Kubernetes/Amazon EKS

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EKS updates, integrations

Get EKS kubectl config

aws eks update-kubeconfig --name <EKSCLUSTER-NAME> --kubeconfig ~/.kube/<EKSCLUSTER-NAME>-config

kubectl

Install

curl -LO https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/$(curl -s https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/stable.txt)/bin/linux/amd64/kubectl && sudo install kubectl /usr/local/bin/kubectl


Auto completion

source <(kubectl completion bash)


Cheatsheet

# Control plane
kubectl get componentstatus
NAME                 STATUS    MESSAGE              ERROR
scheduler            Healthy   ok                   
controller-manager   Healthy   ok                   
etcd-0               Healthy   {"health": "true"}

# Cluster info
kubectl cluster-info
kubectl config view #show configuration of K8s cluster also known as KUBECONFIG
kubectl get      nodes
kubectl describe nodes
kubectl api-resources -w wide #all type resources available to the cluster

# Others mixed
kubectl get namespaces
kubectl get pods --watch
kubectl describe pod <pod-name> #shows events
kubectl run letskube-deployment --image=acrtest.azurecr.io/letskube:v2 --port=80 --replicas=3

## List Pods
kubectl get pods --show-labels --all-namespaces
kubectl get pods --field-selector=status.phase!=Running -n dev # list faulty pods
kubectl get pods --field-selector status.phase=Running --all-namespaces

## list Serviecs
kubectl get services --field-selector metadata.namespace=default             # = is the same as ==

#Deployment
kubectl expose   deployment letskube-deployment --type=NodePort
kubectl destribe deployment letskube-deployment 
kubectl delete   deployment letskube-deployment
kubectl get      deployment letskube-deployment -o yaml

# Service
kubectl create -f .\letskubedeploy.yml
kubectl get      service <serviceName> -o wide --watch #for EXTERNAL-IP to be allocated
kubectl describe service <serviceName> 

# Scale
kubectl scale --replicas=55 deployment/letskube-deployment

#Config
KUBECONFIG=~/.kube/config #default config file

#Useful commands
alias kubectl="k"
k get all #displays pods,srv,deployments and replica sets
k get all --namespace=default #same as the above as default ns is "default"
      #this is set in ~/.kube/config "contexts:" block
                                      - context:
                                          cluster: mycluster
                                          namespace: default
k get all --all-namespaces #display all namespaces, by default --all-namespaces=false
k get all -o wide #additional details are: pod IP and node, selector and images, -o <go-template>
k get all --all-namespaces -o wide
k get <pods|services|rs>
k get events

#Run commands inside a pods
k exec -it <podID> <command>

#Edit "inline" configMaps
k edit configmap -n kube-system <configMap>


Access a pod

A port forward is tunnel provided by the running kubectl port-forward program from your computer into the cluster, this doesn’t make the hello world accessible publicly. Keep this command below running in your terminal and connect your browser to http://localhost:8080/

kubectl port-forward pod/hello-world-pod 8080:80

Simple deployments

# Create a pod named "nginx", using image "nginx"
cat << EOF | kubectl create -f -
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
  name: nginx
spec:
  containers:
  - name: nginx
    image: nginx
EOF

#Clean up
$ k delete pod nginx

Multipurpose container to run a commands

cat << EOF | kubectl create -f -
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
  name: busybox
spec:
  containers:
  - name: busybox
    image: radial/busyboxplus:curl
    args:
    - sleep
    - "1000"
EOF

kubectl get services --all-namespaces
NAMESPACE NAME  TYPE     CLUSTER-IP   EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S)             AGE
aat1      nginx NodePort 172.10.10.81 <none>      8243:31662/TCP      1

kubectl exec busybox -- curl 172.10.10.81:8243

References

kubectx

  • kubectx helps you switch between clusters back and forth
  • kubens helps you switch between Kubernetes namespaces smoothly


git clone https://github.com/ahmetb/kubectx.git ~/.kubectx
COMPDIR=$(pkg-config --variable=completionsdir bash-completion)
ln -sf ~/.kubectx/completion/kubens.bash $COMPDIR/kubens
ln -sf ~/.kubectx/completion/kubectx.bash $COMPDIR/kubectx
cat << FOE >> ~/.bashrc

#kubectx and kubens
export PATH=\$PATH:~/.kubectx
FOE

K8s cluster installation

partial notes not really linked with anything else when running a cluster on managed platform

Preview client/server binaries
  1. Go and download latest binaries
  2. Extract
  3. Run in kubernetes\cluster\get-kube-binaries.sh

This script downloads and installs the Kubernetes client and server. (and optionally test) binaries, It is intended to be called from an extracted Kubernetes release tarball. We automatically choose the correct client binaries to download.

