Traffic Management Problems
Requests are rejected by Envoy
Requests may be rejected for various reasons. The best way to understand why requests are being rejected is by inspecting Envoy’s access logs. By default, access logs are output to the standard output of the container. Run the following command to see the log:
$ kubectl logs PODNAME -c istio-proxy -n NAMESPACEIn the default access log format, Envoy response flags are located after the response code,
if you are using a custom log format, make sure to include %RESPONSE_FLAGS%.
Refer to the Envoy response flags for details of response flags.
Common response flags are:
NR: No route configured, check yourDestinationRuleorVirtualService.UO: Upstream overflow with circuit breaking, check your circuit breaker configuration inDestinationRule.UF: Failed to connect to upstream, if you’re using Istio authentication, check for a mutual TLS configuration conflict.
Route rules don’t seem to affect traffic flow
With the current Envoy sidecar implementation, up to 100 requests may be required for weighted version distribution to be observed.
If route rules are working perfectly for the Bookinfo sample, but similar version routing rules have no effect on your own application, it may be that your Kubernetes services need to be changed slightly. Kubernetes services must adhere to certain restrictions in order to take advantage of Istio’s L7 routing features. Refer to the Requirements for Pods and Services for details.
Another potential issue is that the route rules may simply be slow to take effect. The Istio implementation on Kubernetes utilizes an eventually consistent algorithm to ensure all Envoy sidecars have the correct configuration including all route rules. A configuration change will take some time to propagate to all the sidecars. With large deployments the propagation will take longer and there may be a lag time on the order of seconds.
503 errors after setting destination rule
If requests to a service immediately start generating HTTP 503 errors after you applied a DestinationRule
and the errors continue until you remove or revert the DestinationRule, then the DestinationRule is probably
causing a TLS conflict for the service.
For example, if you configure mutual TLS in the cluster globally, the DestinationRule must include the following trafficPolicy:
trafficPolicy:
tls:
mode: ISTIO_MUTUALOtherwise, the mode defaults to DISABLE causing client proxy sidecars to make plain HTTP requests
instead of TLS encrypted requests. Thus, the requests conflict with the server proxy because the server proxy expects
encrypted requests.
Whenever you apply a DestinationRule, ensure the trafficPolicy TLS mode matches the global server configuration.
Route rules have no effect on ingress gateway requests
Let’s assume you are using an ingress Gateway and corresponding VirtualService to access an internal service.
For example, your VirtualService looks something like this:
apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1
kind: VirtualService
metadata:
name: myapp
spec:
hosts:
- "myapp.com" # or maybe "*" if you are testing without DNS using the ingress-gateway IP (e.g., http://1.2.3.4/hello)
gateways:
- myapp-gateway
http:
- match:
- uri:
prefix: /hello
route:
- destination:
host: helloworld.default.svc.cluster.local
- match:
...You also have a VirtualService which routes traffic for the helloworld service to a particular subset:
apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1
kind: VirtualService
metadata:
name: helloworld
spec:
hosts:
- helloworld.default.svc.cluster.local
http:
- route:
- destination:
host: helloworld.default.svc.cluster.local
subset: v1In this situation you will notice that requests to the helloworld service via the ingress gateway will not be directed to subset v1 but instead will continue to use default round-robin routing.
The ingress requests are using the gateway host (e.g., myapp.com)
which will activate the rules in the myapp VirtualService that routes to any endpoint of the helloworld service.
Only internal requests with the host helloworld.default.svc.cluster.local will use the
helloworld VirtualService which directs traffic exclusively to subset v1.
