NetAssert
is a command line tool that enables you to check the network connectivity between Kubernetes objects such as Pods, Deployments, DaemonSets, and StatefulSets, as well as test their connectivity to remote hosts or IP addresses. NetAssert
v2 is a rewrite of original NetAssert
tool in Go that utilises the ephemeral container support in Kubernetes to verify network connectivity. NetAssert
test(s) are defined in YAML format. NetAssert
currently supports TCP and UDP protocols:
-
To perform a TCP test, only a
scanner
container is used. This container requires no privileges nor any Linux capabilities. -
To run a UDP test, a
sniffer
ephemeral container is injected into the target Pod which requirescap_raw
capabilities to read data from the network interface. During UDP testing,NetAssert
runs both containerscanner
andsniffer
container images which are injected asephemeral
containers into running Pods.
The sniffer
and scanner
container images can be downloaded from:
docker.io/controlplane/netassertv2-l4-client:latest
- Used for both TCP and UDP testing and acts as a Layer 4 (TCP/UDP) client
- Requires no privileges nor any Linux capabilities.
docker.io/controlplane/netassertv2-packet-sniffer:latest
- Used for UDP testing only, injected at the destination to capture packet and search for specific string in the payload
- requires
cap_raw
capabilities to read data from the network interface
NetAssert
utilises the above containers during test and configures them using environment variables. The list of environment variables that are used can be found here and here. It is possible to override the sniffer
and scanner
images from command line during a run, so one can also bring their own container image(s) as long as they support the same environment variables.
-
Please download the latest stable version of
NetAssert
from releases page. The binary is available for Linux, MacOS and Windows platforms. -
If you are on Unix/Linux, you can also use the download.sh script to download the latest version of
NetAssert
into the current path:
curl -sL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/controlplaneio/netassert/master/download.sh | bash
NetAssert
v2 tests are written in YAML format. Each test is a YAML document which supports the following mappings:
- A YAML document is a list of
NetAssert
test. Each test has the following keys:- name: a scalar representing the name of the connection
- type: a scalar representing the type of connection, only "k8s" is supported at this time
- protocol: a scalar representing the protocol used for the connection, which must be "tcp" or "udp"
- targetPort: an integer scalar representing the target port used by the connection
- timeoutSeconds: an integer scalar representing the timeout for the connection in seconds
- attempts: an integer scalar representing the number of connection attempts for the test
- exitCode: an integer scalar representing the expected exit code from the ephemeral/debug container(s)
- src: a mapping representing the source Kubernetes resource, which has the following keys:
- k8sResource: a mapping representing a Kubernetes resource with the following keys:
- kind: a scalar representing the kind of the Kubernetes resource, which can be
deployment
,statefulset
,daemonset
orpod
- name: a scalar representing the name of the Kubernetes resource
- namespace: a scalar representing the namespace of the Kubernetes resource
- kind: a scalar representing the kind of the Kubernetes resource, which can be
- k8sResource: a mapping representing a Kubernetes resource with the following keys:
- dst: a mapping representing the destination Kubernetes resource or host, which can have one of the the following keys i.e both
k8sResource
andhost
are not supported at the same time :- k8sResource: a mapping representing a Kubernetes resource with the following keys:
- kind: a scalar representing the kind of the Kubernetes resource, which can be
deployment
,statefulset
,daemonset
orpod
- name: a scalar representing the name of the Kubernetes resource
- namespace: a scalar representing the namespace of the Kubernetes resource. (Note: Only allowed when protocol is "tcp")
- kind: a scalar representing the kind of the Kubernetes resource, which can be
- host: a mapping representing a host/node with the following key:
- name: a scalar representing the name or IP address of the host/node. (Note: Only allowed when protocol is "tcp" or "udp", but not both at the same time)
- k8sResource: a mapping representing a Kubernetes resource with the following keys:
This is an example of a test that can be consumed by `NetAssert` utility
---
- name: busybox-deploy-to-echoserver-deploy
type: k8s
protocol: tcp
targetPort: 8080
timeoutSeconds: 67
attempts: 3
exitCode: 0
src:
k8sResource:
kind: deployment
name: busybox
namespace: busybox
dst:
k8sResource:
kind: deployment
name: echoserver
namespace: echoserver
#######
#######
- name: busybox-deploy-to-core-dns
type: k8s
protocol: udp
targetPort: 53
