We’ve talked about Kubernetes before, and over the last couple of years it’s become the standard deployment pattern at GitHub. We now run a large portion of both internal and public-facing services on Kubernetes. As our Kubernetes clusters have grown, and our targets on the latency of our services have become more stringent, we began to notice that certain services running on Kubernetes in our environment were experiencing sporadic latency that couldn’t be attributed to the performance characteristics of the application itself.

Essentially, applications running on our Kubernetes clusters would observe seemingly random latency of up to and over 100ms on connections, which would cause downstream timeouts or retries. Services were expected to be able to respond to requests in well under 100ms, which wasn’t feasible when the connection itself was taking so long. Separately, we also observed very fast MySQL queries, which we expected to take a matter of milliseconds and that MySQL observed taking only milliseconds, were being observed taking 100ms or more from the perspective of the querying application.

The problem was initially narrowed down to communications that involved a Kubernetes node, even if the other side of a connection was outside Kubernetes. The most simple reproduction we had was a Vegeta benchmark that could be run from any internal host, targeting a Kubernetes service running on a node port, and would observe the sporadically high latency. In this post, we’ll walk through how we tracked down the underlying issue.

Removing complexity to find the path at fault

Using an example reproduction, we wanted to narrow down the problem and remove layers of complexity. Initially, there were too many moving parts in the flow between Vegeta and pods running on Kubernetes to determine if this was a deeper network problem, so we needed to rule some out.

The client, Vegeta, creates a TCP connection to any kube-node in the cluster. Kubernetes runs in our data centers as an overlay network (a network that runs on top of our existing datacenter network) that uses IPIP (which encapsulates the overlay network’s IP packet inside the datacenter’s IP packet). When a connection is made to that first kube-node, it performs stateful Network Address Translation (NAT) to convert the kube-node’s IP and port to an IP and port on the overlay network (specifically, of the pod running the application). On return, it undoes each of these steps. This is a complex system with a lot of state, and a lot of moving parts that are constantly updating and changing as services deploy and move around.

As part of running a tcpdump on the original Vegeta benchmark, we observed the latency during a TCP handshake (between SYN and SYN-ACK). To simplify some of the complexity of HTTP and Vegeta, we can use hping3 to just “ping” with a SYN packet and see if we observe the latency in the response packet—then throw away the connection. We can filter it to only include packets over 100ms and get a simpler reproduction case than a full Layer 7 Vegeta benchmark or attack against the service. The following “pings” a kube-node using TCP SYN/SYN-ACK on the “node port” for the service (30927) with an interval of 10ms, filtered for slow responses:

theojulienne@shell ~ $ sudo hping3 172.16.47.27 -S -p 30927 -i u10000 | egrep --line-buffered 'rtt=[0-9]{3}\.' len=46 ip=172.16.47.27 ttl=59 DF id=0 sport=30927 flags=SA seq=1485 win=29200 rtt=127.1 ms len=46 ip=172.16.47.27 ttl=59 DF id=0 sport=30927 flags=SA seq=1486 win=29200 rtt=117.0 ms len=46 ip=172.16.47.27 ttl=59 DF id=0 sport=30927 flags=SA seq=1487 win=29200 rtt=106.2 ms len=46 ip=172.16.47.27 ttl=59 DF id=0 sport=30927 flags=SA seq=1488 win=29200 rtt=104.1 ms len=46 ip=172.16.47.27 ttl=59 DF id=0 sport=30927 flags=SA seq=5024 win=29200 rtt=109.2 ms len=46 ip=172.16.47.27 ttl=59 DF id=0 sport=30927 flags=SA seq=5231 win=29200 rtt=109.2 ms

Our first new observation from the sequence numbers and timings is that this isn’t a one-off, but is often grouped, like a backlog that eventually gets processed.

