Files
vpp-maglev/docs/healthchecks.md
Pim van Pelt 744b1cb3d2 install-deps Makefile target; docs refresh; golangci-lint v2 clean
Makefile:
- New install-deps umbrella target split into three sub-targets:
  install-deps-apt        — Debian/Trixie-packaged build deps
                            (nodejs, npm, protobuf-compiler, git, make,
                            dpkg-dev, ca-certificates, curl, tar). Uses
                            sudo when not already root.
  install-deps-go         — ensures a Go toolchain >= GO_VERSION (go.mod
                            floor, default 1.25.0). Short-circuits when
                            the system Go is already recent enough;
                            otherwise downloads the upstream tarball
                            from go.dev/dl/ into /usr/local/go. Trixie
                            only ships 1.24 so this step is load-bearing.
  install-deps-go-tools   — go install protoc-gen-go, protoc-gen-go-grpc,
                            and golangci-lint/v2/cmd/golangci-lint. Then
                            asserts the installed golangci-lint version
                            parses as >= GOLANGCI_LINT_VERSION (default
                            1.64.0, the floor that supports Go 1.25
                            syntax) to catch stale binaries in $GOPATH
                            /bin before they silently run against Go
                            1.25 code.
- Parser bug fixed: golangci-lint v1.x prints "has version v1.64.8" but
  v2.x dropped the 'v' prefix and prints "has version 2.11.4". The
  original sed regex required the 'v' and returned an empty match on
  v2.x, making the assertion explode with "could not parse version
  output". Fixed by switching to extended regex (sed -En) with 'v?' so
  both forms parse cleanly.
- GO_VERSION and GOLANGCI_LINT_VERSION exposed as Makefile variables
  so operators can override on the command line, e.g.
    make install-deps GO_VERSION=1.25.5 GOLANGCI_LINT_VERSION=2.0.0
- .PHONY extended with the four new target names.

Docs:
- README.md: capability note rewritten to cover CAP_NET_RAW (ICMP) and
  the new CAP_SYS_ADMIN requirement when healthchecker.netns is set,
  plus a paragraph explaining that the Debian systemd unit grants both
  automatically. Docker example gained a second variant that shows the
  additional --cap-add SYS_ADMIN and /var/run/netns bind mount for
  netns-scoped deployments. Also notes that maglevd-frontend ignores
  SIGHUP so controlling-terminal disconnects don't kill it.
- docs/user-guide.md: Capabilities section rewritten as a bulleted
  list covering both caps, with the EPERM error string and three
  different ways to grant them (systemd unit, setcap, systemd-run);
  'show vpp lb counters' command description updated to explain that
  per-backend packet counts are no longer shown (LB plugin's
  forwarding node bypasses ip{4,6}_lookup_inline, so /net/route/to at
  the backend's FIB entry never ticks for LB-forwarded traffic); new
  ~75-line "What the SPA shows" subsection covering the scope
  selector + maglev_scope cookie, the per-maglevd frontend cards, the
  health-cascade icon table (ok / bug-buckets / primary-drained /
  degraded / unknown), the lb buckets column semantics, the
  maglev_zippy_open cookie, the admin-mode lifecycle dialogs with
  their plain-English consequence text, and the debug panel.
- docs/config-guide.md: healthchecker.netns field gains a capability-
  requirement note spelling out setns(CLONE_NEWNET), the EPERM
  symptom string, and the /var/run/netns/ readability requirement.
- docs/healthchecks.md: new "Jitter" subsection explaining the +/-10%
  scaling on every computed interval, and a "Probe timing while a
  probe is in flight" subsection that explains why fast-interval alone
  doesn't give fast fault detection against hanging backends (the
  probe loop is synchronous, so each iteration is timeout +
  fast-interval; the advice is to lower timeout, not fast-interval).
- docs/maglevd.8: description paragraph corrected (dropped the
  per-backend stats claim and added a short note pointing at the LB
  plugin forwarding-path bypass); new CAPABILITIES section between
  SIGNALS and FILES covering both CAP_NET_RAW and CAP_SYS_ADMIN with
  the drop-in-override hint.