To control the traffic from the gateway, you need to also include the subset rule in the myapp VirtualService:
apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1
kind: VirtualService
metadata:
name: myapp
spec:
hosts:
- "myapp.com" # or maybe "*" if you are testing without DNS using the ingress-gateway IP (e.g., http://1.2.3.4/hello)
gateways:
- myapp-gateway
http:
- match:
- uri:
prefix: /hello
route:
- destination:
host: helloworld.default.svc.cluster.local
subset: v1
- match:
...Alternatively, you can combine both VirtualServices into one unit if possible:
apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1
kind: VirtualService
metadata:
name: myapp
spec:
hosts:
- myapp.com # cannot use "*" here since this is being combined with the mesh services
- helloworld.default.svc.cluster.local
gateways:
- mesh # applies internally as well as externally
- myapp-gateway
http:
- match:
- uri:
prefix: /hello
gateways:
- myapp-gateway #restricts this rule to apply only to ingress gateway
route:
- destination:
host: helloworld.default.svc.cluster.local
subset: v1
- match:
- gateways:
- mesh # applies to all services inside the mesh
route:
- destination:
host: helloworld.default.svc.cluster.local
subset: v1Envoy is crashing under load
Check your ulimit -a. Many systems have a 1024 open file descriptor limit by default which will cause Envoy to assert and crash with:
[2017-05-17 03:00:52.735][14236][critical][assert] assert failure: fd_ != -1: external/envoy/source/common/network/connection_impl.cc:58Make sure to raise your ulimit. Example: ulimit -n 16384
Envoy won’t connect to my HTTP/1.0 service
Envoy requires HTTP/1.1 or HTTP/2 traffic for upstream services. For example, when using NGINX for serving traffic behind Envoy, you
will need to set the proxy_http_version directive in your NGINX configuration to be “1.1”, since the NGINX default is 1.0.
Example configuration:
upstream http_backend {
server 127.0.0.1:8080;
keepalive 16;
}
server {
...
location /http/ {
proxy_pass http://http_backend;
proxy_http_version 1.1;
proxy_set_header Connection "";
...
}
}503 error while accessing headless services
Assume Istio is installed with the following configuration:
mTLS modeset toSTRICTwithin the meshmeshConfig.outboundTrafficPolicy.modeset toALLOW_ANY
Consider nginx is deployed as a StatefulSet in the default namespace and a corresponding Headless Service is defined as shown below:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: nginx
labels:
app: nginx
spec:
ports:
- port: 80
name: http-web # Explicitly defining an http port
clusterIP: None # Creates a Headless Service
selector:
app: nginx
---
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: StatefulSet
metadata:
name: web
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
app: nginx
serviceName: "nginx"
replicas: 3
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: nginx
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: registry.k8s.io/nginx-slim:0.8
ports:
- containerPort: 80
name: webThe port name http-web in the Service definition explicitly specifies the http protocol for that port.
Let us assume we have a curl pod Deployment as well in the default namespace.
When nginx is accessed from this curl pod using its Pod IP (this is one of the common ways to access a headless service), the request goes via the PassthroughCluster to the server-side, but the sidecar proxy on the server-side fails to find the route entry to nginx and fails with HTTP 503 UC.
$ export SOURCE_POD=$(kubectl get pod -l app=curl -o jsonpath='{.items..metadata.name}')
$ kubectl exec -it $SOURCE_POD -c curl -- curl 10.1.1.171 -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}"
50310.1.1.171 is the Pod IP of one of the replicas of nginx and the service is accessed on containerPort 80.
Here are some of the ways to avoid this 503 error:
Specify the correct Host header:
The Host header in the curl request above will be the Pod IP by default. Specifying the Host header as
nginx.defaultin our request tonginxsuccessfully returnsHTTP 200 OK.$ export SOURCE_POD=$(kubectl get pod -l app=curl -o jsonpath='{.items..metadata.name}') $ kubectl exec -it $SOURCE_POD -c curl -- curl -H "Host: nginx.default" 10.1.1.171 -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" 200Set port name to
tcportcp-webortcp-<custom_name>:Here the protocol is explicitly specified as
tcp. In this case, only theTCP Proxynetwork filter on the sidecar proxy is used both on the client-side and server-side. HTTP Connection Manager is not used at all and therefore, any kind of header is not expected in the request.A request to
nginxwith or without explicitly setting the Host header successfully returnsHTTP 200 OK.This is useful in certain scenarios where a client may not be able to include header information in the request.
