Skip to main content
Version: Next

Chaos Scenario


Chaos Scenario is a set of different operations coupled together to achieve desired chaos impact on a Kubernetes Cluster.
It is useful in automating a series of pre-conditioning steps or action which is necessary to be performed before triggering the chaos injection.
A Chaos Scenario can also be used to perform different operations parallelly to achieve a desired chaos injection scenario.

Prerequisites​

The following should be required before creating a Chaos Scenario:

How do we define and execute a Chaos Scenario ?​

LitmusChaos leverages the popular chaos scenario and GitOps tool Argo to achieve this goal. Argo enables the creation of different chaos scenarios together in from of chaos scenarios which are extremly simple and efficient to use.
With the help of ChaosCenter, chaos scenarios with different type of experiments can be created. In a Chaos Scenario, the experiments can be added in a parallel way and the user can tune the chaos scenario by adding additional steps to simulate a desired fault that might occur in production stage.

Life Cycle of a Chaos Scenario​

Here is a sample pod-delete chaos scenario from ChaosCenter.

apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: Workflow
metadata:
name: custom-chaos-workflow-1627980541
namespace: litmus
labels:
subject: custom-chaos-workflow_litmus
spec:
arguments:
parameters:
- name: adminModeNamespace
value: litmus
entrypoint: custom-chaos
securityContext:
runAsNonRoot: true
runAsUser: 1000
serviceAccountName: argo-chaos
templates:
- name: custom-chaos
steps:
- - name: install-chaos-experiments
template: install-chaos-experiments
- - name: pod-delete
template: pod-delete
- - name: revert-chaos
template: revert-chaos
- name: install-chaos-experiments
inputs:
artifacts:
- name: pod-delete
path: /tmp/pod-delete.yaml
raw:
data: >
apiVersion: litmuschaos.io/v1alpha1

description:
message: |
Deletes a pod belonging to a deployment/statefulset/daemonset
kind: ChaosExperiment

metadata:
name: pod-delete
labels:
name: pod-delete
app.kubernetes.io/part-of: litmus
app.kubernetes.io/component: chaosexperiment
app.kubernetes.io/version: 1.13.8
spec:
definition:
scope: Namespaced
permissions:
- apiGroups:
- ""
- apps
- apps.openshift.io
- argoproj.io
- batch
- litmuschaos.io
resources:
- deployments
- jobs
- pods
- pods/log
- replicationcontrollers
- deployments
- statefulsets
- daemonsets
- replicasets
- deploymentconfigs
- rollouts
- pods/exec
- events
- chaosengines
- chaosexperiments
- chaosresults
verbs:
- create
- list
- get
- patch
- update
- delete
- deletecollection
image: litmuschaos/go-runner:1.13.8
imagePullPolicy: Always
args:
- -c
- ./experiments -name pod-delete
command:
- /bin/bash
env:
- name: TOTAL_CHAOS_DURATION
value: "15"
- name: RAMP_TIME
value: ""
- name: FORCE
value: "true"
- name: CHAOS_INTERVAL
value: "5"
- name: PODS_AFFECTED_PERC
value: ""
- name: LIB
value: litmus
- name: TARGET_PODS
value: ""
- name: SEQUENCE
value: parallel
labels:
name: pod-delete
app.kubernetes.io/part-of: litmus
app.kubernetes.io/component: experiment-job
app.kubernetes.io/version: 1.13.8
container:
args:
- kubectl apply -f /tmp/pod-delete.yaml -n
{{workflow.parameters.adminModeNamespace}} | sleep 30
command:
- sh
- -c
image: litmuschaos/k8s:latest
- name: pod-delete
inputs:
artifacts:
- name: pod-delete
path: /tmp/chaosengine-pod-delete.yaml
raw:
data: |
apiVersion: litmuschaos.io/v1alpha1
kind: ChaosEngine
metadata:
namespace: "{{workflow.parameters.adminModeNamespace}}"
generateName: pod-delete
labels:
instance_id: 86a4f130-d99b-4e91-b34b-8f9eee22cb63
spec:
appinfo:
appns: default
applabel: app=nginx
appkind: deployment
jobCleanUpPolicy: retain
engineState: active
chaosServiceAccount: litmus-admin
experiments:
- name: pod-delete
spec:
components:
env:
- name: TOTAL_CHAOS_DURATION
value: "30"
- name: CHAOS_INTERVAL
value: "10"
- name: FORCE
value: "false"
- name: PODS_AFFECTED_PERC
value: ""
container:
args:
- -file=/tmp/chaosengine-pod-delete.yaml
- -saveName=/tmp/engine-name
image: litmuschaos/litmus-checker:latest
- name: revert-chaos
container:
image: litmuschaos/k8s:latest
command:
- sh
- -c
args:
- "kubectl delete chaosengine -l 'instance_id in
(86a4f130-d99b-4e91-b34b-8f9eee22cb63, )' -n
{{workflow.parameters.adminModeNamespace}} "
podGC:
strategy: OnWorkflowCompletion

