node-problem-detector
node-problem-detector aims to make various node problems visible to the upstream
layers in the cluster management stack.
It is a daemon that runs on each node, detects node
problems and reports them to apiserver.
node-problem-detector can either run as a
DaemonSet or run standalone.
Now it is running as a
Kubernetes Addon
enabled by default in the GCE cluster.
Background
There are tons of node problems that could possibly affect the pods running on the
node, such as:
- Infrastructure daemon issues: ntp service down;
- Hardware issues: Bad CPU, memory or disk;
- Kernel issues: Kernel deadlock, corrupted file system;
- Container runtime issues: Unresponsive runtime daemon;
- ...
Currently, these problems are invisible to the upstream layers in the cluster management
stack, so Kubernetes will continue scheduling pods to the bad nodes.
To solve this problem, we introduced this new daemon node-problem-detector to
collect node problems from various daemons and make them visible to the upstream
layers. Once upstream layers have visibility to those problems, we can discuss the
remedy system.
Problem API
node-problem-detector uses Event
and NodeCondition
to report problems to
apiserver.
NodeCondition
: Permanent problem that makes the node unavailable for pods should
be reported as NodeCondition
.
Event
: Temporary problem that has limited impact on pod but is informative
should be reported as Event
.
Problem Daemon
A problem daemon is a sub-daemon of node-problem-detector. It monitors a specific
kind of node problems and reports them to node-problem-detector.
A problem daemon could be:
- A tiny daemon designed for dedicated Kubernetes use-cases.
- An existing node health monitoring daemon integrated with node-problem-detector.
Currently, a problem daemon is running as a goroutine in the node-problem-detector
binary. In the future, we'll separate node-problem-detector and problem daemons into
different containers, and compose them with pod specification.
Each category of problem daemon can be disabled at compilation time by setting
corresponding build tags. If they are disabled at compilation time, then all their
build dependencies, global variables and background goroutines will be trimmed out
of the compiled executable.
List of supported problem daemons:
Problem Daemon |
NodeCondition |
Description |
Disabling Build Tag |
KernelMonitor |
KernelDeadlock |
A system log monitor monitors kernel log and reports problems and metrics according to predefined rules. |
disable_system_log_monitor |
AbrtAdaptor |
None |
Monitor ABRT log messages and report them further. ABRT (Automatic Bug Report Tool) is a health monitoring daemon able to catch kernel problems as well as application crashes of various kinds that occur on the host. For more information visit the link. |
disable_system_log_monitor |
CustomPluginMonitor |
On-demand(According to users configuration) |
A custom plugin monitor for node-problem-detector to invoke and check various node problems with user-defined check scripts. See the proposal here. |
disable_custom_plugin_monitor |
SystemStatsMonitor |
None(Could be added in the future) |
A system stats monitor for node-problem-detector to collect various health-related system stats as metrics. See the proposal here. |
disable_system_stats_monitor |
Exporter
An exporter is a component of node-problem-detector. It reports node problems and/or metrics to
certain backends. Some of them can be disabled at compile-time using a build tag. List of supported exporters:
Exporter |
Description |
Disabling Build Tag |
Kubernetes exporter |
Kubernetes exporter reports node problems to Kubernetes API server: temporary problems get reported as Events, and permanent problems get reported as Node Conditions. |
|
Prometheus exporter |
Prometheus exporter reports node problems and metrics locally as Prometheus metrics |
|
Stackdriver exporter |
Stackdriver exporter reports node problems and metrics to Stackdriver Monitoring API. |
disable_stackdriver_exporter |
Usage
Flags
--version
: Print current version of node-problem-detector.
--hostname-override
: A customized node name used for node-problem-detector to update conditions and emit events. node-problem-detector gets node name first from hostname-override
, then NODE_NAME
environment variable and finally fall back to os.Hostname
.
For System Log Monitor
--config.system-log-monitor
: List of paths to system log monitor configuration files, comma-separated, e.g.
config/kernel-monitor.json.
Node problem detector will start a separate log monitor for each configuration. You can
use different log monitors to monitor different system logs.
For System Stats Monitor
--config.system-stats-monitor
: List of paths to system stats monitor config files, comma-separated, e.g.
config/system-stats-monitor.json.
Node problem detector will start a separate system stats monitor for each configuration. You can
use different system stats monitors to monitor different problem-related system stats.
For Custom Plugin Monitor
--config.custom-plugin-monitor
: List of paths to custom plugin monitor config files, comma-separated, e.g.
config/custom-plugin-monitor.json.
Node problem detector will start a separate custom plugin monitor for each configuration. You can
use different custom plugin monitors to monitor different node problems.
For Kubernetes exporter
For Prometheus exporter
--prometheus-address
: The address to bind the Prometheus scrape endpoint, default to 127.0.0.1
.
--prometheus-port
: The port to bind the Prometheus scrape endpoint, default to 20257. Use 0 to disable.
For Stackdriver exporter
Deprecated Flags
-
--system-log-monitors
: List of paths to system log monitor config files, comma-separated. This option is deprecated, replaced by --config.system-log-monitor
, and will be removed. NPD will panic if both --system-log-monitors
and --config.system-log-monitor
are set.
-
--custom-plugin-monitors
: List of paths to custom plugin monitor config files, comma-separated. This option is deprecated, replaced by --config.custom-plugin-monitor
, and will be removed. NPD will panic if both --custom-plugin-monitors
and --config.custom-plugin-monitor
are set.
Build Image
If you do not need certain categories of problem daemons, you could choose to disable them at compilation time. This is the
best way of keeping your node-problem-detector runtime compact without unnecessary code (e.g. global
variables, goroutines, etc). You can do so via setting the BUILD_TAGS
environment variable
before running make
. For example:
BUILD_TAGS="disable_custom_plugin_monitor disable_system_stats_monitor" make
The above command will compile the node-problem-detector without Custom Plugin Monitor
and System Stats Monitor.
