Reader small image

You're reading from  Apache Mesos Cookbook

Product typeBook
Published inAug 2017
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781785884627
Edition1st Edition
Right arrow
Authors (2):
David Blomquist
David Blomquist
author image
David Blomquist

David Blomquist been working with computers since the 1980s. His first computer was an Apple Macintosh and the first networked computer he managed was a 10 terminal Xenix system. Since that time, David has held positions in virtually every area of IT, including operations, development, and architecture. David now specializes in designing Big Data, HPC, and Grid Computing systems with applications in Health Care and Science. Most recently, he has designed and deployed several large-scale clusters for the Federal Government.
Read more about David Blomquist

View More author details
Right arrow

Monitoring containers with Sysdig


In this recipe, you will learn how to get events from containers with Sysdig, a tool for collecting system events. It supports containers from both Docker and Mesos and it integrates with Mesos, Marathon, and Kubernetes, matching containers with task, application, or pod. With Sysdig, you can easily detect what is wrong with the container by looking at its events.

Getting ready

You need to have Mesos up and running. See the recipes of Chapter 1, Getting Started with Apache Mesos to get more information.

How to do it...

Install Sysdig on all agents:

curl -s https://s3.amazonaws.com/download.draios.com/DRAIOS-GPG-KEY.public | apt-key add -
 curl -s -o /etc/apt/sources.list.d/draios.list http://download.draios.com/stable/deb/draios.list
 apt-get update
apt-get -y install linux-headers-$(uname -r)
apt-get -y install sysdig

Then log in to an interesting agent and run:

csysdig -m http://<MESOS_IP>:<MESOS_PORT> -pm mesos.task.id!=''

For example, if your Mesos...

lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Chapter
You have been reading a chapter from
Apache Mesos Cookbook
Published in: Aug 2017Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781785884627

Authors (2)

author image
David Blomquist

David Blomquist been working with computers since the 1980s. His first computer was an Apple Macintosh and the first networked computer he managed was a 10 terminal Xenix system. Since that time, David has held positions in virtually every area of IT, including operations, development, and architecture. David now specializes in designing Big Data, HPC, and Grid Computing systems with applications in Health Care and Science. Most recently, he has designed and deployed several large-scale clusters for the Federal Government.
Read more about David Blomquist