$ export SOURCE_POD=$(kubectl get pod -l app=curl -o jsonpath='{.items..metadata.name}') $ kubectl exec -it $SOURCE_POD -c curl -- curl 10.1.1.171 -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" 200$ kubectl exec -it $SOURCE_POD -c curl -- curl -H "Host: nginx.default" 10.1.1.171 -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" 200Use domain name instead of Pod IP:
A specific instance of a headless service can also be accessed using just the domain name.
$ export SOURCE_POD=$(kubectl get pod -l app=curl -o jsonpath='{.items..metadata.name}') $ kubectl exec -it $SOURCE_POD -c curl -- curl web-0.nginx.default -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}" 200Here
web-0is the pod name of one of the 3 replicas ofnginx.
Refer to this traffic routing page for some additional information on headless services and traffic routing behavior for different protocols.
TLS configuration mistakes
Many traffic management problems are caused by incorrect TLS configuration. The following sections describe some of the most common misconfigurations.
Sending HTTPS to an HTTP port
If your application sends an HTTPS request to a service declared to be HTTP, the Envoy sidecar will attempt to parse the request as HTTP while forwarding the request, which will fail because the HTTP is unexpectedly encrypted.
apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1
kind: ServiceEntry
metadata:
name: httpbin
spec:
hosts:
- httpbin.org
ports:
- number: 443
name: http
protocol: HTTP
resolution: DNSAlthough the above configuration may be correct if you are intentionally sending plaintext on port 443 (e.g., curl http://httpbin.org:443),
generally port 443 is dedicated for HTTPS traffic.
Sending an HTTPS request like curl https://httpbin.org, which defaults to port 443, will result in an error like
curl: (35) error:1408F10B:SSL routines:ssl3_get_record:wrong version number.
The access logs may also show an error like 400 DPE.
To fix this, you should change the port protocol to HTTPS:
spec:
ports:
- number: 443
name: https
protocol: HTTPSGateway to virtual service TLS mismatch
There are two common TLS mismatches that can occur when binding a virtual service to a gateway.
- The gateway terminates TLS while the virtual service configures TLS routing.
- The gateway does TLS passthrough while the virtual service configures HTTP routing.
Gateway with TLS termination
apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1
kind: Gateway
metadata:
name: gateway
namespace: istio-system
spec:
selector:
istio: ingressgateway
servers:
- port:
number: 443
name: https
protocol: HTTPS
hosts:
- "*"
tls:
mode: SIMPLE
credentialName: sds-credential
---
apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1
kind: VirtualService
metadata:
name: httpbin
spec:
hosts:
- "*.example.com"
gateways:
- istio-system/gateway
tls:
- match:
- sniHosts:
- "*.example.com"
route:
- destination:
host: httpbin.orgIn this example, the gateway is terminating TLS (the tls.mode configuration of the gateway is SIMPLE,
not PASSTHROUGH) while the virtual service is using TLS-based routing. Evaluating routing rules
occurs after the gateway terminates TLS, so the TLS rule will have no effect because the
request is then HTTP rather than HTTPS.
With this misconfiguration, you will end up getting 404 responses because the requests will be
sent to HTTP routing but there are no HTTP routes configured.
You can confirm this using the istioctl proxy-config routes command.
To fix this problem, you should switch the virtual service to specify http routing, instead of tls:
spec:
...
http:
- match:
- headers:
":authority":
regex: "*.example.com"Gateway with TLS passthrough
apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1
kind: Gateway
metadata:
name: gateway
spec:
selector:
istio: ingressgateway
servers:
- hosts:
- "*"
port:
name: https
number: 443
protocol: HTTPS
tls:
mode: PASSTHROUGH
---
apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1
kind: VirtualService
metadata:
name: virtual-service
spec:
gateways:
- gateway
hosts:
- httpbin.example.com
http:
- route:
- destination:
host: httpbin.orgIn this configuration, the virtual service is attempting to match HTTP traffic against TLS traffic passed through the gateway.
