2016-02-24 21:47:57 +00:00
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---
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---
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2016-02-26 11:54:48 +00:00
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An issue that comes up rather frequently for new installations of Kubernetes is
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that `Services` are not working properly. You've run all your `Pod`s and
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`ReplicationController`s, but you get no response when you try to access them.
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This document will hopefully help you to figure out what's going wrong.
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* TOC
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{:toc}
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## Conventions
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Throughout this doc you will see various commands that you can run. Some
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commands need to be run within `Pod`, others on a Kubernetes `Node`, and others
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can run anywhere you have `kubectl` and credentials for the cluster. To make it
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clear what is expected, this document will use the following conventions.
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If the command "COMMAND" is expected to run in a `Pod` and produce "OUTPUT":
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```shell
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u@pod$ COMMAND
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OUTPUT
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```
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If the command "COMMAND" is expected to run on a `Node` and produce "OUTPUT":
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```shell
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u@node$ COMMAND
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OUTPUT
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```
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If the command is "kubectl ARGS":
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```shell
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$ kubectl ARGS
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OUTPUT
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```
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## Running commands in a Pod
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For many steps here you will want to see what a `Pod` running in the cluster
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sees. Kubernetes does not directly support interactive `Pod`s (yet), but you can
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approximate it:
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```shell
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$ cat <<EOF | kubectl create -f -
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: Pod
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metadata:
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name: busybox-sleep
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spec:
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containers:
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- name: busybox
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image: busybox
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args:
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- sleep
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- "1000000"
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EOF
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pods/busybox-sleep
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```
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Now, when you need to run a command (even an interactive shell) in a `Pod`-like
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context, use:
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```shell
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$ kubectl exec busybox-sleep -- <COMMAND>
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```
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or
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```shell
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$ kubectl exec -ti busybox-sleep sh
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/ #
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```
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## Setup
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For the purposes of this walk-through, let's run some `Pod`s. Since you're
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probably debugging your own `Service` you can substitute your own details, or you
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can follow along and get a second data point.
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```shell
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$ kubectl run hostnames --image=gcr.io/google_containers/serve_hostname \
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--labels=app=hostnames \
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--port=9376 \
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--replicas=3
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CONTROLLER CONTAINER(S) IMAGE(S) SELECTOR REPLICAS
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hostnames hostnames gcr.io/google_containers/serve_hostname app=hostnames 3
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```
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Note that this is the same as if you had started the `ReplicationController` with
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the following YAML:
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```yaml
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: ReplicationController
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metadata:
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name: hostnames
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spec:
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selector:
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app: hostnames
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replicas: 3
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template:
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metadata:
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labels:
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app: hostnames
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spec:
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containers:
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- name: hostnames
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image: gcr.io/google_containers/serve_hostname
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ports:
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- containerPort: 9376
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protocol: TCP
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```
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Confirm your `Pod`s are running:
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```shell
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$ kubectl get pods -l app=hostnames
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NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
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hostnames-0uton 1/1 Running 0 12s
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hostnames-bvc05 1/1 Running 0 12s
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hostnames-yp2kp 1/1 Running 0 12s
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```
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## Does the Service exist?
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The astute reader will have noticed that we did not actually create a `Service`
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yet - that is intentional. This is a step that sometimes gets forgotten, and
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is the first thing to check.
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So what would happen if I tried to access a non-existent `Service`? Assuming you
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have another `Pod` that consumes this `Service` by name you would get something
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like:
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```shell
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u@pod$ wget -qO- hostnames
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wget: bad address 'hostname'
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```
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or:
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```shell
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u@pod$ echo $HOSTNAMES_SERVICE_HOST
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```
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So the first thing to check is whether that `Service` actually exists:
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```shell
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$ kubectl get svc hostnames
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Error from server: service "hostnames" not found
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```
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So we have a culprit, let's create the `Service`. As before, this is for the
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walk-through - you can use your own `Service`'s details here.