Azure AKS

Setting up kubectl

Powershell

$env:KUBECONFIG="$env:HOMEPATH\.kube\aksconfig"
PS1 C:\> kubectl config current-context #show current context, default cluster managed by the kubectl
PS1 C:\> Get-Content $env:KUBECONFIG | sls context
contexts:
- context:
current-context: aks-test-cluster

Bash

export KUBECONFIG=~/.kube/aksconfig

Intro into Amazon EKS

This intro information are valid at the time of writting this section, see Amazon AWS Containers Roadmap to track the new features.

AWS EKS supports only Kubernetes version 1.10.3.

By default, Amazon EKS provides AWS CloudFormation templates to spin up your worker nodes with the Amazon EKS-optimized AMI. This AMI is built on top of Amazon Linux 2. The AMI is configured to work with Amazon EKS out of the box and it includes Docker 17.06.2-ce (with overlay2 as a Docker storage driver), Kubelet 1.10.3, and the AWS authenticator. The AMI also launches with specialized Amazon EC2 user data that allows it to discover and connect to your cluster's control plane automatically.

The AWS VPC container network interface (CNI) plugin is responsible for providing pod networking in Kubernetes using Elastic Network Interfaces (ENI) on AWS. Amazon EKS works with Calico by Tigera to integrate with the CNI plugin to provide fine grained networking policies.

The Amazon EKS service is available at the time of writting this in Novmeber 2018 only in following regions:

  • US East (N. Virginia) - us-east-1
  • US East (Ohio) - us-east-2
  • US West (Oregon) - us-west-2
  • EU (Ireland) - eu-west-1

Architecture diagram

ClipCapIt-190622-095509.PNG
ClipCapIt-190622-111928.PNG

Bootstrap/create EKS Cluster

Additional tools

Bootstraping required


Optional
  • kube2iam - provide IAM credentials to containers running inside a kubernetes cluster based on annotations.


Install kubectl Kubernetes client

mkdir -p ~/.kube # config location
## Download the latest version
sudo curl -L https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/$(curl -s https://storage.googleapis.com/kubernetes-release/release/stable.txt)/bin/linux/amd64/kubectl -o /usr/local/bin/kubectl

## Download 1.10.3 version from AWS S3 hosted location
sudo curl --location -o /usr/local/bin/kubectl "https://amazon-eks.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/1.10.3/2018-07-26/bin/linux/amd64/kubectl"
sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/kubectl
kubectl version --short --client
kubectl <operation> <object> <resource_name> <optional_flags>


Note: If you're running the AWS CLI version 1.16.156 or later, then you don't need to install the authenticator. Instead, you can use the aws eks get-token command. For more information, see Create kubeconfig manually.


Install aws-iam-authenticator if AWS CLI is <1.16.156

## Option 1. Use 'go' to download binary then 'mv' to one of directories in $PATH
go get -u -v github.com/kubernetes-sigs/aws-iam-authenticator/cmd/aws-iam-authenticator
sudo mv ~/go/bin/aws-iam-authenticator /usr/local/bin/aws-iam-authenticator

## Option 2. Download directly to /usr/bin/aws-iam-authenticator
sudo curl https://amazon-eks.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/1.12.7/2019-03-27/bin/linux/amd64/aws-iam-authenticator  -o /usr/bin/aws-iam-authenticator
sudo curl https://amazon-eks.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/1.15.10/2020-02-22/bin/linux/amd64/aws-iam-authenticator -o /usr/bin/aws-iam-authenticator
chmod +x /usr/bin/aws-iam-authenticator
aws-iam-authenticator help


Install jq, configure awscli, install eksctl

sudo yum -y install jq # Amazon Linux
sudo apt -y install jq # Ubuntu

# Configure awscli. These instruction are reference of being executed on AWS Cloud9
rm -vf ${HOME}/.aws/credentials
export AWS_REGION=$(curl -s 169.254.169.254/latest/dynamic/instance-identity/document | jq -r .region)
echo "export AWS_REGION=${AWS_REGION}" >> ~/.bash_profile
aws configure set default.region ${AWS_REGION}
aws configure get default.region

# Install eksctl by Waveworks
curl --location "https://github.com/weaveworks/eksctl/releases/download/latest_release/eksctl_$(uname -s)_amd64.tar.gz" | tar xz -C /tmp
sudo mv -v /tmp/eksctl /usr/local/bin
eksctl version

