using IRSA for pods then following requirements must be satisfied to succesfully publish metrics to CloudWatch
- The IAM Role for your SA (IRSA) must have following policy attached
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"cloudwatch:PutMetricData"
],
"Resource": "*"
}
]
}
- Specify the IRSA name in the cni-metrics-helper deployment spec alongwith the AWS_CLUSTER_ID (as described below). The value that you specify here will show up under the dimension 'CLUSTER_ID' for your published metrics. Specifying a value for this field is mandatory only if you are blocking IMDS access.
AWS_CLUSTER_ID
Type: String
Default: ""
An identifier for your Cluster which will be used as the dimension for published metrics. Ideally it should be ClusterName or ClusterID.
kind: Deployment
apiVersion: apps/v1
metadata:
name: cni-metrics-helper
namespace: kube-system
labels:
k8s-app: cni-metrics-helper
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
k8s-app: cni-metrics-helper
template:
metadata:
labels:
k8s-app: cni-metrics-helper
spec:
containers:
- env:
- name: AWS_CLUSTER_ID
value: ""
- name: USE_CLOUDWATCH
value: "true"
name: cni-metrics-helper
image: <image>
serviceAccountName: <IRSA name>
With IRSA, the above deployment spec will be auto-injected with AWS_REGION parameter, and it will be used to fetch region information when we publish metrics. Possible scenarios for above configuration:
- If you are not using IRSA, then Region and CLUSTER_ID information will be fetched using IMDS (should have access)
- If you are using IRSA but have not specified AWS_CLUSTER_ID, we will fetch the value for CLUSTER_ID if IMDS access is not blocked
- If you have blocked IMDS access, then you must specify a value for AWS_CLUSTER_ID in the deployment spec
- If you have not blocked IMDS access but have specified AWS_CLUSTER_ID value, then this value will be used.
Installing the cni-metrics-helper
To install the CNI metrics helper, follow the installation instructions from the target version release notes.
Creating a metrics dashboard
After you have deployed the CNI metrics helper, you can view the CNI metrics in the Amazon CloudWatch console.
To create a CNI metrics dashboard
- Open the CloudWatch console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/cloudwatch/.
- In the left navigation pane, choose Metrics and then select All metrics.
- Choose the Graphed metrics tab.
- Choose Add metrics using browse or query.
- Make sure that under Metrics, you've selected the AWS Region for your cluster.
- In the Search box, enter Kubernetes and then press Enter.
- Select the metrics that you want to add to the dashboard.
- At the upper right of the console, select Actions, and then Add to dashboard.
- In the Select a dashboard section, choose Create new, enter a name for your dashboard, such as EKS-CNI-metrics, and then choose Create.
- In the Widget type section, select Number.
- In the Customize widget title section, enter a logical name for your dashboard title, such as EKS CNI metrics.
- Choose Add to dashboard to finish. Now your CNI metrics are added to a dashboard that you can monitor. For more information about Amazon CloudWatch Logs metrics, see Using Amazon CloudWatch metrics in the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.
Get cni-metrics-helper logs
kubectl get pod -n kube-system
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
aws-node-248ns 1/1 Running 0 6h
aws-node-257bn 1/1 Running 0 2h
...
cni-metrics-helper-6dcff5ddf4-v5l6d 1/1 Running 0 7h
kube-dns-75fddcb66f-48tzn 3/3 Running 0 1d
kubectl logs cni-metrics-helper-6dcff5ddf4-v5l6d -n kube-system
cni-metrics-helper key log messages
Example of some aggregated metrics
I0516 17:11:58.489648 7 metrics.go:350] Produce GAUGE metrics: ipamdActionInProgress, value: 0.000000
I0516 17:11:58.489657 7 metrics.go:350] Produce GAUGE metrics: assignIPAddresses, value: 2.000000
I0516 17:11:58.489665 7 metrics.go:350] Produce GAUGE metrics: totalIPAddresses, value: 11186.000000
I0516 17:11:58.489674 7 metrics.go:350] Produce GAUGE metrics: eniMaxAvailable, value: 800.000000
I0516 17:11:58.489685 7 metrics.go:340] Produce COUNTER metrics: ipamdErr, value: 1.000000
I0516 17:11:58.489695 7 metrics.go:350] Produce GAUGE metrics: eniAllocated, value: 799.000000
I0516 17:11:58.489715 7 metrics.go:350] Produce GAUGE metrics: maxIPAddresses, value: 11200.000000
How to build
In the base folder of the project:
make docker-metrics
To run tests
make docker-metrics-test