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```shell
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$ kubectl expose rc hostnames --port=80 --target-port=9376
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service "hostnames" exposed
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```
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And read it back, just to be sure:
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```shell
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$ kubectl get svc hostnames
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NAME CLUSTER_IP EXTERNAL_IP PORT(S) SELECTOR AGE
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hostnames 10.0.0.1 <none> 80/TCP run=hostnames 1h
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```
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As before, this is the same as if you had started the `Service` with YAML:
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```yaml
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: Service
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metadata:
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name: hostnames
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spec:
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selector:
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app: hostnames
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ports:
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- name: default
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protocol: TCP
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port: 80
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targetPort: 9376
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```
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Now you can confirm that the `Service` exists.
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## Does the Service work by DNS?
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From a `Pod` in the same `Namespace`:
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```shell
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u@pod$ nslookup hostnames
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Server: 10.0.0.10
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Address: 10.0.0.10#53
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Name: hostnames
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Address: 10.0.1.175
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```
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If this fails, perhaps your `Pod` and `Service` are in different
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`Namespace`s, try a namespace-qualified name:
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```shell
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u@pod$ nslookup hostnames.default
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Server: 10.0.0.10
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Address: 10.0.0.10#53
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Name: hostnames.default
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Address: 10.0.1.175
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```
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If this works, you'll need to ensure that `Pod`s and `Service`s run in the same
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`Namespace`. If this still fails, try a fully-qualified name:
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```shell
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u@pod$ nslookup hostnames.default.svc.cluster.local
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Server: 10.0.0.10
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Address: 10.0.0.10#53
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Name: hostnames.default.svc.cluster.local
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Address: 10.0.1.175
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```
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Note the suffix here: "default.svc.cluster.local". The "default" is the
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`Namespace` we're operating in. The "svc" denotes that this is a `Service`.
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The "cluster.local" is your cluster domain.
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You can also try this from a `Node` in the cluster (note: 10.0.0.10 is my DNS
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`Service`):
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```shell
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u@node$ nslookup hostnames.default.svc.cluster.local 10.0.0.10
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Server: 10.0.0.10
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Address: 10.0.0.10#53
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Name: hostnames.default.svc.cluster.local
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Address: 10.0.1.175
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```
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If you are able to do a fully-qualified name lookup but not a relative one, you
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need to check that your `kubelet` is running with the right flags.
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The `--cluster-dns` flag needs to point to your DNS `Service`'s IP and the
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`--cluster-domain` flag needs to be your cluster's domain - we assumed
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"cluster.local" in this document, but yours might be different, in which case
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you should change that in all of the commands above.
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### Does any Service exist in DNS?
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If the above still fails - DNS lookups are not working for your `Service` - we
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can take a step back and see what else is not working. The Kubernetes master
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`Service` should always work:
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```shell
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u@pod$ nslookup kubernetes.default
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Server: 10.0.0.10
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Address 1: 10.0.0.10
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Name: kubernetes
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Address 1: 10.0.0.1
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```
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If this fails, you might need to go to the kube-proxy section of this doc, or
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even go back to the top of this document and start over, but instead of
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debugging your own `Service`, debug DNS.
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## Does the Service work by IP?
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The next thing to test is whether your `Service` works at all. From a
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`Node` in your cluster, access the `Service`'s IP (from `kubectl get` above).
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```shell
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u@node$ curl 10.0.1.175:80
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hostnames-0uton
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u@node$ curl 10.0.1.175:80
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hostnames-yp2kp
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u@node$ curl 10.0.1.175:80
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hostnames-bvc05
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```
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If your `Service` is working, you should get correct responses. If not, there
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are a number of things that could be going wrong. Read on.
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## Is the Service correct?
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It might sound silly, but you should really double and triple check that your
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`Service` is correct and matches your `Pods`. Read back your `Service` and
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verify it:
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```shell
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$ kubectl get service hostnames -o json
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{
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"kind": "Service",
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"apiVersion": "v1",
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"metadata": {
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"name": "hostnames",
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"namespace": "default",
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"selfLink": "/api/v1/namespaces/default/services/hostnames",
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"uid": "428c8b6c-24bc-11e5-936d-42010af0a9bc",
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"resourceVersion": "347189",
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"creationTimestamp": "2015-07-07T15:24:29Z",
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"labels": {
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"app": "hostnames"
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}
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},
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"spec": {
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"ports": [
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{
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"name": "default",
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"protocol": "TCP",
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"port": 80,
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"targetPort": 9376,
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"nodePort": 0
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}
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],
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"selector": {
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"app": "hostnames"
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},
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"clusterIP": "10.0.1.175",
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"type": "ClusterIP",
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"sessionAffinity": "None"
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},
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"status": {
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"loadBalancer": {}
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}
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}
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```
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Is the port you are trying to access in `spec.ports[]`? Is the `targetPort`
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correct for your `Pod`s? If you meant it to be a numeric port, is it a number
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(9376) or a string "9376"? If you meant it to be a named port, do your `Pod`s
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expose a port with the same name? Is the port's `protocol` the same as the
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`Pod`'s?
