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authorStephen Wong <stephen.kf.wong@gmail.com>2018-11-08 15:30:32 +0000
committerGerrit Code Review <gerrit@opnfv.org>2018-11-08 15:30:32 +0000
commit5634dbdca27a90642b6dfcebf9f5879e1709cd93 (patch)
tree8987a7bd451378446e04cd342e14cdedef9b1470
parenta4017877a1cf735cf71f5ae82f71a1cc56e2b160 (diff)
parentdb29890c61fca1eb76457ed749f2c7d460f4fd8f (diff)
Merge "Initial commit for Clovisor design doc"
-rw-r--r--docs/development/design/clovisor.rst205
-rw-r--r--docs/development/design/index.rst1
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diff --git a/docs/development/design/clovisor.rst b/docs/development/design/clovisor.rst
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+########
+Clovisor
+########
+
+*****************
+What is Clovisor?
+*****************
+
+One of Clover's goals is to investigate an optimal way to perform network
+tracing in cloud native environment. Clovisor is project Clover's initial
+attempt to provide such solution.
+
+Clovisor is named due to it being "Clover's use of IOVisor". `IOVisor`_ is a
+set of tools to ease eBPF code development for tracing, monitoring, and other
+networking functions. BPF stands for Berkeley Packet Filter, an in-kernel
+virtual machine like construct which allows developers to inject bytecodes in
+various kernel event points. More information regarding BPF can be found
+`here`_. Clovisor utilizes the `goBPF`_ module from IOVisor as part of its
+control plane, and primarily uses BPF code to perform packet filtering in the
+data plane.
+
+.. _IOVisor: https://github.com/iovisor
+.. _here: https://cilium.readthedocs.io/en/v1.2/bpf/
+.. _goBPF: https://github.com/iovisor/gobpf
+
+**********************
+Clovisor Functionality
+**********************
+
+Clovisor is primarily a session based network tracing module, that is, it
+generates network traces on a per-session basis, i.e., on a request and response
+pair basis. It records information pertaining to L3/L4 and L7 (just HTTP 1.0 and
+1.1 for now) regarding the session. The traces are sent to Jaeger server who
+acts as tracer, or trace collector.
+
+********************
+Clovisor Requirement
+********************
+
+Clovisor is tested on kernel versions 4.14.x and 4.15.x. For Ubuntu servers
+built-in kernel, it requires Ubuntu version 18.04.
+
+*****************
+Clovisor Workflow
+*****************
+
+Clovisor runs as a `DaemonSet`_ --- that is, it runs on every nodes in a
+Kubernetes cluster, including being automatically launched in newly joined node.
+Clovior runs in the "clovisor" Kubernetes namespace, and it needs to run in
+privilege mode and be granted at least pod and service readable right for the
+Kubernetes namespace(s) in which it is monitoring, i.e., a RBAC needs to be set
+up to grant such access right to the clovisor namespace service account.
+
+Clovisor looks for its configuration(s) from redis server in clover-system
+namespace. The three config info for Clovisor for now are:
+
+#. clovisor_labels, a list of labels which Clovisor would filter for monitoring
+#. clovisor_egress_match, a list of interested egress side IP/port for outbound
+ traffic monitoring
+#. clovisor_jaeger_server, specifying the Jaeger server name / port to send
+ traces to
+
+By default Clovisor would monitor all the pods under the 'default' namespace.
+It will read the service port name associated with the pod under monitoring,
+and use the service port name to determine the network protocol to trace.
+Clovisor expects the same service port naming convention / nomenclature as
+Istio, which is specified in `istio`_. Clovisor extracts expected network
+protocol from these names; some examples are
+
+.. code-block:: yaml
+
+ apiVersion: v1
+ kind: Service
+ [snip]
+ spec:
+ ports:
+ - port: 1234
+ name: http
+
+With the above example in the service specification, Clovisor would specifically
+look to trace HTTP packets for packets matching that destination port number on
+the pods associated with this service, and filter everything else. The
+following has the exact same bahavior
+
+.. code-block:: yaml
+
+ apiVersion: v1
+ kind: Service
+ [snip]
+ spec:
+ ports:
+ - port: 1234
+ name: http-1234
+
+Clovisor derived what TCP port to monitor via the container port exposed by the
+pod in pod spec. In the following example:
+
+.. code-block:: yaml
+
+ spec:
+ containers:
+ - name: foo
+ image: localhost:5000/foo
+ ports:
+ - containerPort: 3456
+
+Packets with destination TCP port number 3456 will be traced for the pod on the
+ingress side, likewise for packet with source TCP port number 3456 on the
+ingress side (for receiving response traffic tracing). This request-response
+pair is sent as a `span`_.