This will result in the virtual service configuration having no effect. You can observe that the HTTP route is not applied using
the istioctl proxy-config listener and istioctl proxy-config route commands.
To fix this, you should switch the virtual service to configure tls routing:
spec:
tls:
- match:
- sniHosts: ["httpbin.example.com"]
route:
- destination:
host: httpbin.orgAlternatively, you could terminate TLS, rather than passing it through, by switching the tls configuration in the gateway:
spec:
...
tls:
credentialName: sds-credential
mode: SIMPLEDouble TLS (TLS origination for a TLS request)
When configuring Istio to perform TLS origination, you need to make sure that the application sends plaintext requests to the sidecar, which will then originate the TLS.
The following DestinationRule originates TLS for requests to the httpbin.org service,
but the corresponding ServiceEntry defines the protocol as HTTPS on port 443.
apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1
kind: ServiceEntry
metadata:
name: httpbin
spec:
hosts:
- httpbin.org
ports:
- number: 443
name: https
protocol: HTTPS
resolution: DNS
---
apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1
kind: DestinationRule
metadata:
name: originate-tls
spec:
host: httpbin.org
trafficPolicy:
tls:
mode: SIMPLEWith this configuration, the sidecar expects the application to send TLS traffic on port 443
(e.g., curl https://httpbin.org), but it will also perform TLS origination before forwarding requests.
This will cause the requests to be double encrypted.
For example, sending a request like curl https://httpbin.org will result in an error:
(35) error:1408F10B:SSL routines:ssl3_get_record:wrong version number.
You can fix this example by changing the port protocol in the ServiceEntry to HTTP:
spec:
hosts:
- httpbin.org
ports:
- number: 443
name: http
protocol: HTTPNote that with this configuration your application will need to send plaintext requests to port 443,
like curl http://httpbin.org:443, because TLS origination does not change the port.
However, starting in Istio 1.8, you can expose HTTP port 80 to the application (e.g., curl http://httpbin.org)
and then redirect requests to targetPort 443 for the TLS origination:
spec:
hosts:
- httpbin.org
ports:
- number: 80
name: http
protocol: HTTP
targetPort: 443404 errors occur when multiple gateways configured with same TLS certificate
Configuring more than one gateway using the same TLS certificate will cause browsers that leverage HTTP/2 connection reuse (i.e., most browsers) to produce 404 errors when accessing a second host after a connection to another host has already been established.
For example, let’s say you have 2 hosts that share the same TLS certificate like this:
- Wildcard certificate
*.test.cominstalled inistio-ingressgateway Gatewayconfigurationgw1with hostservice1.test.com, selectoristio: ingressgateway, and TLS using gateway’s mounted (wildcard) certificateGatewayconfigurationgw2with hostservice2.test.com, selectoristio: ingressgateway, and TLS using gateway’s mounted (wildcard) certificateVirtualServiceconfigurationvs1with hostservice1.test.comand gatewaygw1VirtualServiceconfigurationvs2with hostservice2.test.comand gatewaygw2
Since both gateways are served by the same workload (i.e., selector istio: ingressgateway) requests to both services
(service1.test.com and service2.test.com) will resolve to the same IP. If service1.test.com is accessed first, it
will return the wildcard certificate (*.test.com) indicating that connections to service2.test.com can use the same certificate.
Browsers like Chrome and Firefox will consequently reuse the existing connection for requests to service2.test.com.
Since the gateway (gw1) has no route for service2.test.com, it will then return a 404 (Not Found) response.
You can avoid this problem by configuring a single wildcard Gateway, instead of two (gw1 and gw2).
Then, simply bind both VirtualServices to it like this:
Gatewayconfigurationgwwith host*.test.com, selectoristio: ingressgateway, and TLS using gateway’s mounted (wildcard) certificateVirtualServiceconfigurationvs1with hostservice1.test.comand gatewaygwVirtualServiceconfigurationvs2with hostservice2.test.comand gatewaygw
Configuring SNI routing when not sending SNI
An HTTPS Gateway that specifies the hosts field will perform an SNI match on incoming requests.
