Difference between revisions of "Istio on AWS"

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== What is istio ==
== What is istio ==
Istio is an open source service mesh that layers transparently onto existing distributed applications. Istio’s powerful features provide a uniform and more efficient way to secure, connect, and monitor services. Istio is the path to load balancing, service-to-service authentication, and monitoring – with few or no service code changes. Its powerful control plane brings vital features, including:<br>
Istio is an open source service mesh that layers transparently onto existing distributed applications. Istio’s powerful features provide a uniform and more efficient way to secure, connect, and monitor services. Istio is the path to load balancing, service-to-service authentication, and monitoring – with few or no service code changes. Its powerful control plane brings vital features, including:<br>
<br>
* Secure service-to-service communication in a cluster with TLS encryption, strong identity-based authentication and authorization Automatic load balancing for HTTP, gRPC, WebSocket, and TCP traffic
* Secure service-to-service communication in a cluster with TLS encryption, strong identity-based authentication and authorization Automatic load balancing for HTTP, gRPC, WebSocket, and TCP traffic
* Fine-grained control of traffic behavior with rich routing rules, retries, failovers, and fault injection
* Fine-grained control of traffic behavior with rich routing rules, retries, failovers, and fault injection
* A pluggable policy layer and configuration API supporting access controls, rate limits and quotas
* A pluggable policy layer and configuration API supporting access controls, rate limits and quotas
* Automatic metrics, logs, and traces for all traffic within a cluster, including cluster ingress and egress
* Automatic metrics, logs, and traces for all traffic within a cluster, including cluster ingress and egress
<br>
Istio is designed for extensibility and can handle a diverse range of deployment needs. Istio’s control plane runs on Kubernetes, and you can add applications deployed in that cluster to your mesh, extend the mesh to other clusters, or even connect VMs or other endpoints running outside of Kubernetes.<br>
Istio is designed for extensibility and can handle a diverse range of deployment needs. Istio’s control plane runs on Kubernetes, and you can add applications deployed in that cluster to your mesh, extend the mesh to other clusters, or even connect VMs or other endpoints running outside of Kubernetes.
<br>
<br>
A large ecosystem of contributors, partners, integrations, and distributors extend and leverage Istio for a wide variety of scenarios. You can install Istio yourself, or a number of vendors have products that integrate Istio and manage it for you.
A large ecosystem of contributors, partners, integrations, and distributors extend and leverage Istio for a wide variety of scenarios. You can install Istio yourself, or a number of vendors have products that integrate Istio and manage it for you.
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  kubectl apply -f samples/addons
  kubectl apply -f samples/addons
  kubectl rollout status deployment/kiali -n istio-system
  kubectl rollout status deployment/kiali -n istio-system
Expected output
Expected output :
<syntaxhighlight lang=shell>
<SyntaxHighlight lang=shell>
serviceaccount/grafana created
serviceaccount/grafana created
configmap/grafana created
configmap/grafana created
Line 120: Line 118:
service/prometheus created
service/prometheus created
deployment.apps/prometheus created
deployment.apps/prometheus created
<syntaxhighlight/>
</SyntaxHighlight>
2. Access the kiali dashboard
2. Access the kiali dashboard
  istioctl dashboard kiali
  istioctl dashboard kiali
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Kiali-graph.png|Kiali Graph Page
Kiali-graph.png|Kiali Graph Page
</gallery>
</gallery>
== Cleanup ==
When you’re finished experimenting with the Bookinfo sample, uninstall and clean it up using the following instructions: <br>
Delete the routing rules and terminate the application pods
samples/bookinfo/platform/kube/cleanup.sh
Confirm shutdown
kubectl get virtualservices  #-- there should be no virtual services
kubectl get destinationrules  #-- there should be no destination rules
kubectl get gateway          #-- there should be no gateway
kubectl get pods              #-- the Bookinfo pods should be deleted

Latest revision as of 08:34, 5 September 2021

Preface

The goals of this document is to describe the process of installing istio.io service mesh into kubernetes cluster.

A service mesh is a dedicated infrastructure layer that you can add to your applications. It allows you to transparently add capabilities like observability, traffic management, and security, without adding them to your own code. The term “service mesh” describes both the type of software you use to implement this pattern, and the security or network domain that is created when you use that software.

