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Adding troubleshooting section for Elastic Agent on Kubernetes and Ku…
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…stomize (#1409) (#1426)

Co-authored-by: Brandon Morelli <[email protected]>
Co-authored-by: David Kilfoyle <[email protected]>
Co-authored-by: Andrew Gizas <[email protected]>
(cherry picked from commit 9eeb6a8)

Co-authored-by: Edu González de la Herrán <[email protected]>
Co-authored-by: David Kilfoyle <[email protected]>
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Expand Up @@ -60,6 +60,7 @@ Find troubleshooting information for {fleet}, {fleet-server}, and {agent} in the
* <<fleet-server-integration-removed>>
* <<agent-oom-k8s>>
* <<agent-sudo-error>>
* <<agent-kubernetes-kustomize>>


[discrete]
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -830,3 +831,135 @@ Error: error loading agent config: error loading raw config: fail to read config

To resolve this, either install {agent} without the `--unprivileged` flag so that it has administrative access, or run the {agent} commands without the `sudo` prefix.

[discrete]
[[agent-kubernetes-kustomize]]
== Troubleshoot {agent} installation on Kubernetes, with Kustomize

Potential issues during {agent} installation on Kubernetes can be categorized into two main areas:

. <<agent-kustomize-manifest>>.
. <<agent-kustomize-after>>.

[discrete]
[[agent-kustomize-manifest]]
=== Problems related to the creation of objects within the manifest

When troubleshooting installations performed with https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/kustomize[Kustomize], it's good practice to inspect the output of the rendered manifest. To do this, take the installation command provided by Kibana Onboarding and replace the final part, `| kubectl apply -f-`, with a redirection to a local file. This allows for easier analysis of the rendered output.

For example, the following command, originally provided by {kib} for an {agent} Standalone installation, has been modified to redirect the output for troubleshooting purposes:

[source,sh]
----
kubectl kustomize https://github.com/elastic/elastic-agent/deploy/kubernetes/elastic-agent-kustomize/default/elastic-agent-standalone\?ref\=v8.15.3 | sed -e 's/JUFQSV9LRVkl/ZDAyNnZaSUJ3eWIwSUlCT0duRGs6Q1JfYmJoVFRUQktoN2dXTkd0FNMtdw==/g' -e "s/%ES_HOST%/https:\/\/7a912e8674a34086eacd0e3d615e6048.us-west2.gcp.elastic-cloud.com:443/g" -e "s/%ONBOARDING_ID%/db687358-2c1f-4ec9-86e0-8f1baa4912ed/g" -e "s/\(docker.elastic.co\/beats\/elastic-agent:\).*$/\18.15.3/g" -e "/{CA_TRUSTED}/c\ " > elastic_agent_installation_complete_manifest.yaml
----

The previous command generates a local file named `elastic_agent_installation_complete_manifest.yaml`, which you can use for further analysis. It contains the complete set of resources required for the {agent} installation, including:

* RBAC objects (`ServiceAccounts`, `Roles`, etc.)

* `ConfigMaps` and `Secrets` for {agent} configuration

* {agent} Standalone deployed as a `DaemonSet`

* https://github.com/kubernetes/kube-state-metrics[Kube-state-metrics] deployed as a `Deployment`

The content of this file is equivalent to what you'd obtain by following the <<running-on-kubernetes-standalone>> steps, with the exception that `kube-state-metrics` is not included in the standalone method.

**Possible issues**

* If your user doesn't have *cluster-admin* privileges, the RBAC resources creation might fail.

* Some Kubernetes security mechanisms (like https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/security/pod-security-standards/[Pod Security Standards]) could cause part of the manifest to be rejected, as `hostNetwork` access and `hostPath` volumes are required.

* If you already have an installation of `kube-state-metrics`, it could cause part of the manifest installation to fail or to update your existing resources without notice.