Bootstrap EKS Cluster

# Create EKS cluster
# Docs at https://eksctl.io/
                                                 [default=2]                [default=us-west-2]       [default=m5.large]  
$ eksctl create cluster --name=eksworkshop-eksctl --nodes=3 --node-ami=auto --region=${AWS_REGION} --node-type=m5.large
2018-11-24T12:54:41Z [ℹ]  using region eu-west-1
2018-11-24T12:54:42Z [ℹ]  setting availability zones to [eu-west-1b eu-west-1a eu-west-1c]
2018-11-24T12:54:42Z [ℹ]  subnets for eu-west-1b - public:192.168.0.0/19 private:192.168.96.0/19
2018-11-24T12:54:42Z [ℹ]  subnets for eu-west-1a - public:192.168.32.0/19 private:192.168.128.0/19
2018-11-24T12:54:42Z [ℹ]  subnets for eu-west-1c - public:192.168.64.0/19 private:192.168.160.0/19
2018-11-24T12:54:43Z [ℹ]  using "ami-00c3b2d35bdddffff" for nodes
2018-11-24T12:54:43Z [ℹ]  creating EKS cluster "eksworkshop-eksctl" in "eu-west-1" region
2018-11-24T12:54:43Z [ℹ]  will create 2 separate CloudFormation stacks for cluster itself and the initial nodegroup
2018-11-24T12:54:43Z [ℹ]  if you encounter any issues, check CloudFormation console or try 'eksctl utils describe-stacks --region=eu-west-1 --name=eksworkshop-eksctl'
2018-11-24T12:54:43Z [ℹ]  creating cluster stack "eksctl-eksworkshop-eksctl-cluster"
2018-11-24T13:06:38Z [ℹ]  creating nodegroup stack "eksctl-eksworkshop-eksctl-nodegroup-0"
2018-11-24T13:10:16Z [✔]  all EKS cluster resource for "eksworkshop-eksctl" had been created
2018-11-24T13:10:16Z [✔]  saved kubeconfig as "/home/ec2-user/.kube/config"
2018-11-24T13:10:16Z [ℹ]  the cluster has 0 nodes
2018-11-24T13:10:16Z [ℹ]  waiting for at least 3 nodes to become ready
2018-11-24T13:10:47Z [ℹ]  the cluster has 3 nodes
2018-11-24T13:10:47Z [ℹ]  node "ip-192-168-13-5.eu-west-1.compute.internal" is ready
2018-11-24T13:10:47Z [ℹ]  node "ip-192-168-41-230.eu-west-1.compute.internal" is ready
2018-11-24T13:10:47Z [ℹ]  node "ip-192-168-79-54.eu-west-1.compute.internal" is ready
2018-11-24T13:10:47Z [ℹ]  kubectl command should work with "/home/ec2-user/.kube/config", try 'kubectl get nodes'
2018-11-24T13:10:47Z [✔]  EKS cluster "eksworkshop-eksctl" in "eu-west-1" region is ready


Configure kubectl, make sure awscli has been configured already

aws eks update-kubeconfig --name <EKSCLUSTER-NAME> --kubeconfig ~/.kube/<EKSCLUSTER-NAME>-config
Added new context arn:aws:eks:eu-west-1:111111111111:cluster/EKSCLUSTER-NAME to /home/vagrant/.kube/EKSCLUSTER-NAME-config
export KUBECONFIG=~/.kube/EKSCLUSTER-NAME-config
kubectl config view


Kubectl operations

# Verify EKS cluster nodes
kubectl get nodes
NAME                                           STATUS    ROLES     AGE       VERSION
ip-192-168-13-5.eu-west-1.compute.internal     Ready     <none>    1h        v1.10.3
ip-192-168-41-230.eu-west-1.compute.internal   Ready     <none>    1h        v1.10.3
ip-192-168-79-54.eu-west-1.compute.internal    Ready     <none>    1h        v1.10.3

# Get info about the cluster
eksctl get cluster --name=eksworkshop-eksctl --region=${AWS_REGION}                       NAME                    VERSION STATUS  CREATED                 VPC                     SUBNETS                SECURITYGROUPS
eksworkshop-eksctl      1.10    ACTIVE  2018-11-24T12:55:28Z    vpc-0c97f8a6dabb11111   subnet-05285b6c692711111,subnet-0a6626ec2c0111111,subnet-0c5e839d106f11111,subnet-0d9a9b34be5511111,subnet-0f297fefefad11111,subnet-0faaf1d3dedd11111   sg-083fbc37e4b011111

Deploy the Official Kubernetes Dashboard

# Deploy dashboard from official config sources. Also can download a files and deploy.
kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/dashboard/master/src/deploy/recommended/kubernetes-dashboard.yaml

# Create kube-proxy to enable accedd to the application (dashboard) from Internet
# start the proxy in the background, listen on port 8080, listen on all interfaces, and will disable the filtering of non-localhost requests
kubectl proxy --port=8080 --address='0.0.0.0' --disable-filter=true &
 W1124 14:47:55.308424   14460 proxy.go:138] Request filter disabled, your proxy is vulnerable to XSRF attacks, please be cautious
Starting to serve on [::]:8080

