Deploy a Dockerized ASP.NET Core Application to Azure Kubernetes Service Using a VSTS CI/CD Pipeline: Part 4

Posted by Graham Smith on September 11, 2018No Comments (click here to comment)

In this blog post series I'm working my way through the process of deploying and running an ASP.NET Core application on Microsoft's hosted Kubernetes environment. These are the links to the full series of posts to date:

In this post I take a look at application monitoring and health. There are several options for this however since I'm pretty much all-in with the Microsoft stack in this blog series I'll stick with the Microsoft offering which is Azure Application Insights. This posts builds on previous posts, particularly Part 3, so please do consider working through at least Part 3 before this one.

In this post, I continue to use my MegaStore sample application which has been upgraded to .NET Core 2.1, in particular with reference to the csproj file. This is important because it affects the way Application Insights is configured in the ASP.NET Core web component. See here and here for more details. All my code is in my GitHub repo and you can find the starting code here and the finished code here.

Understanding the Application Insights Big Picture

Whilst it's very easy to get started with Application Insights, configuring it for an application with multiple components which gets deployed to a continuous delivery pipeline consisting of multiple environments running under Kubernetes requires a little planning and a little effort to get everything configured in a satisfactory way. As of the time of writing this isn't helped by the presence of Application Insights documentation on both docs.microsoft.com and github.com (ASP.NET Core | Kubernetes) which sometimes feels like it's conflicting, although it's nothing that good old fashioned detective work can't sort out.

The high-level requirements to get everything working are as follows:

  1. A mechanism is needed to separate out telemetry data from the different environments of the continuous delivery pipeline. Application Insights sends telemetry to a ‘bucket' termed an Application Insights Resource which is identified by a unique instrumentation key. Separation of telemetry data is therefore achieved by creating an individual Application Insights Resource, each for the development environment and the different environments of the delivery pipeline.
  2. Each component of the application that will send telemetry to an Application Insights Resource needs configuring so that it can be supplied with the instrumentation key for the Application Insights Resource for the environment the application is running in. This is a coding issue and there are lots of ways to solve it, however in the MegaStore sample application this is achieved through a helper class in the MegaStore.Helper library that receives the instrumentation key as an environment variable.
  3. The MegaStore.Web and MegaStore.SaveSaleHandler components need configuring for both the core and Kubernetes elements of Application Insights and a mechanism to send the telemetry back to Azure with the actual name of the component rather than a name that Application Insights has chosen.
  4. Each environment needs configuring to create an instrumentation key environment variable for the Application Insights Resource that has been created for that environment. In development this is achieved through hard-coding the instrumentation key in docker-compose.override.yaml. In the deployment pipeline it's achieved through a VSTS task that creates a Kubernetes config map that is picked up by the Kubernetes deployment configuration.

That's the big picture—let's get stuck in to the details.

Creating Application Insights Resources for Different Environments

In the Azure portal follow these slightly outdated instructions (Application Insights is currently found in Developer Tools) to create three Application Insights Resources for the three environments: DEV, DAT and PRD. I chose to put them in one resource group and ended up with this:

For reference there is a dedicated Separating telemetry from Development, Test, and Production page in the official Application Insights documentation set.

Configure MegaStore to Receive an Instrumentation Key from an Environment Variable

As explained above this is a specific implementation detail of the MegaStore sample application, which contains an Env class in MegaStore.Helper to capture environment variables. The amended class is as follows:

Obviously this class relies on an external mechanism creating an environment variable named APP_INSIGHTS_INSTRUMENTATION_KEY. Consumers of this class can reference MegaStore.Helper and call Env.AppInsightsInstrumentationKey to return the key.

Configure MegaStore.Web for Application Insights

If you've upgraded an ASP.NET Core web application to 2.1 or later as detailed earlier then the core of Application Insights is already ‘installed' via the inclusion of the Microsoft.AspNetCore.All meta package so there is nothing to do. You will need to add Microsoft.ApplicationInsights.Kubernetes via NuGet—at the time of writing it was in beta (1.0.0-beta9) so you'll need to make sure you have told NuGet to include prereleases.

In order to enable Application Insights amend BuildWebHost in Program.cs as follows:

Note the way that the instrumentation key is passed in via Env.AppInsightsInstrumentationKey from MegaStore.Helper as mentioned above.