Next up, we want to narrow down which component(s) were potentially at fault. Is it the kube-proxy iptables NAT rules that are hundreds of rules long? Is it the IPIP tunnel and something on the network handling them poorly? One way to validate this is to test each step of the system. What happens if we remove the NAT and firewall logic and only use the IPIP part:

Linux thankfully lets you just talk directly to an overlay IP when you’re on a machine that’s part of the same network, so that’s pretty easy to do:

theojulienne@kube-node-client ~ $ sudo hping3 10.125.20.64 -S -i u10000 | egrep --line-buffered 'rtt=[0-9]{3}\.' len=40 ip=10.125.20.64 ttl=64 DF id=0 sport=0 flags=RA seq=7346 win=0 rtt=127.3 ms len=40 ip=10.125.20.64 ttl=64 DF id=0 sport=0 flags=RA seq=7347 win=0 rtt=117.3 ms len=40 ip=10.125.20.64 ttl=64 DF id=0 sport=0 flags=RA seq=7348 win=0 rtt=107.2 ms

Based on our results, the problem still remains! That rules out iptables and NAT. Is it TCP that’s the problem? Let’s see what happens when we perform a normal ICMP ping:

theojulienne@kube-node-client ~ $ sudo hping3 10.125.20.64 --icmp -i u10000 | egrep --line-buffered 'rtt=[0-9]{3}\.' len=28 ip=10.125.20.64 ttl=64 id=42594 icmp_seq=104 rtt=110.0 ms len=28 ip=10.125.20.64 ttl=64 id=49448 icmp_seq=4022 rtt=141.3 ms len=28 ip=10.125.20.64 ttl=64 id=49449 icmp_seq=4023 rtt=131.3 ms len=28 ip=10.125.20.64 ttl=64 id=49450 icmp_seq=4024 rtt=121.2 ms len=28 ip=10.125.20.64 ttl=64 id=49451 icmp_seq=4025 rtt=111.2 ms len=28 ip=10.125.20.64 ttl=64 id=49452 icmp_seq=4026 rtt=101.1 ms len=28 ip=10.125.20.64 ttl=64 id=50023 icmp_seq=4343 rtt=126.8 ms len=28 ip=10.125.20.64 ttl=64 id=50024 icmp_seq=4344 rtt=116.8 ms len=28 ip=10.125.20.64 ttl=64 id=50025 icmp_seq=4345 rtt=106.8 ms len=28 ip=10.125.20.64 ttl=64 id=59727 icmp_seq=9836 rtt=106.1 ms

Our results show that the problem still exists. Is it the IPIP tunnel that’s causing the problem? Let’s simplify things further:

Is it possible that it’s every packet between these two hosts?

theojulienne@kube-node-client ~ $ sudo hping3 172.16.47.27 --icmp -i u10000 | egrep --line-buffered 'rtt=[0-9]{3}\.' len=46 ip=172.16.47.27 ttl=61 id=41127 icmp_seq=12564 rtt=140.9 ms len=46 ip=172.16.47.27 ttl=61 id=41128 icmp_seq=12565 rtt=130.9 ms len=46 ip=172.16.47.27 ttl=61 id=41129 icmp_seq=12566 rtt=120.8 ms len=46 ip=172.16.47.27 ttl=61 id=41130 icmp_seq=12567 rtt=110.8 ms len=46 ip=172.16.47.27 ttl=61 id=41131 icmp_seq=12568 rtt=100.7 ms len=46 ip=172.16.47.27 ttl=61 id=9062 icmp_seq=31443 rtt=134.2 ms len=46 ip=172.16.47.27 ttl=61 id=9063 icmp_seq=31444 rtt=124.2 ms len=46 ip=172.16.47.27 ttl=61 id=9064 icmp_seq=31445 rtt=114.2 ms len=46 ip=172.16.47.27 ttl=61 id=9065 icmp_seq=31446 rtt=104.2 ms

Behind the complexity, it’s as simple as two kube-node hosts sending any packet, even ICMP pings, to each other. They’ll still see the latency, if the target host is a “bad” one (some are worse than others).