[discrete]
[[agent-kustomize-after]]
=== Failures occurring within specific components after installation

If the installation is correct and all resources are deployed, but data is not flowing as expected (for example, you don't see any data on the *[Metrics Kubernetes] Cluster Overview* dashboard), check the following items:

. Check resources status and ensure they are all in a `Running` state:
+
[source,sh]
----
kubectl get pods -n kube-system | grep elastic
kubectl get pods -n kube-system | grep kube-state-metrics
----
+
[NOTE]
====
The default configuration assumes that both `kube-state-metrics` and the {agent} `DaemonSet` are deployed in the **same namespace** for communication purposes. If you change the namespace of any of the components, the agent configuration will need further policy updates.
====

. Describe the Pods if they are in a `Pending` state:
+
[source,sh]
----
kubectl describe -n kube-system <name_of_elastic_agent_pod>
----

. Check the logs of elastic-agents and kube-state-metrics, and look for errors or warnings:
+
[source,sh]
----
kubectl logs -n kube-system <name_of_elastic_agent_pod>
kubectl logs -n kube-system <name_of_elastic_agent_pod> | grep -i error
kubectl logs -n kube-system <name_of_elastic_agent_pod> | grep -i warn
----
+
[source,sh]
----
kubectl logs -n kube-system <name_of_kube-state-metrics_pod>
----

**Possible issues**

* Connectivity, authorization, or authentication issues when connecting to {es}:
+
Ensure the API Key and {es} destination endpoint used during the installation is correct and is reachable from within the Pods.
+
In an already installed system, the API Key is stored in a `Secret` named `elastic-agent-creds-<hash>`, and the endpoint is configured in the `ConfigMap` `elastic-agent-configs-<hash>`.

* Missing cluster-level metrics (provided by `kube-state-metrics`):
+
As described in <<running-on-kubernetes-standalone>>, the {agent} Pod acting as `leader` is responsible for retrieving cluster-level metrics from `kube-state-metrics` and delivering them to {ref}/data-streams.html[data streams] prefixed as `metrics-kubernetes.state_<resource>`. In order to troubleshoot a situation where these metrics are not appearing:
+
. Determine which Pod owns the <<kubernetes_leaderelection-provider, leadership>> `lease` in the cluster, with:
+
[source,sh]
----
kubectl get lease -n kube-system elastic-agent-cluster-leader
----
+
. Check the logs of that Pod to see if there are errors when connecting to `kube-state-metrics` and if the `state_*` metrics are being sent to {es}.
+
One way to check if `state_*` metrics are being delivered to {es} is to inspect log lines with the `"Non-zero metrics in the last 30s"` message and check the values of the `state_*` metrics within the line, with something like:
+
[source,sh]
----
kubectl logs -n kube-system elastic-agent-xxxx | grep "Non-zero metrics" | grep "state_"
----
+
If the previous command returns `"state_pod":{"events":213,"success":213}` or similar for all `state_*` metrics, it means the metrics are being delivered.
+
. As a last resort, if you believe none of the Pods is acting as a leader, you can try deleting the `lease` to generate a new one:
+
[source,sh]
----
kubectl delete lease -n kube-system elastic-agent-cluster-leader
# wait a few seconds and check for the lease again
kubectl get lease -n kube-system elastic-agent-cluster-leader
----

* Performance problems:
+
Monitor the CPU and Memory usage of the agents Pods and adjust the manifest requests and limits as needed. Refer to <<scaling-on-kubernetes>> for more details about the needed resources.

Extra resources for {agent} on Kubernetes troubleshooting and information:

* <<agent-oom-k8s>>.

* https://github.com/elastic/elastic-agent/tree/main/deploy/kubernetes/elastic-agent-kustomize/default[{agent} Kustomize Templates] documentation and resources.

* Other examples and manifests to deploy https://github.com/elastic/elastic-agent/tree/main/deploy/kubernetes[{agent} on Kubernetes].

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