Difference between revisions of "Kubernetes/Monitoring"

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= Liveness and Readiness probes =
= Liveness and Readiness probes =
Check this [https://cloud.google.com/blog/products/gcp/kubernetes-best-practices-setting-up-health-checks-with-readiness-and-liveness-probes Visual explanation]
Check this [https://cloud.google.com/blog/products/gcp/kubernetes-best-practices-setting-up-health-checks-with-readiness-and-liveness-probes Visual explanation]
Get service endpoints
<source lang=bash>
kubectl get endpoint
</source>

Revision as of 09:21, 25 September 2019

Monitor cluster resources

In order to get cluster resources you need a metric collector plugin. Popular one is heapster that exposes metric-server service. The below commands relay on its API to get data:

Install metrics-server

git clone https://github.com/kubernetes-incubator/metrics-server.git
kubectl apply -f ~/metrics-server/deploy/1.8+/

Get metrics

# verify metrics server API
kubectl get --raw /apis/metrics.k8s.io/

kubectl top node               # CPU,memory utilization of the nodes in your cluster
kubectl top pods               # CPU,memory utilization of the pods in your cluster
kubectl top pods -A            # CPU,memory of pods in all namespaces
kubectl top pod -l run=<label> # CPU and memory of pods with a label selector:
kubectl top pod <pod-name>     # CPU,memory of a specific pod
kubectl top pods group-context --containers # CPU,memory of the containers inside the pod

Liveness and Readiness probes

Check this Visual explanation


Get service endpoints

kubectl get endpoint