Now there’s one last thing to question: we clearly don’t observe this everywhere, so why is it just on kube-node servers? And does it occur when the kube-node is the sender or the receiver? Luckily, this is also pretty easy to narrow down by using a host outside Kubernetes as a sender, but with the same “known bad” target host (from a staff shell host to the same kube-node). We can observe this is still an issue in that direction:

theojulienne@shell ~ $ sudo hping3 172.16.47.27 -p 9876 -S -i u10000 | egrep --line-buffered 'rtt=[0-9]{3}\.' len=46 ip=172.16.47.27 ttl=61 DF id=0 sport=9876 flags=RA seq=312 win=0 rtt=108.5 ms len=46 ip=172.16.47.27 ttl=61 DF id=0 sport=9876 flags=RA seq=5903 win=0 rtt=119.4 ms len=46 ip=172.16.47.27 ttl=61 DF id=0 sport=9876 flags=RA seq=6227 win=0 rtt=139.9 ms len=46 ip=172.16.47.27 ttl=61 DF id=0 sport=9876 flags=RA seq=7929 win=0 rtt=131.2 ms

And then perform the same from the previous source kube-node to a staff shell host (which rules out the source host, since a ping has both an RX and TX component):

theojulienne@kube-node-client ~ $ sudo hping3 172.16.33.44 -p 9876 -S -i u10000 | egrep --line-buffered 'rtt=[0-9]{3}\.' ^C --- 172.16.33.44 hping statistic --- 22352 packets transmitted, 22350 packets received, 1% packet loss round-trip min/avg/max = 0.2/7.6/1010.6 ms

Looking into the packet captures of the latency we observed, we get some more information. Specifically, that the “sender” host (bottom) observes this timeout while the “receiver” host (top) does not—see the Delta column (in seconds):

Additionally, by looking at the difference between the ordering of the packets (based on the sequence numbers) on the receiver side of the TCP and ICMP results above, we can observe that ICMP packets always arrive in the same sequence they were sent, but with uneven timing, while TCP packets are sometimes interleaved, but a subset of them stall. Notably, we observe that if you count the ports of the SYN packets, the ports are not in order on the receiver side, while they’re in order on the sender side.

There is a subtle difference between how modern server NICs—like we have in our data centers—handle packets containing TCP vs ICMP. When a packet arrives, the NIC hashes the packet “per connection” and tries to divvy up the connections across receive queues, each (approximately) delegated to a given CPU core. For TCP, this hash includes both source and destination IP and port. In other words, each connection is hashed (potentially) differently. For ICMP, just the IP source and destination are hashed, since there are no ports.

Another new observation is that we can tell that ICMP observes stalls on all communications between the two hosts during this period from the sequence numbers in ICMP vs TCP, while TCP does not. This tells us that the RX queue hashing is likely in play, almost certainly indicating the stall is in processing RX packets, not in sending responses.

This rules out kube-node transmits, so we now know that it’s a stall in processing packets, and that it’s on the receive side on some kube-node servers.

Deep dive into Linux kernel packet processing

To understand why the problem could be on the receiving side on some kube-node servers, let’s take a look at how the Linux kernel processes packets.

Going back to the simplest traditional implementation, the network card receives a packet and sends an interrupt to the Linux kernel stating that there’s a packet that should be handled. The kernel stops other work, switches context to the interrupt handler, processes the packet, then switches back to what it was doing.

This context switching is slow, which may have been fine on a 10Mbit NIC in the 90s, but on modern servers where the NIC is 10G and at maximal line rate can bring in around 15 million packets per second, on a smaller server with eight cores that could mean the kernel is interrupted millions of times per second per core.

Instead of constantly handling interrupts, many years ago Linux added NAPI, the networking API that modern drivers use for improved performance at high packet rates. At low rates, the kernel still accepts interrupts from the NIC in the method we mentioned. Once enough packets arrive and cross a threshold, it disables interrupts and instead begins polling the NIC and pulling off packets in batches. This processing is done in a “softirq”, or software interrupt context. This happens at the end of syscalls and hardware interrupts, which are times that the kernel (as opposed to userspace) is already running.