Check out the Problem Daemon section
to see how to disable each problem daemon during compilation time.
Note:
By default, node-problem-detector will be built with systemd support with the make
command. This requires systemd develop files.
You should download the systemd develop files first. For Ubuntu, the libsystemd-journal-dev
package should
be installed. For Debian, the libsystemd-dev
package should be installed.
Push Image
make push
uploads the docker image to a registry. By default, the image will be uploaded to
staging-k8s.gcr.io
. It's easy to modify the Makefile
to push the image
to another registry.
Installation
The easiest way to install node-problem-detector into your cluster is to use the Helm chart:
helm repo add deliveryhero https://charts.deliveryhero.io/
helm install deliveryhero/node-problem-detector
Alternatively, to install node-problem-detector manually:
-
Edit node-problem-detector.yaml to fit your environment. Set log
volume to your system log directory (used by SystemLogMonitor). You can use a ConfigMap to overwrite the config
directory inside the pod.
-
Edit node-problem-detector-config.yaml to configure node-problem-detector.
-
Create the ConfigMap with kubectl create -f node-problem-detector-config.yaml
.
-
Create the DaemonSet with kubectl create -f node-problem-detector.yaml
.
Start Standalone
To run node-problem-detector standalone, you should set inClusterConfig
to false
and
teach node-problem-detector how to access apiserver with apiserver-override
.
To run node-problem-detector standalone with an insecure apiserver connection:
node-problem-detector --apiserver-override=http://APISERVER_IP:APISERVER_INSECURE_PORT?inClusterConfig=false
For more scenarios, see here
Try It Out
You can try node-problem-detector in a running cluster by injecting messages to the logs that node-problem-detector is watching. For example, Let's assume node-problem-detector is using KernelMonitor. On your workstation, run kubectl get events -w
. On the node, run sudo sh -c "echo 'kernel: BUG: unable to handle kernel NULL pointer dereference at TESTING' >> /dev/kmsg"
. Then you should see the KernelOops
event.
When adding new rules or developing node-problem-detector, it is probably easier to test it on the local workstation in the standalone mode. For the API server, an easy way is to use kubectl proxy
to make a running cluster's API server available locally. You will get some errors because your local workstation is not recognized by the API server. But you should still be able to test your new rules regardless.
For example, to test KernelMonitor rules:
make
(build node-problem-detector locally)
kubectl proxy --port=8080
(make a running cluster's API server available locally)
- Update KernelMonitor's
logPath
to your local kernel log directory. For example, on some Linux systems, it is /run/log/journal
instead of /var/log/journal
.
./bin/node-problem-detector --logtostderr --apiserver-override=http://127.0.0.1:8080?inClusterConfig=false --config.system-log-monitor=config/kernel-monitor.json --config.system-stats-monitor=config/system-stats-monitor.json --port=20256 --prometheus-port=20257
(or point to any API server address:port and Prometheus port)
sudo sh -c "echo 'kernel: BUG: unable to handle kernel NULL pointer dereference at TESTING' >> /dev/kmsg"
- You can see
KernelOops
event in the node-problem-detector log.
sudo sh -c "echo 'kernel: INFO: task docker:20744 blocked for more than 120 seconds.' >> /dev/kmsg"
- You can see
DockerHung
event and condition in the node-problem-detector log.
- You can see
DockerHung
condition at http://127.0.0.1:20256/conditions.
- You can see disk-related system metrics in Prometheus format at http://127.0.0.1:20257/metrics.
Note:
- You can see more rule examples under test/kernel_log_generator/problems.
- For KernelMonitor message injection, all messages should have
kernel:
prefix (also note there is a space after :
); or use generator.sh.
- To inject other logs into journald like systemd logs, use
echo 'Some systemd message' | systemd-cat -t systemd
.
Dependency Management
node-problem-detector uses go modules
to manage dependencies. Therefore, building node-problem-detector requires
golang 1.11+. It still uses vendoring. See the
Kubernetes go modules KEP
for the design decisions. To add a new dependency, update go.mod and
run GO111MODULE=on go mod vendor
.
Remedy Systems
A remedy system is a process or processes designed to attempt to remedy problems
detected by the node-problem-detector. Remedy systems observe events and/or node
conditions emitted by the node-problem-detector and take action to return the
Kubernetes cluster to a healthy state. The following remedy systems exist:
- Draino automatically drains Kubernetes
nodes based on labels and node conditions. Nodes that match all of the supplied
labels and any of the supplied node conditions will be prevented from accepting
new pods (aka 'cordoned') immediately, and
drained
after a configurable time. Draino can be used in conjunction with the
Cluster Autoscaler
to automatically terminate drained nodes. Refer to
this issue
for an example production use case for Draino.
- Descheduler strategy RemovePodsViolatingNodeTaints
evicts pods violating NoSchedule taints on nodes. The k8s scheduler's TaintNodesByCondition feature must
be enabled. The Cluster Autoscaler
can be used to automatically terminate drained nodes.
Testing
NPD is tested via unit tests, NPD e2e tests, Kubernetes e2e tests and Kubernetes nodes e2e tests. Prow handles the pre-submit tests and CI tests.
CI test results can be found below:
- Unit tests
- NPD e2e tests
- Kubernetes e2e tests
- Kubernetes nodes e2e tests
Running tests
Unit tests are run via make test
.
See NPD e2e test documentation for how to set up and run NPD e2e tests.
Problem Maker
Problem maker is a program used in NPD e2e tests to generate/simulate node problems. It is ONLY intended to be used by NPD e2e tests. Please do NOT run it on your workstation, as it could cause real node problems.
Docs
Links