Fault Injection
This task shows you how to inject faults to test the resiliency of your application.
Before you begin
Set up Istio by following the instructions in the Installation guide.
Deploy the Bookinfo sample application including the default destination rules.
Review the fault injection discussion in the Traffic Management concepts doc.
Apply application version routing by either performing the request routing task or by running the following commands:
$ kubectl apply -f @samples/bookinfo/networking/virtual-service-all-v1.yaml@
$ kubectl apply -f @samples/bookinfo/networking/virtual-service-reviews-test-v2.yaml@
With the above configuration, this is how requests flow:
productpage
→reviews:v2
→ratings
(only for userjason
)productpage
→reviews:v1
(for everyone else)
Injecting an HTTP delay fault
To test the Bookinfo application microservices for resiliency, inject a 7s delay between the reviews:v2
and ratings
microservices for user jason
. This test will uncover a bug that was intentionally introduced into the Bookinfo app.
Note that the reviews:v2
service has a 10s hard-coded connection timeout for calls to the ratings
service. Even with the 7s delay that you introduced, you still expect the end-to-end flow to continue without any errors.
Create a fault injection rule to delay traffic coming from the test user
jason
.$ kubectl apply -f @samples/bookinfo/networking/virtual-service-ratings-test-delay.yaml@
Confirm the rule was created:
$ kubectl get virtualservice ratings -o yaml
apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1beta1
kind: VirtualService
...
spec:
hosts:
- ratings
http:
- fault:
delay:
fixedDelay: 7s
percentage:
value: 100
match:
- headers:
end-user:
exact: jason
route:
- destination:
host: ratings
subset: v1
- route:
- destination:
host: ratings
subset: v1
Allow several seconds for the new rule to propagate to all pods.
Testing the delay configuration
Open the Bookinfo web application in your browser.
On the
/productpage
web page, log in as userjason
.You expect the Bookinfo home page to load without errors in approximately 7 seconds. However, there is a problem: the Reviews section displays an error message:
Sorry, product reviews are currently unavailable for this book.
View the web page response times:
- Open the Developer Tools menu in you web browser.
- Open the Network tab
- Reload the
/productpage
web page. You will see that the page actually loads in about 6 seconds.
Understanding what happened
You’ve found a bug. There are hard-coded timeouts in the microservices that have caused the reviews
service to fail.
As expected, the 7s delay you introduced doesn’t affect the reviews
service because the timeout between the reviews
and ratings
service is hard-coded at 10s. However, there is also a hard-coded timeout between the productpage
and the reviews
service, coded as 3s + 1 retry for 6s total. As a result, the productpage
call to reviews
times out prematurely and throws an error after 6s.
Bugs like this can occur in typical enterprise applications where different teams develop different microservices independently. Istio’s fault injection rules help you identify such anomalies without impacting end users.
Notice that the fault injection test is restricted to when the logged in user is jason
. If you login as any other user, you will not experience any delays.
Fixing the bug
You would normally fix the problem by:
- Either increasing the
productpage
toreviews
service timeout or decreasing thereviews
toratings
timeout - Stopping and restarting the fixed microservice
- Confirming that the
/productpage
web page returns its response without any errors.
However, you already have a fix running in v3 of the reviews
service. The reviews:v3
service reduces the reviews
to ratings
timeout from 10s to 2.5s so that it is compatible with (less than) the timeout of the downstream productpage
requests.
If you migrate all traffic to reviews:v3
as described in the traffic shifting task, you can then try to change the delay rule to any amount less than 2.5s, for example 2s, and confirm that the end-to-end flow continues without any errors.
Injecting an HTTP abort fault
Another way to test microservice resiliency is to introduce an HTTP abort fault. In this task, you will introduce an HTTP abort to the ratings
microservices for the test user jason
.
In this case, you expect the page to load immediately and display the Ratings service is currently unavailable
message.
Create a fault injection rule to send an HTTP abort for user
jason
:$ kubectl apply -f @samples/bookinfo/networking/virtual-service-ratings-test-abort.yaml@
Confirm the rule was created:
$ kubectl get virtualservice ratings -o yaml
apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1beta1
kind: VirtualService
...
spec:
hosts:
- ratings
http:
- fault:
abort:
httpStatus: 500
percentage:
value: 100
match:
- headers:
end-user:
exact: jason
route:
- destination:
host: ratings
subset: v1
- route:
- destination:
host: ratings
subset: v1
Testing the abort configuration
Open the Bookinfo web application in your browser.
On the
/productpage
, log in as userjason
.If the rule propagated successfully to all pods, the page loads immediately and the
Ratings service is currently unavailable
message appears.If you log out from user
jason
or open the Bookinfo application in an anonymous window (or in another browser), you will see that/productpage
still callsreviews:v1
(which does not callratings
at all) for everybody butjason
. Therefore you will not see any error message.
Cleanup
Remove the application routing rules:
$ kubectl delete -f @samples/bookinfo/networking/virtual-service-all-v1.yaml@
If you are not planning to explore any follow-on tasks, refer to the Bookinfo cleanup instructions to shutdown the application.