This is much faster, but brings up another problem. What happens if we have so many packets to process that we spend all our time processing packets from the NIC, but we never have time to let the userspace processes actually drain those queues (read from TCP connections, etc.)? Eventually the queues would fill up, and we’d start dropping packets. To try and make this fair, the kernel limits the amount of packets processed in a given softirq context to a certain budget. Once this budget is exceeded, it wakes up a separate thread called ksoftirqd (you’ll see one of these in ps for each core) which processes these softirqs outside of the normal syscall/interrupt path. This thread is scheduled using the standard process scheduler, which already tries to be fair.

With an overview of the way the kernel is processing packets, we can see there is definitely opportunity for this processing to become stalled. If the time between softirq processing calls grows, packets could sit in the NIC RX queue for a while before being processed. This could be something deadlocking the CPU core, or it could be something slow preventing the kernel from running softirqs.

Narrow down processing to a core or method

At this point, it makes sense that this could happen, and we know we’re observing something that looks a lot like it. The next step is to confirm this theory, and if we do, understand what’s causing it.

Let’s revisit the slow round trip packets we saw before:

len=46 ip=172.16.53.32 ttl=61 id=29573 icmp_seq=1953 rtt=99.3 ms len=46 ip=172.16.53.32 ttl=61 id=29574 icmp_seq=1954 rtt=89.3 ms len=46 ip=172.16.53.32 ttl=61 id=29575 icmp_seq=1955 rtt=79.2 ms len=46 ip=172.16.53.32 ttl=61 id=29576 icmp_seq=1956 rtt=69.1 ms len=46 ip=172.16.53.32 ttl=61 id=29577 icmp_seq=1957 rtt=59.1 ms len=46 ip=172.16.53.32 ttl=61 id=29790 icmp_seq=2070 rtt=75.7 ms len=46 ip=172.16.53.32 ttl=61 id=29791 icmp_seq=2071 rtt=65.6 ms len=46 ip=172.16.53.32 ttl=61 id=29792 icmp_seq=2072 rtt=55.5 ms

As discussed previously, these ICMP packets are hashed to a single NIC RX queue and processed by a single CPU core. If we want to understand what the kernel is doing, it’s helpful to know where (cpu core) and how (softirq, ksoftirqd) it’s processing these packets so we can catch them in action.

Now it’s time to use the tools that allow live tracing of a running Linux kernel—bcc is what was used here. This allows you to write small C programs that hook arbitrary functions in the kernel, and buffer events back to a userspace Python program which can summarize and return them to you. The “hook arbitrary functions in the kernel” is the difficult part, but it actually goes out of its way to be as safe as possible to use, because it’s designed for tracing exactly this type of production issue that you can’t simply reproduce in a testing or dev environment.

The plan here is simple: we know the kernel is processing those ICMP ping packets, so let’s hook the kernel function icmp_echo which takes an incoming ICMP “echo request” packet and initiates sending the ICMP “echo response” reply. We can identify the packet using the incrementing icmp_seq shown by hping3 above.

The code for this bcc script looks complex, but breaking it down it’s not as scary as it sounds. The icmp_echo function is passed a struct sk_buff *skb , which is the packet containing the ICMP echo request. We can delve into this live and pull out the echo.sequence (which maps to the icmp_seq shown by hping3 above), and send that back to userspace. Conveniently, we can also grab the current process name/id as well. This gives us results like the following, live as the kernel processes these packets:

TGID PID PROCESS NAME ICMP_SEQ 0 0 swapper/11 770 0 0 swapper/11 771 0 0 swapper/11 772 0 0 swapper/11 773 0 0 swapper/11 774 20041 20086 prometheus 775 0 0 swapper/11 776 0 0 swapper/11 777 0 0 swapper/11 778 4512 4542 spokes-report-s 779

One thing to note about this process name is that in a post-syscall softirq context, you see the process that made the syscall show as the “process”, even though really it’s the kernel processing it safely within the kernel context.

