Help Center/ Cloud Container Engine/ User Guide/ Nodes/ Node O&M/ Configuring Node Fault Detection Policies
Updated on 2024-09-30 GMT+08:00

Configuring Node Fault Detection Policies

The node fault detection function depends on the NPD add-on. The add-on instances run on nodes and monitor nodes. This section describes how to enable node fault detection.

Prerequisites

The CCE Node Problem Detector add-on has been installed in the cluster.

Enabling Node Fault Detection

  1. Log in to the CCE console and click the cluster name to access the cluster console.
  2. In the navigation pane, choose Nodes and then click the Nodes tab. Check whether the NPD add-on has been installed in the cluster or whether the add-on has been upgraded to the latest version. After the NPD add-on has been installed, you can use the fault detection function.
  3. If the NPD add-on is running properly, click Node Fault Detection Policy to view the current fault detection items. For details about the NPD check item list, see NPD Check Items.
  4. If the check result of the current node is abnormal, a message is displayed in the node list, indicating that the metric is abnormal.

  5. You can click Abnormal metrics and rectify the fault as prompted.

Customized Check Items

  1. Log in to the CCE console and click the cluster name to access the cluster console.
  2. In the navigation pane, choose Nodes and then click the Nodes tab. Then, click Fault Detection Policy.
  3. On the displayed page, view the current check items. Click Edit in the Operation column and edit checks.

    Currently, the following configurations are supported:
    • Enable/Disable: Enable or disable a check item.
    • Target Node: By default, check items run on all nodes. You can change the fault threshold based on special scenarios. For example, the spot price ECS interruption reclamation check runs only on the spot price ECS node.

    • Trigger Threshold: The default thresholds match common fault scenarios. You can customize and modify the fault thresholds as required. For example, change the threshold for triggering connection tracking table exhaustion from 90% to 80%.

    • Check Period: The default check period is 30 seconds. You can modify this parameter as required.

    • Troubleshooting Strategy: After a fault occurs, you can select the strategies listed in the following table.
      Table 1 Troubleshooting strategies

      Troubleshooting Strategy

      Effect

      Prompting Exception

      Kubernetes events are reported.

      Disabling scheduling

      Kubernetes events are reported and the NoSchedule taint is added to the node.

      Evict Node Load

      Kubernetes events are reported and the NoExecute taint is added to the node. This operation will evict workloads on the node and interrupt services. Exercise caution when performing this operation.

NPD Check Items

Check items are supported only in 1.16.0 and later versions.

Check items cover events and statuses.

  • Event-related

    For event-related check items, when a problem occurs, NPD reports an event to the API server. The event type can be Normal (normal event) or Warning (abnormal event).

    Table 2 Event-related check items

    Check Item

    Function

    Description

    OOMKilling

    Listen to the kernel logs and check whether OOM events occur and are reported.

    Typical scenario: When the memory usage of a process in a container exceeds the limit, OOM is triggered and the process is terminated.

    Warning event

    Listening object: /dev/kmsg

    Matching rule: "Killed process \\d+ (.+) total-vm:\\d+kB, anon-rss:\\d+kB, file-rss:\\d+kB.*"

    TaskHung

    Listen to the kernel logs and check whether taskHung events occur and are reported.

    Typical scenario: Disk I/O suspension causes process suspension.

    Warning event

    Listening object: /dev/kmsg

    Matching rule: "task \\S+:\\w+ blocked for more than \\w+ seconds\\."

    ReadonlyFilesystem

    Check whether the Remount root filesystem read-only error occurs in the system kernel by listening to the kernel logs.

    Typical scenario: A user detaches a data disk from a node by mistake on the ECS, and applications continuously write data to the mount point of the data disk. As a result, an I/O error occurs in the kernel and the disk is remounted as a read-only disk.

    NOTE:

    If the rootfs of node pods is of the device mapper type, an error will occur in the thin pool if a data disk is detached. This will affect NPD and NPD will not be able to detect node faults.

    Warning event

    Listening object: /dev/kmsg

    Matching rule: Remounting filesystem read-only

  • Status-related

    For status-related check items, when a problem occurs, NPD reports an event to the API server and changes the node status synchronously. This function can be used together with Node-problem-controller fault isolation to isolate nodes.

    If the check period is not specified in the following check items, the default period is 30 seconds.

    Table 3 Checking system components

    Check Item

    Function

    Description

    Container network component error

    CNIProblem

    Check the status of the CNI components (container network components).

    None

    Container runtime component error

    CRIProblem

    Check the status of Docker and containerd of the CRI components (container runtime components).

