Istio CNI Node Agent
The Istio CNI Node Agent is responsible for several things
- Install an Istio CNI plugin binary on each node's filesystem, updating that node's CNI config in e.g (
/etc/cni/net.d
), and watching the config and binary paths to reinstall if things are modified.
- In sidecar mode, the CNI plugin can configure sidecar networking for pods when they are scheduled by the container runtime, using iptables. The CNI handling the netns setup replaces the current Istio approach using a
NET_ADMIN
privileged initContainers
container, istio-init
, injected in the pods along with istio-proxy
sidecars. This removes the need for a privileged, NET_ADMIN
container in the Istio users' application pods.
- In ambient mode, the CNI plugin does not configure any networking, but is only responsible for synchronously pushing new pod events back up to an ambient watch server which runs as part of the Istio CNI node agent. The ambient server will find the pod netns and configure networking inside that pod via iptables. The ambient server will additionally watch enabled namespaces, and enroll already-started-but-newly-enrolled pods in a similar fashion.
Privileges required
Regardless of mode, the Istio CNI Node Agent requires privileged node permissions, and will require allow-listing in constrained environments that block privileged workloads by default. If using sidecar repair mode or ambient mode, the node agent additionally needs permissions to enter pod network namespaces and perform networking configuration in them. If either sidecar repair or ambient mode are enabled, on startup the container will drop all Linux capabilities via (drop:ALL
), and re-add back the ones sidecar repair/ambient explicitly require to function, namely:
- CAP_SYS_ADMIN
- CAP_NET_ADMIN
- CAP_NET_RAW
Ambient mode details
See architecture doc.
Reference
Design details
Broadly, istio-cni
accomplishes ambient redirection by instructing ztunnel to set up sockets within the application pod network namespace, where:
- one end of the socket is in the application pod
- and the other end is in ztunnel's pod
and setting up iptables rules to funnel traffic thru that socket "tube" to ztunnel and back.
This effectively behaves like ztunnel is an in-pod sidecar, without actually requiring the injection of ztunnel as a sidecar into the pod manifest, or mutatating the application pod in any way.
Additionally, it does not require any network rules/routing/config in the host network namespace, which greatly increases ambient mode compatibility with 3rd-party CNIs. In virtually all cases, this "in-pod" ambient CNI is exactly as compatible with 3rd-party CNIs as sidecars are/were.
Notable Env Vars
Env Var |
Default |
Purpose |
HOST_PROBE_SNAT_IP |
"169.254.7.127" |
Applied to SNAT host probe packets, so they can be identified/skipped podside. Any link-local address in the 169.254.0.0/16 block can be used |
HOST_PROBE_SNAT_IPV6 |
"fd16:9254:7127:1337:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff" |
IPv6 link local ranges are designed to be collision-resistant by default, and so this probably never needs to be overridden |
Sidecar Mode Implementation Details
Istio CNI injection is currently based on the same Pod annotations used in init-container/inject mode.
Selection API
- plugin config "exclude namespaces" applies first
- ambient is enabled if:
- namespace label "istio.io/dataplane-mode" == "ambient", and/or pod label "istio.io/dataplane-mode" == "ambient"
- "sidecar.istio.io/status" annotation is not present on the pod (created by injection of sidecar)
- pod label "istio.io/dataplane-mode" is not "none"
- sidecar interception is enabled if:
- "istio-init" container is not present in the pod.
- istio-proxy container exists and
- does not have DISABLE_ENVOY environment variable (which triggers proxyless mode)
- has a istio-proxy container, with first 2 args "proxy" and "sidecar" - or less then 2 args, or first arg not proxy.
- "sidecar.istio.io/inject" is not false
- "sidecar.istio.io/status" exists
Redirect API
The annotation based control is currently only supported in 'sidecar' mode. See plugin/redirect.go for details.
- redirectMode allows TPROXY may to be set, required envoy has extra permissions. Default is redirect.
- includeIPCidr, excludeIPCidr
- includeInboudPorts, excludeInboundPorts
- includeOutboutPorts, excludeOutboundPorts
- excludeInterfaces
- kubevirtInterfaces (deprecated), reroute-virtual-interfaces
- ISTIO_META_DNS_CAPTURE env variable on the proxy - enables dns redirect
- INVALID_DROP env var on proxy - changes behavior from reset to drop in iptables
- auto excluded inbound ports: 15020, 15021, 15090
The code automatically detects the proxyUID and proxyGID from RunAsUser/RunAsGroup and exclude them from interception, defaulting to 1337
Overview
-
istio-cni Helm chart
install-cni
daemonset - main function is to install and help the node CNI, but it is also a proper server and interacts with K8S, watching Pods for recovery.
istio-cni-config
configmap with CNI plugin config to add to CNI plugin chained config
- creates service-account
istio-cni
with ClusterRoleBinding
to allow gets on pods' info and delete/modifications for recovery.
