Visualizing Your Mesh

This task shows you how to visualize different aspects of your Istio mesh.

As part of this task, you install the Kiali addon and use the web-based graphical user interface to view service graphs of the mesh and your Istio configuration objects. Lastly, you use the Kiali Developer API to generate graph data in the form of consumable JSON.

This task does not cover all of the features provided by Kiali. To learn about the full set of features it supports, see the Kiali website.

This task uses the Bookinfo sample application as the example throughout. This task assumes the Bookinfo application is installed in the bookinfo namespace.

Before you begin

Follow the Kiali installation documentation to deploy Kiali into your cluster.

Generating a service graph

  1. To verify the service is running in your cluster, run the following command:

    1. $ kubectl -n istio-system get svc kiali
  2. To determine the Bookinfo URL, follow the instructions to determine the Bookinfo ingress GATEWAY_URL.

  3. To send traffic to the mesh, you have three options

    • Visit http://$GATEWAY_URL/productpage in your web browser

    • Use the following command multiple times:

      1. $ curl http://$GATEWAY_URL/productpage
    • If you installed the watch command in your system, send requests continually with:

      1. $ watch -n 1 curl -o /dev/null -s -w %{http_code} $GATEWAY_URL/productpage
  4. To open the Kiali UI, execute the following command in your Kubernetes environment:

    1. $ istioctl dashboard kiali
  5. View the overview of your mesh in the Overview page that appears immediately after you log in. The Overview page displays all the namespaces that have services in your mesh. The following screenshot shows a similar page:

    Example Overview

    Example Overview

  6. To view a namespace graph, click on the bookinfo graph icon in the Bookinfo namespace card. The graph icon is in the lower left of the namespace card and looks like a connected group of circles. The page looks similar to:

    Example Graph

    Example Graph

  7. To view a summary of metrics, select any node or edge in the graph to display its metric details in the summary details panel on the right.

  8. To view your service mesh using different graph types, select a graph type from the Graph Type drop down menu. There are several graph types to choose from: App, Versioned App, Workload, Service.

    • The App graph type aggregates all versions of an app into a single graph node. The following example shows a single reviews node representing the three versions of the reviews app.

      Example App Graph

      Example App Graph

    • The Versioned App graph type shows a node for each version of an app, but all versions of a particular app are grouped together. The following example shows the reviews group box that contains the three nodes that represents the three versions of the reviews app.

      Example Versioned App Graph

      Example Versioned App Graph

    • The Workload graph type shows a node for each workload in your service mesh. This graph type does not require you to use the app and version labels so if you opt to not use those labels on your components, this is the graph type you will use.

      Example Workload Graph

      Example Workload Graph

    • The Service graph type shows a node for each service in your mesh but excludes all apps and workloads from the graph.

      Example Service Graph

      Example Service Graph

Examining Istio configuration

  1. To view detailed information about Istio configuration, click on the Applications, Workloads, and Services menu icons on the left menu bar. The following screenshot shows information for the Bookinfo application:

    Example Details

    Example Details

Creating weighted routes

You can use the Kiali weighted routing wizard to define the specific percentage of request traffic to route to two or more workloads.

  1. View the Versioned app graph of the bookinfo graph.

    • Make sure you have selected Requests percentage in the Display drop down menu to see the percentage of traffic routed to each workload.

    • Make sure you have selected the Service Nodes check box in the Display drop down menu to view the service nodes in the graph.

    Bookinfo Graph Options

    Bookinfo Graph Options

  2. Focus on the ratings service within the bookinfo graph by clicking on the ratings service (triangle) node. Notice the ratings service traffic is evenly distributed to the two ratings workloads v1 and v2 (50% of requests are routed to each workload).

    Graph Showing Percentage of Traffic

    Graph Showing Percentage of Traffic

  3. Click the ratings link found in the side panel to go to the service view for the ratings service.

  4. From the Action drop down menu, select Create Weighted Routing to access the weighted routing wizard.

    Service Action Menu

    Service Action Menu

  5. Drag the sliders to specify the percentage of traffic to route to each workload. For ratings-v1, set it to 10%; for ratings-v2 set it to 90%.

    Weighted Routing Wizard

    Weighted Routing Wizard

  6. Click the Create button to create the new routing.

  7. Click Graph in the left hand navigation bar to return to the bookinfo graph.

  8. Send requests to the bookinfo application. For example, to send one request per second, you can execute this command if you have watch installed on your system:

    1. $ watch -n 1 curl -o /dev/null -s -w %{http_code} $GATEWAY_URL/productpage
  9. After a few minutes you will notice that the traffic percentage will reflect the new traffic route, thus confirming the fact that your new traffic route is successfully routing 90% of all traffic requests to ratings-v2.

    90% Ratings Traffic Routed to ratings-v2

    90% Ratings Traffic Routed to ratings-v2

Validating Istio configuration

Kiali can validate your Istio resources to ensure they follow proper conventions and semantics. Any problems detected in the configuration of your Istio resources can be flagged as errors or warnings depending on the severity of the incorrect configuration. See the Kiali validations page for the list of all validation checks Kiali performs.

