Simple wrapper around iperf3 to measure network bandwidth from all nodes of a Kubernetes cluster
You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
iperf3-k8s/iperf2-k8s-flood.sh

61 lines
1.2 KiB

#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -eu
cd $(dirname $0)
## <setup>
kubectl create -f iperf2.yaml
until $(kubectl get pods -l app=iperf2-server -o jsonpath='{.items[0].status.containerStatuses[0].ready}'); do
echo "Waiting for iperf2 server to start..."
sleep 5
done
echo "Server is running"
echo
CLIENTS=$(kubectl get pods -l app=iperf2-client -o name | cut -d'/' -f2)
for POD in ${CLIENTS}; do
until $(kubectl get pod "${POD}" -o jsonpath='{.status.containerStatuses[0].ready}'); do
echo "Waiting for ${POD} to start..."
sleep 5
done
done
echo "All clients are running"
echo
kubectl get pod -o=custom-columns=NAME:.metadata.name,NODE:.spec.nodeName,IP-NODE:.status.hostIP,IP-POD:status.podIP
echo
## </setup>
## <run>
CLIENTS=$(kubectl get pods -l app=iperf2-client -o name | cut -d'/' -f2)
echo "Now all clients flood the server at the same time..."
for POD in ${CLIENTS}; do
echo "[Run] iperf2-client pod ${POD}"
#kubectl exec -it "${POD}" -- iperf -c iperf2-server "$@" &> /dev/null &
kubectl exec -it "${POD}" -- iperf -c iperf2-server "$@"
done
#until [[ $(jobs | grep -v Running) != "" ]]; do
# printf "."
# sleep 2
#done
printf " done\n"
## </run>
## <clean>
kubectl delete --cascade -f iperf2.yaml
## </clean>