Install info type "plugins"

Installing Heapster and InfluxDB

kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/heapster/master/deploy/kube-config/influxdb/heapster.yaml
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/heapster/master/deploy/kube-config/influxdb/influxdb.yaml
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/heapster/master/deploy/kube-config/rbac/heapster-rbac.yaml


aws-auth | Managing users or IAM roles for your cluster

<syntaxhighlightjs lang=yaml>

  1. kubectl -n kube-system edit aws-auth

apiVersion: v1 kind: ConfigMap metadata:

 name: aws-auth
 namespace: kube-system

data:

 mapRoles: |
   - rolearn: <ARN of instance role (not instance profile)>
     username: system:node:Template:EC2PrivateDNSName # <- required
     groups:
       - system:bootstrappers
       - system:nodes
  - rolearn: arn:aws:iam::[hidden]:role/CrossAccountAdmin
    username: aws-admin-user
    groups:
      - system:masters

</syntaxhighlightjs> The 'username' can actually be set to about anything. It appears to only be important if there are custom roles and bindings added to your EKS cluster.

Create admin user and roles

Create administrative account and role binding <syntaxhighlightjs lang=yaml> kubectl apply -f eks-admin-service-account.yaml #create admin account cat << EOF > eks-admin-service-account.yaml apiVersion: v1 kind: ServiceAccount metadata:

 name: eks-admin           #<-service account name
 namespace: kube-system    #<-within this namespace

EOF

kubectl apply -f eks-admin-cluster-role-binding.yaml #create role binding to assosiate eks-admin account with Admin role cat << EOF > eks-admin-cluster-role-binding.yaml apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1beta1 kind: ClusterRoleBinding metadata:

 name: eks-admin

roleRef:

 apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
 kind: ClusterRole
 name: cluster-admin     #<- create the new role name

subjects: - kind: ServiceAccount

 name: eks-admin         #<- associate with the account we created earlier
 namespace: kube-system

EOF </syntaxhighlightjs>


Add/Modify users permissons

kubectl edit -n kube-system configmap/aws-auth

Access the dashboard

When running from local machine (laptop) proxy is required, read more...

kubectl proxy --address 0.0.0.0 --accept-hosts '.*' &


Generate temporary token to login to dashboard

aws-iam-authenticator token -i eksworkshop-eksctl --token-only
aws-iam-authenticator token -i eksworkshop-eksctl --token-only | jq -r .status.token #returns only token


Go to webbrowser, point to kube-proxy and append to the URL following path

/api/v1/namespaces/kube-system/services/https:kubernetes-dashboard:/proxy/

#full url
http://localhost:8001/api/v1/namespaces/kube-system/services/https:kubernetes-dashboard:/proxy/#!/login

select token sign-in and paste token to login in.

Deploy applications

Sample dependency diagram - service and application

The service below is only available within the cluster because we haven't specified the ServiceType, so it assumed to be ClusterIP type. This exposes the service on the cluster internal IP only.

Diagram

ClipCapIt-190703-083804.PNG

Deployments

ClipCapIt-190622-134703.PNG

Deploy ecsdemo-* applications

The containers listen on port 3000, and native service discovery will be used to locate the running containers and communicate with them.

# Download deployable sample applications
mkdir ~/environment #place of deployables to EKS, applications, policies etc
cd ~/environment
git clone https://github.com/brentley/ecsdemo-frontend.git
git clone https://github.com/brentley/ecsdemo-nodejs.git
git clone https://github.com/brentley/ecsdemo-crystal.git

### Deploy applications
# NodeJS Backend API
cd ecsdemo-nodejs
kubectl apply -f kubernetes/deployment.yaml
kubectl apply -f kubernetes/service.yaml
kubectl get deployment ecsdemo-nodejs # watch progress

# Crystal Backend API
cd ~/environment/ecsdemo-crystal
kubectl apply -f kubernetes/deployment.yaml
kubectl apply -f kubernetes/service.yaml
kubectl get deployment ecsdemo-crystal

Before deploying frontend application let's see how service differs between backend and frontend services

kubernetes/service.yaml
frontend service (ecsdemo-frontend.git) backend service (ecsdemo-nodejs.git)
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
  name: ecsdemo-frontend
spec:
  selector:
    app: ecsdemo-frontend
  type: LoadBalancer
  ports:
   -  protocol: TCP
      port: 80
      targetPort: 3000
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
  name: ecsdemo-nodejs
spec:
  selector:
    app: ecsdemo-nodejs
  type: ClusterIP  <-- this is default
  ports:
   -  protocol: TCP
      port: 80
      targetPort: 3000

