- Troubleshooting the Rancher Server Kubernetes Cluster
- Relevant Namespaces
- “default backend - 404”
- Check if Rancher is Running
- Check the Rancher Logs
- Cert CN is “Kubernetes Ingress Controller Fake Certificate”
- Checking for issues with cert-manager issued certs (Rancher Generated or LetsEncrypt)
- Checking for Issues with Your Own SSL Certs
- No matches for kind “Issuer”
- Canal Pods show READY 2/3
- nginx-ingress-controller Pods show RESTARTS
- Failed to dial to /var/run/docker.sock: ssh: rejected: administratively prohibited (open failed)
- Failed to dial ssh using address [xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:xx]: Error configuring SSH: ssh: no key found
- Failed to dial ssh using address [xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:xx]: ssh: handshake failed: ssh: unable to authenticate, attempted methods [none publickey], no supported methods remain
- Failed to dial ssh using address [xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:xx]: Error configuring SSH: ssh: cannot decode encrypted private keys
- Cannot connect to the Docker daemon at unix:///var/run/docker.sock. Is the docker daemon running?
Troubleshooting the Rancher Server Kubernetes Cluster
This section describes how to troubleshoot an installation of Rancher on a Kubernetes cluster.
Relevant Namespaces
Most of the troubleshooting will be done on objects in these 3 namespaces.
cattle-system
-rancher
deployment and pods.ingress-nginx
- Ingress controller pods and services.cert-manager
-cert-manager
pods.
“default backend - 404”
A number of things can cause the ingress-controller not to forward traffic to your rancher instance. Most of the time its due to a bad ssl configuration.
Things to check
Check if Rancher is Running
Use kubectl
to check the cattle-system
system namespace and see if the Rancher pods are in a Running state.
kubectl -n cattle-system get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
pod/rancher-784d94f59b-vgqzh 1/1 Running 0 10m
If the state is not Running
, run a describe
on the pod and check the Events.
kubectl -n cattle-system describe pod
...
Events:
Type Reason Age From Message
---- ------ ---- ---- -------
Normal Scheduled 11m default-scheduler Successfully assigned rancher-784d94f59b-vgqzh to localhost
Normal SuccessfulMountVolume 11m kubelet, localhost MountVolume.SetUp succeeded for volume "rancher-token-dj4mt"
Normal Pulling 11m kubelet, localhost pulling image "rancher/rancher:v2.0.4"
Normal Pulled 11m kubelet, localhost Successfully pulled image "rancher/rancher:v2.0.4"
Normal Created 11m kubelet, localhost Created container
Normal Started 11m kubelet, localhost Started container
Check the Rancher Logs
Use kubectl
to list the pods.
kubectl -n cattle-system get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
pod/rancher-784d94f59b-vgqzh 1/1 Running 0 10m
Use kubectl
and the pod name to list the logs from the pod.
kubectl -n cattle-system logs -f rancher-784d94f59b-vgqzh
Cert CN is “Kubernetes Ingress Controller Fake Certificate”
Use your browser to check the certificate details. If it says the Common Name is “Kubernetes Ingress Controller Fake Certificate”, something may have gone wrong with reading or issuing your SSL cert.
note
If you are using LetsEncrypt to issue certs, it can sometimes take a few minutes to issue the cert.
Checking for issues with cert-manager issued certs (Rancher Generated or LetsEncrypt)
cert-manager
has 3 parts.
cert-manager
pod in thecert-manager
namespace.Issuer
object in thecattle-system
namespace.Certificate
object in thecattle-system
namespace.
Work backwards and do a kubectl describe
on each object and check the events. You can track down what might be missing.
For example there is a problem with the Issuer:
kubectl -n cattle-system describe certificate
...
Events:
Type Reason Age From Message
---- ------ ---- ---- -------
Warning IssuerNotReady 18s (x23 over 19m) cert-manager Issuer rancher not ready
kubectl -n cattle-system describe issuer
...
Events:
Type Reason Age From Message
---- ------ ---- ---- -------
Warning ErrInitIssuer 19m (x12 over 19m) cert-manager Error initializing issuer: secret "tls-rancher" not found
Warning ErrGetKeyPair 9m (x16 over 19m) cert-manager Error getting keypair for CA issuer: secret "tls-rancher" not found
Checking for Issues with Your Own SSL Certs
Your certs get applied directly to the Ingress object in the cattle-system
namespace.
Check the status of the Ingress object and see if its ready.
kubectl -n cattle-system describe ingress
If its ready and the SSL is still not working you may have a malformed cert or secret.
Check the nginx-ingress-controller logs. Because the nginx-ingress-controller has multiple containers in its pod you will need to specify the name of the container.
kubectl -n ingress-nginx logs -f nginx-ingress-controller-rfjrq nginx-ingress-controller
...
W0705 23:04:58.240571 7 backend_ssl.go:49] error obtaining PEM from secret cattle-system/tls-rancher-ingress: error retrieving secret cattle-system/tls-rancher-ingress: secret cattle-system/tls-rancher-ingress was not found
No matches for kind “Issuer”
The SSL configuration option you have chosen requires cert-manager to be installed before installing Rancher or else the following error is shown:
Error: validation failed: unable to recognize "": no matches for kind "Issuer" in version "certmanager.k8s.io/v1alpha1"
Install cert-manager and try installing Rancher again.
Canal Pods show READY 2/3
The most common cause of this issue is port 8472/UDP is not open between the nodes. Check your local firewall, network routing or security groups.
Once the network issue is resolved, the canal
pods should timeout and restart to establish their connections.
nginx-ingress-controller Pods show RESTARTS
The most common cause of this issue is the canal
pods have failed to establish the overlay network. See canal Pods show READY 2/3 for troubleshooting.
Failed to dial to /var/run/docker.sock: ssh: rejected: administratively prohibited (open failed)
Some causes of this error include:
- User specified to connect with does not have permission to access the Docker socket. This can be checked by logging into the host and running the command
docker ps
:
$ ssh user@server
user@server$ docker ps
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
See Manage Docker as a non-root user how to set this up properly.
When using RedHat/CentOS as operating system, you cannot use the user
root
to connect to the nodes because of Bugzilla #1527565. You will need to add a separate user and configure it to access the Docker socket. See Manage Docker as a non-root user how to set this up properly.SSH server version is not version 6.7 or higher. This is needed for socket forwarding to work, which is used to connect to the Docker socket over SSH. This can be checked using
sshd -V
on the host you are connecting to, or using netcat:
$ nc xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx 22
SSH-2.0-OpenSSH_6.6.1p1 Ubuntu-2ubuntu2.10
Failed to dial ssh using address [xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:xx]: Error configuring SSH: ssh: no key found
The key file specified as ssh_key_path
cannot be accessed. Make sure that you specified the private key file (not the public key, .pub
), and that the user that is running the rke
command can access the private key file.
Failed to dial ssh using address [xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:xx]: ssh: handshake failed: ssh: unable to authenticate, attempted methods [none publickey], no supported methods remain
The key file specified as ssh_key_path
is not correct for accessing the node. Double-check if you specified the correct ssh_key_path
for the node and if you specified the correct user to connect with.
Failed to dial ssh using address [xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx:xx]: Error configuring SSH: ssh: cannot decode encrypted private keys
If you want to use encrypted private keys, you should use ssh-agent
to load your keys with your passphrase. If the SSH_AUTH_SOCK
environment variable is found in the environment where the rke
command is run, it will be used automatically to connect to the node.
Cannot connect to the Docker daemon at unix:///var/run/docker.sock. Is the docker daemon running?
The node is not reachable on the configured address
and port
.