- docs/maglevd-frontend.8: new SIGNALS section documenting the
  explicit SIGHUP ignore (so a controlling-terminal disconnect doesn't
  kill the daemon); description extended with paragraphs on the two
  persistence cookies (maglev_scope, maglev_zippy_open) and on the
  health-cascade icon + lb buckets column.
- docs/maglevc.1: left untouched — intentionally minimal and delegates
  to docs/user-guide.md.

Lint (26 issues across 12 files, all errcheck / ineffassign / S1021):
- cmd/frontend/handlers.go: _, _ = fmt.Fprintf(...) for the SSE retry
  hint and resync control-event writes.
- cmd/maglevc/commands.go: bulk-prefix every fmt.Fprintf(w, ...) with
  _, _ =; also merged 'var watchEventsOptSlot *Node; ... = &Node{...}'
  into a single := declaration (staticcheck S1021) — the self-
  referencing pattern still works because the Children back-ref is
  assigned on the next statement, not inside the struct literal.
- cmd/maglevc/complete.go: _, _ = fmt.Fprintf(ql.rl.Stderr(), ...)
  for the banner and help writes; removed the ineffectual
  'partial = ""' assignment (nothing downstream reads partial after
  that branch, so setting it was dead code flagged by ineffassign).
- cmd/maglevc/shell.go: defer func() { _ = rl.Close() }() for the
  readline instance; _, _ = fmt.Fprintf(rl.Stderr(), ...) for error
  display in the REPL loop.
- cmd/maglevc/main.go: defer func() { _ = conn.Close() }() for the
  gRPC client connection.
- internal/grpcapi/server_test.go: _ = conn.Close() in the test
  teardown closure.
- internal/prober/http.go: _ = c.Close() in the TLS-handshake-failed
  path; defer func() { _ = conn.Close() }() and defer func() { _ =
  resp.Body.Close() }() for the two deferred cleanups.
- internal/prober/http_test.go: defer func() { _ = resp.Body.Close()
  }() plus three _, _ = fmt.Fprint(w, ...) in the httptest.Server
  handlers and _, _ = fmt.Sscanf(...) when parsing the test listener's
  port.
- internal/prober/icmp.go: defer func() { _ = pc.Close() }() for the
  ICMP packet conn.
- internal/prober/netns.go: defer func() { _ = origNs.Close() }(),
  defer func() { _ = netns.Set(origNs) }(), defer func() { _ =
  targetNs.Close() }() — also dropped a stray //nolint:errcheck that
  was no longer needed once the closure wrapping handled the discard.
- internal/prober/tcp.go: _ = conn.Close() in the L4-only path,
  _ = tlsConn.Close() in the failed and succeeded handshake branches,
  _ = tlsConn.SetDeadline(...) (also dropped a //nolint:errcheck
  previously covering it).

Iterative 'make lint' runs were needed because golangci-lint v2.x
caps same-linter reports per pass, so the first pass reported 21,
then 4, then 3, then 1, then 0. Final pass: 0 issues. make test is
green across every package, and make build produces all three
binaries cleanly.
2026-04-14 17:37:53 +02:00

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# Health Checking
`maglevd` probes each backend independently of how many frontends reference it.
Every backend runs exactly one probe goroutine. State changes are broadcast as
gRPC events to all connected `WatchEvents` subscribers.
---
## States
| State | Meaning |
|---|---|
| `unknown` | Initial state; also entered after a resume or enable. |
| `up` | Backend is healthy and eligible to receive traffic. |
| `down` | Backend has failed enough consecutive probes to be considered offline. |
| `paused` | Health checking stopped by an operator. No probes are sent. |
| `disabled` | Backend disabled by an operator. No probes are sent. |
| `removed` | Backend removed from configuration by a reload. No probes are sent. |
---
## Rise / fall counter
The state machine is driven by HAProxy's single-integer health counter.
```
counter ∈ [0, rise + fall 1] (called Max below)
backend is UP when counter ≥ rise
backend is DOWN when counter < rise
```
On each probe:
- **pass** — counter increments, ceiling at Max.
