SQR-031: EFD deployment instructions

  • Angelo Fausti

Latest Revision: 2019-12-23

Note

This technote is not yet published.

Instructions on how to deploy the EFD on Kubes, a lightweight Kubernetes.

1   TL;DR

Summit EFD https://argocd-summit.lsst.codes
Tucson Teststand EFD https://argocd-tucson-teststand.lsst.codes
NCSA Teststand EFD https://argocd-ncsa-teststand.lsst.codes

Follow #com-efd at LSSTC Slack for updates.

2   Why are we doing this?

The EFD is a solution based on Kafka and InfluxDB for recording telemetry, commands, and events for LSST. It was prototyped and tested with the simulator for the M1M3 subsystem. The next logical step is to deploy and test the EFD with real hardware.

The ability to deploy the EFD at different environments quickly and reproduce these deployments is crucial. To solve this problem we’ve adopted Kubernetes as our deployment platform, Helm as the Kubernetes package manager and Argo CD as the continuous delivery tool for Kubernetes.

In this technote, we demonstrate that we can deploy the EFD on a single machine with Docker and k3s (“Kubes”) while the final on-premise deployment platform is not ready.

3   Provisioning a k3s (“kubes”) cluster

The first step is to provision our Kubernetes cluster. K3s is a lightweight Kubernetes that runs in a container.

3.1   Requirements

We assume a Linux box running Centos 7. We’ve installed Docker CE and kubectl:

  • Docker CE 18.09.6
  • kubectl 1.14.1

Note

We also tried k3s locally, on Docker Desktop for Mac, but it can not route traffic from the host to the container (the --network host option does not work).

3.2   Configure Docker to start on boot

CentOS uses systemd to manage which services start when the system boots. Run the following to configure Docker to start on boot.

sudo systemctl enable docker

3.3   Run the k3s master

Run the k3s master with the following commands:

export K3S_PORT=6443
export K3S_URL=http://localhost:${K3S_PORT}
export K3S_TOKEN=$(date | base64)
export HOST_PATH=/data # change depending on your host
export CONTAINER_PATH=/opt/local-path-provisioner
sudo docker run  -d --restart always --tmpfs /run --tmpfs /var/run --volume ${HOST_PATH}:${CONTAINER_PATH} -e K3S_URL=${K3S_URL} -e K3S_TOKEN=${K3S_TOKEN} --privileged --network host --name master docker.io/rancher/k3s:v0.5.0-rc1 server --https-listen-port ${K3S_PORT} --no-deploy traefik

The --restart always option ensures that the k3s master is automatically restarted after a system reboot.

Data is persisted at $HOST_PATH with the --volume option (see also 3.4   Deploy the local-path provisioner).

The --network host option routes network traffic from the host to the container, we need that to reach the different services running inside k3s.

Note that we are not deploying Traefik Ingress Controller which is included in the k3s docker image, because the EFD already deploys the NGINX Ingress Controller.

To connect to the master you need to copy the kubeconfig file from the container, and set the KUBECONFIG environment variable so that kubectl knows how to connect to the cluster:

sudo docker cp master:/etc/rancher/k3s/k3s.yaml k3s.yaml
export KUBECONFIG=$(pwd)/k3s.yaml
kubectl cluster-info

Kubernetes master is running at https://localhost:6443
CoreDNS is running at https://localhost:6443/api/v1/namespaces/kube-system/services/kube-dns:dns/proxy

To further debug and diagnose cluster problems, use 'kubectl cluster-info dump'.

To connect to the cluster from another machine, copy the k3s.yaml file and replace localhost by 140.252.32.142 for the lab instance and 139.229.162.114 for the summit instance.

Note that we will likely also keep current versions of the configuration files in 1Password. Look for k3s-summit.yaml and k3s-test.yaml.

3.4   Deploy the local-path provisioner

The local-path provisioner creates hostPath persistent volumes on the node automatically. The directory /opt/local-path-provisioner is used as the path for provisioning. The provisioner is installed in the local-path-storage namespace by default.

kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/rancher/local-path-provisioner/master/deploy/local-path-storage.yaml

At this point you should see the following pods running in the cluster:

kubectl get pods --all-namespaces
NAMESPACE            NAME                                      READY   STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
kube-system          coredns-695688789-r9gkt                   1/1     Running   0          5m
local-path-storage   local-path-provisioner-5d4b898474-vz2np   1/1     Running   0          4s

3.5   Add workers (optional)

If there are other machines, you can easily add workers to the cluster. Copy the node-token from the master:

sudo docker cp master:/var/lib/rancher/k3s/server/node-token node-token

and start the worker(s):

export SERVER_URL=https://<master external IP>:${K3S_PORT}
export NODE_TOKEN=$(cat node-token)
export WORKER=kube-0
export HOST_PATH=/data # change depending on your host
export CONTAINER_PATH=/opt/local-path-provisioner
sudo docker run -d --tmpfs /run --tmpfs /var/run -v ${HOST_PATH}:${CONTAINER_PATH} -e K3S_URL=${SERVER_URL} -e K3S_TOKEN=${NODE_TOKEN} --privileged --name ${WORKER} rancher/k3s:v0.5.0-rc1

Note

By default /opt/local-path-provisioner is used across all the nodes to store persistent volume data, see local-path provisioner configuration.