With that running, we can now correlate back from the stalled packets observed with hping3 to the process that’s handling it. A simple grep on that capture for the icmp_seq values with some context shows what happened before these packets were processed. The packets that line up with the above hping3 icmp_seq values have been marked along with the rtt’s we observed above (and what we’d have expected if <50ms rtt’s weren’t filtered out):

TGID PID PROCESS NAME ICMP_SEQ ** RTT -- 10137 10436 cadvisor 1951 10137 10436 cadvisor 1952 76 76 ksoftirqd/11 1953 ** 99ms 76 76 ksoftirqd/11 1954 ** 89ms 76 76 ksoftirqd/11 1955 ** 79ms 76 76 ksoftirqd/11 1956 ** 69ms 76 76 ksoftirqd/11 1957 ** 59ms 76 76 ksoftirqd/11 1958 ** (49ms) 76 76 ksoftirqd/11 1959 ** (39ms) 76 76 ksoftirqd/11 1960 ** (29ms) 76 76 ksoftirqd/11 1961 ** (19ms) 76 76 ksoftirqd/11 1962 ** (9ms) -- 10137 10436 cadvisor 2068 10137 10436 cadvisor 2069 76 76 ksoftirqd/11 2070 ** 75ms 76 76 ksoftirqd/11 2071 ** 65ms 76 76 ksoftirqd/11 2072 ** 55ms 76 76 ksoftirqd/11 2073 ** (45ms) 76 76 ksoftirqd/11 2074 ** (35ms) 76 76 ksoftirqd/11 2075 ** (25ms) 76 76 ksoftirqd/11 2076 ** (15ms) 76 76 ksoftirqd/11 2077 ** (5ms)

The results tells us a few things. First, these packets are being processed by ksoftirqd/11 which conveniently tells us this particular pair of machines have their ICMP packets hashed to core 11 on the receiving side. We can also see that every time we see a stall, we always see some packets processed in cadvisor ’s syscall softirq context, followed by ksoftirqd taking over and processing the backlog, exactly the number we’d expect to work through the backlog.

The fact that cadvisor is always running just prior to this immediately also implicates it in the problem. Ironically, cadvisor “analyzes resource usage and performance characteristics of running containers”, yet it’s triggering this performance problem. As with many things related to containers, it’s all relatively bleeding-edge tooling which can result in some somewhat expected corner cases of bad performance.

What is cadvisor doing to stall things?

With the understanding of how the stall can happen, the process causing it, and the CPU core it’s happening on, we now have a pretty good idea of what this looks like. For the kernel to hard block and not schedule ksoftirqd earlier, and given we see packets processed under cadvisor ’s softirq context, it’s likely that cadvisor is running a slow syscall which ends with the rest of the packets being processed:

That’s a theory but how do we validate this is actually happening? One thing we can do is trace what’s running on the CPU core throughout this process, catch the point where the packets are overflowing budget and processed by ksoftirqd, then look back a bit to see what was running on the CPU core. Think of it like taking an x-ray of the CPU every few milliseconds. It would look something like this:

Conveniently, this is something that’s already mostly supported. The perf record tool samples a given CPU core at a certain frequency and can generate a call graph of the live system, including both userspace and the kernel. Taking that recording and manipulating it using a quick fork of a tool from Brendan Gregg’s FlameGraph that retained stack trace ordering, we can get a one-line stack trace for each 1ms sample, then get a sample of the 100ms before ksoftirqd is in the trace:

# record 999 times a second, or every 1ms with some offset so not to align exactly with timers sudo perf record -C 11 -g -F 999 # take that recording and make a simpler stack trace. sudo perf script 2>/dev/null | ./FlameGraph/stackcollapse-perf-ordered.pl | grep ksoftir -B 100

This results in the following:

