Dieser Inhalt ist in der von Ihnen ausgewählten Sprache nicht verfügbar.
Chapter 8. Using metrics with dashboards and alerts
The Network Observability Operator uses the flowlogs-pipeline
to generate metrics from flow logs. You can utilize these metrics by setting custom alerts and viewing dashboards.
8.1. Viewing Network Observability metrics dashboards
On the Overview tab in the OpenShift Container Platform console, you can view the overall aggregated metrics of the network traffic flow on the cluster. You can choose to display the information by node, namespace, owner, pod, and service. You can also use filters and display options to further refine the metrics.
Procedure
-
In the web console Observe
Dashboards, select the Netobserv dashboard. View network traffic metrics in the following categories, with each having the subset per node, namespace, source, and destination:
- Byte rates
- Packet drops
- DNS
- RTT
- Select the Netobserv/Health dashboard.
View metrics about the health of the Operator in the following categories, with each having the subset per node, namespace, source, and destination.
- Flows
- Flows Overhead
- Flow rates
- Agents
- Processor
- Operator
Infrastructure and Application metrics are shown in a split-view for namespace and workloads.
8.2. Predefined metrics
Metrics generated by the flowlogs-pipeline
are configurable in the spec.processor.metrics.includeList
of the FlowCollector
custom resource to add or remove metrics.
8.3. Network Observability metrics
You can also create alerts by using the includeList
metrics in Prometheus rules, as shown in the example "Creating alerts".
When looking for these metrics in Prometheus, such as in the Console through Observe netobserv_
. For example, netobserv_namespace_flows_total
. Available metrics names are as follows:
- includeList metrics names
Names followed by an asterisk
*
are enabled by default.-
namespace_egress_bytes_total
-
namespace_egress_packets_total
-
namespace_ingress_bytes_total
-
namespace_ingress_packets_total
-
namespace_flows_total
* -
node_egress_bytes_total
-
node_egress_packets_total
-
node_ingress_bytes_total
* -
node_ingress_packets_total
-
node_flows_total
-
workload_egress_bytes_total
-
workload_egress_packets_total
-
workload_ingress_bytes_total
* -
workload_ingress_packets_total
-
workload_flows_total
-
- PacketDrop metrics names
When the
PacketDrop
feature is enabled inspec.agent.ebpf.features
(withprivileged
mode), the following additional metrics are available:-
namespace_drop_bytes_total
-
namespace_drop_packets_total
* -
node_drop_bytes_total
-
node_drop_packets_total
-
workload_drop_bytes_total
-
workload_drop_packets_total
-
- DNS metrics names
When the
DNSTracking
feature is enabled inspec.agent.ebpf.features
, the following additional metrics are available:-
namespace_dns_latency_seconds
* -
node_dns_latency_seconds
-
workload_dns_latency_seconds
-
- FlowRTT metrics names
When the
FlowRTT
feature is enabled inspec.agent.ebpf.features
, the following additional metrics are available:-
namespace_rtt_seconds
* -
node_rtt_seconds
-
workload_rtt_seconds
-
8.4. Creating alerts
You can create custom alerting rules for the Netobserv dashboard metrics to trigger alerts when some defined conditions are met.
Prerequisites
- You have access to the cluster as a user with the cluster-admin role or with view permissions for all projects.
- You have the Network Observability Operator installed.
Procedure
- Create a YAML file by clicking the import icon, +.
Add an alerting rule configuration to the YAML file. In the YAML sample that follows, an alert is created for when the cluster ingress traffic reaches a given threshold of 10 MBps per destination workload.
apiVersion: monitoring.openshift.io/v1 kind: AlertingRule metadata: name: netobserv-alerts namespace: openshift-monitoring spec: groups: - name: NetObservAlerts rules: - alert: NetObservIncomingBandwidth annotations: message: |- {{ $labels.job }}: incoming traffic exceeding 10 MBps for 30s on {{ $labels.DstK8S_OwnerType }} {{ $labels.DstK8S_OwnerName }} ({{ $labels.DstK8S_Namespace }}). summary: "High incoming traffic." expr: sum(rate(netobserv_workload_ingress_bytes_total {SrcK8S_Namespace="openshift-ingress"}[1m])) by (job, DstK8S_Namespace, DstK8S_OwnerName, DstK8S_OwnerType) > 10000000 1 for: 30s labels: severity: warning
- 1
- The
netobserv_workload_ingress_bytes_total
metric is enabled by default inspec.processor.metrics.includeList
.
