Understand your Mesh with Istioctl Describe
In Istio 1.3, we included the istioctl experimental describe
command. This CLI command provides you with the information needed to understand
the configuration impacting a pod. This guide shows
you how to use this experimental sub-command to see if a pod is in the mesh and
verify its configuration.
The basic usage of the command is as follows:
$ istioctl experimental describe pod <pod-name>[.<namespace>]
Appending a namespace to the pod name has the same affect as using the -n
option
of istioctl
to specify a non-default namespace.
This guide assumes you have deployed the Bookinfo sample in your mesh. If you haven’t already done so, start the application’s services and determine the IP and port of the ingress before continuing.
Verify a pod is in the mesh
The istioctl describe
command returns a warning if the Envoy
proxy is not present in a pod or if the proxy has not started. Additionally, the command warns
if some of the Istio requirements for pods
are not met.
For example, the following command produces a warning indicating a kube-dns
pod is not part of the service mesh because it has no sidecar:
$ export KUBE_POD=$(kubectl -n kube-system get pod -l k8s-app=kube-dns -o jsonpath='{.items[0].metadata.name}')
$ istioctl x describe pod -n kube-system $KUBE_POD
Pod: coredns-f9fd979d6-2zsxk
Pod Ports: 53/UDP (coredns), 53 (coredns), 9153 (coredns)
WARNING: coredns-f9fd979d6-2zsxk is not part of mesh; no Istio sidecar
--------------------
2021-01-22T16:10:14.080091Z error klog an error occurred forwarding 42785 -> 15000: error forwarding port 15000 to pod 692362a4fe313005439a873a1019a62f52ecd02c3de9a0957cd0af8f947866e5, uid : failed to execute portforward in network namespace "/var/run/netns/cni-3c000d0a-fb1c-d9df-8af8-1403e6803c22": failed to dial 15000: dial tcp4 127.0.0.1:15000: connect: connection refused[]
Error: failed to execute command on sidecar: failure running port forward process: Get "http://localhost:42785/config_dump": EOF
The command will not produce such a warning for a pod that is part of the mesh,
the Bookinfo ratings
service for example, but instead will output the Istio configuration applied to the pod:
$ export RATINGS_POD=$(kubectl get pod -l app=ratings -o jsonpath='{.items[0].metadata.name}')
$ istioctl experimental describe pod $RATINGS_POD
Pod: ratings-v1-7dc98c7588-8jsbw
Pod Ports: 9080 (ratings), 15090 (istio-proxy)
--------------------
Service: ratings
Port: http 9080/HTTP targets pod port 9080
The output shows the following information:
- The ports of the service container in the pod,
9080
for theratings
container in this example. - The ports of the
istio-proxy
container in the pod,15090
in this example. - The protocol used by the service in the pod,
HTTP
over port9080
in this example.
Verify destination rule configurations
You can use istioctl describe
to see what
destination rules apply to requests
to a pod. For example, apply the Bookinfo
mutual TLS destination rules:
$ kubectl apply -f @samples/bookinfo/networking/destination-rule-all-mtls.yaml@
Now describe the ratings
pod again:
$ istioctl x describe pod $RATINGS_POD
Pod: ratings-v1-f745cf57b-qrxl2
Pod Ports: 9080 (ratings), 15090 (istio-proxy)
--------------------
Service: ratings
Port: http 9080/HTTP
DestinationRule: ratings for "ratings"
Matching subsets: v1
(Non-matching subsets v2,v2-mysql,v2-mysql-vm)
Traffic Policy TLS Mode: ISTIO_MUTUAL
The command now shows additional output:
- The
ratings
destination rule applies to request to theratings
service. - The subset of the
ratings
destination rule that matches the pod,v1
in this example. - The other subsets defined by the destination rule.
- The pod accepts either HTTP or mutual TLS requests but clients use mutual TLS.
Verify virtual service configurations
When virtual services configure
routes to a pod, istioctl describe
will also include the routes in its output.
For example, apply the
Bookinfo virtual services
that route all requests to v1
pods:
$ kubectl apply -f @samples/bookinfo/networking/virtual-service-all-v1.yaml@
Then, describe a pod implementing v1
of the reviews
service:
$ export REVIEWS_V1_POD=$(kubectl get pod -l app=reviews,version=v1 -o jsonpath='{.items[0].metadata.name}')
$ istioctl x describe pod $REVIEWS_V1_POD
...
VirtualService: reviews
1 HTTP route(s)
The output contains similar information to that shown previously for the ratings
pod,
but it also includes the virtual service’s routes to the pod.
The istioctl describe
command doesn’t just show the virtual services impacting the pod.
If a virtual service configures the service host of a pod but no traffic will reach it,
the command’s output includes a warning. This case can occur if the virtual service
actually blocks traffic by never routing traffic to the pod’s subset. For
example:
$ export REVIEWS_V2_POD=$(kubectl get pod -l app=reviews,version=v2 -o jsonpath='{.items[0].metadata.name}')
$ istioctl x describe pod $REVIEWS_V2_POD
...