Notice there is no need to specific service type describe for backend because the default type is ClusterIP. This Exposes the service on a cluster-internal IP. Choosing this value makes the service only reachable from within the cluster. Thus forntend has type: LoadBalancer

The frontend service will attempt to create ELB thus requires access to the elb service. This is controlled by IAM service role that needs creating if does not exist.

aws iam get-role --role-name "AWSServiceRoleForElasticLoadBalancing" || aws iam create-service-linked-role --aws-service-name "elasticloadbalancing.amazonaws.com"

Deploy frontend service

cd ecsdemo-frontend
kubectl apply -f kubernetes/deployment.yaml
kubectl apply -f kubernetes/service.yaml
kubectl get deployment ecsdemo-frontend

# Get service address
kubectl get service ecsdemo-frontend -o wide
ELB=$(kubectl get service ecsdemo-frontend -o json | jq -r '.status.loadBalancer.ingress[].hostname')
curl -m3 -v $ELB #You can also open this in a webrowser

Scale backend services

kubectl scale deployment ecsdemo-nodejs --replicas=3
kubectl scale deployment ecsdemo-crystal --replicas=3
kubectl get deployments
NAME               DESIRED   CURRENT   UP-TO-DATE   AVAILABLE   AGE
ecsdemo-crystal    3         3         3            3           38m
ecsdemo-frontend   1         1         1            1           20m
ecsdemo-nodejs     3         3         3            3           40m

# Watch scaling in action
$ i=3; kubectl scale deployment ecsdemo-nodejs --replicas=$i; kubectl scale deployment ecsdemo-crystal --replicas=$i
$ watch -d -n 0.5 kubectl get deployments

Check the browser you should now see traffic flowing to multiple frontend services.

Delete the applications

cd ecsdemo-frontend
kubectl delete -f kubernetes/service.yaml
kubectl delete -f kubernetes/deployment.yaml

cd ecsdemo-crystal
kubectl delete -f kubernetes/service.yaml
kubectl delete -f kubernetes/deployment.yaml

cd ecsdemo-nodejs
kubectl delete -f kubernetes/service.yaml
kubectl delete -f kubernetes/deployment.yaml

Networking using Calico

Install

Below will install Calico manifest. This creates the daemon sets in the kube-system namespace.

wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/aws/amazon-vpc-cni-k8s/master/config/v1.2/calico.yaml
kubectl apply -f calico.yaml
kubectl get daemonset calico-node --namespace=kube-system

See more details on the eksworkshop.com website.

Network policy demo

Before creating network polices, we will create the required resources.

mkdir calico_resources && cd calico_resources 
wget https://eksworkshop.com/calico/stars_policy_demo/create_resources.files/namespace.yaml
kubectl apply -f namespace.yaml # create namespace

# Download manifest for orher resources
wget https://eksworkshop.com/calico/stars_policy_demo/create_resources.files/management-ui.yaml
wget https://eksworkshop.com/calico/stars_policy_demo/create_resources.files/backend.yaml
wget https://eksworkshop.com/calico/stars_policy_demo/create_resources.files/frontend.yaml
wget https://eksworkshop.com/calico/stars_policy_demo/create_resources.files/client.yaml

kubectl apply -f management-ui.yaml
kubectl apply -f backend.yaml
kubectl apply -f frontend.yaml
kubectl apply -f client.yaml

kubectl get pods --all-namespaces


Resources we created:

  • A namespace called stars
  • frontend and backend replication controllers and services within stars namespace
  • A namespace called management-ui
  • Replication controller and service management-ui for the user interface seen on the browser, in the management-ui namespace
  • A namespace called client
  • client replication controller and service in client namespace

Pod-to-Pod communication

In Kubernetes, the pods by default can communicate with other pods, regardless of which host they land on. Every pod gets its own IP address so you do not need to explicitly create links between pods. This is demonstrated by the management-ui.

$ cat management-ui.yaml
kind: Service
metadata:
  name: management-ui
  namespace: management-ui
spec:
  type: LoadBalancer
  ports:
  - port: 80
    targetPort: 9001

# Get Management UI dns name
kubectl get svc -o wide -n management-ui

If you open the URL you see Visual Start of connectiona between PODs B-C-F. The UI here shows the default behavior, of all services being able to reach each other.

