Introduction

Regardless of whether you are developing traditional applications or microservices, you will inevitably have a requirement to monitor the health of your applications, and the components upon which they are built.

Furthermore, users of OpenShift Container Platform will often have their own existing enterprise standard monitoring infrastructure into which they will be looking to integrate applications they build. As part of Red Hat’s Professional Services organisation, one of the monitoring platforms I encounter whilst working with OpenShift in the field is the AppDynamics SaaS offering.

In this post, I will run through how we can take a Source-to-Image (S2I) builder, customise it to add the monitoring agent, and then use it as the basis of a Fuse Integration Services application, written in Apache Camel, and using the Java CDI approach.

Register with AppDynamics

Before getting into the process of modifying the S2I builder image and building the application, the first thing we need to do is register with the AppDynamics platform. If you’re an existing consumer of this service, then this step obviously isn’t required!

Either way, once registered, we need to download the Java agent. In this example, I’ve used the Standalone JVM agent, but there are many more options to choose from, and one of those may better suit your requirements.

Adding the Agent to your Image

There are two primary ways you can go about adding the AppDynamics Java agent to your image.

Firstly, you can use Source-To-Image (S2I) to add the Java agent to the standard fis-java-openshift base image at the same time as pulling in all your other dependencies - mainly source code and libraries.

Secondly, you can extend the fis-java-openshift S2I builder image itself, add your own layer containing the Java agent, and use this new image as the basis for your builds.

Using S2I

When using S2I to create an image, OpenShift can execute a number of scripts as part of this process. The two scripts we are interested in in this context are assemble and run.

In the fis-java-openshift image, the S2I scripts are located in /usr/local/s2i. We can override the actions of these scripts by adding an .s2i/bin directory into the code repository, and creating our new scripts there.

Assemble

The assemble script is going to be the script that pulls in the Java agent and unpacks it ready for use. Whilst we need to override it to carry out this task, we also need it to carry on performing the tasks it currently performs in addition to any customisations we might add:

#!/bin/bash # run original assemble script

/usr/local/s2i/assemble # install appdynamics agent

curl -H "Accept: application/zip" https://codeload.github.com/benemon/fis-java-appdynamics-plugin/zip/master -o /deployments/appdynamics.zip pushd /deployments

unzip appdynamics.zip

pushd fis-java-appdynamics-plugin-master/

mv appdynamics/ ../

popd

rm -rf fis-java-appdynamics-plugin-master/

rm -f appdynamics.zip

popd

As can be seen above, we actually get this script to execute the original assemble script before we add the AppDynamics agent - this way, if the Maven build fails, we haven’t wasted any time downloading any artifacts we’re not going to use.

Run

The run script is going to be the script that sets up the environment to allow us to use the AppDynamics Java agent, and - you’ve guessed it - run our app! Just as with the assemble script, we still want run to carry on executing our application when our customisations are complete. Therefore, all we do here is get it to check for the presence of an environment variable, and if it’s found, configure the environment to use AppDynamics.

#!/bin/bash if [ x"$APPDYNAMICS_AGENT_ACCOUNT_NAME" != "x" ]; then

mkdir /deployments/logs

export JAVA_OPTIONS="-javaagent:/deployments/appdynamics/javaagent.jar -Dappdynamics.agent.logs.dir=/deployments/logs $JAVA_OPTIONS"

fi exec /usr/local/s2i/run

In this case, we’re looking for a variable called APPDYNAMICS_AGENT_ACCOUNT_NAME. After all, if we haven’t configured any credentials for the Java agent, then it can’t connect to the AppDynamics SaaS anyway.

Template

Finally, to bring this all together, we can use a Template to pull all of these components together, begin the build process, and deploy our application.

The S2I process is possibly the simpler of the two methods outlined here for adding the AppDynamics Java agent to your application, but it does present some points of which you need to be aware:

The Java agent needs to be hosted somewhere accessible to your build process. It also needs to be version controlled separately from the build, which adds extra build management overhead.

It will be downloaded every single time you run a build - not the most efficient way of deploying it if you have an effective CI / CD pipeline and are doing multiple builds per hour!

