77cfcc0b27
ch15 is now an account of what's actually running, not a roadmap for what we'd add: VictoriaMetrics + Jaeger + Grafana on 88oakappsUpdate fronted by Cloudflare and bearer-gated nginx, vmagent in-cluster, the internal/prom histogram set, the rollout's NetworkPolicy footprint, the obs.88oakapps.com endpoint shape, the ~$0/700MB resource budget, and a token-rotation runbook. The "what we still don't have" section keeps log aggregation, alerting, and full distributed tracing as the honest gap list. Other touched docs: - 00-overview: \"deliberately absent\" no longer claims we have no metrics — calls out the cross-cluster shape instead. - 14-deployment-process: TL;DR now points at deploy-k3s/scripts/03-deploy.sh (full build + push + apply + obs vmagent), with the manual kubectl-set-image flow kept as the single-service path. Notes the IfNotPresent gotcha that bit us during the rollout. - 16-failure-modes: adds vmagent-can't-reach-obs and Grafana-no-data. - 18-cost: $0 line item for the obs stack on 88oakappsUpdate, with the CX32 migration trigger. - 17/18 README + appendix b: link the new ch15, add the obs cheat sheet block. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
8.7 KiB
8.7 KiB
Appendix B — kubectl Cheat Sheet
Specific to this deployment. Assumes:
export KUBECONFIG=~/.kube/honeydue-k3s.yaml
Viewing state
# All pods in our namespace
kubectl get pods -n honeydue
# With node placement + IPs
kubectl get pods -n honeydue -o wide
# All resources in our namespace
kubectl get all -n honeydue
# Cluster-wide pod overview
kubectl get pods -A
# Node health
kubectl get nodes
kubectl top nodes
# What's using RAM
kubectl top pods -n honeydue --sort-by=memory
# What's using CPU
kubectl top pods -n honeydue --sort-by=cpu
Logs
# Follow all api pod logs
kubectl logs -n honeydue -l app.kubernetes.io/name=api -f --prefix
# One specific pod
kubectl logs -n honeydue <pod-name>
# Previous pod's logs (after crash)
kubectl logs -n honeydue <pod-name> --previous
# Filtered
kubectl logs -n honeydue deploy/api | grep -i error
kubectl logs -n honeydue deploy/api --since=1h
# stern is nicer for multi-pod (if installed)
stern -n honeydue api
Deploying new code
SHA=$(git rev-parse --short HEAD)
# Build + push (requires docker login to Gitea first)
docker buildx build --platform linux/amd64 --target api \
-t "gitea.treytartt.com/admin/honeydue-api:${SHA}" --push .
# Roll it in
kubectl set image deployment/api -n honeydue \
api="gitea.treytartt.com/admin/honeydue-api:${SHA}"
# Watch
kubectl rollout status -n honeydue deployment/api
Rolling update controls
# Pause a rollout in progress (new pods stop being created)
kubectl rollout pause deployment/api -n honeydue
# Resume
kubectl rollout resume deployment/api -n honeydue
# Rollback to previous version
kubectl rollout undo deployment/api -n honeydue
# Rollback to specific revision
kubectl rollout history deployment/api -n honeydue
kubectl rollout undo deployment/api -n honeydue --to-revision=3
# Force restart (re-pulls image if digest changed; reloads ConfigMap)
kubectl rollout restart deployment/api -n honeydue
Scaling
# Scale up
kubectl scale deployment/api -n honeydue --replicas=5
# Scale down
kubectl scale deployment/api -n honeydue --replicas=3
# Kill everything (emergency)
kubectl scale deployment -n honeydue --all --replicas=0
# Bring back
kubectl scale deployment/api -n honeydue --replicas=3
kubectl scale deployment/admin deployment/worker deployment/redis -n honeydue --replicas=1
Debugging a pod
# Describe = events + state + restart history
kubectl describe pod -n honeydue <pod-name>
# Shell in
kubectl exec -it -n honeydue deploy/api -- /bin/sh
# Inside:
# Test HTTP locally (bypasses Traefik, Service, overlay)
wget -qO- http://127.0.0.1:8000/api/health/
# Test cross-Service DNS
getent hosts redis
getent hosts admin
getent hosts postgres
# Run arbitrary command (one-shot)
kubectl exec -n honeydue deploy/api -- env | grep POSTGRES
Networking checks
# Resolve a Service from a pod
kubectl exec -n honeydue deploy/api -- nslookup redis
# Check Service endpoints (the actual IPs behind a ClusterIP)
kubectl get endpoints -n honeydue api
# Traffic test via Service
kubectl run test --rm -it --image=alpine/curl -- sh
# curl http://api.honeydue.svc:8000/api/health/
# List all Ingresses
kubectl get ingress -A
Secret / Config
# List
kubectl get secrets -n honeydue
kubectl get configmap -n honeydue
# Describe (shows keys, not values)
kubectl describe secret honeydue-secrets -n honeydue
# Read a value (DANGER: plaintext to stdout)
kubectl get secret honeydue-secrets -n honeydue \
-o jsonpath='{.data.POSTGRES_PASSWORD}' | base64 -d; echo
# Update a single secret key
kubectl patch secret honeydue-secrets -n honeydue \
--type=merge -p "{\"data\":{\"SECRET_KEY\":\"$(echo -n 'new-val' | base64)\"}}"
# Regenerate ConfigMap from prod.env
kubectl create configmap honeydue-config -n honeydue \