Apply network policies

By default all Pods can talk to each other what is not what we shuld allow in produciton environemtns. So, let's apply policies:

cd calico_resources
wget https://eksworkshop.com/calico/stars_policy_demo/apply_network_policies.files/default-deny.yaml

cat default-deny.yaml #not all output showing below
kind: NetworkPolicy
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
metadata:
  name: default-deny
spec:
  podSelector:
    matchLabels: {}

# Create deny policies to followign name spaces 'stars' and 'client'. Web browser won't show anything as UI won't have access to pods.
kubectl apply -n stars -f default-deny.yaml
kubectl apply -n client -f default-deny.yaml

# Create allow policies
wget https://eksworkshop.com/calico/stars_policy_demo/apply_network_policies.files/allow-ui.yaml
wget https://eksworkshop.com/calico/stars_policy_demo/apply_network_policies.files/allow-ui-client.yaml

cat allow-ui.yaml
kind: NetworkPolicy
apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1
metadata:
  namespace: stars
  name: allow-ui
spec:
  podSelector:
    matchLabels: {}
  ingress:
    - from:
        - namespaceSelector:
            matchLabels:
              role: management-ui

cat allow-ui-client.yaml
kind: NetworkPolicy
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
metadata:
  namespace: client
  name: allow-ui
spec:
  podSelector:
    matchLabels: {}
  ingress:
    - from:
        - namespaceSelector:
            matchLabels:
              role: management-ui

kubectl apply -f allow-ui.yaml
kubectl apply -f allow-ui-client.yaml
# The website should start showing connection star again but Pods cannot communicate to each other.

Allow Directional Traffic

Network policies in Kubernetes use labels to select pods, and define rules on what traffic is allowed to reach those pods. They may specify ingress or egress or both. Each rule allows traffic which matches both the from and ports sections.

# Download 
cd calico_resources
wget https://eksworkshop.com/calico/stars_policy_demo/directional_traffic.files/backend-policy.yaml
wget https://eksworkshop.com/calico/stars_policy_demo/directional_traffic.files/frontend-policy.yaml


Backend and forntend policies
backend-policy frontend-policy
$ cat backend-policy.yaml:
kind: NetworkPolicy
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
metadata:
  namespace: stars
  name: backend-policy
spec:
  podSelector:
    matchLabels:
      role: backend
  ingress:
    - from:
        - podSelector:
            matchLabels:
              role: frontend
      ports:
        - protocol: TCP
          port: 6379
$ cat frontend-policy.yaml 
kind: NetworkPolicy
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
metadata:
  namespace: stars
  name: frontend-policy
spec:
  podSelector:
    matchLabels:
      role: frontend
  ingress:
    - from:
        - namespaceSelector:
            matchLabels:
              role: client
      ports:
        - protocol: TCP
          port: 80

Apply policies

# allow traffic from frontend service to the backend service apply the manifest
kubectl apply -f backend-policy.yaml

# allow traffic from the client namespace to the frontend service
kubectl apply -f frontend-policy.yaml


Let’s have a look at the backend-policy. Its spec has a podSelector that selects all pods with the label role:backend, and allows ingress from all pods that have the label role:frontend and on TCP port 6379, but not the other way round. Traffic is allowed in one direction on a specific port number.

The frontend-policy is similar, except it allows ingress from namespaces that have the label role: client on TCP port 80.

Clean up

Remove deleting the namespaces and uninstalling Calico

kubectl delete ns client stars management-ui #delete namespaces
kubectl calico.yaml                          #uninstall Calico
kubectl delete -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/aws/amazon-vpc-cni-k8s/master/config/v1.2/calico.yaml

Health Checks

By default, Kubernetes will restart a container if it crashes for any reason. Addtionally you can use probes:

  • Liveness probes are used to know when a pod is alive or dead. A pod can be in a dead state for different reasons while Kubernetes kills and recreates the pod when liveness probe does not pass.
  • Readiness probes are used to know when a pod is ready to serve traffic. Only when the readiness probe passes, a pod will receive traffic from the service. When readiness probe fails, traffic will not be sent to a pod until it passes.
liveness probe

In the example below kublet is instructed to send HTTP GET request to the server hosting this Pod and if the handler for the servers /health returns a success code, then the Container is considered healthy.

mkdir healthchecks; cd $_
$ cat << EOF > liveness-app.yaml                                                                                                                                                                                                          
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
  name: liveness-app
spec:
  containers:
  - name: liveness
    image: brentley/ecsdemo-nodejs
    livenessProbe:
      httpGet:
        path: /health
        port: 3000
      initialDelaySeconds: 5
      periodSeconds: 5
EOF

# Create a pod from the manifrst
kubectl apply -f liveness-app.yaml

# Show the pod event history
kubectl describe pod liveness-app
NAME           READY     STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
liveness-app   1/1       Running   0          54s

# Intrduce failure. Send a kill signal to the application process in docker runtime
kubectl exec -it liveness-app -- /bin/kill -s SIGUSR1 1

kubectl get pod liveness-app
NAME           READY     STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
liveness-app   1/1       Running   1          11m