- **fail** — counter decrements, floor at 0.
This gives **hysteresis**: a backend that is barely up (counter = rise) needs
`fall` consecutive failures before it transitions to down. A backend that is
fully down (counter = 0) needs `rise` consecutive passes to come back up. A
backend that oscillates between passing and failing stays in the degraded range
without bouncing between up and down.
### Expedited unknown resolution
When a backend enters `unknown` state (new, restarted, resumed, or re-enabled)
its counter is pre-loaded to `rise 1`. This means a single probe result is
enough to resolve the state:
- **1 pass** → `up`
- **1 fail** → `down` (also via the special unknown shortcut below)
In addition, any failure while state is `unknown` transitions immediately to
`down`, regardless of the counter value.
### Example: rise=2, fall=3 (Max=4)
```
counter: 0 1 2 3 4
state: DOWN DOWN UP UP UP
^
rise boundary
```
A backend starting from unknown has counter=1 (rise1). One pass → counter=2
→ up. One fail while unknown → down immediately.
A backend that just became up sits at counter=2. It needs 3 failures to go down
(2→1→0, crossing the rise boundary at 2→1).
A backend that has been fully healthy for a while sits at counter=4. It needs 3
failures to go down (4→3→2→1, crossing the rise boundary at 2→1).
---
## Probe intervals
The interval used between probes depends on the backend's counter state:
| Condition | Interval used |
|---|---|
| State is `unknown` | `fast-interval` (falls back to `interval`) |
| Counter = Max (fully healthy) | `interval` |
| Counter = 0 (fully down) | `down-interval` (falls back to `interval`) |
| Counter between 0 and Max (degraded) | `fast-interval` (falls back to `interval`) |
Using `fast-interval` in degraded and unknown states means a flapping or
recovering backend is re-evaluated quickly without waiting a full `interval`.
Using `down-interval` for fully down backends reduces probe traffic to servers
that are known to be offline.
### Jitter
Every computed interval is then scaled by a uniformly-distributed random
factor in `[0.9, 1.1)` before the probe worker sleeps. The `±10%` jitter
prevents all probes from aligning on the same tick after a restart or a
config reload — a deployment with dozens of backends would otherwise send a
bursty, phase-locked flight of probes every `interval`. The jitter is
applied once per probe iteration, not averaged across iterations, so the
long-run cadence is still the configured `interval`.
### Probe timing while a probe is in flight
The probe worker loop is synchronous: each iteration blocks on the probe's
completion (or its `timeout`) before computing the next `sleepFor`. That
means a fully-timing-out probe effectively runs at
`timeout + fast-interval` cadence, not `fast-interval` cadence. If you
want fast fault detection against backends that hang rather than refuse
the connection (e.g. a dead TCP stack, or an unreachable backend via a
blackhole route), lower `timeout` rather than `fast-interval`. Setting
`fast-interval` below `timeout` doesn't make probes fire more frequently —
it just changes the idle gap between a completed probe and the next one.
---
## Transition events
Every state change is logged as `backend-transition` and emitted as a gRPC
`BackendEvent` to all active `WatchEvents` streams.
### Backend added (config load or reload)
```
unknown → unknown (code: start)
```
The counter is pre-loaded to `rise 1`. The first probe fires after
`fast-interval` (or `interval` if not configured). One pass produces `unknown →
up`; one fail produces `unknown → down`.
If multiple backends start together they are staggered across the first
`interval` to avoid probe bursts.
### Probe pass
- Counter increments.
- If counter reaches `rise` from below: `down → up` (or `unknown → up`).
- If already up: no transition. Next probe at `fast-interval` if degraded,
`interval` if fully healthy.
### Probe fail
- Counter decrements.
- If counter drops below `rise` from above: `up → down`.
- If state is `unknown`: transition immediately to `down` regardless of counter.
- Next probe at `down-interval` if fully down, `fast-interval` if degraded.
### Pause
```
<any> → paused (operator action)
```
The counter is reset to 0. The probe goroutine is cancelled — no further
probes are sent and no traffic reaches the backend while it is paused. The
backend stays `paused` until explicitly resumed.