    Check object: Docker or containerd

    Frequent restarts of Kubelet

    FrequentKubeletRestart

    Periodically backtrack system logs to check whether the key component Kubelet restarts frequently.

    • Default threshold: 10 restarts within 10 minutes

      If Kubelet restarts for 10 times within 10 minutes, it indicates that the system restarts frequently and a fault alarm is generated.

    • Listening object: logs in the /run/log/journal directory
    NOTE:

    The Ubuntu and HCE 2.0 OSs do not support the preceding check items due to incompatible log formats.

    Frequent restarts of Docker

    FrequentDockerRestart

    Periodically backtrack system logs to check whether the container runtime Docker restarts frequently.

    Frequent restarts of containerd

    FrequentContainerdRestart

    Periodically backtrack system logs to check whether the container runtime containerd restarts frequently.

    kubelet error

    KubeletProblem

    Check the status of the key component Kubelet.

    None

    kube-proxy error

    KubeProxyProblem

    Check the status of the key component kube-proxy.

    None

    Table 4 Checking system metrics

    Check Item

    Function

    Description

    Conntrack table full

    ConntrackFullProblem

    Check whether the conntrack table is full.

    • Default threshold: 90%
    • Usage: nf_conntrack_count
    • Maximum value: nf_conntrack_max

    Insufficient disk resources

    DiskProblem

    Check the usage of the system disk and CCE data disks (including the CRI logical disk and kubelet logical disk) on the node.

    • Default threshold: 90%
    • Source:
      df -h

    Currently, additional data disks are not supported.

    Insufficient file handles

    FDProblem

    Check if the FD file handles are used up.

    • Default threshold: 90%
    • Usage: the first value in /proc/sys/fs/file-nr
    • Maximum value: the third value in /proc/sys/fs/file-nr

    Insufficient node memory

    MemoryProblem

    Check whether memory is used up.

    • Default threshold: 80%
    • Usage: MemTotal-MemAvailable in /proc/meminfo
    • Maximum value: MemTotal in /proc/meminfo

    Insufficient process resources

    PIDProblem

    Check whether PID process resources are exhausted.

    • Default threshold: 90%
    • Usage: nr_threads in /proc/loadavg
    • Maximum value: smaller value between /proc/sys/kernel/pid_max and /proc/sys/kernel/threads-max.
    Table 5 Checking the storage

    Check Item

    Function

    Description

    Disk read-only

    DiskReadonly

    Periodically perform write tests on the system disk and CCE data disks (including the CRI logical disk and Kubelet logical disk) of the node to check the availability of key disks.

    Detection paths:

    • /mnt/paas/kubernetes/kubelet/
    • /var/lib/docker/
    • /var/lib/containerd/
    • /var/paas/sys/log/cceaddon-npd/

    The temporary file npd-disk-write-ping is generated in the detection path.

    Currently, additional data disks are not supported.

    emptyDir storage pool error

    EmptyDirVolumeGroupStatusError

    Check whether the ephemeral volume group on the node is normal.

    Impact: Pods that depend on the storage pool cannot write data to the temporary volume. The temporary volume is remounted as a read-only file system by the kernel due to an I/O error.

    Typical scenario: When creating a node, a user configures two data disks as a temporary volume storage pool. Some data disks are deleted by mistake. As a result, the storage pool becomes abnormal.

    • Detection period: 30s
    • Source:
      vgs -o vg_name, vg_attr
    • Principle: Check whether the VG (storage pool) is in the P state. If yes, some PVs (data disks) are lost.
    • Joint scheduling: The scheduler can automatically identify a PV storage pool error and prevent pods that depend on the storage pool from being scheduled to the node.
    • Exceptional scenario: The NPD add-on cannot detect the loss of all PVs (data disks), resulting in the loss of VGs (storage pools). In this case, kubelet automatically isolates the node, detects the loss of VGs (storage pools), and updates the corresponding resources in nodestatus.allocatable to 0. This prevents pods that depend on the storage pool from being scheduled to the node. The damage of a single PV cannot be detected by this check item, but by the ReadonlyFilesystem check item.

    PV storage pool error

    LocalPvVolumeGroupStatusError

    Check the PV group on the node.

    Impact: Pods that depend on the storage pool cannot write data to the persistent volume. The persistent volume is remounted as a read-only file system by the kernel due to an I/O error.

    Typical scenario: When creating a node, a user configures two data disks as a persistent volume storage pool. Some data disks are deleted by mistake.

    Mount point error

    MountPointProblem

    Check the mount point on the node.

    Exceptional definition: You cannot access the mount point by running the cd command.