VirtualService: reviews
WARNING: No destinations match pod subsets (checked 1 HTTP routes)
Route to non-matching subset v1 for (everything)
The warning includes the cause of the problem, how many routes were checked, and
even gives you information about the other routes in place. In this example,
no traffic arrives at the v2
pod because the route in the virtual service directs all
traffic to the v1
subset.
If you now delete the Bookinfo destination rules:
$ kubectl delete -f @samples/bookinfo/networking/destination-rule-all-mtls.yaml@
You can see another useful feature of istioctl describe
:
$ istioctl x describe pod $REVIEWS_V1_POD
...
VirtualService: reviews
WARNING: No destinations match pod subsets (checked 1 HTTP routes)
Warning: Route to subset v1 but NO DESTINATION RULE defining subsets!
The output shows you that you deleted the destination rule but not the virtual
service that depends on it. The virtual service routes traffic to the v1
subset, but there is no destination rule defining the v1
subset.
Thus, traffic destined for version v1
can’t flow to the pod.
If you refresh the browser to send a new request to Bookinfo at this
point, you would see the following message: Error fetching product reviews
.
To fix the problem, reapply the destination rule:
$ kubectl apply -f @samples/bookinfo/networking/destination-rule-all-mtls.yaml@
Reloading the browser shows the app working again and
running istioctl experimental describe pod $REVIEWS_V1_POD
no longer produces
warnings.
Verifying traffic routes
The istioctl describe
command shows split traffic weights too.
For example, run the following command to route 90% of traffic to the v1
subset
and 10% to the v2
subset of the reviews
service:
$ kubectl apply -f @samples/bookinfo/networking/virtual-service-reviews-90-10.yaml@
Now describe the reviews v1
pod:
$ istioctl x describe pod $REVIEWS_V1_POD
...
VirtualService: reviews
Weight 90%
The output shows that the reviews
virtual service has a weight of 90% for the
v1
subset.
This function is also helpful for other types of routing. For example, you can deploy header-specific routing:
$ kubectl apply -f @samples/bookinfo/networking/virtual-service-reviews-jason-v2-v3.yaml@
Then, describe the pod again:
$ istioctl x describe pod $REVIEWS_V1_POD
...
VirtualService: reviews
WARNING: No destinations match pod subsets (checked 2 HTTP routes)
Route to non-matching subset v2 for (when headers are end-user=jason)
Route to non-matching subset v3 for (everything)
The output produces a warning since you are describing a pod in the v1
subset.
However, the virtual service configuration you applied routes traffic to the v2
subset if the header contains end-user=jason
and to the v3
subset in all
other cases.
Verifying strict mutual TLS
Following the mutual TLS migration
instructions, you can enable strict mutual TLS for the ratings
service:
$ kubectl apply -f - <<EOF
apiVersion: security.istio.io/v1beta1
kind: PeerAuthentication
metadata:
name: ratings-strict
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
app: ratings
mtls:
mode: STRICT
EOF
Run the following command to describe the ratings
pod:
$ istioctl x describe pod $RATINGS_POD
Pilot reports that pod enforces mTLS and clients speak mTLS
The output reports that requests to the ratings
pod are now locked down and secure.
Sometimes, however, a deployment breaks when switching mutual TLS to STRICT
.
The likely cause is that the destination rule didn’t match the new configuration.
For example, if you configure the Bookinfo clients to not use mutual TLS using the
plain HTTP destination rules:
$ kubectl apply -f @samples/bookinfo/networking/destination-rule-all.yaml@
If you open Bookinfo in your browser, you see Ratings service is currently unavailable
.
To learn why, run the following command:
$ istioctl x describe pod $RATINGS_POD
...
WARNING Pilot predicts TLS Conflict on ratings-v1-f745cf57b-qrxl2 port 9080 (pod enforces mTLS, clients speak HTTP)
Check DestinationRule ratings/default and AuthenticationPolicy ratings-strict/default
The output includes a warning describing the conflict between the destination rule and the authentication policy.
You can restore correct behavior by applying a destination rule that uses mutual TLS:
$ kubectl apply -f @samples/bookinfo/networking/destination-rule-all-mtls.yaml@
Conclusion and cleanup
Our goal with the istioctl x describe
command is to help you understand the
traffic and security configurations in your Istio mesh.
We would love to hear your ideas for improvements! Please join us at https://discuss.istio.io.
To remove the Bookinfo pods and configurations used in this guide, run the following commands:
$ kubectl delete -f @samples/bookinfo/platform/kube/bookinfo.yaml@
$ kubectl delete -f @samples/bookinfo/networking/bookinfo-gateway.yaml@
$ kubectl delete -f @samples/bookinfo/networking/destination-rule-all-mtls.yaml@
$ kubectl delete -f @samples/bookinfo/networking/virtual-service-all-v1.yaml@