- Click Create to apply the configuration file to the cluster.
8.5. Custom metrics
You can create custom metrics out of the flowlogs data using the FlowMetric
API. In every flowlogs data that is collected, there are a number of fields labeled per log, such as source name and destination name. These fields can be leveraged as Prometheus labels to enable the customization of cluster information on your dashboard.
8.6. Configuring custom metrics by using FlowMetric API
You can configure the FlowMetric
API to create custom metrics by using flowlogs data fields as Prometheus labels. You can add multiple FlowMetric
resources to a project to see multiple dashboard views.
Procedure
-
In the web console, navigate to Operators
Installed Operators. - In the Provided APIs heading for the NetObserv Operator, select FlowMetric.
- In the Project: dropdown list, select the project of the Network Observability Operator instance.
- Click Create FlowMetric.
Configure the
FlowMetric
resource, similar to the following sample configurations:Example 8.1. Generate a metric that tracks ingress bytes received from cluster external sources
apiVersion: flows.netobserv.io/v1alpha1 kind: FlowMetric metadata: name: flowmetric-cluster-external-ingress-traffic namespace: netobserv 1 spec: metricName: cluster_external_ingress_bytes_total 2 type: Counter 3 valueField: Bytes direction: Ingress 4 labels: [DstK8S_HostName,DstK8S_Namespace,DstK8S_OwnerName,DstK8S_OwnerType] 5 filters: 6 - field: SrcSubnetLabel matchType: Absence
- 1
- The
FlowMetric
resources need to be created in the namespace defined in theFlowCollector
spec.namespace
, which isnetobserv
by default. - 2
- The name of the Prometheus metric, which in the web console appears with the prefix
netobserv-<metricName>
. - 3
- The
type
specifies the type of metric. TheCounter
type
is useful for counting bytes or packets. - 4
- The direction of traffic to capture. If not specified, both ingress and egress are captured, which can lead to duplicated counts.
- 5
- Labels define what the metrics look like and the relationship between the different entities and also define the metrics cardinality. For example,
SrcK8S_Name
is a high cardinality metric. - 6
- Refines results based on the listed criteria. In this example, selecting only the cluster external traffic is done by matching only flows where
SrcSubnetLabel
is absent. This assumes the subnet labels feature is enabled (viaspec.processor.subnetLabels
), which is done by default.
Verification
-
Once the pods refresh, navigate to Observe
Metrics. -
In the Expression field, type the metric name to view the corresponding result. You can also enter an expression, such as
topk(5, sum(rate(netobserv_cluster_external_ingress_bytes_total{DstK8S_Namespace="my-namespace"}[2m])) by (DstK8S_HostName, DstK8S_OwnerName, DstK8S_OwnerType))
Example 8.2. Show RTT latency for cluster external ingress traffic
apiVersion: flows.netobserv.io/v1alpha1 kind: FlowMetric metadata: name: flowmetric-cluster-external-ingress-rtt namespace: netobserv 1 spec: metricName: cluster_external_ingress_rtt_seconds type: Histogram 2 valueField: TimeFlowRttNs direction: Ingress labels: [DstK8S_HostName,DstK8S_Namespace,DstK8S_OwnerName,DstK8S_OwnerType] filters: - field: SrcSubnetLabel matchType: Absence - field: TimeFlowRttNs matchType: Presence divider: "1000000000" 3 buckets: [".001", ".005", ".01", ".02", ".03", ".04", ".05", ".075", ".1", ".25", "1"] 4
- 1
- The
FlowMetric
resources need to be created in the namespace defined in theFlowCollector
spec.namespace
, which isnetobserv
by default. - 2
- The
type
specifies the type of metric. TheHistogram
type
is useful for a latency value (TimeFlowRttNs
). - 3
- Since the Round-trip time (RTT) is provided as nanos in flows, use a divider of 1 billion to convert into seconds, which is standard in Prometheus guidelines.