The structure of a chaos scenario is similar to that of a Kubernetes Object. It consists of the mandatory fields like apiVersion, kind, metadata, spec.

The spec in a Chaos Scenario is where the different steps are mentioned and the overall life cycle of the chaos scenario is described. We can see different templates are present in the spec of a chaos scenario.

templates:
- name: custom-chaos
steps:
- - name: install-chaos-experiments
template: install-chaos-experiments
- - name: pod-delete
template: pod-delete
- - name: revert-chaos
template: revert-chaos

Here in this template, we can see different steps are present. These include installing the chaos experiments, executing the chaos engine of the experiment and at the end we have the revert chaos step which deletes/removes the resources that were created as part of the chaos scenario.

Some additional checks can be added with the experiments in the form of probes. These probes are defined in the ChaosEngines of the experiment and are updated when the experiment execution takes place. The overall chaos scenario result can be viewed with the ChaosResult CRD which contains the verdict and the probeSuccessPercentage (a ratio of successful checks v/s total probes).

What is a run?​

A chaos scenario run can be defined as single/one-time execution of the chaos scenario. There can be multiple runs of a single chaos scenario. If the chaos scenario consists of a cron syntax, it will run periodically according to the cron provided in the chaos scenario.

What is Resiliency Score?​

Resiliency score is the measure of how resilient is the chaos scenario when different chaos scenarios are performed on the Kubernetes System.

While creating a chaos scenario, certain weights are assigned to all the experiments present in the chaos scenario. These weights signify the priority/importance of the experiment. The higher the weight, the more significant is the experiment.

In ChaosCenter, the weight priority is generally divided into three sections:

  • 0-3: Low Priority
  • 4-6: Medium Priority
  • 7-10: High Priority

Once a weight has been assigned to the experiment, we look for the Probe Success Percentage for that experiment itself (Post Chaos) and calculate the total resilience result for that experiment as a multiplication of the weight given and the probe success percentage returned after the Chaos Run.

Total Resilience for one single experiment = (Weight Given to that experiment * Probe Success Percentage)
Overall Resilience Score = Total Test Result / Sum of the assigned weights of the experiments

What is a Cron Chaos Scenario?​

Cron Chaos Scenario is a type of chaos scenario that runs on a pre-defined schedule. It consists of a mandatory field spec.schedule. A cron syntax is provided in this field at which the chaos scenario execution takes place.

Here's a sample Cron Chaos Scenario for Podtato-Head application:

