Debugging and Reporting Bugs in Contiv-VPP
Bug Report Structure
Deployment description: Briefly describes the deployment, where an issue was spotted, number of k8s nodes, is DHCP/STN/TAP used.
Logs: Attach corresponding logs, at least from the vswitch pods.
VPP config: Attach output of the show commands.
Describe Deployment
Since contiv-vpp can be used with different configurations, it is
helpful to attach the config that was applied. Either attach
values.yaml
passed to the helm chart, or attach the corresponding
part
from the deployment yaml file.
contiv.yaml: |-
TCPstackDisabled: true
UseTAPInterfaces: true
TAPInterfaceVersion: 2
NatExternalTraffic: true
MTUSize: 1500
IPAMConfig:
PodSubnetCIDR: 10.1.0.0/16
PodNetworkPrefixLen: 24
PodIfIPCIDR: 10.2.1.0/24
VPPHostSubnetCIDR: 172.30.0.0/16
VPPHostNetworkPrefixLen: 24
NodeInterconnectCIDR: 192.168.16.0/24
VxlanCIDR: 192.168.30.0/24
NodeInterconnectDHCP: False
Information that might be helpful: - Whether node IPs are statically
assigned, or if DHCP is used - STN is enabled - Version of TAP
interfaces used - Output of
kubectl get pods -o wide --all-namespaces
Collecting the Logs
The most essential thing that needs to be done when debugging and reporting an issue in Contiv-VPP is collecting the logs from the contiv-vpp vswitch containers.
a) Collecting Vswitch Logs Using kubectl
In order to collect the logs from individual vswitches in the cluster, connect to the master node and then find the POD names of the individual vswitch containers:
$ kubectl get pods --all-namespaces | grep vswitch
kube-system contiv-vswitch-lqxfp 2/2 Running 0 1h
kube-system contiv-vswitch-q6kwt 2/2 Running 0 1h
Then run the following command, with pod name replaced by the actual POD name:
$ kubectl logs <pod name> -n kube-system -c contiv-vswitch
Redirect the output to a file to save the logs, for example:
kubectl logs contiv-vswitch-lqxfp -n kube-system -c contiv-vswitch > logs-master.txt
b) Collecting Vswitch Logs Using Docker
If option a) does not work, then you can still collect the same logs using the plain docker command. For that, you need to connect to each individual node in the k8s cluster, and find the container ID of the vswitch container:
$ docker ps | grep contivvpp/vswitch
b682b5837e52 contivvpp/vswitch "/usr/bin/supervisor…" 2 hours ago Up 2 hours k8s_contiv-vswitch_contiv-vswitch-q6kwt_kube-system_d09b6210-2903-11e8-b6c9-08002723b076_0
Now use the ID from the first column to dump the logs into the
logs-master.txt
file:
$ docker logs b682b5837e52 > logs-master.txt
Reviewing the Vswitch Logs
In order to debug an issue, it is good to start by grepping the logs for
the level=error
string, for example:
$ cat logs-master.txt | grep level=error
Also, VPP or contiv-agent may crash with some bugs. To check if some
process crashed, grep for the string exit
, for example:
$ cat logs-master.txt | grep exit
2018-03-20 06:03:45,948 INFO exited: vpp (terminated by SIGABRT (core dumped); not expected)
2018-03-20 06:03:48,948 WARN received SIGTERM indicating exit request
Collecting the STN Daemon Logs
In STN (Steal The NIC) deployment scenarios, often need to collect and review the logs from the STN daemon. This needs to be done on each node:
$ docker logs contiv-stn > logs-stn-master.txt
Collecting Logs in Case of Crash Loop
If the vswitch is crashing in a loop (which can be determined by
increasing the number in the RESTARTS
column of the
kubectl get pods --all-namespaces
output), the kubectl logs
or
docker logs
would give us the logs of the latest incarnation of the
vswitch. That might not be the original root cause of the very first
crash, so in order to debug that, we need to disable k8s health check
probes to not restart the vswitch after the very first crash. This can
be done by commenting-out the readinessProbe
and livenessProbe
in the contiv-vpp deployment YAML:
diff --git a/k8s/contiv-vpp.yaml b/k8s/contiv-vpp.yaml
index 3676047..ffa4473 100644
--- a/k8s/contiv-vpp.yaml
+++ b/k8s/contiv-vpp.yaml
@@ -224,18 +224,18 @@ spec:
ports:
# readiness + liveness probe
- containerPort: 9999
- readinessProbe:
- httpGet:
- path: /readiness
- port: 9999
- periodSeconds: 1
- initialDelaySeconds: 15
- livenessProbe:
- httpGet:
- path: /liveness
- port: 9999
- periodSeconds: 1
- initialDelaySeconds: 60
+ # readinessProbe:
+ # httpGet:
+ # path: /readiness
+ # port: 9999
+ # periodSeconds: 1
+ # initialDelaySeconds: 15
+ # livenessProbe:
+ # httpGet:
+ # path: /liveness
+ # port: 9999
+ # periodSeconds: 1
+ # initialDelaySeconds: 60
env:
- name: MICROSERVICE_LABEL
valueFrom:
If VPP is the crashing process, please follow the [CORE_FILES](CORE_FILES.html) guide and provide the coredump file.