- 4
- The custom buckets specify precision on RTT, with optimal precision ranging between 5ms and 250ms.
Verification
-
Once the pods refresh, navigate to Observe
Metrics. - In the Expression field, you can type the metric name to view the corresponding result.
High cardinality can affect the memory usage of Prometheus. You can check whether specific labels have high cardinality in the Network Flows format reference.
8.7. Configuring custom charts using FlowMetric API
You can generate charts for dashboards in the OpenShift Container Platform web console, which you can view as an administrator in the Dashboard menu by defining the charts
section of the FlowMetric
resource.
Procedure
-
In the web console, navigate to Operators
Installed Operators. - In the Provided APIs heading for the NetObserv Operator, select FlowMetric.
- In the Project: dropdown list, select the project of the Network Observability Operator instance.
- Click Create FlowMetric.
-
Configure the
FlowMetric
resource, similar to the following sample configurations:
Example 8.3. Chart for tracking ingress bytes received from cluster external sources
apiVersion: flows.netobserv.io/v1alpha1 kind: FlowMetric metadata: name: flowmetric-cluster-external-ingress-traffic namespace: netobserv 1 # ... charts: - dashboardName: Main 2 title: External ingress traffic unit: Bps type: SingleStat queries: - promQL: "sum(rate($METRIC[2m]))" legend: "" - dashboardName: Main 3 sectionName: External title: Top external ingress traffic per workload unit: Bps type: StackArea queries: - promQL: "sum(rate($METRIC{DstK8S_Namespace!=\"\"}[2m])) by (DstK8S_Namespace, DstK8S_OwnerName)" legend: "{{DstK8S_Namespace}} / {{DstK8S_OwnerName}}" # ...
- 1
- The
FlowMetric
resources need to be created in the namespace defined in theFlowCollector
spec.namespace
, which isnetobserv
by default.
Verification
-
Once the pods refresh, navigate to Observe
Dashboards. Search for the NetObserv / Main dashboard. View two panels under the NetObserv / Main dashboard, or optionally a dashboard name that you create:
- A textual single statistic showing the global external ingress rate summed across all dimensions
- A timeseries graph showing the same metric per destination workload
For more information about the query language, refer to the Prometheus documentation.
Example 8.4. Chart for RTT latency for cluster external ingress traffic
apiVersion: flows.netobserv.io/v1alpha1 kind: FlowMetric metadata: name: flowmetric-cluster-external-ingress-traffic namespace: netobserv 1 # ... charts: - dashboardName: Main 2 title: External ingress TCP latency unit: seconds type: SingleStat queries: - promQL: "histogram_quantile(0.99, sum(rate($METRIC_bucket[2m])) by (le)) > 0" legend: "p99" - dashboardName: Main 3 sectionName: External title: "Top external ingress sRTT per workload, p50 (ms)" unit: seconds type: Line queries: - promQL: "histogram_quantile(0.5, sum(rate($METRIC_bucket{DstK8S_Namespace!=\"\"}[2m])) by (le,DstK8S_Namespace,DstK8S_OwnerName))*1000 > 0" legend: "{{DstK8S_Namespace}} / {{DstK8S_OwnerName}}" - dashboardName: Main 4 sectionName: External title: "Top external ingress sRTT per workload, p99 (ms)" unit: seconds type: Line queries: - promQL: "histogram_quantile(0.99, sum(rate($METRIC_bucket{DstK8S_Namespace!=\"\"}[2m])) by (le,DstK8S_Namespace,DstK8S_OwnerName))*1000 > 0" legend: "{{DstK8S_Namespace}} / {{DstK8S_OwnerName}}" # ...
This example uses the histogram_quantile
function to show p50
and p99
.