timeoutSeconds: 67
attempts: 3
exitCode: 0
src:
k8sResource:
kind: deployment
name: busybox
namespace: busybox
dst:
k8sResource:
kind: deployment
name: coredns
namespace: kube-system
######
######
- name: busybox-deploy-to-web-statefulset
type: k8s
protocol: tcp
targetPort: 80
timeoutSeconds: 67
attempts: 3
exitCode: 0
src:
k8sResource: # this is type endpoint
kind: deployment
name: busybox
namespace: busybox
dst:
k8sResource: ## this is type endpoint
kind: statefulset
name: web
namespace: web
###
###
- name: fluentd-daemonset-to-web-statefulset
type: k8s
protocol: tcp
targetPort: 80
timeoutSeconds: 67
attempts: 3
exitCode: 0
src:
k8sResource: # this is type endpoint
kind: daemonset
name: fluentd
namespace: fluentd
dst:
k8sResource: ## this is type endpoint
kind: statefulset
name: web
namespace: web
###
####
- name: busybox-deploy-to-control-plane-dot-io
type: k8s
protocol: tcp
targetPort: 80
timeoutSeconds: 67
attempts: 3
exitCode: 0
src:
k8sResource: # type endpoint
kind: deployment
name: busybox
namespace: busybox
dst:
host: # type host or node or machine
name: control-plane.io
###
###
- name: test-from-pod1-to-pod2
type: k8s
protocol: tcp
targetPort: 80
timeoutSeconds: 67
attempts: 3
exitCode: 0
src:
k8sResource: ##
kind: pod
name: pod1
namespace: pod1
dst:
k8sResource:
kind: pod
name: pod2
namespace: pod2
###
###
- name: busybox-deploy-to-fake-host
type: k8s
protocol: tcp
targetPort: 333
timeoutSeconds: 67
attempts: 3
exitCode: 1
src:
k8sResource: # type endpoint
kind: deployment
name: busybox
namespace: busybox
dst:
host: # type host or node or machine
name: 0.0.0.0
...
NetAssert
has three main components:
- NetAssert: This is responsible for orchestrating the tests and is also known as
Netassert-Engine
or simply theEngine
- NetAssertv2-packet-sniffer: This is the sniffer component that is utilised during a UDP test and is injected to the destination/target Pod as an ephemeral container
- NetAssertv2-l4-client: This is the scanner component that is injected as the scanner ephemeral container onto the source Pod and is utilised during both TCP and UDP tests
All the tests are read from an YAML file or a directory (step 1) and the results are written following the TAP format (step 5 for UDP and step 4 for TCP). The tests are performed in two different manners depending on whether a TCP or UDP connection is used
- Validate the test spec and ensure that the
src
anddst
fields are correct: for udp tests both of them must be of typek8sResource
- Find a running Pod called
dstPod
in the object defined by thedst.k8sResource
field. Ensure that the Pod is in running state and has an IP address allocated by the CNI - Find a running Pod called
srcPod
in the object defined by thesrc.k8sResource
field. Ensure that the Pod is in running state and has an IP address allocated by the CNI - Generate a random UUID, which will be used by both ephemeral containers
- Inject the
netassert-l4-client
as an ephemeral container in thesrcPod
(step 2) and set the port and protocol according to the test specifications. Provide also the target host equal to the previously found dstPod IP address, and the random UUID that was generated in the previous step as the message to be sent over the udp connection. At the same time, inject thenetassertv2-packet-sniffer
(step 3) as an ephemeral container in thedstPod
using the protocol, search string, number of matches and timeout defined in the test specifications. The search_string environment variable is equal to the UUID that was generated in the previous step which is expected to be found in the data sent by the scanner when the connections are successful. - Poll that status of the ephemeral containers (step 4)
- Ensure that the
netassertv2-packet-sniffer
ephemeral sniffer container’s exit status matches the one defined in the test specification - Ensure that the
netassert-l4-client
, exits with exit status of zero. This should always be the case as UDP is not a connection oriented protocol.
- Validate the test spec and ensure that the
src
field is of typek8sResource
- Find a running Pod called
srcPod
in the object defined by thesrc.k8sResource
field. Ensure that the Pod is in running state and has an IPAddress - Check if
dst
hask8sResource
defined as a child object. If so then find a running Pod defined by thedst.K8sResource
- Inject the
netassert-l4-client
as an ephemeral container in thesrcPod
(step 2). Configure thenetassert-l4-client
similarly to the udp case. If thedst
field is set tohost
then use the hostname
field as the scanner target host - Poll that status of the ephemeral containers (step 3)
- Ensure that the exit code of that container matches the
exitCode
field defined in the test specification
- You will need Go version 1.20.x or higher. Download the latest version of just. To build the project you can use
just build
. The resulting binary will be incmd/netassert/cli/netassert
. To rununit
tests you can usejust test
. There is a separate README.md that detailsend-to-end
testing.