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## Does the Service have any Endpoints?
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If you got this far, we assume that you have confirmed that your `Service`
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exists and resolves by DNS. Now let's check that the `Pod`s you ran are
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actually being selected by the `Service`.
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Earlier we saw that the `Pod`s were running. We can re-check that:
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```shell
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$ kubectl get pods -l app=hostnames
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NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
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hostnames-0uton 1/1 Running 0 1h
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hostnames-bvc05 1/1 Running 0 1h
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hostnames-yp2kp 1/1 Running 0 1h
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```
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The "AGE" column says that these `Pod`s are about an hour old, which implies that
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they are running fine and not crashing.
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The `-l app=hostnames` argument is a label selector - just like our `Service`
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has. Inside the Kubernetes system is a control loop which evaluates the
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selector of every `Service` and save the results into an `Endpoints` object.
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```shell
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$ kubectl get endpoints hostnames
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NAME ENDPOINTS
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hostnames 10.244.0.5:9376,10.244.0.6:9376,10.244.0.7:9376
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```
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This confirms that the control loop has found the correct `Pod`s for your
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`Service`. If the `hostnames` row is blank, you should check that the
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`spec.selector` field of your `Service` actually selects for `metadata.labels`
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values on your `Pod`s.
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## Are the Pods working?
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At this point, we know that your `Service` exists and has selected your `Pod`s.
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Let's check that the `Pod`s are actually working - we can bypass the `Service`
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mechanism and go straight to the `Pod`s.
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```shell
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u@pod$ wget -qO- 10.244.0.5:9376
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hostnames-0uton
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pod $ wget -qO- 10.244.0.6:9376
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hostnames-bvc05
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u@pod$ wget -qO- 10.244.0.7:9376
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hostnames-yp2kp
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```
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We expect each `Pod` in the `Endpoints` list to return its own hostname. If
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this is not what happens (or whatever the correct behavior is for your own
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`Pod`s), you should investigate what's happening there. You might find
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`kubectl logs` to be useful or `kubectl exec` directly to your `Pod`s and check
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service from there.
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## Is the kube-proxy working?
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If you get here, your `Service` is running, has `Endpoints`, and your `Pod`s
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are actually serving. At this point, the whole `Service` proxy mechanism is
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suspect. Let's confirm it, piece by piece.
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### Is kube-proxy running?
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Confirm that `kube-proxy` is running on your `Node`s. You should get something
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like the below:
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```shell
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u@node$ ps auxw | grep kube-proxy
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root 4194 0.4 0.1 101864 17696 ? Sl Jul04 25:43 /usr/local/bin/kube-proxy --master=https://kubernetes-master --kubeconfig=/var/lib/kube-proxy/kubeconfig --v=2
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```
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Next, confirm that it is not failing something obvious, like contacting the
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master. To do this, you'll have to look at the logs. Accessing the logs
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depends on your `Node` OS. On some OSes it is a file, such as
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/var/log/kube-proxy.log, while other OSes use `journalctl` to access logs. You
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should see something like:
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```shell
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2016-03-07 12:09:02 +00:00
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I1027 22:14:53.995134 5063 server.go:200] Running in resource-only container "/kube-proxy"
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I1027 22:14:53.998163 5063 server.go:247] Using iptables Proxier.
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I1027 22:14:53.999055 5063 server.go:255] Tearing down userspace rules. Errors here are acceptable.