Inspect VPP Config
Inspect the following areas: - Configured interfaces (issues related basic node/pod connectivity issues):
vpp# sh int addr
GigabitEthernet0/9/0 (up):
192.168.16.1/24
local0 (dn):
loop0 (up):
l2 bridge bd_id 1 bvi shg 0
192.168.30.1/24
tapcli-0 (up):
172.30.1.1/24
IP forwarding table:
vpp# sh ip fib
ipv4-VRF:0, fib_index:0, flow hash:[src dst sport dport proto ] locks:[src:(nil):2, src:adjacency:3, src:default-route:1, ]
0.0.0.0/0
unicast-ip4-chain
[@0]: dpo-load-balance: [proto:ip4 index:1 buckets:1 uRPF:0 to:[7:552]]
[0] [@0]: dpo-drop ip4
0.0.0.0/32
unicast-ip4-chain
[@0]: dpo-load-balance: [proto:ip4 index:2 buckets:1 uRPF:1 to:[0:0]]
[0] [@0]: dpo-drop ip4
...
...
255.255.255.255/32
unicast-ip4-chain
[@0]: dpo-load-balance: [proto:ip4 index:5 buckets:1 uRPF:4 to:[0:0]]
[0] [@0]: dpo-drop ip4
ARP Table:
vpp# sh ip arp
Time IP4 Flags Ethernet Interface
728.6616 192.168.16.2 D 08:00:27:9c:0e:9f GigabitEthernet0/8/0
542.7045 192.168.30.2 S 1a:2b:3c:4d:5e:02 loop0
1.4241 172.30.1.2 D 86:41:d5:92:fd:24 tapcli-0
15.2485 10.1.1.2 SN 00:00:00:00:00:02 tapcli-1
739.2339 10.1.1.3 SN 00:00:00:00:00:02 tapcli-2
739.4119 10.1.1.4 SN 00:00:00:00:00:02 tapcli-3
NAT configuration (issues related to services):
DBGvpp# sh nat44 addresses
NAT44 pool addresses:
192.168.16.10
tenant VRF independent
0 busy udp ports
0 busy tcp ports
0 busy icmp ports
NAT44 twice-nat pool addresses:
vpp# sh nat44 static mappings
NAT44 static mappings:
tcp local 192.168.42.1:6443 external 10.96.0.1:443 vrf 0 out2in-only
tcp local 192.168.42.1:12379 external 192.168.42.2:32379 vrf 0 out2in-only
tcp local 192.168.42.1:12379 external 192.168.16.2:32379 vrf 0 out2in-only
tcp local 192.168.42.1:12379 external 192.168.42.1:32379 vrf 0 out2in-only
tcp local 192.168.42.1:12379 external 192.168.16.1:32379 vrf 0 out2in-only
tcp local 192.168.42.1:12379 external 10.109.143.39:12379 vrf 0 out2in-only
udp local 10.1.2.2:53 external 10.96.0.10:53 vrf 0 out2in-only
tcp local 10.1.2.2:53 external 10.96.0.10:53 vrf 0 out2in-only
vpp# sh nat44 interfaces
NAT44 interfaces:
loop0 in out
GigabitEthernet0/9/0 out
tapcli-0 in out
vpp# sh nat44 sessions
NAT44 sessions:
192.168.20.2: 0 dynamic translations, 3 static translations
10.1.1.3: 0 dynamic translations, 0 static translations
10.1.1.4: 0 dynamic translations, 0 static translations
10.1.1.2: 0 dynamic translations, 6 static translations
10.1.2.18: 0 dynamic translations, 2 static translations
ACL config (issues related to policies):
vpp# sh acl-plugin acl
“Steal the NIC (STN)” config (issues related to host connectivity when STN is active):
vpp# sh stn rules
- rule_index: 0
address: 10.1.10.47
iface: tapcli-0 (2)
next_node: tapcli-0-output (410)
Errors:
vpp# sh errors
Vxlan tunnels:
vpp# sh vxlan tunnels
Vxlan tunnels:
vpp# sh vxlan tunnels
Hardware interface information:
vpp# sh hardware-interfaces
Basic Example
contiv-vpp-bug-report.sh is an example of a script that may be a useful starting point to gathering the above information using kubectl.
Limitations: - The script does not include STN daemon logs nor does it handle the special case of a crash loop
Prerequisites: - The user specified in the script must have passwordless access to all nodes in the cluster; on each node in the cluster the user must have passwordless access to sudo.
Setting up Prerequisites
To enable logging into a node without a password, copy your public key to the following node:
ssh-copy-id <user-id>@<node-name-or-ip-address>
To enable running sudo without a password for a given user, enter:
$ sudo visudo
Append the following entry to run ALL command without a password for a given user:
<userid> ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD:ALL
You can also add user <user-id>
to group sudo
and edit the
sudo
entry as follows:
# Allow members of group sudo to execute any command
%sudo ALL=(ALL:ALL) NOPASSWD:ALL
Add user <user-id>
to group <group-id>
as follows:
sudo adduser <user-id> <group-id>
or as follows:
usermod -a -G <group-id> <user-id>
Working with the Contiv-VPP Vagrant Test Bed
The script can be used to collect data from the Contiv-VPP test bed created with Vagrant. To collect debug information from this Contiv-VPP test bed, do the following steps: * In the directory where you created your vagrant test bed, do:
vagrant ssh-config > vagrant-ssh.conf
To collect the debug information do:
./contiv-vpp-bug-report.sh -u vagrant -m k8s-master -f <path-to-your-vagrant-ssh-config-file>/vagrant-ssh.conf