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Moesif Envoy Plugin

The Moesif Envoy plugin captures API traffic from Envoy Service Proxy and logs it to Moesif API Analytics. This plugin leverages an asynchronous design and doesn’t add any latency to your API calls.

  • Envoy is an open-source Service Proxy.
  • Moesif is an API analytics and monitoring service.

Source Code on GitHub

How to install

1. Download plugin files

Download the latest release into your current working directory for Envoy.

 wget -O moesif-envoy-plugin.tar.gz https://github.com/Moesif/moesif-envoy-plugin/archive/0.1.7.tar.gz && \
    tar -xf moesif-envoy-plugin.tar.gz -C ./ --strip-components 1

2. Update Envoy config

In your envoy.yaml, add a http_filters section along with the below code snippet.

Your Moesif Application Id can be found in the Moesif Portal. After signing up for a Moesif account, your Moesif Application Id will be displayed during the onboarding steps.

 http_filters:
    - name: envoy.filters.http.lua
    typed_config:
        "@type": type.googleapis.com/envoy.extensions.filters.http.lua.v3.Lua
        inline_code: |
        local log = require("moesif.plugins.log")

        -- Moesif configs
        log.set_application_id("Your Moesif Application Id")
        -- ... For other options see below.

        function envoy_on_request(request_handle)
            -- Log Event Request to Moesif
            log.log_request(request_handle)
        end

        function envoy_on_response(response_handle)
            -- Log Event Response to Moesif
            log.log_response(response_handle)
        end

Add a clusters config with the below code snippet.

 clusters:
  - name: moesifprod
    connect_timeout: 0.25s
    type: logical_dns
    http2_protocol_options: {}
    lb_policy: round_robin
    load_assignment:
      cluster_name: moesifprod
      endpoints:
      - lb_endpoints:
        - endpoint:
            address:
              socket_address:
                address: api.moesif.net
                port_value: 443
    transport_socket:
      name: envoy.transport_sockets.tls
      typed_config:
        "@type": type.googleapis.com/envoy.extensions.transport_sockets.tls.v3.UpstreamTlsContext
        sni: api.moesif.net
        common_tls_context: 
          validation_context:
            match_subject_alt_names:
            - exact: "*.moesif.net"
            trusted_ca:
              filename: /etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt

If you downloaded the files to a different location, replace moesif.plugins.log with the correct path

3. Restart Envoy

Make a few API calls to test that they are logged to Moesif.

Docker Compose

If you're using Docker, Moesif has a working example usign Docker Compose in the example dir

To run the example:

Modify the example files Dockerfile-envoy and envoy.yml for use with your live application.

  1. cd into the example dir
  2. Add your Moesif Application Id to envoy.yml
  3. Run the command docker-compose up -d

To run the HTTPS example:

Envoy's Dynamic forward proxy will not normally terminate an SSL connection and will instead tunnel to proxied service. In order for API observability tools like Moesif to capture traffic, you need to configure Envoy to terminate the SSL connection.

In order to do so, do the following:

  1. cd into the example dir
  2. Add your Moesif Application Id to envoy-https.yml
  3. Expose port "8443:8443" in docker-compose.yaml
  4. Generate a self-signed certificate pair using: (Please change the common name as required) $ openssl req -x509 -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout key.pem -out cert.pem -days 3650 -nodes -subj '/CN=localhost'
  5. Please update the keys in the transport_socket section in envoy-https.yml. Incase, if you don't want to copy the keys in the file, you could provide the path where keys are located. Please update the section if passing the path -
transport_socket:
name: envoy.transport_sockets.tls
typed_config:
    "@type": type.googleapis.com/envoy.extensions.transport_sockets.tls.v3.DownstreamTlsContext
    common_tls_context:
    tls_certificates:
        certificate_chain: { filename: "/etc/envoy/ssl/cert.pem" }
        private_key: { filename: "/etc/envoy/ssl/key.pem" }
        password: { inline_string: "XXXXX" }    
  1. Update the Docker cmd to use envoy-https.yaml instead of envoy.yml. This can be done by updating last line in Dockerfile-envoy to CMD ["/usr/local/bin/envoy", "-c", "/etc/envoy-https.yaml", "-l", "debug", "--service-cluster", "proxy"]
  2. Run the command docker-compose up -d

Configuration options

set_application_id()

(required), string, is obtained via your Moesif Account, this is required.

set_batch_size()

(optional) number, default 5. Maximum batch size when sending to Moesif.

set_user_id_header()

(optional) string, Request header to use to identify the User in Moesif.