As the deployment of distributed services, such as in a Kubernetes-based system, grows in size and complexity, it can become harder to understand and manage. Its requirements can include discovery, load balancing, failure recovery, metrics, and monitoring. A service mesh also often addresses more complex operational requirements, like A/B testing, canary deployments, rate limiting, access control, encryption, and end-to-end authentication.

Service-to-service communication is what makes a distributed application possible. Routing this communication, both within and across application clusters, becomes increasingly complex as the number of services grow. Istio helps reduce this complexity while easing the strain on development teams

Pre-Requisite

To follows this particular case of installation, it is assumed that one has already successfully installed managed kubernetes service in AWS Platform, should one needs detailed instruction to perform the task, please refer to Getting Started on Amazon EKS page. This should enable one to have deployed manage kubernetes services that manageable from local machine.

What is istio

Istio is an open source service mesh that layers transparently onto existing distributed applications. Istio’s powerful features provide a uniform and more efficient way to secure, connect, and monitor services. Istio is the path to load balancing, service-to-service authentication, and monitoring – with few or no service code changes. Its powerful control plane brings vital features, including:

  • Secure service-to-service communication in a cluster with TLS encryption, strong identity-based authentication and authorization Automatic load balancing for HTTP, gRPC, WebSocket, and TCP traffic
  • Fine-grained control of traffic behavior with rich routing rules, retries, failovers, and fault injection
  • A pluggable policy layer and configuration API supporting access controls, rate limits and quotas
  • Automatic metrics, logs, and traces for all traffic within a cluster, including cluster ingress and egress

Istio is designed for extensibility and can handle a diverse range of deployment needs. Istio’s control plane runs on Kubernetes, and you can add applications deployed in that cluster to your mesh, extend the mesh to other clusters, or even connect VMs or other endpoints running outside of Kubernetes.

A large ecosystem of contributors, partners, integrations, and distributors extend and leverage Istio for a wide variety of scenarios. You can install Istio yourself, or a number of vendors have products that integrate Istio and manage it for you.

Installing Istio

In order to install istio.io, first we are going to download the source into local machine by using below command, at the time this document is written, current version of istio.io is 1.11.2

curl -L https://istio.io/downloadIstio | sh -

move to istio folder installation

cd istio-1.11.2

Add the istioctl client to your path (Linux or macOS):

export PATH=$PWD/bin:$PATH

Then, one can start to install istio on the cluster

istioctl install --set profile=demo -y

Please noted, that we are going to install the demo application. Next step is to create the default namespace for sidecar injection.

kubectl label namespace default istio-injection=enabled

Next, deploy the Bookinfo sample application.

kubectl apply -f samples/bookinfo/platform/kube/bookinfo.yaml

Inspecting the installation result.

kubectl get pod

Output :

NAME                              READY   STATUS            RESTARTS   AGE
details-v1-79f774bdb9-2vfgq       0/2     PodInitializing   0          9s
productpage-v1-6b746f74dc-lp2dh   0/2     PodInitializing   0          3s
ratings-v1-b6994bb9-6hftr         0/2     PodInitializing   0          7s
reviews-v1-545db77b95-rt69k       0/2     PodInitializing   0          6s
reviews-v2-7bf8c9648f-tvgn6       0/2     PodInitializing   0          5s
reviews-v3-84779c7bbc-trknm       0/2     PodInitializing   0          4s
kubectl get services

Output :

NAME          TYPE        CLUSTER-IP       EXTERNAL-IP   PORT(S)    AGE
details       ClusterIP   10.100.109.10    <none>        9080/TCP   21s
kubernetes    ClusterIP   10.100.0.1       <none>        443/TCP    68m
productpage   ClusterIP   10.100.151.213   <none>        9080/TCP   15s
ratings       ClusterIP   10.100.1.63      <none>        9080/TCP   20s
reviews       ClusterIP   10.100.119.183   <none>        9080/TCP   18s

Please ensure all the pod status becomes READY <2/2> before proceed to next step. Verify everything is working correctly up to this point. Run this command to see if the app is running inside the cluster and serving HTML pages by checking for the page title in the response:

kubectl exec "$(kubectl get pod -l app=ratings -o jsonpath='{.items[0].metadata.name}')" -c ratings -- curl -sS productpage:9080/productpage | grep -o "<title>.*</title>"

Output:

<title>Simple Bookstore App</title>

Exposing Application to outside traffic

At this point, the application is already running but we cannot access it from the outside. To make it accessible, you need to create an Istio Ingress Gateway, which maps a path to a route at the edge of your mesh. To execute this, there are two step that we need to execute.

