Subscribe to our blog

Network Observability for secondary interfaces with Multus and SR-IOV plugins in Kubernetes can be a complex task, but it's crucial for monitoring and troubleshooting network issues in a Kubernetes cluster.

Overview of achieving network observability for a secondary interface

sriov

  1. Multus CNI plugin: Multus is a Container Network Interface (CNI) plugin for Kubernetes that allows you to attach multiple network interfaces to pods. In OpenShift, Multus is used to attach SR-IOV vfs to your pods. For reference and more details about Multus CNI, please refer to the Multus OCP documentation.
  2. SR-IOV plugin: SR-IOV (Single Root I/O Virtualization) is a technology that enables the partitioning of a single PCIe network adapter into multiple virtual functions (VFs). Pods can use these VFs as secondary network interfaces, achieving higher performance and isolation. For reference and more details about SR-IOV, refer to the SR-IOV OCP documentation.

Network Observability eBPF agent enhancements to support the secondary interface

To provide network observability for secondary interfaces in this setup and make the eBPF agent network namespace aware, eBPF agents need to implement the following steps:

  1. Using fsNotify package: Utilize the fsNotify package to be notified when new network namespaces are created. This allows the eBPF agent to keep track of network namespace creation events.
  2. Using netlink package: Employ the netlink package to register when the network interfaces are created or deleted within each network namespace. This will enable the eBPF agent to monitor the interface changes on a per-namespace basis.
  3. Attaching/detaching eBPF TC hooks: Add support to the eBPF agent to attach and detach the eBPF Traffic Control (TC) hook for network interfaces in non-default network namespaces. This step is crucial for monitoring and controlling network traffic within these network namespaces.

Configuring SR-IOV objects

  1. Install the SR-IOV operator in the environment.
  2. Identify the SR-IOV-capable device on the node.
  3. Label the node that has the SR-IOV interface with the feature.node.kubernetes.io/network-sriov.capable=true label.
  4. Create the SriovNetworkNodePolicy object.
apiVersion: sriovnetwork.openshift.io/v1
kind: SriovNetworkNodePolicy
metadata:
 name: mypolicy
 namespace: openshift-sriov-network-operator
spec:
 resourceName: netdeviceresource
 nodeSelector:
  feature.node.kubernetes.io/network-sriov.capable: "true"
 priority: 99
 numVfs: 50
 nicSelector:
  pfNames: ["ens7f0np0#25-49"]
  deviceType: netdevice

 

5. Create the SriovNetwork object. This will create net-attach-def in the openshift-sriov-network-operator namespace.

apiVersion: sriovnetwork.openshift.io/v1
kind: SriovNetwork
metadata:
 name: sriov-test
 namespace: openshift-sriov-network-operator
spec:
 resourceName: netdeviceresource
 networkNamespace: test
 ipam: '{ "type": "static", "addresses": [{"address": "192.168.122.71/24"}]}'

 

6. Create a test pod using the SRIOVNetwork object created above and denoted by the k8s.v1.cni.cncf.io/networks: "sriov-test" annotation.

apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
 name: httpd-2
 namespace: openshift-sriov-network-operator
 labels:
  app: sriov
 annotations:
  k8s.v1.cni.cncf.io/networks: "sriov-test"
spec:
 containers:
 - name: httpd
  command: ["sleep", "30d"]
  image: registry.redhat.io/rhel8/support-tools
  ports:
  - containerPort: 8080
  securityContext:
    allowPrivilegeEscalation: false
    seccompProfile:
      type: RuntimeDefault
    capabilities:
      drop:
      - ALL

 

Configuring the Network Observability operator to work with SR-IOV

  1. Deploy the Network Observability operator.
  2. Create the FollowCollector object with privileged set to true.
apiVersion: flows.netobserv.io/v1beta1
kind: FlowCollector
metadata:
 name: cluster
spec:
 agent:
  type: EBPF
  ebpf:
      privileged: true

 

The Network Observability operator will deploy its components (eBPF agent, flowlogs pipeline, and console plugin). The eBPF agent will start discovering all the interfaces, attach the eBPF hooks, and then flows start being collected.

Sample Network Observability raw flow output by filtering on Pod VF interface net1

View Network Observability output by opening the console plugin, looking in the Traffic Flows table, and filtering by Network interface name == net1. For example, if you filter by TCP flow packets, you'll see results like the following:

sriov_flow

Feedback

Netobserv is an open source project available on GitHub. Feel free to share your ideas, use cases, or ask the community for help.


About the author

Browse by channel

automation icon

Automation

The latest on IT automation for tech, teams, and environments

AI icon

Artificial intelligence

Updates on the platforms that free customers to run AI workloads anywhere

open hybrid cloud icon

Open hybrid cloud

Explore how we build a more flexible future with hybrid cloud

security icon

Security

The latest on how we reduce risks across environments and technologies

edge icon

Edge computing

Updates on the platforms that simplify operations at the edge

Infrastructure icon

Infrastructure

The latest on the world’s leading enterprise Linux platform

application development icon

Applications

Inside our solutions to the toughest application challenges

Original series icon

Original shows

Entertaining stories from the makers and leaders in enterprise tech