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Tasks
As a complement to the Linkerd feature docs and the Linkerd reference docs, we’ve provided guides and examples of common tasks that you may need to perform when using Linkerd.
Common Linkerd tasks
- Adding your services to Linkerd
In order for your services to take advantage of Linkerd, they also need to be *meshed* by injecting Linkerd's data plane proxy into their pods. - Automated Canary Releases
Reduce deployment risk by combining Linkerd and Flagger to automate canary releases based on service metrics. - Automatic Multicluster Failover
Use the Linkerd Failover extension to failover between clusters. - Automatically Rotating Control Plane TLS Credentials
Use cert-manager to automatically rotate control plane TLS credentials. - Automatically Rotating Webhook TLS Credentials
Use cert-manager to automatically rotate webhook TLS credentials. - Bringing your own Prometheus
Use an existing Prometheus instance with Linkerd. - Configuring Per-Route Policy
Fine-grained authorization policies can be configured for individual HTTP routes. - Configuring Proxy Concurrency
Limit the Linkerd proxy's CPU usage. - Configuring Retries
Configure Linkerd to automatically retry failing requests. - Configuring Timeouts
Configure Linkerd to automatically fail requests that take too long. - Control Plane Debug Endpoints
Linkerd's control plane components provide debug endpoints. - Customizing Linkerd's Configuration with Kustomize
Use Kustomize to modify Linkerd's configuration in a programmatic way. - Debugging 502s
Determine why Linkerd is returning 502 responses. - Debugging gRPC applications with request tracing
Follow a long-form example of debugging a failing gRPC application using live request tracing. - Debugging HTTP applications with per-route metrics
Follow a long-form example of debugging a failing HTTP application using per-route metrics. - Distributed tracing with Linkerd
Use Linkerd to help instrument your application with distributed tracing. - Exporting Metrics
Integrate Linkerd's metrics with your existing metrics infrastructure. - Exposing the Dashboard
Make it easy for others to access Linkerd and Grafana dashboards without the CLI. - Generating your own mTLS root certificates
Generate your own mTLS root certificate instead of letting Linkerd do it for you. - Getting Per-Route Metrics
Configure per-route metrics for your application. - Getting started with Linkerd SMI extension
Use Linkerd SMI extension to work with Service Mesh Interface(SMI) resources. - Graceful Pod Shutdown
Gracefully handle pod shutdown signal. - Grafana
Grafana install instructions and how to link it with the Linkerd Dashboard - Ingress traffic
Linkerd works alongside your ingress controller of choice. - Injecting Faults
Practice chaos engineering by injecting faults into services with Linkerd. - Installing Linkerd
Install Linkerd onto your Kubernetes cluster. - Installing Linkerd with Helm
Install Linkerd onto your Kubernetes cluster using Helm. - Installing Multi-cluster Components
Allow Linkerd to manage cross-cluster communication. - Linkerd and Pod Security Policies (PSP)
Using Linkerd with a pod security policies enabled. - Manually Rotating Control Plane TLS Credentials
Update Linkerd's TLS trust anchor and issuer certificate. - Modifying the Proxy Log Level
Linkerd proxy log levels can be modified dynamically to assist with debugging. - Multi-cluster communication
Allow Linkerd to manage cross-cluster communication. - Multi-cluster communication with StatefulSets
cross-cluster communication to and from headless services. - Replacing expired certificates
Follow this workflow if any of your TLS certs have expired. - Restricting Access To Services
Use Linkerd policy to restrict access to a service. - Rotating webhooks certificates
Follow these steps to rotate your Linkerd webhooks certificates. - Securing Linkerd Tap
Best practices for securing Linkerd's tap feature. - Setting Up Service Profiles
Create a service profile that provides more details for Linkerd to build on. - Troubleshooting
Troubleshoot issues with your Linkerd installation. - Uninstalling Linkerd
Linkerd can be easily removed from a Kubernetes cluster. - Uninstalling Multicluster
Unlink and uninstall Linkerd multicluster. - Upgrading Linkerd
Perform zero-downtime upgrades for Linkerd. - Using a Custom Cluster Domain
Use Linkerd with a custom cluster domain. - Using A Private Docker Repository
Using Linkerd with a Private Docker Repository. - Using extensions
Add functionality to Linkerd with optional extensions. - Using GitOps with Linkerd with Argo CD
Use Argo CD to manage Linkerd installation and upgrade lifecycle. - Using the Debug Sidecar
Inject the debug container to capture network packets. - Validating your mTLS traffic
You can validate whether or not your traffic is being mTLS'd by Linkerd.