Awesome
Kube DOOM
Kill Kubernetes pods using Id's Doom!
The next level of chaos engineering is here! Kill pods inside your Kubernetes cluster by shooting them in Doom!
This is a fork of the excellent gideonred/dockerdoomd using a slightly modified Doom, forked from https://github.com/gideonred/dockerdoom, which was forked from psdoom.
Running Locally
In order to run locally you will need to
- Run the kubedoom container
- Attach a VNC client to the appropriate port (5901)
With Docker
Run ghcr.io/storax/kubedoom:latest
with docker locally:
$ docker run -p5901:5900 \
--net=host \
-v ~/.kube:/root/.kube \
--rm -it --name kubedoom \
ghcr.io/storax/kubedoom:latest
Optionally, if you set -e NAMESPACE={your namespace}
you can limit Kubedoom to deleting pods in a single namespace
With Podman
Run ghcr.io/storax/kubedoom:latest
with podman locally:
$ podman run -it -p5901:5900/tcp \
-v ~/.kube:/tmp/.kube --security-opt label=disable \
--env "KUBECONFIG=/tmp/.kube/config" --name kubedoom
ghcr.io/storax/kubedoom:latest
Attaching a VNC Client
Now start a VNC viewer and connect to localhost:5901
. The password is idbehold
:
$ vncviewer viewer localhost:5901
You should now see DOOM! Now if you want to get the job done quickly enter the
cheat idspispopd
and walk through the wall on your right. You should be
greeted by your pods as little pink monsters. Press CTRL
to fire. If the
pistol is not your thing, cheat with idkfa
and press 5
for a nice surprise.
Pause the game with ESC
.
Killing namespaces
Kubedoom now also supports killing namespaces in case you have too many of
them. Simply set the -mode
flag
to namespaces
:
$ docker run -p5901:5900 \
--net=host \
-v ~/.kube:/root/.kube \
--rm -it --name kubedoom \
ghcr.io/storax/kubedoom:latest \
-mode namespaces
Running Kubedoom inside Kubernetes
See the example in the /manifest
directory. You can quickly test it using
kind. Create a cluster with the
example config from this repository:
$ kind create cluster --config kind-config.yaml
Creating cluster "kind" ...
â Ensuring node image (kindest/node:v1.23.0) đŧ
â Preparing nodes đĻ đĻ
â Writing configuration đ
â Starting control-plane đšī¸
â Installing CNI đ
â Installing StorageClass đž
â Joining worker nodes đ
Set kubectl context to "kind-kind"
You can now use your cluster with:
kubectl cluster-info --context kind-kind
Not sure what to do next? đ
Check out https://kind.sigs.k8s.io/docs/user/quick-start/
This will spin up a 2 node cluster inside docker, with port 5900 exposed from the worker node. Then run kubedoom inside the cluster by applying the manifest provided in this repository:
$ kubectl apply -k manifest/
namespace/kubedoom created
deployment.apps/kubedoom created
serviceaccount/kubedoom created
clusterrolebinding.rbac.authorization.k8s.io/kubedoom created
To connect run:
$ vncviewer viewer localhost:5900
Kubedoom requires a service account with permissions to list all pods and delete them and uses kubectl 1.23.2.
Building Kubedoom
The repository contains a Dockerfile to build the kubedoom image. You have to
specify your systems architecture as the TARGETARCH
build argument. For
example amd64
or arm64
.
$ docker build --build-arg=TARGETARCH=amd64 -t kubedoom .
To change the default VNC password, use --build-arg=VNCPASSWORD=differentpw
.