# Get logs
kubectl logs liveness-app # use -f for log tailing
kubectl logs liveness-app --previous # previous container logs
readiness probe
cd healthchecks
cat << EOF > readiness-deployment.yaml
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
  name: readiness-deployment
spec:
  replicas: 3
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: readiness-deployment
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: readiness-deployment
    spec:
      containers:
      - name: readiness-deployment
        image: alpine
        command: ["sh", "-c", "touch /tmp/healthy && sleep 86400"]
        readinessProbe:
          exec:
            command:
            - cat
            - /tmp/healthy
          initialDelaySeconds: 5
          periodSeconds: 3
EOF

# create a deployment to test readiness probe
kubectl apply -f readiness-deployment.yaml

# Verify
kubectl get pods -l app=readiness-deployment
kubectl describe deployment readiness-deployment | grep Replicas:

# Introduce failure by deleting the file used by the probe
kubectl exec -it readiness-deployment-<POD-NAME> -- rm /tmp/healthy
kubectl get pods -l app=readiness-deployment
NAME                                    READY     STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
readiness-deployment-59dcf5956f-jfpf6   1/1       Running   0          9m
readiness-deployment-59dcf5956f-mdqc6   0/1       Running   0          9m  #traffic won't be routed to it
readiness-deployment-59dcf5956f-wfwgn   1/1       Running   0          9m

kubectl describe deployment readiness-deployment | grep Replicas:
Replicas:               3 desired | 3 updated | 3 total | 2 available | 1 unavailable

# Recreate the probe file
kubectl exec -it readiness-deployment-<YOUR-POD-NAME> -- touch /tmp/healthy
Clean up
kubectl delete -f liveness-app.yaml,readiness-deployment.yaml

In the example above we use a text file but instead you can use tcpSocket

readinessProbe:
      tcpSocket:
        port: 8080

Delete EKS cluster

As the running cluster costs $0.20 per hour it make sense to kill it. The command below will run CloudForamtion and delete stack named eksctl-eksworkshop-eksctl-cluster

eksctl delete cluster --name=eksworkshop-eksctl

ECR Elastic Container Registry

Fully-managed Docker container registry

aws ecr get-login --no-include-email --region us-east-1 #returns Docker command to add repository to your docker-client
                                                        #credentials are valid for 12 hours
docker login -u AWS -p ey[**hash**]Z9 https://111111111111.dkr.ecr.eu-west-1.amazonaws.com


Create repository

aws ecr create-repository --repository-name hello


Repository endpoint

AWS account ID       region            repo-name    tag
     \                  |                   |       /
111111111111.dkr.ecr.eu-west-1.amazon.com/hello:latest

Kubernetes plugins

Auto-Scaling in Kubernetes

There are 2 major available solutions to scale Kubernetes cluster based on demanded load.

  • Horizontal Pod Autoscaler (HPA) - native Kubernetes component to scale Deployment or ReplicaSet based on CPU or other metrics
  • Cluster Autoscaler (CA) - plugin to auto-scale worker-nodes of Kubernetes cluster
ClipCapIt-190622-191033.PNG

Horizontal Pod Autoscaler (HPA)

Steps below demonstrate how to deploy HPA to EKS.

# Install HELM
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes/helm/master/scripts/get > get_helm.sh
chmod +x get_helm.sh
 ./get_helm.sh


Setup Tiller the Helm server-side component. It requires ServiceAccount <syntaxhighlightjs lang=yaml> cat << EOF > tiller-rbac.yaml --- apiVersion: v1 kind: ServiceAccount metadata:

 name: tiller          #<- name of this service account
 namespace: kube-system

--- apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1beta1 kind: ClusterRoleBinding metadata:

 name: tiller

roleRef:

 apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
 kind: ClusterRole
 name: cluster-admin   #<- assigned role

subjects:

 - kind: ServiceAccount
   name: tiller

namespace: kube-system </syntaxhighlightjs>


Deploy Tiller

kubectl apply -f tiller-rbac.yaml


Deploy Metric Server, cluster wide aggregator resource usage data. Metrics are collected by kublet on each of the nodes and it can dictate scaling behavior of deployments.

helm install stable/metrics-server --name metrics-server --version 2.0.4 --namespace metrics`
kubectl get apiservice v1beta1.metrics.k8s.io -o yaml #verify "all checks passed"


Create load and enable HPA autoscale

kubectl run php-apache --image=k8s.gcr.io/hpa-example --requests=cpu=200m --expose --port=80
# --requests=cpu=200m :- allocate 200 mili-cores to a pod

# Set "php-apache" deployment to hpa-autoscale (horizontal pod autoscale) based on "--cpu-percent" metric
kubectl autoscale deployment php-apache --cpu-percent=50 --min=1 --max=10