Istio 1.4 introduces istioctl analyze which lets you perform similar analysis in a way that can be used in a CI pipeline.

Force an invalid configuration of a service port name to see how Kiali reports a validation error.

  1. Change the port name of the details service from http to foo:

    1. $ kubectl patch service details -n bookinfo --type json -p '[{"op":"replace","path":"/spec/ports/0/name", "value":"foo"}]'
  2. Navigate to the Services list by clicking Services on the left hand navigation bar.

  3. Select bookinfo from the Namespace drop down menu if it is not already selected.

  4. Notice the error icon displayed in the Configuration column of the details row.

    Services List Showing Invalid Configuration

    Services List Showing Invalid Configuration

  5. Click the details link in the Name column to navigate to the service details view.

  6. Hover over the error icon to display a tool tip describing the error.

    Service Details Describing the Invalid Configuration

    Service Details Describing the Invalid Configuration

  7. Change the port name back to http to correct the configuration and return bookinfo back to its normal state.

    1. $ kubectl patch service details -n bookinfo --type json -p '[{"op":"replace","path":"/spec/ports/0/name", "value":"http"}]'

    Service Details Showing Valid Configuration

    Service Details Showing Valid Configuration

Viewing and editing Istio configuration YAML

Kiali provides a YAML editor for viewing and editing Istio configuration resources. The YAML editor will also provide validation messages when it detects incorrect configurations.

  1. Create Bookinfo destination rules:

    Zip

    1. $ kubectl apply -f @samples/bookinfo/networking/destination-rule-all.yaml@
  2. Click Istio Config on the left hand navigation bar to navigate to the Istio configuration list.

  3. Select bookinfo from the Namespace drop down menu if it is not already selected.

  4. Notice the error messages and the error and warning icons that alert you to several configuration problems.

    Istio Config List Incorrect Configuration Messages

    Istio Config List Incorrect Configuration Messages

  5. Hover over the error icon in the Configuration column of the details row to see additional messages.

    Istio Config List Incorrect Configuration Tool Tips

    Istio Config List Incorrect Configuration Tool Tips

  6. Click the details link in the Name column to navigate to the details destination rule view.

  7. Notice the messages and icons that alert you to several validation rules that failed.

    Istio Configuration Details View Showing Errors

    Istio Configuration Details View Showing Errors

  8. Click the YAML tab to view the YAML for this Istio destination rule resource.

  9. Notice the color highlights and icons on the rows that have failed validation checks.

    YAML Editor Showing Validation Errors and Warnings

    YAML Editor Showing Validation Errors and Warnings

  10. Hover over the yellow icon to view the tool tip message that informs you of the validation check that triggered the warning. For more details on the cause of the warning and how to resolve it, look up the validation warning message on the Kiali Validations page.

    YAML Editor Showing Warning Tool Tip

    YAML Editor Showing Warning Tool Tip

  11. Hover over the red icon to view the tool tip message that informs you of the validation check that triggered the error. For more details on the cause of the error and how to resolve it, look up the validation error message on the Kiali Validations page.

    YAML Editor Showing Error Tool Tip

    YAML Editor Showing Error Tool Tip

  12. Delete the destination rules to return bookinfo back to its original state.

    1. $ kubectl delete -f samples/bookinfo/networking/destination-rule-all.yaml

About the Kiali Developer API

The Kiali Developer API is not designed or documented for public consumption, but it may be useful to some users. Please note the Kiali Developer API can change from version to version - there is no guarantee of backward compatibility.

To generate JSON files representing the graphs and other metrics, health, and configuration information, you can access the Kiali Developer API. For example, point your browser to $KIALI_URL/api/namespaces/graph?namespaces=bookinfo&graphType=app to get the JSON representation of your graph using the app graph type.

The Kiali Developer API is built on top of Prometheus queries and depends on the standard Istio metric configuration. It also makes Kubernetes API calls to obtain additional details about your services. For the best experience using Kiali, use the metadata labels app and version on your application components. As a template, the Bookinfo sample application follows this convention.

Additional Features

Kiali has more features than reviewed in this task, such as an integration with Jaeger tracing.

For more details on these additional features, see the Kiali documentation.

Cleanup

If you are not planning any follow-up tasks, remove the Bookinfo sample application and Kiali from your cluster.

  1. To remove the Bookinfo application, refer to the Bookinfo cleanup instructions.

  2. To remove Kiali from a Kubernetes environment:

  1. $ kubectl delete -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/istio/istio/release-1.9/samples/addons/kiali.yaml

See also

Visualizing Metrics with Grafana

This task shows you how to setup and use the Istio Dashboard to monitor mesh traffic.

Reworking our Addon Integrations

A new way to manage installation of telemetry addons.

Mixer and the SPOF Myth

Improving availability and reducing latency.

Mixer Adapter Model

Provides an overview of Mixer’s plug-in architecture.

Classifying Metrics Based on Request or Response (Experimental)

This task shows you how to improve telemetry by grouping requests and responses by their type.

Collecting Metrics for TCP Services

This task shows you how to configure Istio to collect metrics for TCP services.