TCP Traffic Shifting
This task shows you how to gradually migrate TCP traffic from one version of a microservice to another. For example, you might migrate TCP traffic from an older version to a new version.
A common use case is to migrate TCP traffic gradually from one version of a
microservice to another. In Istio, you accomplish this goal by configuring a
sequence of rules that route a percentage of TCP traffic to one service or
another. In this task, you will send 100% of the TCP traffic to tcp-echo:v1
.
Then, you will route 20% of the TCP traffic to tcp-echo:v2
using Istio’s
weighted routing feature.
Before you begin
Setup Istio by following the instructions in the Installation guide.
Review the Traffic Management concepts doc.
Apply weight-based TCP routing
To get started, deploy the
v1
version of thetcp-echo
microservice.If you are using manual sidecar injection, use the following command
$ kubectl apply -f <(istioctl kube-inject -f @samples/tcp-echo/tcp-echo-services.yaml@)
The
istioctl kube-inject
command is used to manually modify thetcp-echo-services.yaml
file before creating the deployments.If you are using a cluster with automatic sidecar injection enabled, label the
default
namespace withistio-injection=enabled
$ kubectl label namespace default istio-injection=enabled
Then simply deploy the services using
kubectl
$ kubectl apply -f @samples/tcp-echo/tcp-echo-services.yaml@
Next, route all TCP traffic to the
v1
version of thetcp-echo
microservice.$ kubectl apply -f @samples/tcp-echo/tcp-echo-all-v1.yaml@
Confirm that the
tcp-echo
service is up and running.The
$INGRESS_HOST
variable below is the External IP address of the ingress, as explained in the Ingress Gateways doc. To obtain the$INGRESS_PORT
value, use the following command.$ export INGRESS_PORT=$(kubectl -n istio-system get service istio-ingressgateway -o jsonpath='{.spec.ports[?(@.name=="tcp")].port}')
Send some TCP traffic to the
tcp-echo
microservice.$ for i in {1..10}; do \ docker run -e INGRESS_HOST=$INGRESS_HOST -e INGRESS_PORT=$INGRESS_PORT -it --rm busybox sh -c "(date; sleep 1) | nc $INGRESS_HOST $INGRESS_PORT"; \ done one Mon Nov 12 23:24:57 UTC 2018 one Mon Nov 12 23:25:00 UTC 2018 one Mon Nov 12 23:25:02 UTC 2018 one Mon Nov 12 23:25:05 UTC 2018 one Mon Nov 12 23:25:07 UTC 2018 one Mon Nov 12 23:25:10 UTC 2018 one Mon Nov 12 23:25:12 UTC 2018 one Mon Nov 12 23:25:15 UTC 2018 one Mon Nov 12 23:25:17 UTC 2018 one Mon Nov 12 23:25:19 UTC 2018
You should notice that all the timestamps have a prefix of one, which means that all traffic was routed to the
v1
version of thetcp-echo
service.Transfer 20% of the traffic from
tcp-echo:v1
totcp-echo:v2
with the following command:$ kubectl apply -f @samples/tcp-echo/tcp-echo-20-v2.yaml@
Wait a few seconds for the new rules to propagate.
Confirm that the rule was replaced:
$ kubectl get virtualservice tcp-echo -o yaml apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1alpha3 kind: VirtualService metadata: name: tcp-echo ... spec: ... tcp: - match: - port: 31400 route: - destination: host: tcp-echo port: number: 9000 subset: v1 weight: 80 - destination: host: tcp-echo port: number: 9000 subset: v2 weight: 20
Send some more TCP traffic to the
tcp-echo
microservice.$ for i in {1..10}; do \ docker run -e INGRESS_HOST=$INGRESS_HOST -e INGRESS_PORT=$INGRESS_PORT -it --rm busybox sh -c "(date; sleep 1) | nc $INGRESS_HOST $INGRESS_PORT"; \ done one Mon Nov 12 23:38:45 UTC 2018 two Mon Nov 12 23:38:47 UTC 2018 one Mon Nov 12 23:38:50 UTC 2018 one Mon Nov 12 23:38:52 UTC 2018 one Mon Nov 12 23:38:55 UTC 2018 two Mon Nov 12 23:38:57 UTC 2018 one Mon Nov 12 23:39:00 UTC 2018 one Mon Nov 12 23:39:02 UTC 2018 one Mon Nov 12 23:39:05 UTC 2018 one Mon Nov 12 23:39:07 UTC 2018
You should now notice that about 20% of the timestamps have a prefix of two, which means that 80% of the TCP traffic was routed to the
v1
version of thetcp-echo
service, while 20% was routed tov2
.
Understanding what happened
In this task you partially migrated TCP traffic from an old to new version of
the tcp-echo
service using Istio’s weighted routing feature. Note that this is
very different than doing version migration using the deployment features of
container orchestration platforms, which use instance scaling to manage the
traffic.
With Istio, you can allow the two versions of the tcp-echo
service to scale up
and down independently, without affecting the traffic distribution between them.
For more information about version routing with autoscaling, check out the blog article Canary Deployments using Istio.
Cleanup
Remove the
tcp-echo
application and routing rules:$ kubectl delete -f @samples/tcp-echo/tcp-echo-all-v1.yaml@ $ kubectl delete -f @samples/tcp-echo/tcp-echo-services.yaml@