--from-env-file=deploy/prod.env \
--dry-run=client -o yaml | kubectl apply -f -
# Edit a ConfigMap interactively (does NOT restart pods)
kubectl edit configmap honeydue-config -n honeydue
Node management
# Prevent scheduling on a node
kubectl cordon <node-hostname>
# Prevent scheduling + evict existing pods
kubectl drain <node-hostname> --ignore-daemonsets --delete-emptydir-data
# Allow scheduling again
kubectl uncordon <node-hostname>
# Label a node
kubectl label node <node-hostname> honeydue/redis=true --overwrite
# Remove a label
kubectl label node <node-hostname> honeydue/redis-
Events (the timeline)
# All events, newest last
kubectl get events -A --sort-by=.lastTimestamp
# Watch live
kubectl get events -A --sort-by=.lastTimestamp -w
# Only warnings
kubectl get events -A --field-selector type=Warning
# Events for a specific pod
kubectl describe pod -n honeydue <pod> | awk '/Events:/,0'
Traefik-specific
# All Traefik pods (DaemonSet, so one per node)
kubectl get pods -n kube-system -l app.kubernetes.io/name=traefik -o wide
# Restart Traefik across all nodes
kubectl rollout restart daemonset/traefik -n kube-system
# View Traefik config (via ConfigMap)
kubectl get cm -n kube-system traefik -o yaml | less
# See the HelmChartConfig we applied
kubectl get helmchartconfig -n kube-system traefik -o yaml
# Force Helm re-reconcile
kubectl delete job -n kube-system helm-install-traefik
Cluster-wide operations
# API server health
kubectl cluster-info
# All namespaces
kubectl get namespaces
# All k3s-system pods
kubectl get pods -n kube-system
# All ServiceAccounts in our namespace
kubectl get sa -n honeydue
# Check what an SA can do
kubectl auth can-i --list --as=system:serviceaccount:honeydue:api
Hetzner SSH (not kubectl but oft needed)
# SSH in
ssh -i ~/.ssh/hetzner deploy@hetzner1
# Check k3s service
ssh -i ~/.ssh/hetzner deploy@hetzner1 'sudo systemctl status k3s'
# Per-node commands in parallel (e.g., apt upgrade)
for h in hetzner1 hetzner2 hetzner3; do
ssh -i ~/.ssh/hetzner "deploy@$h" 'sudo apt update && sudo apt upgrade -y'
done
Emergency: cluster is wedged
# Check all nodes Ready
kubectl get nodes
# If one is NotReady
ssh -i ~/.ssh/hetzner deploy@<node> 'sudo systemctl restart k3s'
# If still bad, kill k3s on that node and check
ssh -i ~/.ssh/hetzner deploy@<node> 'sudo /usr/local/bin/k3s-killall.sh'
ssh -i ~/.ssh/hetzner deploy@<node> 'sudo systemctl start k3s'
# Last resort: uninstall + rejoin
# ssh -i ~/.ssh/hetzner deploy@<node> 'sudo /usr/local/bin/k3s-uninstall.sh'
# then re-join via the k3s install command
Observability
# Hit api /metrics from inside the cluster
kubectl -n honeydue exec deploy/vmagent -- wget -qO- http://api:8000/metrics | head -30
# vmagent self-stats: scrapes succeeded, samples shipped, queue health
kubectl -n honeydue exec deploy/vmagent -- wget -qO- http://127.0.0.1:8429/metrics \
| grep -E "scrapes_total|targets|remotewrite_samples_dropped|persistentqueue_blocks_dropped"
# Force vmagent to reload config (after editing the ConfigMap)
kubectl -n honeydue rollout restart deploy/vmagent
# Query VictoriaMetrics by SSH'ing to the obs box
ssh 88oakappsUpdate 'curl -s "http://127.0.0.1:8428/api/v1/query?query=up"'
# p95 latency by route, last 5m
ssh 88oakappsUpdate 'curl -s "http://127.0.0.1:8428/api/v1/query?query=histogram_quantile(0.95,sum%20by%20(route,le)(rate(http_request_duration_seconds_bucket%5B5m%5D)))" | python3 -m json.tool'
# All metric names landing in VM
ssh 88oakappsUpdate 'curl -s http://127.0.0.1:8428/api/v1/label/__name__/values | python3 -m json.tool'
# Restart the obs stack on 88oakappsUpdate (VM + Jaeger + Grafana)
ssh 88oakappsUpdate 'cd /opt/honeydue-obs && sudo docker compose restart'
# Live RAM usage of the obs containers
ssh 88oakappsUpdate 'sudo docker stats --no-stream | grep honeydue-obs'
# Test the obs ingest endpoint with auth
TOKEN=$(grep ^OBS_INGEST_TOKEN= deploy/prod.env | cut -d= -f2)
curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code}\n" https://obs.88oakapps.com/health \
-H "Authorization: Bearer $TOKEN" # 200 = healthy
Dashboards live at https://grafana.88oakapps.com/d/honeydue-red.
Admin credentials in deploy/prod.env.
One-liners worth memorizing
# Heavy smoke test through CF
for url in https://api.myhoneydue.com/api/health/ https://admin.myhoneydue.com/ https://myhoneydue.com/; do
ok=0
for i in $(seq 1 20); do
[[ "$(curl -sS -o /dev/null -w '%{http_code}' --max-time 10 "$url")" == "200" ]] && ok=$((ok+1))
done
printf "%-45s %d/20\n" "$url" "$ok"
done
# Pods not ready
kubectl get pods -A | awk '$3!="Running" && $3!="Completed" && $3!="STATUS"'
# Restart everything in our namespace
for d in api admin worker redis; do
kubectl rollout restart deploy/$d -n honeydue
done
# Watch all rollouts simultaneously
for d in api admin worker redis; do
kubectl rollout status deploy/$d -n honeydue &
done; wait