Run Metricbeat on Kubernetes

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You can use Metricbeat Docker images on Kubernetes to retrieve cluster metrics.

Running Elastic Cloud on Kubernetes? See Run Beats on ECK.

Kubernetes deploy manifests

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You deploy Metricbeat as a DaemonSet to ensure that there’s a running instance on each node of the cluster. These instances are used to retrieve most metrics from the host, such as system metrics, Docker stats, and metrics from all the services running on top of Kubernetes.

In addition, one of the Pods in the DaemonSet will constantly hold a leader lock which makes it responsible for handling cluster-wide monitoring. This instance is used to retrieve metrics that are unique for the whole cluster, such as Kubernetes events or kube-state-metrics. You can find more information about leader election configuration options at Autodiscover.

Note: If you are upgrading from older versions, please make sure there are no redundant parts as left-overs from the old manifests. Deployment specification and its ConfigMaps might be the case.

Everything is deployed under the kube-system namespace by default. To change the namespace, modify the manifest file.

To download the manifest file, run:

curl -L -O https://raw.githubusercontent.com/elastic/beats/7.15/deploy/kubernetes/metricbeat-kubernetes.yaml

If you are using Kubernetes 1.7 or earlier: Metricbeat uses a hostPath volume to persist internal data. It’s located under /var/lib/metricbeat-data. The manifest uses folder autocreation (DirectoryOrCreate), which was introduced in Kubernetes 1.8. You need to remove type: DirectoryOrCreate from the manifest and create the host folder yourself.

Settings

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By default, Metricbeat sends events to an existing Elasticsearch deployment, if present. To specify a different destination, change the following parameters in the manifest file:

- name: ELASTICSEARCH_HOST
  value: elasticsearch
- name: ELASTICSEARCH_PORT
  value: "9200"
- name: ELASTICSEARCH_USERNAME
  value: elastic
- name: ELASTICSEARCH_PASSWORD
  value: changeme
Red Hat OpenShift configuration
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If you are using Red Hat OpenShift, you need to specify additional settings in the manifest file and enable the container to run as privileged.

  1. Modify the DaemonSet container spec in the manifest file:

      securityContext:
        runAsUser: 0
        privileged: true
  2. In the manifest file, edit the metricbeat-daemonset-modules ConfigMap, and specify the following settings under kubernetes.yml in the data section:

      kubernetes.yml: |-
        - module: kubernetes
          metricsets:
            - node
            - system
            - pod
            - container
            - volume
          period: 10s
          host: ${NODE_NAME}
          hosts: ["https://${NODE_NAME}:10250"]
          bearer_token_file: /var/run/secrets/kubernetes.io/serviceaccount/token
          ssl.certificate_authorities:
            - /path/to/kubelet-service-ca.crt

    kubelet-service-ca.crt can be any CA bundle that contains the issuer of the certificate used in the Kubelet API. According to each specific installation of Openshift this can be found either in secrets or in configmaps. In some installations it can be available as part of the service account secret, in /var/run/secrets/kubernetes.io/serviceaccount/service-ca.crt. In case of using Openshift installer for GCP then the following configmap can be mounted in Metricbeat Pod and use ca-bundle.crt in ssl.certificate_authorities:

    Name:         kubelet-serving-ca
    Namespace:    openshift-kube-apiserver
    Labels:       <none>
    Annotations:  <none>
    
    Data
    ====
    ca-bundle.crt:
  3. Under the metricbeat ClusterRole, add the following resources:

      - nodes/metrics
      - nodes/stats
  4. Grant the metricbeat service account access to the privileged SCC:

    oc adm policy add-scc-to-user privileged system:serviceaccount:kube-system:metricbeat

    This command enables the container to be privileged as an administrator for OpenShift.

  5. Override the default node selector for the kube-system namespace (or your custom namespace) to allow for scheduling on any node:

    oc patch namespace kube-system -p \
    '{"metadata": {"annotations": {"openshift.io/node-selector": ""}}}'

    This command sets the node selector for the project to an empty string. If you don’t run this command, the default node selector will skip master nodes.

Load Kibana dashboards

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Metricbeat comes packaged with various pre-built Kibana dashboards that you can use to visualize metrics about your Kubernetes environment.

If these dashboards are not already loaded into Kibana, you must install Metricbeat on any system that can connect to the Elastic Stack, and then run the setup command to load the dashboards. To learn how, see Load Kibana dashboards.

If you are using a different output other than Elasticsearch, such as Logstash, you need to Load the index template manually and Load Kibana dashboards.

Deploy

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Metricbeat gets some metrics from kube-state-metrics. If kube-state-metrics is not already running, deploy it now (see the Kubernetes deployment docs).

To deploy Metricbeat to Kubernetes, run:

kubectl create -f metricbeat-kubernetes.yaml

To check the status, run:

$ kubectl --namespace=kube-system  get ds/metricbeat

NAME       DESIRED   CURRENT   READY     UP-TO-DATE   AVAILABLE   NODE-SELECTOR   AGE
metricbeat   32        32        0         32           0           <none>          1m

Metrics should start flowing to Elasticsearch.

Deploying Metricbeat to collect cluster-level metrics in large clusters

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The size and the number of nodes in a Kubernetes cluster can be fairly large at times, and in such cases the Pod that will be collecting cluster level metrics might face performance issues due to resources limitations. In this case users might consider to avoid using the leader election strategy and instead run a dedicated, standalone Metricbeat instance using a Deployment in addition to the DaemonSet.