-
Make sure you have installed
kind
and its prerequisites -
Make sure you have also installed
just
-
Download the
NetAssert
binary from the release page -
If you want to quickly test
NetAssert
, you can make use of the sample test(s) and manifests provided -
You will also need a working kubernetes cluster with ephemeral/debug container support, you can spin one quickly using the
justfile
included in the repo
❯ just kind-down ; just kind-up
- In order to use the sample tests, you need to create kubernetes resources:
❯ just k8s-apply
kubectl apply -f ./kubernetes/manifests
namespace/fluentd created
daemonset.apps/fluentd created
namespace/echoserver created
namespace/busybox created
deployment.apps/echoserver created
deployment.apps/busybox created
namespace/web created
statefulset.apps/web created
- Run the netassert binary pointing it to the test cases, one of the test cases will fail and this is by design:
## if you have Go installed, you can build the binary using the the following command
❯ just build ## from the root of the project
go build -ldflags="-X 'main.appName=NetAssert' -X 'main.version=2.0.0-dev'" -o bin/netassert cmd/netassert/cli/*.go
❯ bin/netassert run --input-file ./sample-tests/test-cases/test-cases.yaml
❯ cat results.tap
TAP version 14
1..6
ok 1 - busybox-deploy-to-echoserver-deploy
ok 2 - busybox-deploy-to-echoserver-deploy-2
ok 3 - busybox-deploy-to-web-statefulset
ok 4 - busybox-deploy-to-control-plane-dot-io
ok 5 - test-from-pod1-to-pod2
not ok 6 - busybox-deploy-to-fake-host
---
reason: ephemeral container netassertv2-client-7y16ra1f9 exit code for test busybox-deploy-to-fake-host
is 1 instead of 0
NetAssert is architected for compatibility with Kubernetes versions that offer support for ephemeral containers. We have thoroughly tested NetAssert with Kubernetes versions 1.25 to 1.28, confirming compatibility and performance stability.
For broader validation, our team has also executed comprehensive end-to-end tests against various Kubernetes distributions and CNIs which is detailed below:
Kubernetes Distribution | Supported Version | Container Network Interface (CNI) |
---|---|---|
Amazon EKS | 1.25 and higher | AWS VPC CNI |
Amazon EKS | 1.25 and higher | Calico (Version 3.25 or later) |
Google GKE | 1.24 and higher | Google Cloud Platform VPC CNI |
Google GKE | 1.24 and higher | Google Cloud Dataplane V2 |
You can check for ephemeral container support using the following command:
❯ netassert ping
2023-03-27T11:25:28.421+0100 [INFO] [NetAssert-v2.0.0]: ✅ Successfully pinged /healthz endpoint of the Kubernetes server
2023-03-27T11:25:28.425+0100 [INFO] [NetAssert-v2.0.0]: ✅ Ephemeral containers are supported by the Kubernetes server
You can increase the logging level to debug
by passing --log-level
argument:
❯ netassert run --input-file ./sample-tests/test-cases/test-cases.yaml --log-level=debug
This tool can be run according to the Principle of Least Privilege (PoLP) by properly configuring the RBAC.
The list of required permissions can be found in the netassert
ClusterRole kubernetes/rbac/cluster-role.yaml
, which could be redefined as a Role for namespacing reasons if needed. This role can then be bound to a "principal" either through a RoleBinding or a ClusterRoleBinding, depending on whether the scope of the role is supposed to be namespaced or not. The ClusterRoleBinding kubernetes/rbac/cluster-rolebinding.yaml
is an example where the user netassert-user
is assigned the role netassert
using a cluster-wide binding called netassert
- When performing UDP scanning, the sniffer container image needs
cap_net_raw
capability so that it can bind and read packets from the network interface. As a result, admission controllers or other security mechanisms must be modified to allow thesniffer
image to run with this capability. Currently, the Security context used by the ephemeral sniffer container looks like the following:
...
...
securityContext:
allowPrivilegeEscalation: false
capabilities:
add:
- NET_RAW
runAsNonRoot: true
...
...
-
Although they do not consume any resources, ephemeral containers that are injected as part of the test(s) by
NetAssert
will remain in the Pod specification -
Service meshes are not be currently supported
- Please check this README.md