#Check status
kubectl get hpa

#Run load test
kubectl run -i --tty load-generator --image=busybox /bin/sh
while true; do wget -q -O - http://php-apache; done

#In another terminal watch the scaling effect
kubectl get hpa -w
NAME       REFERENCE               TARGETS    MINPODS MAXPODS REPLICAS AGE
php-apache Deployment/php-apache   0%/50%     1       10      1        1m
php-apache Deployment/php-apache   321%/50%   1       10      1        2m    #<- load container started
php-apache Deployment/php-apache   410%/50%   1       10      4        3m
php-apache Deployment/php-apache   131%/50%   1       10      4        4m
php-apache Deployment/php-apache   90%/50%    1       10      8        5m
php-apache Deployment/php-apache   43%/50%    1       10      10       12m
php-apache Deployment/php-apache   0%/50%     1       10      10       14m
php-apache Deployment/php-apache   0%/50%     1       10      1        16m   #<- load container stopped

Cluster Autoscaler (CA)

Complimentary projects:


Cluster Autoscaler (CA) allows to scale worker nodes works with all major public clouds. Below it's AWS deployment example. There is a number considerations then using it, all below is in context of EKS:

  • use the correct version of CA for K8s, eg. note Helm for v1.18 changed location
  • instance types should have the same amount of RAM and number of CPU cores, since this is fundamental to CA's scaling calculations. Using mismatched instances types can produce unintended results
  • ensure cluster nodes have the same capacity; for spot instances fleet /or overrides instance types in ASG these should have the same vCPU and memory
  • ensure every pod has resource requests defined, and set close to actual usage
  • specify PodDisruptionBudget for kube-system pods and for application pods
  • avoid using the Cluster autoscaler with more than 1000 node clusters
  • ensure resource availability for the cluster autoscaler pod
  • over-provision cluster to ensure head room for critical pods


Allow IAM Instance role attached to EKS-ec2-worker-instances or IRSA to interact with ASG; policy: <syntaxhighlightjs lang=json> {

   "Version": "2012-10-17",
   "Statement": [
       {
           "Action": [
               "autoscaling:DescribeAutoScalingGroups",
               "autoscaling:DescribeAutoScalingInstances",
               "autoscaling:DescribeLaunchConfigurations",
               "autoscaling:DescribeTags",
               "autoscaling:SetDesiredCapacity",
               "autoscaling:TerminateInstanceInAutoScalingGroup",
               "ec2:DescribeLaunchTemplateVersions"
           ],
           "Resource": "*",
           "Effect": "Allow"
       }
   ]

} </syntaxhighlightjs>


Deploy Autoscaler and Metrics server

# Optinal
SPOT_TERMINATION_HANDLER_VERSION=1.4.9
helm search repo stable/k8s-spot-termination-handler --version $SPOT_TERMINATION_HANDLER_VERSION
helm repo update
helm upgrade --install k8s-spot-termination-handler stable/k8s-spot-termination-handler \
    --version $SPOT_TERMINATION_HANDLER_VERSION \
    --namespace kube-system

helm repo add google-stable https://kubernetes-charts.storage.googleapis.com/ # K8s v1.17> autoscaler, metric-server
#helm repo add autoscaler   https://kubernetes.github.io/autoscaler           # K8s v1.18+ autoscaler
helm repo update

METRICS_SERVER_VERSION=2.11.1
helm upgrade --install metrics-server google-stable/metrics-server \
  --version $METRICS_SERVER_VERSION \
  --namespace kube-system

CLUSTER_AUTOSCALER_VERSION=8.0.0
helm upgrade --install aws-cluster-autoscaler google-stable/cluster-autoscaler \
  --version $CLUSTER_AUTOSCALER_VERSION    \
  --set autoDiscovery.clusterName=$CLUSTER \
  --set awsRegion=$AWS_REGION              \
  --set cloudProvider=aws                  \
  --namespace cluster-autoscaler           \
  --create-namespace

# IRSA
  --set rbac.serviceAccountAnnotations."eks\.amazonaws\.com/role-arn"=$ROLE_ARN
  --set rbac.serviceAccount.name="cluster-autoscaler" \


Example of Nginx deployment to create a load <syntaxhighlightjs lang=yaml> cat << EOF > nginx-autoscaler.yaml apiVersion: extensions/v1beta1 kind: Deployment metadata:

 name: nginx-autoscaler

spec:

 replicas: 1
 template:
   metadata:
     labels:
       service: nginx
       app: nginx
   spec:
     containers:
     - image: nginx
       name: nginx-scaleout
       resources:
         limits:
           cpu: 250m
           memory: 256Mi
         requests:
           cpu: 250m
           memory: 256Mi

EOF </syntaxhighlightjs>


References:

References

References