Use readiness and liveness probes to detect and handle unhealthy virtual machine instances (VMIs). You can include one or more probes in the specification of the VMI to ensure that traffic does not reach a VMI that is not ready for it and that a new instance is created when a VMI becomes unresponsive.
A readiness probe determines whether a VMI is ready to accept service requests. If the probe fails, the VMI is removed from the list of available endpoints until the VMI is ready.
A liveness probe determines whether a VMI is responsive. If the probe fails, the VMI is deleted and a new instance is created to restore responsiveness.
You can configure readiness and liveness probes by setting the spec.readinessProbe
and the spec.livenessProbe
fields of the VirtualMachineInstance
object. These fields support the following tests:
- HTTP GeT
-
The probe determines the health of the VMI by using a web hook. The test is successful if the HTTP response code is between 200 and 399. You can use an HTTP GeT test with applications that return HTTP status codes when they are completely initialized.
- TCP socket
-
The probe attempts to open a socket to the VMI. The VMI is only considered healthy if the probe can establish a connection. You can use a TCP socket test with applications that do not start listening until initialization is complete.
- Guest agent ping
-
The probe uses the guest-ping
command to determine if the QeMU guest agent is running on the virtual machine.