    Typical scenario: Network File System (NFS), for example, obsfs and s3fs is mounted to a node. When the connection is abnormal due to network or peer NFS server exceptions, all processes that access the mount point are suspended. For example, during a cluster upgrade, a kubelet is restarted, and all mount points are scanned. If the abnormal mount point is detected, the upgrade fails.

    Alternatively, you can run the following command:

    for dir in `df -h | grep -v "Mounted on" | awk "{print \\$NF}"`;do cd $dir; done && echo "ok"

    Suspended disk I/O

    DiskHung

    Check whether I/O suspension occurs on all disks on the node, that is, whether I/O read and write operations are not responded.

    Definition of I/O suspension: The system does not respond to disk I/O requests, and some processes are in the D state.

    Typical scenario: Disks cannot respond due to abnormal OS hard disk drivers or severe faults on the underlying network.

    • Check object: all data disks
    • Source:

      /proc/diskstat

      Alternatively, you can run the following command:
      iostat -xmt 1
    • Thresholds: (All following conditions must be met).
      • Average usage (ioutil) ≥ 0.99
      • Average I/O queue length (avgqu-sz) ≥ 1
      • Average I/O transfer volume ≤ 1

        Average I/O transfer volume = Number of writes completed per second (iops, unit: w/s) + Amount of data written per second (ioth, unit: wMB/s)

      NOTE:

      In some OSs, no data changes during I/O. In this case, calculate the CPU I/O time usage. The value of iowait should be greater than 0.8.

    Slow disk I/O

    DiskSlow

    Check whether all disks on the node have slow I/Os, that is, whether I/Os respond slowly.

    Typical scenario: EVS disks have slow I/Os due to network fluctuation.

    • Check object: all data disks
    • Source:

      /proc/diskstat

      Alternatively, you can run the following command:
      iostat -xmt 1
    • Default threshold:

      Average I/O latency (await) ≥ 5000 ms

    NOTE:

    If I/O requests are not responded and the await data is not updated, this check item is invalid.

    Table 6 Other check items

    Check Item

    Function

    Description

    Abnormal NTP

    NTPProblem

    Check whether the node clock synchronization service ntpd or chronyd is running properly and whether a system time drift is caused.

    Default clock offset threshold: 8000 ms

    Process D error

    ProcessD

    Check whether there is a process D on the node.

    Default threshold: 10 abnormal processes detected for three consecutive times

    Source:

    • /proc/{PID}/stat
    • Alternately, you can run the ps aux command.

    Exceptional scenario: The ProcessD check item ignores the resident D processes (heartbeat and update) on which the SDI driver on the BMS node depends.

    Process Z error

    ProcessZ

    Check whether the node has processes in Z state.

    ResolvConf error

    ResolvConfFileProblem

    Check whether the ResolvConf file is lost.

    Check whether the ResolvConf file is normal.

    Exceptional definition: No upstream domain name resolution server (nameserver) is included.

    Object: /etc/resolv.conf

    Existing scheduled event

    ScheduledEvent

    Check whether scheduled live migration events exist on the node. A live migration plan event is usually triggered by a hardware fault and is an automatic fault rectification method at the IaaS layer.

    Typical scenario: The host is faulty. For example, the fan is damaged or the disk has bad sectors. As a result, live migration is triggered for VMs.

    Source:

    • http://169.254.169.254/meta-data/latest/events/scheduled

    This check item is an Alpha feature and is disabled by default.

    The spot price node is being reclaimed.

    SpotPriceNodeReclaimNotification

    Check whether the reclaiming of a spot price node is interrupted due to preemption.

    Default check interval: 120 seconds

    Default fault handling policy: evicts node loads.

    The kubelet component has the following default check items, which have bugs or defects. You can fix them by upgrading the cluster or using NPD.

    Table 7 Default kubelet check items

    Check Item

    Function

    Description

    Insufficient PID resources

    PIDPressure

    Check whether PIDs are sufficient.

    • Interval: 10 seconds
    • Threshold: 90%
    • Defect: In community version 1.23.1 and earlier versions, this check item becomes invalid when over 65535 PIDs are used. For details, see issue 107107. In community version 1.24 and earlier versions, thread-max is not considered in this check item.

    Insufficient memory

    MemoryPressure

    Check whether the allocable memory for the containers is sufficient.

    • Interval: 10 seconds
    • Threshold: max. 100 MiB
    • Allocable = Total memory of a node – Reserved memory of a node
    • Defect: This check item checks only the memory consumed by containers, and does not consider that consumed by other elements on the node.

    Insufficient disk resources

    DiskPressure

    Check the disk usage and inodes usage of the kubelet and Docker disks.

    • Interval: 10 seconds
    • Threshold: 90%