You can show averages of histograms by dividing the metric, $METRIC_sum
, by the metric, $METRIC_count
, which are automatically generated when you create a histogram. With the preceding example, the Prometheus query to do this is as follows:
promQL: "(sum(rate($METRIC_sum{DstK8S_Namespace!=\"\"}[2m])) by (DstK8S_Namespace,DstK8S_OwnerName) / sum(rate($METRIC_count{DstK8S_Namespace!=\"\"}[2m])) by (DstK8S_Namespace,DstK8S_OwnerName))*1000"
Verification
-
Once the pods refresh, navigate to Observe
Dashboards. - Search for the NetObserv / Main dashboard. View the new panel under the NetObserv / Main dashboard, or optionally a dashboard name that you create.
For more information about the query language, refer to the Prometheus documentation.
8.8. Detecting SYN flooding using the FlowMetric API and TCP flags
You can create an AlertingRule
resouce to alert for SYN flooding.
Procedure
-
In the web console, navigate to Operators
Installed Operators. - In the Provided APIs heading for the NetObserv Operator, select FlowMetric.
- In the Project dropdown list, select the project of the Network Observability Operator instance.
- Click Create FlowMetric.
Create
FlowMetric
resources to add the following configurations:Configuration counting flows per destination host and resource, with TCP flags
apiVersion: flows.netobserv.io/v1alpha1 kind: FlowMetric metadata: name: flows-with-flags-per-destination spec: metricName: flows_with_flags_per_destination_total type: Counter labels: [SrcSubnetLabel,DstSubnetLabel,DstK8S_Name,DstK8S_Type,DstK8S_HostName,DstK8S_Namespace,Flags]
Configuration counting flows per source host and resource, with TCP flags
apiVersion: flows.netobserv.io/v1alpha1 kind: FlowMetric metadata: name: flows-with-flags-per-source spec: metricName: flows_with_flags_per_source_total type: Counter labels: [DstSubnetLabel,SrcSubnetLabel,SrcK8S_Name,SrcK8S_Type,SrcK8S_HostName,SrcK8S_Namespace,Flags]
Deploy the following
AlertingRule
resource to alert for SYN flooding:AlertingRule
for SYN floodingapiVersion: monitoring.openshift.io/v1 kind: AlertingRule metadata: name: netobserv-syn-alerts namespace: openshift-monitoring # ... spec: groups: - name: NetObservSYNAlerts rules: - alert: NetObserv-SYNFlood-in annotations: message: |- {{ $labels.job }}: incoming SYN-flood attack suspected to Host={{ $labels.DstK8S_HostName}}, Namespace={{ $labels.DstK8S_Namespace }}, Resource={{ $labels.DstK8S_Name }}. This is characterized by a high volume of SYN-only flows with different source IPs and/or ports. summary: "Incoming SYN-flood" expr: sum(rate(netobserv_flows_with_flags_per_destination_total{Flags="2"}[1m])) by (job, DstK8S_HostName, DstK8S_Namespace, DstK8S_Name) > 300 1 for: 15s labels: severity: warning app: netobserv - alert: NetObserv-SYNFlood-out annotations: message: |- {{ $labels.job }}: outgoing SYN-flood attack suspected from Host={{ $labels.SrcK8S_HostName}}, Namespace={{ $labels.SrcK8S_Namespace }}, Resource={{ $labels.SrcK8S_Name }}. This is characterized by a high volume of SYN-only flows with different source IPs and/or ports. summary: "Outgoing SYN-flood" expr: sum(rate(netobserv_flows_with_flags_per_source_total{Flags="2"}[1m])) by (job, SrcK8S_HostName, SrcK8S_Namespace, SrcK8S_Name) > 300 2 for: 15s labels: severity: warning app: netobserv # ...
Verification
- In the web console, click Manage Columns in the Network Traffic table view and click TCP flags.
- In the Network Traffic table view, filter on TCP protocol SYN TCPFlag. A large number of flows with the same byteSize indicates a SYN flood.
-
Go to Observe
Alerting and select the Alerting Rules tab. - Filter on netobserv-synflood-in alert. The alert should fire when SYN flooding occurs.