(hundreds of traces that look similar) cadvisor;[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];entry_SYSCALL_64_after_swapgs;do_syscall_64;sys_read;vfs_read;seq_read;memcg_stat_show;mem_cgroup_nr_lru_pages;mem_cgroup_node_nr_lru_pages cadvisor;[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];entry_SYSCALL_64_after_swapgs;do_syscall_64;sys_read;vfs_read;seq_read;memcg_stat_show;mem_cgroup_nr_lru_pages;mem_cgroup_node_nr_lru_pages cadvisor;[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];entry_SYSCALL_64_after_swapgs;do_syscall_64;sys_read;vfs_read;seq_read;memcg_stat_show;mem_cgroup_iter cadvisor;[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];entry_SYSCALL_64_after_swapgs;do_syscall_64;sys_read;vfs_read;seq_read;memcg_stat_show;mem_cgroup_nr_lru_pages;mem_cgroup_node_nr_lru_pages cadvisor;[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];[cadvisor];entry_SYSCALL_64_after_swapgs;do_syscall_64;sys_read;vfs_read;seq_read;memcg_stat_show;mem_cgroup_nr_lru_pages;mem_cgroup_node_nr_lru_pages ksoftirqd/11;ret_from_fork;kthread;kthread;smpboot_thread_fn;smpboot_thread_fn;run_ksoftirqd;__do_softirq;net_rx_action;ixgbe_poll;ixgbe_clean_rx_irq;napi_gro_receive;netif_receive_skb_internal;inet_gro_receive;bond_handle_frame;__netif_receive_skb_core;ip_rcv_finish;ip_rcv;ip_forward_finish;ip_forward;ip_finish_output;nf_iterate;ip_output;ip_finish_output2;__dev_queue_xmit;dev_hard_start_xmit;ipip_tunnel_xmit;ip_tunnel_xmit;iptunnel_xmit;ip_local_out;dst_output;__ip_local_out;nf_hook_slow;nf_iterate;nf_conntrack_in;generic_packet;ipt_do_table;set_match_v4;ip_set_test;hash_net4_kadt;ixgbe_xmit_frame_ring;swiotlb_dma_mapping_error;hash_net4_test ksoftirqd/11;ret_from_fork;kthread;kthread;smpboot_thread_fn;smpboot_thread_fn;run_ksoftirqd;__do_softirq;net_rx_action;gro_cell_poll;napi_gro_receive;netif_receive_skb_internal;inet_gro_receive;__netif_receive_skb_core;ip_rcv_finish;ip_rcv;ip_forward_finish;ip_forward;ip_finish_output;nf_iterate;ip_output;ip_finish_output2;__dev_queue_xmit;dev_hard_start_xmit;dev_queue_xmit_nit;packet_rcv;tpacket_rcv;sch_direct_xmit;validate_xmit_skb_list;validate_xmit_skb;netif_skb_features;ixgbe_xmit_frame_ring;swiotlb_dma_mapping_error;__dev_queue_xmit;dev_hard_start_xmit;__bpf_prog_run;__bpf_prog_run

There’s a lot there, but looking through it you can see it’s the cadvisor-then-ksoftirqd pattern we saw from the ICMP tracer above. What does it mean?

Each line is a trace of the CPU at a point in time. Each call down the stack is separated by ; on that line. Looking at the middle of the lines we can see the syscall being called is read(): .... ;do_syscall_64;sys_read; ... So cadvisor is spending a lot of time in a read() syscall relating to mem_cgroup_* functions (the top of the call stack / end of line).

The call stack trace isn’t convenient to see what’s being read, so let’s use strace to see what cadvisor is doing and find 100ms-or-slower syscalls:

theojulienne@kube-node-bad ~ $ sudo strace -p 10137 -T -ff 2>&1 | egrep '<0\.[1-9]' [pid 10436] <... futex resumed> ) = 0 <0.156784> [pid 10432] <... futex resumed> ) = 0 <0.258285> [pid 10137] <... futex resumed> ) = 0 <0.678382> [pid 10384] <... futex resumed> ) = 0 <0.762328> [pid 10436] <... read resumed> "cache 154234880

rss 507904

rss_h"..., 4096) = 658 <0.179438> [pid 10384] <... futex resumed> ) = 0 <0.104614> [pid 10436] <... futex resumed> ) = 0 <0.175936> [pid 10436] <... read resumed> "cache 0

rss 0

rss_huge 0

mapped_"..., 4096) = 577 <0.228091> [pid 10427] <... read resumed> "cache 0

rss 0

rss_huge 0

mapped_"..., 4096) = 577 <0.207334> [pid 10411] <... epoll_ctl resumed> ) = 0 <0.118113> [pid 10382] <... pselect6 resumed> ) = 0 (Timeout) <0.117717> [pid 10436] <... read resumed> "cache 154234880

