TiDB Kubernetes Control User Guide
TiDB Kubernetes Control (tkctl) is a command line utility that is used for TiDB Operator to maintain and diagnose the TiDB cluster on Kubernetes.
Installation
To install tkctl, you can download the pre-built binary or build tkctl from source.
Download the latest pre-built binary
After unzipping the downloaded file, you can add the tkctl executable file to your PATH to finish the installation.
Build from source
Requirement: Go >= the 1.11 version or later
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/pingcap/tidb-operator.git && \
GOOS=<YOUR_GOOS> make cli &&\
mv tkctl /usr/local/bin/tkctl
Shell auto-completion
You can configure the shell auto-completion for tkctl to simplify its usage.
To configure the auto-completion for BASH, you need to first install the bash-completion package, and configure with either of the two methods below:
Configure auto-completion in the current shell:
source <(tkctl completion bash)Add auto-completion permanently to your bash shell:
echo "if hash tkctl 2>/dev/null; then source <(tkctl completion bash); fi" >> ~/.bashrc
To configure the auto-completion for ZSH, you can choose from either of the two methods below:
Configure auto-completion in the current shell:
source <(tkctl completion zsh)Add auto-completion permanently to your zsh shell:
echo "if hash tkctl 2>/dev/null; then source <(tkctl completion zsh); fi" >> ~/.zshrc
Kubernetes configuration
tkctl reuses the kubeconfig file (the default location is ~/.kube/config) to connect with the Kubernetes cluster. You can verify whether kubeconfig is correctly configured by using the following command:
tkctl version
If the above command correctly outputs the version of TiDB Operator on the server side, then kubeconfig is correctly configured.
Commands
tkctl version
This command is used to show the version of the local tkctl and tidb-operator installed in the target cluster.
For example:
tkctl version
Client Version: v1.0.0-beta.1-p2-93-g6598b4d3e75705-dirty
TiDB Controller Manager Version: pingcap/tidb-operator:latest
TiDB Scheduler Version: pingcap/tidb-operator:latest
tkctl list
This command is used to list all installed TiDB clusters.
| Flag | Abbreviation | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| --all-namespaces | -A | Whether to search all Kubernetes namespaces | 
| --output | -o | The output format; you can choose from [default,json,yaml], and the default format is default | 
For example:
tkctl list -A
NAMESPACE NAME           PD    TIKV   TIDB   AGE
foo       demo-cluster   3/3   3/3    2/2    11m
bar       demo-cluster   3/3   3/3    1/2    11m
tkctl use
This command is used to specify the TiDB cluster that the current tkctl command operates on. After you specify a TiDB cluster by using this command, all commands that operates on a cluster will automatically select this cluster so the --tidbcluster option can be omitted.
For example:
tkctl use --namespace=foo demo-cluster
Tidb cluster switched to foo/demo-cluster
tkctl info
This command is used to display information about the TiDB cluster.
| Flag | Abbreviation | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| --tidb-cluster | -t | Specify a TiDB cluster; default to the TiDB cluster that is being used | 
For example:
tkctl info
Name:               demo-cluster
Namespace:          foo
CreationTimestamp:  2019-04-17 17:33:41 +0800 CST
Overview:
         Phase    Ready  Desired  CPU    Memory  Storage  Version
         -----    -----  -------  ---    ------  -------  -------
  PD:    Normal   3      3        200m   1Gi     1Gi      pingcap/pd:v3.0.0-rc.1
  TiKV:  Normal   3      3        1000m  2Gi     10Gi     pingcap/tikv:v3.0.0-rc.1
  TiDB   Upgrade  1      2        500m   1Gi              pingcap/tidb:v3.0.0-rc.1
Endpoints(NodePort):
  - 172.16.4.158:31441
  - 172.16.4.155:31441
tkctl get [component]
This is a group of commands that are used to get the details of TiDB cluster components.
You can query the following components: pd, tikv, tidb, volume and all (to query all components).
| Flag | Abbreviation | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| --tidb-cluster | -t | Specify a TiDB cluster; default to the TiDB cluster that is being used | 
| --output | -o | The output format; you can choose from [default,json,yaml], and the default format is default | 
For example:
tkctl get tikv
NAME                  READY   STATUS    MEMORY          CPU   RESTARTS   AGE     NODE
demo-cluster-tikv-0   2/2     Running   2098Mi/4196Mi   2/2   0          3m19s   172.16.4.155
demo-cluster-tikv-1   2/2     Running   2098Mi/4196Mi   2/2   0          4m8s    172.16.4.160
demo-cluster-tikv-2   2/2     Running   2098Mi/4196Mi   2/2   0          4m45s   172.16.4.157
tkctl get volume
VOLUME              CLAIM                      STATUS   CAPACITY   NODE           LOCAL
local-pv-d5dad2cf   tikv-demo-cluster-tikv-0   Bound    1476Gi     172.16.4.155   /mnt/disks/local-pv56
local-pv-5ade8580   tikv-demo-cluster-tikv-1   Bound    1476Gi     172.16.4.160   /mnt/disks/local-pv33
local-pv-ed2ffe50   tikv-demo-cluster-tikv-2   Bound    1476Gi     172.16.4.157   /mnt/disks/local-pv13
local-pv-74ee0364   pd-demo-cluster-pd-0       Bound    1476Gi     172.16.4.155   /mnt/disks/local-pv46
local-pv-842034e6   pd-demo-cluster-pd-1       Bound    1476Gi     172.16.4.158   /mnt/disks/local-pv74
local-pv-e54c122a   pd-demo-cluster-pd-2       Bound    1476Gi     172.16.4.156   /mnt/disks/local-pv72
tkctl debug [pod_name]
This command is used to diagnose the Pods in a TiDB cluster. It launches a debug launcher Pod which then starts a debug container using the specified docker image on the same host of the target Pod. The container has necessary troubleshooting tools and shares the same namespaces with the container in the target Pod, so you can diagnose the target container by using various tools in the debug container.
