CKAD Exam Practice Exercise : Observability
Vijay Daswani
Posted on June 7, 2020
Observability (18%)
Practice questions based on these concepts
- Understand LivenessProbes and ReadinessProbes
- Understand Container Logging
- Understand how to monitor applications in kubernetes
- Understand Debugging in Kubernetes
Exercise
Create an nginx pod with containerPort 80 and it should only receive traffic only it checks the endpoint / on port 80 and verify and delete the pod
kubectl run nginx --image=nginx --restart=Never --port=80 --dry-run -o yaml > nginx-pod.yaml
// add the readinessProbe section and create
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
creationTimestamp: null
labels:
run: nginx
name: nginx
spec:
containers:
- image: nginx
name: nginx
ports:
- containerPort: 80
readinessProbe:
httpGet:
path: /
port: 80
resources: {}
dnsPolicy: ClusterFirst
restartPolicy: Never
status: {}
kubectl create -f nginx-pod.yaml
// verify
kubectl describe pod nginx | grep -i readiness
kubectl delete po nginx
Create an nginx pod with containerPort 80 and it should check the pod running at endpoint / healthz on port 80 and verify and delete the pod
kubectl run nginx --image=nginx --restart=Never --port=80 --dry-run -o yaml > nginx-pod.yaml
// add the livenessProbe section and create
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
creationTimestamp: null
labels:
run: nginx
name: nginx
spec:
containers:
- image: nginx
name: nginx
ports:
- containerPort: 80
livenessProbe:
httpGet:
path: /healthz
port: 80
resources: {}
dnsPolicy: ClusterFirst
restartPolicy: Never
status: {}
kubectl create -f nginx-pod.yaml
// verify
kubectl describe pod nginx | grep -i readiness
kubectl delete po nginx
Create an nginx pod with containerPort 80 and it should check the pod running at endpoint /healthz on port 80 and it should only receive traffic only it checks the endpoint / on port 80. verify the pod
kubectl run nginx --image=nginx --restart=Never --port=80 --dry-run -o yaml > nginx-pod.yaml
// add the livenessProbe and readiness section and create
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
creationTimestamp: null
labels:
run: nginx
name: nginx
spec:
containers:
- image: nginx
name: nginx
ports:
- containerPort: 80
livenessProbe:
httpGet:
path: /healthz
port: 80
readinessProbe:
httpGet:
path: /
port: 80
resources: {}
dnsPolicy: ClusterFirst
restartPolicy: Never
status: {}
kubectl create -f nginx-pod.yaml
// verify
kubectl describe pod nginx | grep -i readiness
kubectl describe pod nginx | grep -i liveness
Check what all are the options that we can configure with readiness and liveness probes
kubectl explain Pod.spec.containers.livenessProbe
kubectl explain Pod.spec.containers.readinessProbe
Create the pod nginx with the above liveness and readiness probes so that it should wait for 20 seconds before it checks liveness and readiness probes and it should check every 25 seconds.
// nginx-pod.yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
creationTimestamp: null
labels:
run: nginx
name: nginx
spec:
containers:
- image: nginx
name: nginx
ports:
- containerPort: 80
livenessProbe:
initialDelaySeconds: 20
periodSeconds: 25
httpGet:
path: /healthz
port: 80
readinessProbe:
initialDelaySeconds: 20
periodSeconds: 25
httpGet:
path: /
port: 80
resources: {}
dnsPolicy: ClusterFirst
restartPolicy: Never
status: {}
kubectl create -f nginx-pod.yaml
Create a busybox pod with this command “echo I am from busybox pod; sleep 3600;” and verify the logs
kubectl run busybox --image=busybox --restart=Never -- /bin/sh -c "echo I am from busybox pod; sleep 3600;"
kubectl logs busybox
copy the logs of the above pod to the busybox-logs.txt and verify
kubectl logs busybox > busybox-logs.txt
cat busybox-logs.txt
List all the events sorted by timestamp and put them into file.log and verify
kubectl get events --sort-by=.metadata.creationTimestamp
// putting them into file.log
kubectl get events --sort-by=.metadata.creationTimestamp > file.log
cat file.log
Create a pod with an image alpine which executes this command ”while true; do echo ‘Hi I am from alpine’; sleep 5; done” and verify and follow the logs of the pod
// create the pod
kubectl run hello --image=alpine --restart=Never -- /bin/sh -c "while true; do echo 'Hi I am from Alpine'; sleep 5;done"
// verify and follow the logs
kubectl logs --follow hello
Get the memory and CPU usage of all the pods and find out top 3 pods which have the highest usage and put them into the cpu-usage.txt file
// get the top 3 hungry pods
kubectl top pod --all-namespaces | sort --reverse --key 3 --numeric | head -3
// putting into file
kubectl top pod --all-namespaces | sort --reverse --key 3 --numeric | head -3 > cpu-usage.txt
// verify
cat cpu-usage.txt
Posted on June 7, 2020
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