set_company_id_header()

(optional) string, Request header to use to identify the Company (Account) in Moesif.

set_metadata()

(optional) table, default {}. This allows you to associate the event with custom metadata. For example, you may want to save a VM instance_id, a trace_id, or a tenant_id with the request.

set_disable_capture_request_body()

(optional) boolean, default false. Set this flag to true, to disable logging of request body.

set_disable_capture_response_body()

(optional) boolean, default false. Set this flag to true, to disable logging of response body.

set_request_header_masks()

(optional) table, default {}. An array of request header fields to mask.

set_request_body_masks()

(optional) table, default {}. An array of request body fields to mask.

set_response_header_masks()

(optional) table, default {}. An array of response header fields to mask.

set_response_body_masks()

(optional) table, default {}. An array of response body fields to mask.

set_debug()

(optional) boolean, default false. Set this flag to true, to see debugging messages.

How to test

  1. Clone this repo and edit the example/envoy.yaml file to set your actual Moesif Application Id.

    Your Moesif Application Id can be found in the Moesif Portal. After signing up for a Moesif account, your Moesif Application Id will be displayed during the onboarding steps.

    You can always find your Moesif Application Id at any time by logging into the Moesif Portal, click on the top right menu, and then clicking API Keys.

  2. Build docker image and start container

    cd example && docker-compose up -d
    
  3. By default, The container is listening on port 8000. You should now be able to make a request:

    curl --request GET \
        --url 'http://localhost:8000/?x=2&y=4' \
        --header 'Content-Type: application/json' \
        --header 'company_id_header: envoy_company_id' \
        --header 'user_id_header: envoy_user_id' \
        --data '{
            "envoy_event": true
        }'
  4. The data should be captured in the corresponding Moesif account.

Congratulations! If everything was done correctly, Moesif should now be tracking all network requests. If you have any issues with set up, please reach out to [email protected].

How to enable Envoy plugin inside Istio's sidecars

  1. If you've istio already installed, and istio-system namespace available, skip this step. If not you could download and install istio.
  • Download (Linux or macOS):

    curl -L https://istio.io/downloadIstio | sh -
  • Move to the Istio package directory. For example, if the package is istio-1.9.2:

    cd istio-1.9.2
  • Add the istioctl client to your path (Linux or macOS):

    export PATH=$PWD/bin:$PATH
  • For this example, we use the demo configuration profile. It’s selected to have a good set of defaults for testing, but there are other profiles for production or performance testing.

    istioctl install --set profile=demo
  1. Clone this repo and edit the istio-example/envoy-filter.yaml file to set your actual Moesif Application Id.

    Your Moesif Application Id can be found in the Moesif Portal. After signing up for a Moesif account, your Moesif Application Id will be displayed during the onboarding steps.

    You can always find your Moesif Application Id at any time by logging into the Moesif Portal, click on the top right menu, and then clicking API Keys.

  2. At this point, make sure istio-system namespace is available since we're going to deploy app and enable envoy-filter in istio-system for this particular example. It could be verified by running this command

    kubectl get namespace
  3. Navigate to istio-example directory.

  4. Create a configMap which will be consumed by Pods as configuration file in a volume.

    kubectl create -f configMap.yaml -n istio-system
  5. Create a Pod and manually inject the sidecar before deploying the nginx application with the following command:

    kubectl apply -n istio-system -f <(istioctl kube-inject -f nginx.yaml)
  6. Verify the nginx pod is running

    kubectl get pods -n istio-system
  7. Verify the deployment is ready and available

    kubectl get deployment -o wide -n istio-system
  8. Create Envoy filter

    kubectl apply -f envoy-filter.yaml -n istio-system
  9. Set the SOURCE_POD environment variable to the name of your source pod:

    export SOURCE_POD=$(kubectl get pod -n istio-system -l app=nginx -o jsonpath={.items..metadata.name})
    echo $SOURCE_POD
  10. Now you could send request to an external service, and data should be captured in the corresponding Moesif account.

    kubectl -n istio-system exec "$SOURCE_POD" -c nginx -- curl -XGET -sSL  -H "Content-Type:application/json" -o /dev/null -D - http://httpbin.org/uuid -d "{\"test\": \"sf\"}"
  11. You could tail Logs

    kubectl logs --follow -l app=nginx -c istio-proxy -n istio-system

Congratulations! If everything was done correctly, Moesif should now be tracking all network requests. If you have any issues with set up, please reach out to [email protected].

Other integrations

To view more documentation on integration options, please visit the Integration Options Documentation.