-
install-cni
container
- copies
istio-cni
and istio-iptables
to /opt/cni/bin
- creates kubeconfig for the service account the pod runs under
- periodically copy the K8S JWT token for istio-cni on the host to connect to K8S.
- injects the CNI plugin config to the CNI config file
- CNI installer will try to look for the config file under the mounted CNI net dir based on file name extensions (
.conf
, .conflist
)
- the file name can be explicitly set by
CNI_CONF_NAME
env var
- the program inserts
CNI_NETWORK_CONFIG
into the plugins
list in /etc/cni/net.d/${CNI_CONF_NAME}
- the actual code is in pkg/install - including a readiness probe, monitoring.
- it also sets up a UDS socket for istio-cni to send logs to this container.
- based on config, it may run the 'repair' controller that detects pods where istio setup fails and restarts them, or created in corner cases.
- if ambient is enabled, also runs an ambient controller, watching Pod, Namespace
-
istio-cni
- CNI plugin executable copied to
/opt/cni/bin
- currently implemented for k8s only
- on pod add, determines whether pod should have netns setup to redirect to Istio proxy. See cmdAdd for detailed logic.
- it connects to K8S using the kubeconfig and JWT token copied from install-cni to get Pod and Namespace. Since this is a short-running command, each invocation creates a new connection.
- If so, calls
istio-iptables
with params to setup pod netns
- If ambient, sets up the ambient logic.
-
istio-iptables
- sets up iptables to redirect a list of ports to the port envoy will listen
- shared code with istio-init container
- it will generate an iptables-save config, based on annotations/labels and other settings, and apply it.
CmdAdd Sidecar Workflow
CmdAdd
is triggered when there is a new pod created. This runs on the node, in a chain of CNI plugins - Istio is
run after the main CNI sets up the pod IP and networking.
- Check k8s pod namespace against exclusion list (plugin config)
- Config must exclude namespace that Istio control-plane is installed in (TODO: this may change, exclude at pod level is sufficient and we may want Istiod and other istio components to use ambient too)
- If excluded, ignore the pod and return prevResult
- Setup redirect rules for the pods:
- Get the port list from pods definition, as well as annotations.
- Setup iptables with required port list:
nsenter --net=<k8s pod netns> /opt/cni/bin/istio-iptables ...
. Following conditions will prevent the redirect rules to be setup in the pods:
- Pods have annotation
sidecar.istio.io/inject
set to false
or has no key sidecar.istio.io/status
in annotations
- Pod has
istio-init
initContainer - this indicates a pod running its own injection setup.
- Return prevResult
Troubleshooting
Collecting Logs
Using istioctl
/helm
- Set:
values.global.logging.level="cni:debug,ambient:debug"
- Inspect the pod logs of a
istio-cni
Daemonset pod on a specific node.
From a specific node syslog
The CNI plugins are executed by threads in the kubelet
process. The CNI plugins logs end up the syslog
under the kubelet
process. On systems with journalctl
the following is an example command line
to view the last 1000 kubelet
logs via the less
utility to allow for vi
-style searching:
$ journalctl -t kubelet -n 1000 | less
GKE via Stackdriver Log Viewer
Each GKE cluster's will have many categories of logs collected by Stackdriver. Logs can be monitored via
the project's log viewer and/or the gcloud logging read
capability.
The following example grabs the last 10 kubelet
logs containing the string "cmdAdd" in the log message.
$ gcloud logging read "resource.type=k8s_node AND jsonPayload.SYSLOG_IDENTIFIER=kubelet AND jsonPayload.MESSAGE:cmdAdd" --limit 10 --format json
Other Reference
The framework for this implementation of the CNI plugin is based on the
containernetworking sample plugin
The details for the deployment & installation of this plugin were pretty much lifted directly from the
Calico CNI plugin.
Specifically:
- The CNI installation script is containerized and deployed as a daemonset in k8s. The relevant calico k8s manifests were used as the model for the istio-cni plugin's manifest:
- daemonset and configmap - search for the
calico-node
Daemonset and its install-cni
container deployment
- RBAC - this creates the service account the CNI plugin is configured to use to access the kube-api-server