rss 507904

rss_h"..., 4096) = 660 <0.159891> [pid 10417] <... futex resumed> ) = 0 <0.917495> [pid 10436] <... futex resumed> ) = 0 <0.208172> [pid 10417] <... futex resumed> ) = 0 <0.190763> [pid 10417] <... read resumed> "cache 0

rss 0

rss_huge 0

mapped_"..., 4096) = 576 <0.154442>

Sure enough, we see the slow read() calls. From the content being read and mem_cgroup context above, these read() calls are to a memory.stat file which shows the memory usage and limits of a cgroup (the resource isolation technology used by Docker). cadvisor is polling this file to get resource utilization details for the containers. Let’s see if it’s the kernel or cadvisor that’s doing something unexpected by attempting the read ourselves:

theojulienne@kube-node-bad ~ $ time cat /sys/fs/cgroup/memory/memory.stat >/dev/null real 0m0.153s user 0m0.000s sys 0m0.152s theojulienne@kube-node-bad ~ $

Since we can reproduce it, this indicates that it’s the kernel hitting a pathologically bad case.

What causes this read to be so slow

At this point it’s much more simple to find similar issues reported by others. As it turns out, this has been reported to cadvisor as an excessive CPU usage problem, it just hadn’t been observed that latency was also being introduced to the network stack randomly as well. In fact, some folks internally had noticed cadvisor was consuming more CPU than expected, but it didn’t seem to be causing an issue since our servers had plenty of CPU capacity, and so the CPU usage hadn’t yet been investigated.

The overview of the issue is that the memory cgroup is accounting for memory usage inside a namespace (container). When all processes in that cgroup exit, the memory cgroup is released by Docker. However, “memory” isn’t just process memory, and although processes memory usage itself is gone, it turns out the kernel also assigns cached content like dentries and inodes (directory and file metadata) that are cached to the memory cgroup. From that issue:

“zombie” cgroups: cgroups that have no processes and have been deleted but still have memory charged to them (in my case, from the dentry cache, but it could also be from page cache or tmpfs).

Rather than the kernel iterating over every page in the cache at cgroup release time, which could be very slow, they choose to wait for those pages to be reclaimed and then finally clean up the cgroup once all are reclaimed when memory is needed, lazily. In the meantime, the cgroup still needs to be counted during stats collection.

From a performance perspective, they are trading off time on a slow process by amortizing it over the reclamation of each page, opting to make the initial cleanup fast in return for leaving some cached memory around. That’s fine, when the kernel reclaims the last of the cached memory, the cgroup eventually gets cleaned up, so it’s not really a “leak”. Unfortunately the search that memory.stat performs, the way it’s implemented on the kernel version (4.9) we’re running on some servers, combined with the huge amount of memory on our servers, means it can take a significantly long time for the last of the cached data to be reclaimed and for the zombie cgroup to be cleaned up.

It turns out we had nodes that had such a large number of zombie cgroups that some had reads/stalls of over a second.

The workaround on that cadvisor issue, to immediately free the dentries/inodes cache systemwide, immediately stopped the read latency, and also the network latency stalls on the host, since the dropping of the cache included the cached pages in the “zombie” cgroups and so they were also freed. This isn’t a solution, but it does validate the cause of the issue.

As it turns out newer kernel releases (4.19+) have improved the performance of the memory.stat call and so this is no longer a problem after moving to that kernel. In the interim, we had existing tooling that was able to detect problems with nodes in our Kubernetes clusters and gracefully drain and reboot them, which we used to detect the cases of high enough latency that would cause issues, and treat them with a graceful reboot. This gave us breathing room while OS and kernel upgrades were rolled out to the remainder of the fleet.

Wrapping up

Since this problem manifested as NIC RX queues not being processed for hundreds of milliseconds, it was responsible for both high latency on short connections and latency observed mid-connection such as between MySQL query and response packets. Understanding and maintaining performance of our most foundational systems like Kubernetes is critical to the reliability and speed of all services that build on top of them. As we invest in and improve on this performance, every system we run benefits from those improvements.