+
+In addition, Clovisor provides egress match configurion where user can
+configure the (optional) IP address of the egress side traffic and TCP port
+number for EGRESS or outbound side packet tracing. This is particularly useful
+for the use case where the pod sends traffic to an external entity (for
+example, sending to an external web site on port 80). User can further specify
+which pod prefix should the rules be applied.
+
+Clovisor is a session-based network tracer, therefore it would trace both the
+request and response packet flow, and extract any information necessary (the
+entire packet from IP header up is copied to user space). In Gambia release
+Clovisor control plane extracts source/destination IP addresses (from request
+packet flow perspective), source/destination TCP port number, and HTTP request
+method/URL/protocol as well as response status/status code/protocol, and
+overall session duration. These information is being logged via OpenTracing
+APIs to Jaeger.
+
+.. _DaemonSet: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/controllers/daemonset/
+.. _istio: https://istio.io/docs/setup/kubernetes/spec-requirements/
+.. _span: https://github.com/opentracing/specification/blob/master/specification.md
+
+**********************
+Clovisor Control Plane
+**********************
+
+There are two main elements of Clovisor control plane: Kubernetes client and
+BPF control plane using IOVisor BCC.
+
+Kubernetes client is used for the following needs:
+
+#. fetches the pods pertaining to filter ('default' namespace by default
+ without filter)
+#. fetches corresponding service port name to determine network protocol to
+ trace (TCP by default)
+#. extracts veth interface index for pod network interface
+#. watches for pod status change, or if new pod got launched that matches the
+ filter
+
+Clovisor uses goBPF from IOVisor BCC project to build its control plane for BPF
+datapath, which does:
+
+#. via `netlink`_, under the pod veth interface on the Linux host side, creates
+ a `QDisc`_ with name 'classact' with ingress and egress filters created
+ under it
+#. dynamically compiles and loads BPF code "session_tracing.c" and sets ingress
+ and egress functions on the filters created above
+#. sets up perfMap (shared packet buffer between user space and kernel) and
+ sets up kernel channel to poll map write event
+#. sets up timer task to periodically logs and traces interested packets
+
+.. _netlink: https://github.com/vishvananda/netlink
+.. _QDisc: http://tldp.org/HOWTO/Traffic-Control-HOWTO/components.html
+
+*******************
+Clovisor Data Plane
+*******************
+
+Clovisor utilizes BPF for data plane packet analysis in kernel. BPF bytecode
+runs in kernel and is executed as an event handler. Clovisor's BPF program has
+an ingress and egress packet handling functions as loadable modules for
+respective event trigger points, i.e., ingress and egress on a particular Linux
+network interface, which for Clovisor is the pod associated veth. There are
+three tables used by the Clovisor BPF program:
+
+#. dports2proto: control plane -> data plane: the container/service port and
+ corresponding protocol (TCP, HTTP...etc) to trace on the ingress side
+#. egress_lookup_table: control plane -> data plane: the list of egress IP
+ address / ports which Clovisor should trace on the egress side
+#. sessions: data plane -> control plane: BPF creates entries to this table to
+ record TCP sessions
+
+*****************
+Clovisor Clean Up
+*****************
+
+As mentioned above, on a per pod basis, Clovisor creates a qdisc called
+'classact' per each pod veth interface. This kernel object does not get deleted
+by simply killing the Clovisor pod. The cleanup is done via Clovisor either via
+pod removal, or when the Clovisor pod is deleted. However, IF the qdisc is not
+cleaned up, Clovisor would not be able to tap into that same pod, more
+specifically, that pod veth interface. The qdisc can be examined via the
+following command::
+
+ sudo tc qdisc show
+
+and you should see something like this::
+
+ qdisc clsact ffff: dev veth4c47cc75 parent ffff:fff1
+
+in case it wasn't removed at the end, user can manually remove it via::
+
+ sudo tc qdisc del dev veth4c47cc75 clsact
+
+(of course, the qdisc should be removed by Clovisor, otherwise it is a Clovisor
+bug)
diff --git a/docs/development/design/index.rst b/docs/development/design/index.rst
index 1bb89f1..5f950b9 100644
--- a/docs/development/design/index.rst
+++ b/docs/development/design/index.rst
@@ -10,6 +10,7 @@ OPNFV Clover Design Specification
.. toctree::
:maxdepth: 1
+ clovisor
logging
monitoring
tracing