| Flag | Abbreviation | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| --image | Specify the docker image used by the debug container; default to pingcap/tidb-debug:lastest | |
| --launcher-image | Specify the docker image for the debug launcher pod which is responsible for launching the debug container; default to pingcap/debug-launcher:latest | |
| --container | -c | Select the container to be diagnosed; default to the first container of the target Pod | 
| --docker-socket | Specify the docker socket on the target node; default to /var/run/docker.sock | |
| --privileged | Whether to enable the privileged mode for the debug container | 
For example:
tkctl debug demo-cluster-tikv-0
ps -ef
Using tools like GDB and perf in the debug container requires special operations because of the difference in root filesystems of the target container and the debug container.
GDB
When you use GDB to debug the process in the target container, make sure you set the program option to the binary in the target container. Additionally, if you use images other than tidb-debug as the debug container or if the pid of the target process is not 1, you have to configure the location of dynamic libraries via the set sysroot command as follows:
tkctl debug demo-cluster-tikv-0
gdb /proc/${pid:-1}/root/tikv-server 1
The .gdbinit pre-configured in the tidb-debug image will set sysroot to /proc/1/root/ automatically. For this reason, you can omit this following step if you are using the tidb-debug image and the pid of the target process is 1.
(gdb) set sysroot /proc/${pid}/root/
Start debugging:
(gdb) thread apply all bt
(gdb) info threads
Perf and flame graphs
To use the perf command and the run_flamegraph.sh script properly, you must copy the program from the target container to the same location in the debug container:
tkctl debug demo-cluster-tikv-0
cp /proc/1/root/tikv-server /
./run_flamegraph.sh 1
This script automatically uploads the generated flame graph (SVG format) to transfer.sh, and you can visit the link outputted by the script to download the flame graph.
tkctl ctop
The complete form of the command is tkctl ctop [pod_name | node/node_name ].
This command is used to view the real-time monitoring stats of the target Pod or node in the cluster. Compared with kubectl top, tkctl ctop also provides network and disk stats, which are important for diagnosing problems in the TiDB cluster.
| Flag | Abbreviation | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| --image | Specify the docker image of ctop; default to quay.io/vektorlab/ctop:0.7.2 | |
| --docker-socket | Specify the docker socket that ctop uses; default to /var/run/docker.sock | 
For example:
tkctl ctop node/172.16.4.155
tkctl ctop demo-cluster-tikv-0
tkctl help [command]
This command is used to print help messages of the sub commands.
For example:
tkctl help debug
tkctl options
This command is used to view the global flags of tkctl.
For example:
tkctl options
The following options can be passed to any command:
      --alsologtostderr=false: log to standard error as well as files
      --as='': Username to impersonate for the operation
      --as-group=[]: Group to impersonate for the operation, this flag can be repeated to specify multiple groups.
      --cache-dir='/Users/alei/.kube/http-cache': Default HTTP cache directory
      --certificate-authority='': Path to a cert file for the certificate authority
      --client-certificate='': Path to a client certificate file for TLS
      --client-key='': Path to a client key file for TLS
      --cluster='': The name of the kubeconfig cluster to use
      --context='': The name of the kubeconfig context to use
      --insecure-skip-tls-verify=false: If true, the server's certificate will not be checked for validity. This will
make your HTTPS connections insecure
      --kubeconfig='': Path to the kubeconfig file to use for CLI requests.
      --log_backtrace_at=:0: when logging hits line file:N, emit a stack trace
      --log_dir='': If non-empty, write log files in this directory
      --logtostderr=true: log to standard error instead of files
  -n, --namespace='': If present, the namespace scope for this CLI request
      --request-timeout='0': The length of time to wait before giving up on a single server request. Non-zero values
should contain a corresponding time unit (e.g. 1s, 2m, 3h). A value of zero means don't timeout requests.
  -s, --server='': The address and port of the Kubernetes API server
      --stderrthreshold=2: logs at or above this threshold go to stderr
  -t, --tidbcluster='': Tidb cluster name
      --token='': Bearer token for authentication to the API server
      --user='': The name of the kubeconfig user to use
  -v, --v=0: log level for V logs
      --vmodule=: comma-separated list of pattern=N settings for file-filtered logging
These options are mainly used to connect with the Kubernetes cluster and two commonly used options among them are as follows:
--context: specify the target Kubernetes cluster--namespace: specify the Kubernetes namespace