apiVersion: argoproj.io/v1alpha1
kind: CronWorkflow
metadata:
name: podtato-head-1628058291
namespace: litmus
labels:
subject: podtato-head_litmus
spec:
schedule: 10 0-23 * * *
concurrencyPolicy: Forbid
startingDeadlineSeconds: 0
workflowSpec:
entrypoint: argowf-chaos
serviceAccountName: argo-chaos
securityContext:
runAsUser: 1000
runAsNonRoot: true
arguments:
parameters:
- name: adminModeNamespace
value: litmus
templates:
- name: argowf-chaos
steps:
- - name: install-application
template: install-application
- - name: install-chaos-experiments
template: install-chaos-experiments
- - name: pod-delete
template: pod-delete
- - name: revert-chaos
template: revert-chaos
- name: delete-application
template: delete-application
- name: install-application
container:
image: litmuschaos/litmus-app-deployer:latest
args:
- -namespace={{workflow.parameters.adminModeNamespace}}
- -typeName=resilient
- -operation=apply
- -timeout=400
- -app=podtato-head
- -scope=namespace
- name: install-chaos-experiments
container:
image: litmuschaos/k8s:latest
command:
- sh
- -c
args:
- kubectl apply -f
https://hub.litmuschaos.io/api/chaos/1.13.7?file=charts/generic/experiments.yaml
-n {{workflow.parameters.adminModeNamespace}} ; sleep 30
- name: pod-delete
inputs:
artifacts:
- name: pod-delete
path: /tmp/chaosengine.yaml
raw:
data: >
apiVersion: litmuschaos.io/v1alpha1

kind: ChaosEngine

metadata:
namespace: "{{workflow.parameters.adminModeNamespace}}"
labels:
instance_id: 1b7ec920-75f9-4398-b4c3-9c3a5d7fd5c2
generateName: podtato-main-pod-delete-chaos
spec:
appinfo:
appns: "{{workflow.parameters.adminModeNamespace}}"
applabel: name=podtato-main
appkind: deployment
engineState: active
chaosServiceAccount: litmus-admin
jobCleanUpPolicy: retain
components:
runner:
imagePullPolicy: Always
experiments:
- name: pod-delete
spec:
probe:
- name: check-podtato-main-access-url
type: httpProbe
httpProbe/inputs:
url: http://podtato-main.{{workflow.parameters.adminModeNamespace}}.svc.cluster.local:9000
insecureSkipVerify: false
method:
get:
criteria: ==
responseCode: "200"
mode: Continuous
runProperties:
probeTimeout: 1
interval: 1
retry: 1
components:
env:
- name: TOTAL_CHAOS_DURATION
value: "30"
- name: CHAOS_INTERVAL
value: "10"
- name: FORCE
value: "false"
container:
image: litmuschaos/litmus-checker:latest
args:
- -file=/tmp/chaosengine.yaml
- -saveName=/tmp/engine-name
- name: delete-application
container:
image: litmuschaos/litmus-app-deployer:latest
args:
- -namespace={{workflow.parameters.adminModeNamespace}}
- -typeName=resilient
- -operation=delete
- -app=podtato-head
- name: revert-chaos
container:
image: litmuschaos/k8s:latest
command:
- sh
- -c
args:
- "kubectl delete chaosengine -l 'instance_id in
(1b7ec920-75f9-4398-b4c3-9c3a5d7fd5c2, )' -n
{{workflow.parameters.adminModeNamespace}} "
timezone: Asia/Calcutta

In the above chaos scenario, we can see the cron syntax at spec.schedule is

spec:
schedule: 10 0-23 * * *

This means the chaos scenario will be executed at the 10th minute of every hour.

A chaos scenario can be changed into Cron Chaos Scenario from the ChaosCenter. While scheduling a chaos scenario, in the Schedule step, there are few options as part of Recurring Schedules. These include:

  • Every hour
  • Every Day
  • Every Week
  • Every Month

Summary​

Chaos Scenario is combination of different steps combined together to perfrom a specific chaos use-case on a Kubernetes system. These steps can include install experiment steps, ChaosEngine CR for target selection, revert-chaos steps etc. Chaos Scenarios can be scheduled for a later time with the help of Cron Chaos Scenarios. These chaos scenarios consist of a cron syntax that is used for scheduling a chaos scenario. Once the chaos scenario execution is completed, the resiliency of the targeted application is calculated. Several weights are assigned to different experiments in the chaos scenario. These weights are used along with the ProbeSuccessPercentage to find out the resiliency score.

Resources​

Learn More​