Whilst it’s simpler to configure, it can present confusing problems during the build process. For example, if your assemble script creates some directories for your application to use (logging directories, for example), you may need to think about how your build and application are being executed, and who owns what in that process.

Regardless of these minor issues, this is still a powerful (and useful!) mechanism, and as such I have provided a sample repository that allows you to execute an S2I build that should pull in the Java agent and run it alongside an application.

NOTE: If you’re still interested in using the S2I process, and want to know more about how to configure the Java agent with environment variables, skip ahead to ‘Adding the AppDynamics agent to a FIS application’.

Extending the Fuse Integration Services (FIS) Base Image

My preference for using the AppDynamics Java agent with applications built on FIS (and for similar use cases), is to add it into the base image once, so that it is accessible by the any applications based on that image.

Dockerfile

In this example, this is done by creating a new Docker image, based on fis-java-openshift:latest and adding the Java agent into this project as an artifact to be added to that image:

FROM registry.access.redhat.com/jboss-fuse-6/fis-java-openshift:latest USER root ADD appdynamics/ /opt/appdynamics/ RUN chgrp -R 0 /opt/appdynamics/

RUN chmod -R g+rw /opt/appdynamics/

RUN find /opt/appdynamics/ -type d -exec chmod g+x {} + #jboss from FIS

USER 185

In this Dockerfile, we are adding the content of the appdynamics directory in our Git repository to the fis-java-openshift base image, and altering its permissions so that it is owned by the JBoss user in that image.

OpenShift

In order to consume this Dockerfile and turn it into a useable image, we have a number of options. By far the simplest is to execute an oc new-build command against the repository hosting the Docker image - in the case of this image, this would be:

oc new-build https://github.com/benemon/fis-java-appdynamics/#0.2-SNAPSHOT --context-dir=src/main/docker

Note the use of the --context-dir switch pointing to the directory containing the Dockerfile. This informs OpenShift that it needs to look in a sub-directory, not the root of the Git repository, for its build artifacts.

Once we’ve executed the above command, we can tail the OpenShift logs from the CLI (or view them from the Web Console), and see the Dockerfile build taking place. The output will be similar to this:

[vagrant@rhel-cdk ~]$ oc logs -f fis-java-appdynamics-1-build

I0709 09:03:35.440237 1 source.go:197] Downloading "https://github.com/benemon/fis-java-appdynamics" ...

Step 1 : FROM registry.access.redhat.com/jboss-fuse-6/fis-java-openshift

---> 771d26abb75d

Step 2 : USER root

---> Using cache

---> c66c5f1378be

Step 3 : ADD appdynamics/ /opt/appdynamics/

---> ef153cb350d8

Removing intermediate container 44c776871f6f

Step 4 : RUN chown -R 185:185 /opt/appdynamics/

---> Running in 861f8c27225e

---> ee1ac493f88d

Removing intermediate container 861f8c27225e

Step 5 : USER 185

---> Running in 1d9fe0a02e6a

---> 73f598d8a0e9

Removing intermediate container 1d9fe0a02e6a

Step 6 : ENV "OPENSHIFT_BUILD_NAME" "fis-java-appdynamics-1" "OPENSHIFT_BUILD_NAMESPACE" "dev1" "OPENSHIFT_BUILD_SOURCE" "https://github.com/benemon/fis-java-appdynamics" "OPENSHIFT_BUILD_COMMIT" "d025f9961896b25fcae479d62779ae455df334d3"

---> Running in 510a4b51db5a

---> c4e938d189eb

Removing intermediate container 510a4b51db5a

Step 7 : LABEL "io.openshift.build.commit.message" "Updated the FIS build artifacts" "io.openshift.build.source-location" "https://github.com/benemon/fis-java-appdynamics" "io.openshift.build.source-context-dir" "src/main/docker" "io.openshift.build.commit.author" "Benjamin Holmes \u003canonymous@email.com\u003e" "io.openshift.build.commit.date" "Sat Jul 9 11:26:11 2016 +0100" "io.openshift.build.commit.id" "d025f9961896b25fcae479d62779ae455df334d3" "io.openshift.build.commit.ref" "master"

---> Running in 213844392db7

---> 44fede9609fd

Removing intermediate container 213844392db7

Successfully built 44fede9609fd

I0709 09:04:06.573966 1 docker.go:118] Pushing image 172.30.49.26:5000/dev1/fis-java-appdynamics:latest ...