For example, the following configuration would only allow requests that match *.example.com in the SNI:
servers:
- port:
number: 443
name: https
protocol: HTTPS
hosts:
- "*.example.com"This may cause certain requests to fail.
For example, if you do not have DNS set up and are instead directly setting the host header, such as curl 1.2.3.4 -H "Host: app.example.com", no SNI will be set, causing the request to fail.
Instead, you can set up DNS or use the --resolve flag of curl. See the Secure Gateways task for more information.
Another common issue is load balancers in front of Istio. Most cloud load balancers will not forward the SNI, so if you are terminating TLS in your cloud load balancer you may need to do one of the following:
- Configure the cloud load balancer to instead passthrough the TLS connection
- Disable SNI matching in the
Gatewayby setting the hosts field to*
A common symptom of this is for the load balancer health checks to succeed while real traffic fails.
Unchanged Envoy filter configuration suddenly stops working
An EnvoyFilter configuration that specifies an insert position relative to another filter can be very
fragile because, by default, the order of evaluation is based on the creation time of the filters.
Consider a filter with the following specification:
spec:
configPatches:
- applyTo: NETWORK_FILTER
match:
context: SIDECAR_OUTBOUND
listener:
portNumber: 443
filterChain:
filter:
name: istio.stats
patch:
operation: INSERT_BEFORE
value:
...To work properly, this filter configuration depends on the istio.stats filter having an older creation time
than it. Otherwise, the INSERT_BEFORE operation will be silently ignored. There will be nothing in the
error log to indicate that this filter has not been added to the chain.
This is particularly problematic when matching filters, like istio.stats, that are version
specific (i.e., that include the proxyVersion field in their match criteria). Such filters may be removed
or replaced by newer ones when upgrading Istio. As a result, an EnvoyFilter like the one above may initially
be working perfectly but after upgrading Istio to a newer version it will no longer be included in the network
filter chain of the sidecars.
To avoid this issue, you can either change the operation to one that does not depend on the presence of
another filter (e.g., INSERT_FIRST), or set an explicit priority in the EnvoyFilter to override the
default creation time-based ordering. For example, adding priority: 10 to the above filter will ensure
that it is processed after the istio.stats filter which has a default priority of 0.
Virtual service with fault injection and retry/timeout policies not working as expected
Currently, Istio does not support configuring fault injections and retry or timeout policies on the
same VirtualService. Consider the following configuration:
apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1
kind: VirtualService
metadata:
name: helloworld
spec:
hosts:
- "*"
gateways:
- helloworld-gateway
http:
- match:
- uri:
exact: /hello
fault:
abort:
httpStatus: 500
percentage:
value: 50
retries:
attempts: 5
retryOn: 5xx
route:
- destination:
host: helloworld
port:
number: 5000You would expect that given the configured five retry attempts, the user would almost never see any
errors when calling the helloworld service. However since both fault and retries are configured on
the same VirtualService, the retry configuration does not take effect, resulting in a 50% failure
rate. To work around this issue, you may remove the fault config from your VirtualService and
inject the fault to the upstream Envoy proxy using EnvoyFilter instead:
apiVersion: networking.istio.io/v1alpha3
kind: EnvoyFilter
metadata:
name: hello-world-filter
spec:
workloadSelector:
labels:
app: helloworld
configPatches:
- applyTo: HTTP_FILTER
match:
context: SIDECAR_INBOUND # will match outbound listeners in all sidecars
listener:
filterChain:
filter:
name: "envoy.filters.network.http_connection_manager"
patch:
operation: INSERT_BEFORE
value:
name: envoy.fault
typed_config:
"@type": "type.googleapis.com/envoy.extensions.filters.http.fault.v3.HTTPFault"
abort:
http_status: 500
percentage:
numerator: 50
denominator: HUNDREDThis works because this way the retry policy is configured for the client proxy while the fault injection is configured for the upstream proxy.