4   Install Argo CD

With Argo CD we keep the EFD deployment configuration on GitHub. This way we can use GitHub to control changes in the EFD deployments and easily bootstrap new EFD deployments.

kubectl create namespace argocd
kubectl apply -n argocd -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/argoproj/argo-cd/stable/manifests/install.yaml

This creates a new namespace, argocd, where Argo CD services and application resources will live.

Follow these instructions to install Argo CD CLI.

Additional Argo CD configuration includes Single Sign On (SSO) and the Role Based Access Control (RBAC).

In particular, this is the RBAC configuration we added to the ArgoCD ConfigMap argocd-rbac-cm to let members of the EFD ops team in the lsst-sqre GitHub organization to synchronize the EFD configuration, while granting read-only permission for other members.

data:
  policy.csv: |
    p, lsst-sqre:EFD ops, applications, sync, default/*, allow

    g, lsst-sqre:EFD ops, role:admin
    policy.default: role:readonly

5   Deploy the EFD

Once Argo CD is installed we can deploy the EFD.

Argo CD manages the deployment of the EFD on multiple environments. The possible environments are summit, tucson-teststand, ncsa-teststand, ldf, and gke.

For example, the following bootstraps an EFD deployment using the configuration for the summit environment:

kubectl port-forward svc/argocd-server -n argocd 8080:443

argocd login localhot:8080
argocd app create efd --dest-namespace argocd --dest-server https://kubernetes.default.svc --repo https://github.com/lsst-sqre/argocd-efd.git --path apps/efd --helm-set env=summit
argocd app sync efd

See the Argo CD getting started guide for further instructions on how to login using the CLI.

The secrets used by the EFD are stored on LSST’s Vault Service but you need to create at least one secret manually with the VAULT_TOKEN:

export VAULT_TOKEN=<vault token>
export VAULT_TOKEN_LEASE_DURATION=<vault token lease duration>

kubectl create secret generic vault-secrets-operator --from-literal=VAULT_TOKEN=$VAULT_TOKEN --from-literal=VAULT_TOKEN_LEASE_DURATION=$VAULT_TOKEN_LEASE_DURATION --namespace vault-secrets-operator

Service names for the apps follow the convention <app>-<environment>-efd.lsst.codes, for example, chronograf-summit-efd.lsst.codes

In particular, the broker URL for the Summit EFD is kafka-0-summit-efd.lsst.codes:30190.

6   Testing the EFD

The EFD deployment can be tested using kafkacat a command line utility implemented with librdkafka the Apache Kafka C/C++ client library.

Run in producer mode (-P) to produce messages for a test topic:

kafkacat -P -b <kafka broker url> -t test_topic
Hello EFD!
^D

Run in metadata listing mode (-L) to retrieve metadata from the cluster:

kafkacat -L -b <kafka broker url>

The -d option enables librdkafka debugging. For instance, -d broker can be used to debug connection issues with the cluster:

kafkacat -L -b <kafka broker url>  -d broker

Run in consumer mode (-C) to consume topics from the cluster:

kafkacat -C -b <kafka broker url> -t <topic name>

7   Restarting the EFD manually

k3s is configured to automatically start after a system reboot (--restart-always flag). In case you need to start the k3s master manually, first check its status:

sudo docker ps -a

If k3s master status is Exited start with the following command:

sudo docker start master

After a few minutes, all Kubernetes pods should be running again:

export KUBECONFIG=$(pwd)/k3s.yaml
kubectl cluster-info
kubectl get pods --all-namespaces

8   Inspecting logs, restarting pods, etc.

You can inspect logs, restart pods and do other operations including synchronization of the deployment using the Argo CD UI or the CLI.

In the case of the EFD, we have most often needed to restart the kafka connector pod confluent-cp-kafka-connect in the cp-helm-charts namespace.

9   Accessing EFD data

Use the Chronograf interface for time-series visualization and dashboarding.

In this notebook we show how to access EFD data using aioinflux, a Python client for InfluxDB, and proceed with data analysis using Pandas dataframes.