Hi Jorge,

I agree completely with the points you make about the logs. We still feel that 
metering and logging are two different problems. The ceilometers community has 
a proposal on how to meter lbaas (see 
http://specs.openstack.org/openstack/ceilometer-specs/specs/juno/lbaas_metering.html)
 and we at HP think that those values are be sufficient for us for the time 
being. 

I think our discussion is mostly about connection logs which are emitted some 
way from amphora (e.g. haproxy logs). Since they are customer's logs we need to 
explore on our end the privacy implications (I assume at RAX you have controls 
in place to make sure that there is no violation :-). Also I need to check if 
our central logging system is scalable enough and we can send logs there 
without creating security holes.

Another possibility is to log like syslog our apmphora agent logs to a central 
system to help with trouble shooting debugging. Those could be sufficiently 
anonymized to avoid privacy issue. What are your thoughts on logging those?

Thanks,
German

-----Original Message-----
From: Jorge Miramontes [mailto:jorge.miramon...@rackspace.com] 
Sent: Thursday, October 23, 2014 3:30 PM
To: OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)
Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [Neutron][LBaaS][Octavia] Usage Requirements

Hey German/Susanne,

To continue our conversation from our IRC meeting could you all provide more 
insight into you usage requirements? Also, I'd like to clarify a few points 
related to using logging.

I am advocating that logs be used for multiple purposes, including billing. 
Billing requirements are different that connection logging requirements. 
However, connection logging is a very accurate mechanism to capture billable 
metrics and thus, is related. My vision for this is something like the 
following:

- Capture logs in a scalable way (i.e. capture logs and put them on a separate 
scalable store somewhere so that it doesn't affect the amphora).
- Every X amount of time (every hour, for example) process the logs and send 
them on their merry way to cielometer or whatever service an operator will be 
using for billing purposes.
- Keep logs for some configurable amount of time. This could be anything from 
indefinitely to not at all. Rackspace is planing on keeping them for a certain 
period of time for the following reasons:
        
        A) We have connection logging as a planned feature. If a customer turns 
on the connection logging feature for their load balancer it will already have 
a history. One important aspect of this is that customers (at least
ours) tend to turn on logging after they realize they need it (usually after a 
tragic lb event). By already capturing the logs I'm sure customers will be 
extremely happy to see that there are already X days worth of logs they can 
immediately sift through.
        B) Operators and their support teams can leverage logs when providing 
service to their customers. This is huge for finding issues and resolving them 
quickly.
        C) Albeit a minor point, building support for logs from the get-go 
mitigates capacity management uncertainty. My example earlier was the extreme 
case of every customer turning on logging at the same time. While unlikely, I 
would hate to manage that!

I agree that there are other ways to capture billing metrics but, from my 
experience, those tend to be more complex than what I am advocating and without 
the added benefits listed above. An understanding of HP's desires on this 
matter will hopefully get this to a point where we can start working on a spec.

Cheers,
--Jorge

P.S. Real-time stats is a different beast and I envision there being an API 
call that returns "real-time" data such as this ==> 
http://cbonte.github.io/haproxy-dconv/configuration-1.5.html#9.


From:  <Eichberger>, German <german.eichber...@hp.com>
Reply-To:  "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)"
<openstack-dev@lists.openstack.org>
Date:  Wednesday, October 22, 2014 2:41 PM
To:  "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)"
<openstack-dev@lists.openstack.org>
Subject:  Re: [openstack-dev] [Neutron][LBaaS][Octavia] Usage Requirements