I0709 09:04:10.970516 1 docker.go:122] Push successful

NOTE: As an alternative to a standard Dockerfile build, we can use the Kubernetes Fluent DSL to generate the BuildConfig and ImageStream objects as part of a Template that will tell OpenShift to do a Dockerfile build based on the supplied project content. Using Kubernetes DSL is optional (you are more than welcome to define the objects manually), but as a Java developer this is a simple process to understand, it allows you to version control your whole image build process, and also falls nicely into the ‘configuration as code’ discipline so prominent in the DevOps world. An example of how to use the Fluent DSL is supplied in the Github repository for the AppDynamics base image.

Whichever process you decide upon (the supplied Github repository contains artifacts for both builds), OpenShift will generate a number of Kubernetes artifacts. What we are interested in here is the Image Stream…

apiVersion: v1

kind: ImageStream

metadata:

...

generation: 1

labels:

app: fis-java-appdynamics

name: fis-java-appdynamics

namespace: dev1

...

spec: {}

status:

dockerImageRepository: 172.30.49.26:5000/dev1/fis-java-appdynamics

tags:

..

tag: latest

...and the BuildConfig:

apiVersion: v1

kind: BuildConfig

metadata:

...

labels:

app: fis-java-appdynamics

name: fis-java-appdynamics

namespace: dev1

...

spec:

output:

to:

kind: ImageStreamTag

name: fis-java-appdynamics:latest

postCommit: {}

resources: {}

source:

contextDir: src/main/docker

git:

uri: https://github.com/benemon/fis-java-appdynamics

secrets: []

type: Git

strategy:

dockerStrategy:

from:

kind: ImageStreamTag

name: fis-java-openshift:latest

type: Docker

triggers:

- github:

secret: 9Y66CCaSoOipX2pgeEXs

type: GitHub

- generic:

secret: IrYOFwVX0pZKSkceG4D_

type: Generic

- type: ConfigChange

- imageChange:

lastTriggeredImageID: registry.access.redhat.com/jboss-fuse-6/fis-java-openshift:latest

type: ImageChange

status:

lastVersion: 1

Please note that lines have been removed from the above objects for the sake of brevity.

Once the build of the fis-java-appdynamics image has completed successfully, we will have a new base image present in our namespace that contains the AppDynamics agent plugin.

Magic.

Adding the AppDynamics agent to a FIS application

Given that I have elected to follow the second method of creating a new base image with the AppDynamics Java agent added to it, I now need a way of configuring it.

NOTE: These steps are much the same as those performed if you were to use the S2I builder process. However you can see the subtle differences, such as the addition of JAVA_OPTIONS is performed by the .s2i/bin/run script as opposed to the DeploymentConfig in the Template in the sample repository here.

Configuring the Agent

The AppDynamics agent follows a similar agent model to many other profiling tools, in that it is added to a JVM using the -javaagent switch. When thinking in terms of immutable containers, we obviously want this whole configuration process to be as loosely coupled from the application image as possible.

With this in mind, the simplest way to configure the AppDynamics Java agent is via environment variables. This is helpful, as the AppDynamics agent prioritises environment variables over any other forms of configuration it may have available to it (such as controller-info.xml within the agent distribution). The AppDynamics Agent Configuration guide has further information.

One option we have here is to hard code all of the requisite environment variables into an application DeploymentConfig. However, in this brave new world of immutable containers, short lived cloud applications workloads, and CI/CD pipelines we can be a bit cleverer than that.

Using a Template for the application, we can still define all of the environment variables required by the AppDynamics agent, but we can also use a mixture of templated parameters, and Kubernetes’ Downward API to effectively allow the container to introspect itself at runtime, and feed useful information about itself to the agent.

