Configure and Monitor What Just Happened
What Just Happened (WJH) streams detailed and contextual telemetry data for analysis. This provides real-time visibility into problems in the network, such as hardware packet drops due to buffer congestion, incorrect routing, and ACL or layer 1 problems.
Using WJH in combination with NetQ helps you identify losses anywhere in the fabric. From a single management console you can:
- View any current or historic drop information, including the reason for the drop
- Identify problematic flows or endpoints, and pinpoint where communication is failing in the network
For a list of supported WJH events, refer to the WJH Events Reference.
To use a gNMI client to export WJH data to a collector, refer to Collect WJH Data with gNMI.
WJH is only supported on NVIDIA Spectrum switches running Cumulus Linux 4.4.0 or later. WJH latency and congestion monitoring is supported on NVIDIA Spectrum-2 switches and later. SONiC only supports collection of WJH data with gNMI.
By default, Cumulus Linux 4.4.0 and later includes the NetQ Agent and CLI. Depending on the version of Cumulus Linux running on your NVIDIA switch, you might need to upgrade the NetQ Agent and CLI to the latest release:
cumulus@<hostname>:~$ sudo apt-get update
cumulus@<hostname>:~$ sudo apt-get install -y netq-agent
cumulus@<hostname>:~$ sudo netq config restart agent
cumulus@<hostname>:~$ sudo apt-get install -y netq-apps
cumulus@<hostname>:~$ sudo netq config restart cli
Configure What Just Happened
WJH is enabled by default on NVIDIA Spectrum switches running Cumulus Linux 4.4.0 or later. Before WJH can collect data, you must enable the NetQ Agent on your switches and servers.
To enable WJH on any switch or server:
-
Configure the NetQ Agent on the switch:
cumulus@switch:~$ sudo netq config add agent wjh
-
Restart the NetQ Agent to begin collecting WJH data:
cumulus@switch:~$ sudo netq config restart agent
When you finish viewing WJH metrics, you can stop the NetQ Agent from collecting WJH data to reduce network traffic. Use netq config del agent wjh
followed by netq config restart agent
to disable WJH on a given switch.
Using wjh_dump.py on an NVIDIA platform that is running Cumulus Linux and the NetQ Agent causes the NetQ WJH client to stop receiving packet drop call backs. To prevent this issue, run wjh_dump.py on a system other than the one where the NetQ Agent has WJH enabled, or disable wjh_dump.py and restart the NetQ Agent with netq config restart agent
.
View What Just Happened Metrics
You can view the WJH metrics from the NetQ UI or the NetQ CLI. WJH metrics are visible on the WJH card and the Events card. To view the metrics on the Events card, open the large card and select the WJH tab at the top of the card. For a more detailed view, open the WJH card.
To add the WJH card to your workbench, navigate to the header and select Add card > Events > What Just Happened > Open cards
You can expand the card to see a detailed summary of WJH data, including devices with the most drops, the number of drops, their distribution, and a timeline:
Expand the card to its largest size to open the WJH dashboard. You can also access this dashboard by clicking Menu, then What Just Happened.
The table beneath the charts displays WJH events and recommendations for resolving them. Hover over the color-coded chart to view WJH event categories:
Click on a category in the chart for a detailed view:
Select Advanced view in the top-right corner for a tabular display of drops that can be sorted by drop type. This display includes additional information, such as source and destination IP addresses, ports, and MACs.
For L1 events, you can group entries by switch and ingress port to reduce the number of events displayed. To do this, select the Aggregate by port toggle in the top-right corner.
To view WJH drops, run one of the following commands. Refer to the command line reference for a comprehensive list of options and definitions.
netq [<hostname>] show wjh-drop
[severity <text-severity>]
[details]
[between <text-fixed-time> and <text-fixed-endtime>]
[around <text-fixed-time>]
[json]
netq [<hostname>] show wjh-drop <text-drop-type>
[ingress-port <text-ingress-port>]
[severity <text-severity>]
[reason <text-reason>]
[src-ip <text-src-ip>]
[dst-ip <text-dst-ip>]
[proto <text-proto>]
[src-port <text-src-port>]
[dst-port <text-dst-port>]
[src-mac <text-src-mac>]
[dst-mac <text-dst-mac>]
[egress-port <text-egress-port>]
[traffic-class <text-traffic-class>]
[rule-id-acl <text-rule-id-acl>]
[vlan <text-vlan>]
[between <text-time> and <text-endtime>]
[around <text-time>]
[json]
An additional command is available that aggregates WJH L1 errors that occur on the same ingress port.
netq [<hostname>] show wjh-drop l1
[ingress-port <text-ingress-port>]
[severity <text-severity>]
[reason <text-reason>]
[port-aggregate <text-port-aggregate>]
[between <text-time> and <text-endtime>]
[around <text-time>] [json]
This example uses the first form of the command to show drops on switch leaf03 for the past week.
cumulus@switch:~$ netq leaf03 show wjh-drop between now and 7d
Matching wjh records:
Drop type Aggregate Count
------------------ ------------------------------
L1 560
Buffer 224
Router 144
L2 0
ACL 0
Tunnel 0
This example uses the second form of the command to show drops on switch leaf03 for the past week including the drop reasons.
cumulus@switch:~$ netq leaf03 show wjh-drop details between now and 7d
Matching wjh records:
Drop type Aggregate Count Reason
------------------ ------------------------------ ---------------------------------------------
L1 556 None
Buffer 196 WRED
Router 144 Blackhole route
Buffer 14 Packet Latency Threshold Crossed
Buffer 14 Port TC Congestion Threshold
L1 4 Oper down
This example shows the drops seen at layer 2 across the network.
