CLI to monitor connection pool in OpenShift












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I have used Istio's circuitbreaker settings that ejects a host from connection pool based on number of consecutive errors. Is there a way to monitor the connection pool using command line and see the changes to host id or something like that?










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    I have used Istio's circuitbreaker settings that ejects a host from connection pool based on number of consecutive errors. Is there a way to monitor the connection pool using command line and see the changes to host id or something like that?










    share|improve this question

























      0












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      0








      I have used Istio's circuitbreaker settings that ejects a host from connection pool based on number of consecutive errors. Is there a way to monitor the connection pool using command line and see the changes to host id or something like that?










      share|improve this question














      I have used Istio's circuitbreaker settings that ejects a host from connection pool based on number of consecutive errors. Is there a way to monitor the connection pool using command line and see the changes to host id or something like that?







      openshift istio






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      asked Nov 13 '18 at 5:46









      AruAru

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          Using the command line tool, I'm not sure. But the load-balancing pool size is stored in Envoy metrics (see membership healthy / total and outlier detection stats: https://www.envoyproxy.io/docs/envoy/latest/configuration/cluster_manager/cluster_stats#health-check-statistics ). So, if you have istio's prometheus running, you can open its UI and view the values (or curl it with prometheus rest api).



          Example of metric name:
          envoy_cluster_inbound_8080__my_service_my_namespace_svc_cluster_local_membership_healthy



          Where 8080 is the port of your service, my_service is its name, my_namespace its namespace. There's also a similiar one for outbound: envoy_cluster_outbound_(etc.)



          In Istio 1.1 these metrics are reorganized into a format more suitable for Prometheus, so the names change a little bit and service name / namespace become label instead of being part of the name.



          Note that Kiali ( https://www.kiali.io/ ) shows this health information.






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            Using the command line tool, I'm not sure. But the load-balancing pool size is stored in Envoy metrics (see membership healthy / total and outlier detection stats: https://www.envoyproxy.io/docs/envoy/latest/configuration/cluster_manager/cluster_stats#health-check-statistics ). So, if you have istio's prometheus running, you can open its UI and view the values (or curl it with prometheus rest api).



            Example of metric name:
            envoy_cluster_inbound_8080__my_service_my_namespace_svc_cluster_local_membership_healthy



            Where 8080 is the port of your service, my_service is its name, my_namespace its namespace. There's also a similiar one for outbound: envoy_cluster_outbound_(etc.)



            In Istio 1.1 these metrics are reorganized into a format more suitable for Prometheus, so the names change a little bit and service name / namespace become label instead of being part of the name.



            Note that Kiali ( https://www.kiali.io/ ) shows this health information.






            share|improve this answer




























              1














              Using the command line tool, I'm not sure. But the load-balancing pool size is stored in Envoy metrics (see membership healthy / total and outlier detection stats: https://www.envoyproxy.io/docs/envoy/latest/configuration/cluster_manager/cluster_stats#health-check-statistics ). So, if you have istio's prometheus running, you can open its UI and view the values (or curl it with prometheus rest api).



              Example of metric name:
              envoy_cluster_inbound_8080__my_service_my_namespace_svc_cluster_local_membership_healthy



              Where 8080 is the port of your service, my_service is its name, my_namespace its namespace. There's also a similiar one for outbound: envoy_cluster_outbound_(etc.)



              In Istio 1.1 these metrics are reorganized into a format more suitable for Prometheus, so the names change a little bit and service name / namespace become label instead of being part of the name.



              Note that Kiali ( https://www.kiali.io/ ) shows this health information.






              share|improve this answer


























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                1







                Using the command line tool, I'm not sure. But the load-balancing pool size is stored in Envoy metrics (see membership healthy / total and outlier detection stats: https://www.envoyproxy.io/docs/envoy/latest/configuration/cluster_manager/cluster_stats#health-check-statistics ). So, if you have istio's prometheus running, you can open its UI and view the values (or curl it with prometheus rest api).



                Example of metric name:
                envoy_cluster_inbound_8080__my_service_my_namespace_svc_cluster_local_membership_healthy



                Where 8080 is the port of your service, my_service is its name, my_namespace its namespace. There's also a similiar one for outbound: envoy_cluster_outbound_(etc.)



                In Istio 1.1 these metrics are reorganized into a format more suitable for Prometheus, so the names change a little bit and service name / namespace become label instead of being part of the name.



                Note that Kiali ( https://www.kiali.io/ ) shows this health information.






                share|improve this answer













                Using the command line tool, I'm not sure. But the load-balancing pool size is stored in Envoy metrics (see membership healthy / total and outlier detection stats: https://www.envoyproxy.io/docs/envoy/latest/configuration/cluster_manager/cluster_stats#health-check-statistics ). So, if you have istio's prometheus running, you can open its UI and view the values (or curl it with prometheus rest api).



                Example of metric name:
                envoy_cluster_inbound_8080__my_service_my_namespace_svc_cluster_local_membership_healthy



                Where 8080 is the port of your service, my_service is its name, my_namespace its namespace. There's also a similiar one for outbound: envoy_cluster_outbound_(etc.)



                In Istio 1.1 these metrics are reorganized into a format more suitable for Prometheus, so the names change a little bit and service name / namespace become label instead of being part of the name.



                Note that Kiali ( https://www.kiali.io/ ) shows this health information.







                share|improve this answer












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                answered Nov 13 '18 at 10:18









                JoelJoel

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