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I1027 22:14:54.038140 5063 proxier.go:352] Setting endpoints for "kube-system/kube-dns:dns-tcp" to [10.244.1.3:53]
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I1027 22:14:54.038164 5063 proxier.go:352] Setting endpoints for "kube-system/kube-dns:dns" to [10.244.1.3:53]
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I1027 22:14:54.038209 5063 proxier.go:352] Setting endpoints for "default/kubernetes:https" to [10.240.0.2:443]
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I1027 22:14:54.038238 5063 proxier.go:429] Not syncing iptables until Services and Endpoints have been received from master
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I1027 22:14:54.040048 5063 proxier.go:294] Adding new service "default/kubernetes:https" at 10.0.0.1:443/TCP
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I1027 22:14:54.040154 5063 proxier.go:294] Adding new service "kube-system/kube-dns:dns" at 10.0.0.10:53/UDP
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I1027 22:14:54.040223 5063 proxier.go:294] Adding new service "kube-system/kube-dns:dns-tcp" at 10.0.0.10:53/TCP
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2016-02-26 11:54:48 +00:00
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```
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If you see error messages about not being able to contact the master, you
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should double-check your `Node` configuration and installation steps.
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### Is kube-proxy writing iptables rules?
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One of the main responsibilities of `kube-proxy` is to write the `iptables`
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rules which implement `Service`s. Let's check that those rules are getting
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written.
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2016-03-07 12:09:02 +00:00
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The kube-proxy can run in either "userspace" mode or "iptables" mode.
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Hopefully you are using the newer, faster, more stable "iptables" mode. You
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should see one of the following cases.
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#### Userspace
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2016-02-26 11:54:48 +00:00
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```shell
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u@node$ iptables-save | grep hostnames
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-A KUBE-PORTALS-CONTAINER -d 10.0.1.175/32 -p tcp -m comment --comment "default/hostnames:default" -m tcp --dport 80 -j REDIRECT --to-ports 48577
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-A KUBE-PORTALS-HOST -d 10.0.1.175/32 -p tcp -m comment --comment "default/hostnames:default" -m tcp --dport 80 -j DNAT --to-destination 10.240.115.247:48577
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```
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There should be 2 rules for each port on your `Service` (just one in this
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example) - a "KUBE-PORTALS-CONTAINER" and a "KUBE-PORTALS-HOST". If you do
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not see these, try restarting `kube-proxy` with the `-V` flag set to 4, and
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then look at the logs again.
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2016-03-07 12:09:02 +00:00
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#### Iptables
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```shell
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u@node$ iptables-save | grep hostnames
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-A KUBE-SEP-57KPRZ3JQVENLNBR -s 10.244.3.6/32 -m comment --comment "default/hostnames:" -j MARK --set-xmark 0x00004000/0x00004000
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-A KUBE-SEP-57KPRZ3JQVENLNBR -p tcp -m comment --comment "default/hostnames:" -m tcp -j DNAT --to-destination 10.244.3.6:9376
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-A KUBE-SEP-WNBA2IHDGP2BOBGZ -s 10.244.1.7/32 -m comment --comment "default/hostnames:" -j MARK --set-xmark 0x00004000/0x00004000
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-A KUBE-SEP-WNBA2IHDGP2BOBGZ -p tcp -m comment --comment "default/hostnames:" -m tcp -j DNAT --to-destination 10.244.1.7:9376
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-A KUBE-SEP-X3P2623AGDH6CDF3 -s 10.244.2.3/32 -m comment --comment "default/hostnames:" -j MARK --set-xmark 0x00004000/0x00004000
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-A KUBE-SEP-X3P2623AGDH6CDF3 -p tcp -m comment --comment "default/hostnames:" -m tcp -j DNAT --to-destination 10.244.2.3:9376
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-A KUBE-SERVICES -d 10.0.1.175/32 -p tcp -m comment --comment "default/hostnames: cluster IP" -m tcp --dport 80 -j KUBE-SVC-NWV5X2332I4OT4T3
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-A KUBE-SVC-NWV5X2332I4OT4T3 -m comment --comment "default/hostnames:" -m statistic --mode random --probability 0.33332999982 -j KUBE-SEP-WNBA2IHDGP2BOBGZ
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-A KUBE-SVC-NWV5X2332I4OT4T3 -m comment --comment "default/hostnames:" -m statistic --mode random --probability 0.50000000000 -j KUBE-SEP-X3P2623AGDH6CDF3
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-A KUBE-SVC-NWV5X2332I4OT4T3 -m comment --comment "default/hostnames:" -j KUBE-SEP-57KPRZ3JQVENLNBR
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```
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There should be 1 rule in `KUBE-SERVICES`, 1 or 2 rules per endpoint in
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`KUBE-SVC-(hash)` (depending on `SessionAffinity`), one `KUBE-SEP-(hash)` chain
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per endpoint, and a few rules in each `KUBE-SEP-(hash)` chain. The exact rules
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will vary based on your exact config (including node-ports and load-balancers).
