We're sorry but this page doesn't work properly without JavaScript enabled. Please enable it to continue.
Feedback

eBPF powered

Formale Metadaten

Titel
eBPF powered
Untertitel
Kubernetes performance analysis
Alternativer Titel
eBPF powered Distributed Kubernetes performance analysis
Serientitel
Anzahl der Teile
561
Autor
Lizenz
CC-Namensnennung 2.0 Belgien:
Sie dürfen das Werk bzw. den Inhalt zu jedem legalen Zweck nutzen, verändern und in unveränderter oder veränderter Form vervielfältigen, verbreiten und öffentlich zugänglich machen, sofern Sie den Namen des Autors/Rechteinhabers in der von ihm festgelegten Weise nennen.
Identifikatoren
Herausgeber
Erscheinungsjahr
Sprache

Inhaltliche Metadaten

Fachgebiet
Genre
Abstract
Since the Linux kernel 4.x series a lot of enanchements reached mainline to the eBPF ecosystem giving us the capability to do a lot more than just network stuff. The purpose of this talk is to give an initial understanding on what eBPF programs are and how to hook them to programs running inside Kubernetes clusters in order to answer targeted questions at cluster level but about very specific fine-grained situations happening in our programs and systems, like: - Had that function in my program been called ? - For a given function which arguments have been passed to it? And what it did return? - Which TCP packets are being retransmitted? - What are the queries running slow? - Insights on programming language events/gc - Had that file been opened? Imagine a programmable Kubernetes performance analysis tool that runs at cluster level without performance implications how would you it to be?