### Resume
```
paused → unknown (operator action)
```
The counter is reset to `rise 1`. A fresh probe goroutine is started,
which fires its first probe after `fast-interval` (or `interval` if not
configured). One pass produces `unknown → up`; one fail produces `unknown →
down`.
### Disable
```
<any> → disabled (operator action)
```
The probe goroutine is cancelled and the backend is marked `enabled: false`.
No further probes are sent. The backend remains visible via the gRPC API (state
`disabled`) and can be re-enabled without a config reload.
### Enable
```
disabled → unknown (operator action, via fresh goroutine)
```
A new probe goroutine is started and the backend re-enters `unknown` with the
counter pre-loaded to `rise 1`. The `enabled` flag is set back to `true`.
The first probe fires after `fast-interval` and resolves state as described
under *Backend added*.
### Backend removed (config reload)
```
<any> → removed (code: removed)
```
The probe goroutine stops. No further state changes occur. The removed event is
emitted using the frontend map from before the reload so that consumers can
correlate it to the correct frontend.
### Backend healthcheck config changed (config reload)
The old probe goroutine is stopped (`<any> → removed`) and a new one started
(`unknown → unknown`, code: `start`). The new goroutine resolves state on the
first probe as described under *Backend added* above.
### Backend metadata changed without healthcheck change (config reload)
Weight, enabled flag, and similar fields are updated in place. The probe
goroutine is not restarted and no transition event is emitted.
---
## Static (no-healthcheck) backends
A backend with no `healthcheck` field in YAML skips the probe loop entirely.
Instead of actually probing, `maglevd` synthesises a single passing result
on startup. Specifically:
- The worker's rise/fall counters are forced to `1/1`, so a single synthetic
pass is enough to reach `StateUp`.
- The first "probe" fires immediately (zero sleep). Subsequent iterations
idle at 30 seconds — there is nothing to do.
- The backend reaches `up` within milliseconds of startup.
Static backends are useful for administrative VIPs where the caller knows the
backend is always available, or for test configurations where deterministic
state is more valuable than real health signals.
---
## Pool failover
Every frontend has one or more pools. The pools are priority tiers: pool[0]
is the primary, pool[1] is the first fallback, pool[2] the next, and so on.
At any moment, `maglevd` computes an **active pool** — the first pool that
contains at least one backend in `StateUp`:
- As long as pool[0] has any up backend, it stays active. Its up backends
receive traffic at their configured weights; backends in lower-priority
pools stay on standby with effective weight 0.
- When pool[0] has zero up backends (all down, paused, disabled, or still
unknown), pool[1] is promoted: its up backends get their configured
weights, and pool[0] backends stay at 0 until at least one recovers.
- The same rule cascades to pool[2], pool[3], etc., for further fallback
tiers.
- When no pool has any up backend, every backend's effective weight is 0
and the VIP serves nothing.
Failover is evaluated on every backend state transition and also on the
periodic VPP drift reconciliation (every `maglev.vpp.lb.sync-interval`).
The resulting effective weight for each backend can be inspected via
`maglevc show frontends <name>` — each pool backend row shows both the
configured weight and the effective weight after failover.
Demotion on recovery (e.g. pool[1] → standby when pool[0] comes back up)
drains gracefully: the demoted backends have their weight set to 0 but
existing flows in the VPP flow table are left to drain naturally. The only
state that forces immediate flow-table flushing is operator `disable`.
---
## Log lines
All state changes produce a structured log line at `INFO` level:
```json
{"level":"INFO","msg":"backend-transition","backend":"nginx0-ams","from":"up","to":"paused"}
{"level":"INFO","msg":"backend-transition","backend":"nginx0-ams","from":"paused","to":"unknown"}
{"level":"INFO","msg":"backend-transition","backend":"nginx0-ams","from":"unknown","to":"up","code":"L7OK","detail":""}
```
Probe-driven transitions also carry `code` and `detail` fields from the probe
result (e.g. `L4CON`, `L7STS`, `connection refused`). Operator-driven
transitions (pause, resume, disable, enable) carry empty code and detail.