This page provides some guidance and best practices around benchmarking the performance of the OPA-Envoy plugin in order to give users an idea of the overhead of using the plugin. It describes an example setup to perform the benchmarks, different benchmarking scenarios and important metrics that should be captured to understand the impact of the OPA-Envoy plugin.
Benchmark Setup
Sample App
The first component of the setup features a simple Go app which provides information about employees in a company. It
exposes a /people
endpoint to get
and create
employees. The app’s source code can be found here.
Envoy
Next, is the Envoy proxy that runs alongside the example application. The Envoy configuration below defines an external authorization
filter envoy.ext_authz
for a gRPC authorization server. The config uses Envoy’s in-built gRPC client which
is a minimal custom implementation of gRPC to make the external gRPC call.
static_resources:
listeners:
- address:
socket_address:
address: 0.0.0.0
port_value: 8000
filter_chains:
- filters:
- name: envoy.http_connection_manager
typed_config:
"@type": type.googleapis.com/envoy.extensions.filters.network.http_connection_manager.v3.HttpConnectionManager
codec_type: auto
stat_prefix: ingress_http
route_config:
name: local_route
virtual_hosts:
- name: backend
domains:
- "*"
routes:
- match:
prefix: "/"
route:
cluster: service
http_filters:
- name: envoy.ext_authz
typed_config:
"@type": type.googleapis.com/envoy.extensions.filters.http.ext_authz.v3.ExtAuthz
transport_api_version: V3
with_request_body:
max_request_bytes: 8192
allow_partial_message: true
failure_mode_allow: false
grpc_service:
envoy_grpc:
cluster_name: opa-envoy
timeout: 0.5s
- name: envoy.filters.http.router
clusters:
- name: service
connect_timeout: 0.25s
type: strict_dns
lb_policy: round_robin
load_assignment:
cluster_name: service
endpoints:
- lb_endpoints:
- endpoint:
address:
socket_address:
address: 127.0.0.1
port_value: 8080
- name: opa-envoy
connect_timeout: 1.25s
type: strict_dns
lb_policy: round_robin
http2_protocol_options: {}
load_assignment:
cluster_name: opa-envoy
endpoints:
- lb_endpoints:
- endpoint:
address:
socket_address:
address: 127.0.0.1
port_value: 9191
admin:
access_log_path: "/dev/null"
address:
socket_address:
address: 0.0.0.0
port_value: 8001
layered_runtime:
layers:
- name: static_layer_0
static_layer:
envoy:
resource_limits:
listener:
example_listener_name:
connection_limit: 10000
overload:
global_downstream_max_connections: 50000
OPA-Envoy Plugin
Now let’s deploy OPA as an External Authorization server. Below is a sample configuration for the OPA-Envoy container:
containers:
- image: openpolicyagent/opa:0.49.2-envoy
imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
name: opa
resources:
requests:
memory: "64Mi"
cpu: "1m"
limits:
memory: "128Mi"
cpu: "2m"
args:
- "run"
- "--server"
- "--addr=localhost:8181"
- "--diagnostic-addr=0.0.0.0:8282"
- "--set=plugins.envoy_ext_authz_grpc.addr=:9191"
- "--set=plugins.envoy_ext_authz_grpc.path=envoy/authz/allow"
- "--ignore=.*"
- "/policy/policy.rego"
livenessProbe:
httpGet:
path: /health?plugins
port: 8282
readinessProbe:
httpGet:
path: /health?plugins
port: 8282
💡 Consider specifying CPU and memory resource requests and limits for the OPA and other containers to prevent deployments from resource starvation. You can also start OPA with the
GOMAXPROCS
environment variable to limit the number of cores that OPA can consume.💡 The OPA-Envoy plugin can be configured to listen on a UNIX Domain Socket. A complete example of such a setup can be found here.
Load Generator And Measurement Tool
Consider using a load generator and measurement tool that measures latency from the end user’s perspective and reports
latency as the percentiles of a distribution, e.g. p50
(median), p99
, p999
etc. As example
implementation of such a tool can be found here.
Benchmark Scenarios
Following are some scenarios to perform benchmarks on. The results could be used to compare OPA-Envoy plugin’s latency and resource consumption with the baseline (no-opa) case for instance.
- App Only
In this case, requests are sent directly to the application ie. no Envoy and OPA in the request path.
- App and Envoy
In this case, OPA is not included in the request path but Envoy is (ie. Envoy External Authorization API disabled).
- App, Envoy and OPA (NOP policy)
In this case, performance measurements are observed with Envoy External Authorization API enabled. This means Envoy will make a call to OPA on every incoming request with the below NOP policy loaded into OPA.
package envoy.authz
default allow := true
- App, Envoy and OPA (RBAC policy)
In this case, performance measurements are observed with Envoy External Authorization API enabled and a sample real-world RBAC policy as shown below loaded into OPA.
package envoy.authz
import input.attributes.request.http as http_request
default allow := false
allow {
roles_for_user[r]
required_roles[r]
}
roles_for_user[r] {
r := user_roles[user_name][_]
}
required_roles[r] {
perm := role_perms[r][_]
perm.method == http_request.method
perm.path == http_request.path
}
user_name := parsed {
[_, encoded] := split(http_request.headers.authorization, " ")
[parsed, _] := split(base64url.decode(encoded), ":")
}
user_roles := {
"alice": ["guest"],
"bob": ["admin"]
}
role_perms := {
"guest": [
{"method": "GET", "path": "/people"},
],
"admin": [
{"method": "GET", "path": "/people"},
{"method": "POST", "path": "/people"},
],
}
- App, Envoy and OPA (Header Injection policy)
This scenario is similar to the previous one expect the policy decision is an object which contains optional response headers. An example of such a policy can be found here.
Measurements
This section describes some metrics that should help to measure the cost of the OPA-Envoy plugin in terms of CPU and memory consumed as well as latency added.
End-to-end Latency
is the latency measured from the end user’s perspective. This includes time spent on the network, in the application, in OPA and so on. The sample load tester tool shows how to measure this metric.OPA Evaluation
is the time taken to evaluate the policy.gRPC Server Handler
is the total time taken to prepare the input for the policy, evaluate the policy (OPA Evaluation
) and prepare the result. Basically this is time spent by the OPA-Envoy plugin to process the request. OPA’s metrics package provides helpers to measure bothgRPC Server Handler
andOPA Evaluation
time.Resource utilization
refers to the CPU and memory usage of the OPA-Envoy container.kubectl top
utility can be leveraged to measure this.
Features
The sample OPA-Envoy deployment described previously, does not utilize OPA’s decision logs management API that enables periodic reporting of decision logs to remote HTTP servers or local console. Decision logging can be enabled by updating the OPA-Envoy configuration, and the guidance provided on this page can be used to gather benchmark results.
Feedback
Was this page helpful?
Glad to hear it! Please tell us how we can improve.
Sorry to hear that. Please tell us how we can improve.