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Performance Testing Guide for Kubearmor
THIS METHODOLOGY IS NOT WELL FUNCTIONED YET AND WILL CHANGE DRASTICALLY
-
A Kuberenetes Cluster with sock-shop deployment installed. (Note, we'll be using a custom sock-shop deployment which has two replicas of the frontend pod)
-
Apache benchmark from the httpd docker which must be deployed to the cluster.
- Node: 2-4
- Platform - AKS
- Workload -> Sock-shop
- replica: 2 (For the frontend pod only)
- Tool -> Apache-bench (request at front-end service)
- Vm: DS_v2
Vm | CPU | Ram | Data disks | Temp Storage |
---|---|---|---|---|
DS2_v2 | 2 | 7 GiB | 8 | 14 GiB |
P.S: To change the default enforcer to BPFLSM, deploy this in the cluster:
apiVersion: v1
items:
- apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: DaemonSet
metadata:
labels:
kubearmor-app: updater
name: updater
namespace: kubearmor
spec:
revisionHistoryLimit: 10
selector:
matchLabels:
kubearmor-app: updater
template:
metadata:
labels:
kubearmor-app: updater
spec:
containers:
- args:
- |
grep "bpf" /rootfs/sys/kernel/security/lsm >/dev/null
[[ $? -eq 0 ]] && echo "sysfs already has BPF enabled" && sleep infinity
grep "GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX.*bpf" /rootfs/etc/default/grub >/dev/null
[[ $? -eq 0 ]] && echo "grub already has BPF enabled" && sleep infinity
cat <<EOF >/rootfs/updater.sh
#!/bin/bash
lsmlist=\$(cat /sys/kernel/security/lsm)
echo "current lsmlist=\$lsmlist"
sed -i "s/^GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX=.*$/GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX=\"lsm=\$lsmlist,bpf\"/g" /etc/default/grub
command -v grub2-mkconfig >/dev/null 2>&1 && grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/grub2.cfg
command -v grub-mkconfig >/dev/null 2>&1 && grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub.cfg
command -v aa-status >/dev/null 2>&1 || yum install apparmor-utils -y
command -v update-grub >/dev/null 2>&1 && update-grub
command -v update-grub2 >/dev/null 2>&1 && update-grub2
reboot
EOF
cat /rootfs/updater.sh
chmod +x /rootfs/updater.sh
chroot /rootfs/ /bin/bash /updater.sh
image: debian
command:
- "bash"
- "-c"
imagePullPolicy: Always
name: updater
resources: {}
securityContext:
privileged: true
terminationMessagePath: /dev/termination-log
terminationMessagePolicy: File
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /rootfs
mountPropagation: HostToContainer
name: rootfs
readOnly: false
dnsPolicy: ClusterFirstWithHostNet
hostNetwork: true
hostPID: true
nodeSelector:
kubernetes.io/os: linux
restartPolicy: Always
schedulerName: default-scheduler
securityContext: {}
terminationGracePeriodSeconds: 30
tolerations:
- operator: Exists
volumes:
- hostPath:
path: /
type: DirectoryOrCreate
name: rootfs
updateStrategy:
rollingUpdate:
maxSurge: 0
maxUnavailable: 1
type: RollingUpdate
status:
currentNumberScheduled: 4
desiredNumberScheduled: 4
numberAvailable: 4
numberMisscheduled: 0
numberReady: 4
observedGeneration: 1
updatedNumberScheduled: 4
kind: List
metadata:
resourceVersion: ""
- Change
replicas:2
for the front-end deployment in the sock-shop demo, as given:
-
Apply labels to both the nodes, for ex:
kubectl label nodes <your-node-name> nodetype=node1
-
Use this yaml file to deploy httpd to the cluster:
NOTE: Make sure it is applied to the node where the frontend pods are NOT running, we need this to be on a node different from the frontend svc
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: httpd
labels:
env: prod
spec:
containers:
- name: httpd
image: httpd
imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
nodeSelector:
nodetype: node1
This is the table we need:
Scenario | Requests | Concurrent Requests | Kubearmor CPU (m) | Kubearmor Memory (Mi) | Throughput (req/s) | Average time per req. (ms) | # Failed requests | Micro-service CPU (m) | Micro-service Memory (Mi) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
no kubearmor | 50000 | 5000 | - | - | 2205.502 | 0.4534 | 0 | 401.1 | 287.3333333 |
AND atleast 10 data for it, including the average of all of them.
First, get the service IP of the frontend pod using kubectl get svc
command.
I have made two scripts, which kind of semi automates the process.
- ApacheBench.sh script which starts the benchmark and outputs only the important parts (does not save to csv file yet):
#!/bin/bash
apache() {
# Define the Kubernetes pod and container information
pod_name="httpd"
kubectl exec -it "$pod_name" -- bash -c "ab -r -c 5000 -n 50000 {K8s Service IP}" > ab_output.txt | tee ab_output.txt
failed_requests=$(grep "Failed requests" ab_output.txt | awk '{print $3}')
requests_per_second=$(grep "Requests per second" ab_output.txt | awk '{print $4}')
time_per_request=$(grep "Time per request" ab_output.txt | awk 'NR==2{print $4}')
echo "Requests per second: $requests_per_second"
echo "Time per request: $time_per_request"
echo "Failed requests: $failed_requests"
}
apache
- While this is running, concurrently run this script to get the average resource usage of both the front-end pods on the node:
#!/bin/bash
output_file="mic.csv"
get_pod_stats() {
pod_name="$1"
data=$(kubectl top pod -n sock-shop "$pod_name" | tail -n 1 | tr -s " " | cut -d " " --output-delimiter "," -f2,3)
echo "$pod_name,$data"
}
#Unused for now
get_highest_cpu_row() {
sort -t, -k1 -n -r "$output_file" | head -n 1
}
total_cpu=0
total_memory=0
count=0
# Continuously update and display the CSV file with live data
microservices_metrics() {
while true; do
data1=$(get_pod_stats "front-end-pod-1")
data2=$(get_pod_stats "front-end-pod-2")
cpu1=$(echo "$data1" | cut -d ',' -f2 | sed 's/m//')
memory1=$(echo "$data1" | cut -d ',' -f3 | sed 's/Mi//')
cpu2=$(echo "$data2" | cut -d ',' -f2 | sed 's/m//')
memory2=$(echo "$data2" | cut -d ',' -f3 | sed 's/Mi//')
# Calculate the average CPU and memory usage
average_cpu=$((($cpu1 + $cpu2) / 2))
average_memory=$((($memory1 + $memory2) / 2))
echo "$average_cpu,$average_memory" >> "$output_file"
sleep 1
done
}
microservices_metrics
You'll have to keep a watch on this to see when the usage spikes at the highest, till the benchmark is complete. Also
replace front-end-pod-1 and front-end-pod-2 accordingly.
From these two scripts, you'll get all the data EXCEPT Kubearmor usage data to fill in the table mentioned above. As for checking Kubearmor data, you'll have to run this bash command concurrently as well:
watch -n 1 -d 'echo "`date +%H:%M:%S`,`kubectl top pods -n kubearmor --sort-by=memory -l kubearmor-app=kubearmor | tail -n 1 | tr -s " " | cut -d " " --output-delimiter "," -f2,3`" | tee -a perf.csv'```