Therefore, we can produce a Template that includes an environment variables component in its DeploymentConfig section which looks a little like this:

- name: JAVA_OPTIONS

value: '-javaagent:/opt/appdynamics/javaagent.jar'

- name: TZ

value: Europe/London

- name: APPDYNAMICS_CONTROLLER_HOST_NAME

value: ${APPDYNAMICS_CONTROLLER_HOST_NAME}

- name: APPDYNAMICS_CONTROLLER_PORT

value: ${APPDYNAMICS_CONTROLLER_PORT}

- name: APPDYNAMICS_CONTROLLER_SSL_ENABLED

value: ${APPDYNAMICS_CONTROLLER_SSL_ENABLED}

- name: APPDYNAMICS_AGENT_ACCOUNT_NAME

value: ${APPDYNAMICS_AGENT_ACCOUNT_NAME}

- name: APPDYNAMICS_AGENT_ACCOUNT_ACCESS_KEY

value: ${APPDYNAMICS_AGENT_ACCOUNT_ACCESS_KEY}

- name: APPDYNAMICS_AGENT_APPLICATION_NAME

value: ${SERVICE_NAME}

- name: APPDYNAMICS_AGENT_TIER_NAME

valueFrom:

fieldRef:

apiVersion: v1

fieldPath: metadata.namespace

- name: APPDYNAMICS_AGENT_NODE_NAME

valueFrom:

fieldRef:

apiVersion: v1

fieldPath: metadata.name

Note the use of Downward API reference for APPDYNAMICS_TIER_NAME and APPDYNAMICS_AGENT_NODE_NAME.

NOTE: If you would like to try this with my sample template, you should execute the following command against your OpenShift environment:

oc create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/benemon/camel-cxf-cdi-java-example/appdynamics/openshift/cxf-cdi-java-example.yml

This creates the template within the current OpenShift project. This should be the same project in which you have done the fis-java-appdynamics build, otherwise OpenShift won’t be able to locate the new base image!

When we present this via the OpenShift Web Console, we are shown a much more user friendly version of the above, allowing you to key in your AppDynamics account details without the need to store them in potentially troublesome static configuration files within the container.

Once all the fields have been completed, click on ‘Create’, and (assuming all mandatory fields have been filled in), a screen will be presented confirming the successful creation of all template objects.

Once this Template has been instantiated successfully, OpenShift will start a build against the source code branch, using fis-java-appdynamics as the S2I builder image.

Be aware that this project repository contains a standard Maven settings.xml which can be used to define how Maven resolves the build dependencies. If you experience long build times, this file can be updated to resolve to a local Maven repository, such as Sonatype Nexus, or JFrog Artifactory.

After the build has completed successfully, a new Pod will be started, running the application with its embedded Java agent (parts omitted for brevity):

Executing /deployments/bin/run ...

Launching application in folder: /deployments

Running java -javaagent:/opt/appdynamics/javaagent.jar

…

Install Directory resolved to[/opt/appdynamics]

log4j:WARN No appenders could be found for logger (com.singularity.MissingMethodGenerator).

log4j:WARN Please initialize the log4j system properly.

[Thread-0] Sat Jul 09 05:29:26 BST 2016[DEBUG]: AgentInstallManager - Full Agent Registration Info Resolver is running

[Thread-0] Sat Jul 09 05:29:26 BST 2016[INFO]: AgentInstallManager - Full Agent Registration Info Resolver found env variable [APPDYNAMICS_AGENT_APPLICATION_NAME] for application name [greeting-service]

[Thread-0] Sat Jul 09 05:29:26 BST 2016[INFO]: AgentInstallManager - Full Agent Registration Info Resolver found env variable [APPDYNAMICS_AGENT_TIER_NAME] for tier name [dev1]

[Thread-0] Sat Jul 09 05:29:26 BST 2016[INFO]: AgentInstallManager - Full Agent Registration Info Resolver found env variable [APPDYNAMICS_AGENT_NODE_NAME] for node name [greeting-service-1-fbcaa]

[Thread-0] Sat Jul 09 05:29:26 BST 2016[INFO]: AgentInstallManager - Full Agent Registration Info Resolver using selfService [true]

[Thread-0] Sat Jul 09 05:29:26 BST 2016[INFO]: AgentInstallManager - Full Agent Registration Info Resolver using selfService [true]

