Logging with Kubernetes
We need to carefully consider our logging strategy with Kubernetes. There are several types of logs that are relevant for monitoring purposes. Our workloads run in containers, of course, and we care about these logs, but we also care about the logs of Kubernetes components such as kubelets and the container runtime. In addition, chasing logs across multiple nodes and containers is a non-starter. The best practice is to use central logging (also known as log aggregation). There are several options here that we will explore soon.
Container logs
Kubernetes stores the standard output and standard error of every container. They are made available through the kubectl logs command.
Here is a pod manifest that prints the current date and time every 10 seconds:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: now
spec:
containers:
- name: now
image: g1g1/py-kube:0.2
command: ["/bin/bash", "-c", "while true; do sleep...