>Hi Jorge,
> 
>Good discussion so far + glad to have you back J
> 
>I am not a big fan of using logs for billing information since 
>ultimately (at least at HP) we need to pump it into ceilometer. So I am 
>envisioning either the  amphora (via a proxy) to pump it straight into 
>that system or we collect it on the controller and pump it from there.
> 
>Allowing/enabling logging creates some requirements on the hardware, 
>mainly, that they can handle the IO coming from logging. Some operators 
>might choose to  hook up very cheap and non performing disks which 
>might not be able to deal with the log traffic. So I would suggest that 
>there is some rate limiting on the log output to help with that.
>
> 
>Thanks,
>German
> 
>From: Jorge Miramontes [mailto:jorge.miramon...@rackspace.com]
>
>Sent: Wednesday, October 22, 2014 6:51 AM
>To: OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)
>Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [Neutron][LBaaS][Octavia] Usage 
>Requirements
>
>
> 
>Hey Stephen (and Robert),
>
> 
>
>For real-time usage I was thinking something similar to what you are 
>proposing. Using logs for this would be overkill IMO so your 
>suggestions were what I was  thinking of starting with.
>
> 
>
>As far as storing logs is concerned I was definitely thinking of 
>offloading these onto separate storage devices. Robert, I totally hear 
>you on the scalability  part as our current LBaaS setup generates TB of 
>request logs. I'll start planning out a spec and then I'll let everyone 
>chime in there. I just wanted to get a general feel for the ideas I had 
>mentioned. I'll also bring it up in today's meeting.
>
> 
>
>Cheers,
>
>--Jorge
>
>
>
>
> 
>
>From:
>Stephen Balukoff <sbaluk...@bluebox.net>
>Reply-To: "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)"
><openstack-dev@lists.openstack.org>
>Date: Wednesday, October 22, 2014 4:04 AM
>To: "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)"
><openstack-dev@lists.openstack.org>
>Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [Neutron][LBaaS][Octavia] Usage 
>Requirements
>
> 
>
>>Hi Jorge!
>>
>> 
>>
>>Welcome back, eh! You've been missed.
>>
>> 
>>
>>Anyway, I just wanted to say that your proposal sounds great to me, 
>>and it's good to finally be closer to having concrete requirements for 
>>logging, eh. Once this  discussion is nearing a conclusion, could you 
>>write up the specifics of logging into a specification proposal 
>>document?
>>
>> 
>>
>>Regarding the discussion itself: I think we can ignore UDP for now, as 
>>there doesn't seem to be high demand for it, and it certainly won't be 
>>supported in v 0.5  of Octavia (and maybe not in v1 or v2 either, 
>>unless we see real demand).
>>
>> 
>>
>>Regarding the 'real-time usage' information: I have some ideas 
>>regarding getting this from a combination of iptables and / or the 
>>haproxy stats interface. Were  you thinking something different that 
>>involves on-the-fly analysis of the logs or something?  (I tend to 
>>find that logs are great for non-real time data, but can often be 
>>lacking if you need, say, a gauge like 'currently open connections' or 
>>something.)
>>
>> 
>>
>>One other thing: If there's a chance we'll be storing logs on the 
>>amphorae themselves, then we need to have log rotation as part of the 
>>configuration here. It  would be silly to have an amphora failure just 
>>because its ephemeral disk fills up, eh.
>>
>> 
>>
>>Stephen
>>
>>
>> 
>>On Wed, Oct 15, 2014 at 4:03 PM, Jorge Miramontes 
>><jorge.miramon...@rackspace.com> wrote:
>>Hey Octavia folks!
>>
>>
>>First off, yes, I'm still alive and kicking. :)
>>
>>I,d like to start a conversation on usage requirements and have a few 
>>suggestions. I advocate that, since we will be using TCP and 
>>HTTP/HTTPS based protocols, we inherently enable connection logging 
>>for load balancers for several reasons:
>>
>>1) We can use these logs as the raw and granular data needed to track 
>>usage. With logs, the operator has flexibility as to what usage 
>>metrics they want to bill against. For example, bandwidth is easy to 
>>track and can even be split into header and body data so that the 
>>provider can choose if they want to bill on header data or not. Also, 
>>the provider can determine if they will bill their customers for 
>>failed requests that were the fault of the provider themselves. These 
>>are just a few examples; the point is the flexible nature of logs.
>>
>>2) Creating billable usage from logs is easy compared to other options 
>>like polling. For example, in our current LBaaS iteration at Rackspace 
>>we bill partly on "average concurrent connections". This is based on 
>>polling and is not as accurate as it possibly can be. It's very close, 
>>but it doesn't get more accurate that the logs themselves. 
>>Furthermore, polling is more complex and uses up resources on the polling 
>>cadence.
>>
>>3) Enabling logs for all load balancers can be used for debugging, 
>>support and audit purposes. While the customer may or may not want 
>>their logs uploaded to swift, operators and their support teams can 
>>still use this data to help customers out with billing and setup 
>>issues. Auditing will also be easier with raw logs.
>>
>>4) Enabling logs for all load balancers will help mitigate uncertainty 
>>in terms of capacity planning. Imagine if every customer suddenly 
>>enabled logs without it ever being turned on. This could produce a 
>>spike in resource utilization that will be hard to manage. Enabling 
>>logs from the start means we are certain as to what to plan for other 
>>than the nature of the customer's traffic pattern.
>>
>>Some Cons I can think of (please add more as I think the pros outweigh 
>>the
>>cons):
>>
>>1) If we every add UDP based protocols then this model won't work. < 
>>1% of our load balancers at Rackspace are UDP based so we are not 
>>looking at using this protocol for Octavia. I'm more of a fan of 
>>building a really good TCP/HTTP/HTTPS based load balancer because UDP 
>>load balancing solves a different problem. For me different problem == 
>>different product.
>>
>>2) I'm assuming HA Proxy. Thus, if we choose another technology for 
>>the amphora then this model may break.
>>
>>
>>Also, and more generally speaking, I have categorized usage into three
>>categories:
>>
>>1) Tracking usage - this is usage that will be used my operators and 
>>support teams to gain insight into what load balancers are doing in an 
>>attempt to monitor potential issues.
>>2) Billable usage - this is usage that is a subset of tracking usage 
>>used to bill customers.
>>3) Real-time usage - this is usage that should be exposed via the API 
>>so that customers can make decisions that affect their configuration (ex.
>>"Based off of the number of connections my web heads can handle when 
>>should I add another node to my pool?").
>>
>>These are my preliminary thoughts, and I'd love to gain insight into 
>>what the community thinks. I have built about 3 usage collection 
>>systems thus far (1 with Brandon) and have learned a lot. Some basic 
>>rules I have discovered with collecting usage are:
>>
>>1) Always collect granular usage as it "paints a picture" of what 
>>actually happened. Massaged/un-granular usage == lost information.
>>2) Never imply, always be explicit. Implications usually stem from bad 
>>assumptions.
>>
>>
>>Last but not least, we need to store every user and system load 
>>balancer event such as creation, updates, suspension and deletion so 
>>that we may bill on things like uptime and serve our customers better 
>>by knowing what happened and when.
>>
>>
>>Cheers,
>>--Jorge
>>
>>
>>_______________________________________________
>>OpenStack-dev mailing list
>>OpenStack-dev@lists.openstack.org
>>http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> 
>>
>>--
>>
>>Stephen Balukoff
>>Blue Box Group, LLC
>>(800)613-4305 x807


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