1. Associate this application with the Istio gateway:

kubectl apply -f samples/bookinfo/networking/bookinfo-gateway.yaml

Expected Output:

gateway.networking.istio.io/bookinfo-gateway created
virtualservice.networking.istio.io/bookinfo created

2. Ensure that there are no issues with the configuration:

istioctl analyze

Expected Output:

✔ No validation issues found when analyzing namespace: default.

3. Determining INGRESS IP and Ports Execute the following command to determine if your Kubernetes cluster is running in an environment that supports external load balancers:

kubectl get svc istio-ingressgateway -n istio-system

Expected output, tabled out from shell output

Expected output
NAME istio-ingressgateway
TYPE LoadBalancer
CLUSTER-IP 10.100.32.131
EXTERNAL-IP a63eca23a2998474c9feda458e127103-292095897.us-west-2.elb.amazonaws.com
PORT(S) 15021:31607/TCP,80:30526/TCP,443:30361/TCP,31400:30605/TCP,15443:32431/TCP

If the EXTERNAL-IP value is set, your environment has an external load balancer that you can use for the ingress gateway. If the EXTERNAL-IP value is <none> (or perpetually <pending>), your environment does not provide an external load balancer for the ingress gateway. In this case, you can access the gateway using the service’s node port.
There are three environment variable that we need to set inside the cluster's ingress controller to enable the external traffic.
In AWS environments, the load balancer may be exposed using a host name, instead of an IP address. In this case, the ingress gateway’s EXTERNAL-IP value will not be an IP address, but rather a host name, Please use below command to set the environment variables

export INGRESS_HOST=$(kubectl -n istio-system get service istio-ingressgateway -o jsonpath='{.status.loadBalancer.ingress[0].hostname}')
export INGRESS_PORT=$(kubectl -n istio-system get service istio-ingressgateway -o jsonpath='{.spec.ports[?(@.name=="http2")].port}')
export SECURE_INGRESS_PORT=$(kubectl -n istio-system get service istio-ingressgateway -o jsonpath='{.spec.ports[?(@.name=="https")].port}')
export GATEWAY_URL=$INGRESS_HOST:$INGRESS_PORT

Finally, ensure host and port is setup correctly

echo "$GATEWAY_URL"

Verify External Access

Confirm that the Bookinfo application is accessible from outside by viewing the Bookinfo product page using a browser. Run the following command to retrieve the external address of the Bookinfo application.

echo "http://$GATEWAY_URL/productpage"

Paste the output from the previous command into your web browser and confirm that the Bookinfo product page is displayed.

Dashboards on istio

stio integrates with several different telemetry applications. These can help you gain an understanding of the structure of your service mesh, display the topology of the mesh, and analyze the health of your mesh. Use the following instructions to deploy the Kiali dashboard, along with Prometheus, Grafana, and Jaeger. 1. Install Kiali and other addons

kubectl apply -f samples/addons
kubectl rollout status deployment/kiali -n istio-system

Expected output :

serviceaccount/grafana created
configmap/grafana created
...
service/prometheus created
deployment.apps/prometheus created

2. Access the kiali dashboard

istioctl dashboard kiali

This command will start default web browser on your machine to access the kiali dashboard through tunneling traffic.

Notes on Graph menu item, on left menu navigation will only displayed trace data after the request has reached minimum sampling rate. Default sampling rate is 1%, please execute below command to access the product-page service.

for i in {1..100}; do curl "http://$GATEWAY_URL/productpage"; done

The Kiali dashboard shows an overview of your mesh with the relationships between the services in the Bookinfo sample application. It also provides filters to visualize the traffic flow. Below are the screen capture for kiali dashboard on Bookstore application sample.

Cleanup

When you’re finished experimenting with the Bookinfo sample, uninstall and clean it up using the following instructions:
Delete the routing rules and terminate the application pods

samples/bookinfo/platform/kube/cleanup.sh

Confirm shutdown

kubectl get virtualservices   #-- there should be no virtual services
kubectl get destinationrules  #-- there should be no destination rules
kubectl get gateway           #-- there should be no gateway
kubectl get pods              #-- the Bookinfo pods should be deleted