cumulus@mlx-2700-03:mgmt:~$ netq show wjh-drop l2
Matching wjh records:
Hostname Ingress Port Reason Agg Count Src Ip Dst Ip Proto Src Port Dst Port Src Mac Dst Mac First Timestamp Last Timestamp
----------------- ------------------------ --------------------------------------------- ------------------ ---------------- ---------------- ------ ---------------- ---------------- ------------------ ------------------ ------------------------------ ----------------------------
mlx-2700-03 swp1s2 Port loopback filter 10 27.0.0.19 27.0.0.22 0 0 0 00:02:00:00:00:73 0c:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff Mon Dec 16 11:54:15 2019 Mon Dec 16 11:54:15 2019
mlx-2700-03 swp1s2 Source MAC equals destination MAC 10 27.0.0.19 27.0.0.22 0 0 0 00:02:00:00:00:73 00:02:00:00:00:73 Mon Dec 16 11:53:17 2019 Mon Dec 16 11:53:17 2019
mlx-2700-03 swp1s2 Source MAC equals destination MAC 10 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 0 0 0 00:02:00:00:00:73 00:02:00:00:00:73 Mon Dec 16 11:40:44 2019 Mon Dec 16 11:40:44 2019
The following two examples include the severity of a drop event (error, warning, or notice) for ACLs and routers.
cumulus@switch:~$ netq show wjh-drop acl
Matching wjh records:
Hostname Ingress Port Reason Severity Agg Count Src Ip Dst Ip Proto Src Port Dst Port Src Mac Dst Mac Acl Rule Id Acl Bind Point Acl Name Acl Rule First Timestamp Last Timestamp
----------------- ------------------------ --------------------------------------------- ---------------- ------------------ ---------------- ---------------- ------ ---------------- ---------------- ------------------ ------------------ ---------------------- ---------------------------- ---------------- ---------------- ------------------------------ ----------------------------
leaf01 swp2 Ingress router ACL Error 49 55.0.0.1 55.0.0.2 17 8492 21423 00:32:10:45:76:89 00:ab:05:d4:1b:13 0x0 0 Tue Oct 6 15:29:13 2020 Tue Oct 6 15:29:39 2020
cumulus@switch:~$ netq show wjh-drop router
Matching wjh records:
Hostname Ingress Port Reason Severity Agg Count Src Ip Dst Ip Proto Src Port Dst Port Src Mac Dst Mac First Timestamp Last Timestamp
----------------- ------------------------ --------------------------------------------- ---------------- ------------------ ---------------- ---------------- ------ ---------------- ---------------- ------------------ ------------------ ------------------------------ ----------------------------
leaf01 swp1 Blackhole route Notice 36 46.0.1.2 47.0.2.3 6 1235 43523 00:01:02:03:04:05 00:06:07:08:09:0a Tue Oct 6 15:29:13 2020 Tue Oct 6 15:29:47 2020
Configure Latency and Congestion Thresholds
WJH latency and congestion metrics depend on threshold settings to trigger the events. WJH measures packet latency as the time spent inside a single system (switch). When specified, WJH triggers events when measured values cross high thresholds and events are suppressed when values are below low thresholds.
To configure these thresholds, run:
netq config add agent wjh-threshold
(latency|congestion)
(<text-tc-list>|all)
(<text-port-list>|all)
<text-th-hi>
<text-th-lo>
You can specify multiple traffic classes and multiple ports by separating the classes or ports by a comma (no spaces).
For example, the following command creates latency thresholds for Class 3 traffic on port swp1 where the upper threshold is 10 usecs and the lower threshold is 1 usec:
cumulus@switch:~$ sudo netq config add agent wjh-threshold latency 3 swp1 10 1
This example creates congestion thresholds for Class 4 traffic on port swp1 where the upper threshold is 200 cells and the lower threshold is 10 cells, where a cell is a unit of 144 bytes:
cumulus@switch:~$ sudo netq config add agent wjh-threshold congestion 4 swp1 200 10
Refer to the command line reference for a comprehensive list of options and definitions for this command.
Suppress Events with Filters
You can create filters with the UI or CLI to prevent WJH from generating events. Filters can be applied to a drop category (such as layer 1 drops or buffer drops), a drop reason (for example, “decapsulation error” or “multicast MAC mismatch”), or according to severity level (notice, warning, or error). With the CLI, you can create filters to suppress events according to their source or destination IP addresses.
For a complete list of drop types, reasons, and severity levels, refer to the WJH Events Reference.
Before configuring the NetQ Agent to filter WJH drops, you must generate AuthKeys. Copy the access key and secret key to an accessible location. You will enter them in one of the final steps.
-
Expand the Menu and select Manage switches.
-
Select the NetQ agent configurations tab.
-
On the NetQ Agent Configurations card, select Add config.
-
Enter a name for the profile. In the WJH row, select Enable, then Customize. By default, WJH includes all drop reasons and severities. Uncheck any drop reasons or severity you do not want to generate WJH events, then click Done.
-
Enter your NetQ access key and secret key.
-
Select Add to save the configuration profile, or click Close to discard it.
To configure the NetQ Agent to filter WJH drops, run netq config add agent wjh-drop-filter. Use tab completion to view the available drop type, drop reason, and severity values.
netq config add agent wjh-drop-filter
drop-type <text-wjh-drop-type>
[drop-reasons <text-wjh-drop-reasons>]
[severity <text-drop-severity-list>]
To configure the NetQ Agent to ignore WJH drops based on IP addresses (both source and destination), run:
netq config add agent wjh-drop-filter
ips [<text-wjh-ips>]
To display filter configurations, run netq config show agent wjh-drop-filter. To delete a filter, run netq config del agent wjh-drop-filter.