Telemetry relating to Kubernetes is enabled in ConfgureServices in Startup.cs as follows:

Note also that a CloudRoleTelemetryInitializer class is being initialised. This facilitates the setting of a custom RoleName for the component, and requires a class to be added as follows:

Note here that we are setting the RoleName to MegaStore.Web. Finally, we need to ensure that all web pages return telemetry. This is achieved by adding the following code to the end of _ViewImports.cshtml:

and then by adding the following code to the end of the <head> element in _Layout.cshtml:

Configure MegaStore.SaveSaleHandler for Application Insights

I'll start this section with a warning because at the time of writing the latest versions of Microsoft.ApplicationInsights and Microsoft.ApplicationInsights.Kubernetes didn't play nicely together and resulted in dependency errors. Additionally the latest version of Microsoft.ApplicationInsights.Kubernetes was missing the KubernetesModule.EnableKubernetes class described in the documentation for making Kubernetes work with Application Insights. The Kubernetes bits are still in beta though so it's only fair to expect turbulence. The good news is that with a bit of experimentation I got everything working by installing NuGet packages Microsoft.ApplicationInsights (2.4.0) and Microsoft.ApplicationInsights.Kubernetes (1.0.0-beta3). If you try this long after publication date things will have moved on but this combination works with this initialisation code in Program.cs:

Please do note that this a completely stripped down Program class to just show how Application Insights and the Kubennetes extension is configured. Note again that this component uses the CloudRoleTelemetryInitializer class shown above, this time with the RoleName set to MegaStore.SaveSaleHandler. What I don't show here in any detail is that you can add lots of client.Track* calls to generate rich telemetry to help you understand what your application is doing. The code on my GitHub repo has details.

Configure the Development Environment to Create an Instrumentation Key Environment Variable

This is a simple matter of editing docker-compose.override.yaml with the new APP_INSIGHTS_INSTRUMENTATION_KEY environment variable and the instrumentation key for the corresponding Application Insights Resource:

Make sure you don't just copy the code above as the actual key needs to come from the Application Insights Resource you created for the DEV environment, which you can find as follows:

Configure the VSTS Deployment Pipeline to Create Instrumentation Key Environment Variables

The first step is to amend the two Kubernetes deployment files (megastore-web-deployment.yaml and megastore-savesalehandler-deployment.yaml) with details of the new environment variable in the respective env sections:

Now in VSTS:

  1. Create variables called DatAppInsightsInstrumentationKey and PrdAppInsightsInstrumentationKey scoped to their respective environments and populate the variables with the respective instrumentation keys.
  2. In the task lists for the DAT and PRD environments clone the Delete ASPNETCORE_ENVIRONMENT config map and Create ASPNETCORE_ENVIRONMENT config map tasks and amend them to work with the new APP_INSIGHTS_INSTRUMENTATION_KEY environment variable configured in the *.deployment.yaml files.

Generate Traffic to the MegaStore Web Frontend

Now the real fun can begin! Commit all the code changes to trigger a build and deploy. The clumsy way I'm having to delete an environment variable and then recreate it (to cater for a changed variable name) will mean that the release will be amber in each environment for a couple of releases but will hopefully eventually go green. In order to generate some interesting telemetry we need to put one of the environments under load as follows:

  1. Find the public IP address of MegaStore.Web in the PRD environment by running kubectl get services --namespace=prd:
  2. Create a PowerShell (ps1) file with the following code (using your own IP address of course):
  3. Run the script (in Windows PowerShell ISE for example) and as long as the output is white you know that traffic is getting to the website.

Now head over to the Azure portal and navigate to the Application Insights Resource that was created for the PRD environment earlier and under Investigate click on Search and then Click here (to see all data in the last 24 hours):

You should see something like this:

Hurrah! We have telemetry! However the icing on the cake comes when you click on an individual entry (a trace for example) and see the Kubernetes details that are being returned with the basic trace properties:

Until Next Time

It's taken my quite a lot of research and experimentation to get to this point so that's it for now! In this post I showed you how to get started monitoring your Dockerized .NET Core 2.1 applications running in AKS using Application Insights. The emphasis has been very much on getting started though as Application Insights is a big beast and I've only scratched the surface in this post. Do bear in mind that some of the NuGets used in this post are in beta and some pain is to be expected.

As I publish this blog post VSTS has had a name change to Azure DevOps so that's the title of this series having to change again!

Cheers—Graham