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2016-02-26 11:54:48 +00:00
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### Is kube-proxy proxying?
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Assuming you do see the above rules, try again to access your `Service` by IP:
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```shell
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u@node$ curl 10.0.1.175:80
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hostnames-0uton
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```
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2016-03-07 12:09:02 +00:00
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If this fails and you are using the userspace proxy, you can try accessing the
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proxy directly. If you are using the iptables proxy, skip this section.
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Look back at the `iptables-save` output above, and extract the
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port number that `kube-proxy` is using for your `Service`. In the above
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examples it is "48577". Now connect to that:
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2016-02-26 11:54:48 +00:00
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```shell
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u@node$ curl localhost:48577
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hostnames-yp2kp
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```
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If this still fails, look at the `kube-proxy` logs for specific lines like:
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```shell
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Setting endpoints for default/hostnames:default to [10.244.0.5:9376 10.244.0.6:9376 10.244.0.7:9376]
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```
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If you don't see those, try restarting `kube-proxy` with the `-V` flag set to 4, and
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then look at the logs again.
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2016-03-16 22:54:34 +00:00
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Services provide load balancing across a set of pods. There are several common
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problems that can make services not work properly. The following instructions
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should help debug service problems.
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First, verify that there are endpoints for the service. For every service
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object, the apiserver makes an `endpoints` resource available.
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You can view this resource with:
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$ kubectl get endpoints ${SERVICE_NAME}
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Make sure that the endpoints match up with the number of containers that you
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expect to be a member of your service. For example, if your service is for an
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nginx container with 3 replicas, you would expect to see three different IP
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addresses in the service's endpoints.
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### My service is missing endpoints
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If you are missing endpoints, try listing pods using the labels that service
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uses. Imagine that you have a service where the labels are:
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...
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spec:
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- selector:
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name: nginx
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type: frontend
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You can use:
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$ kubectl get pods --selector=name=nginx,type=frontend
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to list pods that match this selector. Verify that the list matches the pods
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that you expect to provide your service.
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If the list of pods matches expectations, but your endpoints are still empty,
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it's possible that you don't have the right ports exposed. If your service has
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a `containerPort` specified, but the pods that are selected don't have that
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port listed, then they won't be added to the endpoints list.
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Verify that the pod's `containerPort` matches up with the service's
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`containerPort`.
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### Network traffic is not forwarded
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If you can connect to the service, but the connection is immediately dropped,
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and there are endpoints in the endpoints list, it's likely that the proxy can't
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contact your pods.
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There are three things to check:
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* Are your pods working correctly? Look for restart count, and
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[debug pods](#debugging_pods).
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* Can you connect to your pods directly? Get the IP address for the pod, and
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try to connect directly to that IP.
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* Is your application serving on the port that you configured? Container
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Engine doesn't do port remapping, so if your application serves on 8080,
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the `containerPort` field needs to be 8080.
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2016-02-26 11:54:48 +00:00
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## Seek help
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If you get this far, something very strange is happening. Your `Service` is
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running, has `Endpoints`, and your `Pod`s are actually serving. You have DNS
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working, `iptables` rules installed, and `kube-proxy` does not seem to be
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misbehaving. And yet your `Service` is not working. You should probably let
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us know, so we can help investigate!
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Contact us on
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2016-02-29 23:17:22 +00:00
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[Slack](/docs/troubleshooting/#slack) or
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2016-02-26 11:54:48 +00:00
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[email](https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/google-containers) or
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[GitHub](https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes).
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## More information
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2016-02-29 23:17:22 +00:00
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Visit [troubleshooting document](/docs/troubleshooting/) for more information.
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