[Thread-0] Sat Jul 09 05:29:26 BST 2016[INFO]: AgentInstallManager - Full Agent Registration Info Resolver using application name [greeting-service]

[Thread-0] Sat Jul 09 05:29:26 BST 2016[INFO]: AgentInstallManager - Full Agent Registration Info Resolver using tier name [dev1]

[Thread-0] Sat Jul 09 05:29:26 BST 2016[INFO]: AgentInstallManager - Full Agent Registration Info Resolver using node name [greeting-service-1-fbcaa]

[Thread-0] Sat Jul 09 05:29:26 BST 2016[DEBUG]: AgentInstallManager - Full Agent Registration Info Resolver finished running

[Thread-0] Sat Jul 09 05:29:26 BST 2016[INFO]: AgentInstallManager - Agent runtime directory set to [/opt/appdynamics/ver4.1.7.1]

[Thread-0] Sat Jul 09 05:29:26 BST 2016[INFO]: AgentInstallManager - Agent node directory set to [greeting-service-1-fbcaa]

[Thread-0] Sat Jul 09 05:29:26 BST 2016[INFO]: JavaAgent - Using Java Agent Version [Server Agent v4.1.7.1 GA #9949 ra4a2721d52322207b626e8d4c88855c846741b3d 18-4.1.7.next-build]

[Thread-0] Sat Jul 09 05:29:26 BST 2016[INFO]: JavaAgent - Running IBM Java Agent [No]

[Thread-0] Sat Jul 09 05:29:26 BST 2016[INFO]: JavaAgent - Java Agent Directory [/opt/appdynamics/ver4.1.7.1]

[Thread-0] Sat Jul 09 05:29:26 BST 2016[INFO]: JavaAgent - Java Agent AppAgent directory [/opt/appdynamics/ver4.1.7.1]

Agent Logging Directory [/opt/appdynamics/ver4.1.7.1/logs/greeting-service-1-fbcaa]

Running obfuscated agent

Started AppDynamics Java Agent Successfully.

…

Registered app server agent with Node ID[8494] Component ID[6859] Application ID [4075]

Verifying Successful Integration

Once the application has started successfully, and the agent has registered itself with AppDynamics, you should be able to see your application on the AppDynamics Dashboard:

Drilling down into the Application in the Dashboard also confirms that the Downward API has done its job, and we’ve automatically pulled in both the container name, and the Kubernetes namespace.

Testing Integration

In order to get something a bit more meaningful out of the AppDynamics platform, I’ve put together a small test harness in SoapUI that simply runs a load test against the Fuse application’s RESTful endpoint:

In OpenShift’s container logs we can see these requests coming into the application, either via the Web Console or via the CLI.

Once the test harness has completed its cycle, going back to the AppDynamics dashboard starts to give us a glimpse of something a bit more useful to us from an application monitoring and operations point of view:

We can even drill down into the Web Service endpoints themselves, and examine the levels of load each is experiencing.

Application Scaling

One of the really nice things about using OpenShift, the Downward API, and AppDynamics in this way is that it even gives us useful information about health, request distribution and throughput when we scale out the application. Here the application has been scaled to 3 nodes:

We can also look at the load and response times being experienced by users of the application service. Whilst this particular view gives an amalgamation of data, it’s a simple operation to drill down into an individual JVM to see how it’s performing.

Conclusion

I have barely scratched the surface of what we can monitor, log, and alert on with OpenShift, Fuse Integration Services, and AppDynamics. Hopefully though, it gives you a glimpse of what is possible using the tools provided by the OpenShift Container Platform, and a template for not only integrating AppDynamics, but also other useful toolsets that follow a similar agent model.

Resources

The full source repository for fis-java-appdynamics is here: https://github.com/benemon/fis-java-appdynamics/tree/0.2-SNAPSHOT

The full source repository for the FIS/Camel application based on the fis-java-appdynamics image is here: https://github.com/benemon/camel-cxf-cdi-java-example/tree/appdynamics

The full source repository for the FIS/Camel application with the Java agent added using S2I is here:

https://github.com/benemon/camel-cxf-cdi-java-example/tree/appdynamics-s2i

Please note branches and tags in these repositories.