Are you using traffic mirroring in production? If not, you might be missing one of the safest ways to test and observe production changes.
🚦 What is Traffic Mirroring?
Traffic mirroring in Istio or Envoy Proxy lets you send a copy of live traffic to a secondary target.
When enabled, traffic to /service routes to cluster1 as normal, and a mirrored copy is sent to cluster2.
The key: mirrored traffic is fire-and-forget. Responses are ignored and never impact the primary request.
🧪 Why It’s Powerful
1️⃣ Shadow Traffic for Safe Testing
The most common use case is shadow traffic.
When migrating platforms or deploying a new version of an application, you can send real traffic to the new system, observe behavior, and validate responses.
All without impacting users. No risky cutovers. You see exactly how the new system behaves under real load.
2️⃣ Out-of-Band Traffic Inspection
Another powerful use case is traffic inspection.
Inline inspection is risky. It adds latency, introduces new failure points, and becomes part of the critical path.
With traffic mirroring, you can inspect traffic, analyze requests, and detect anomalies.
All without impacting the primary path.
😶🌫️ Reality Check
It’s not perfect. There is some overhead.
Mirroring adds load to the sidecar, which may or may not be acceptable for your system. In my experience, it’s negligible, but it’s something you should measure in your own environment before deploying to production.
🧠 Final Thoughts
Traffic mirroring is one of the safest ways to validate migrations, test new systems, and observe real production behavior.
The hard part isn’t mirroring traffic. It’s running two production systems in parallel. That’s the real cost, and the real tradeoff.
But if you can afford that cost, traffic mirroring is an incredibly powerful tool.
If you want to dig deeper:
- Istio traffic mirroring docs explain the workflow.
- Envoy request mirror policy docs cover the lower-level routing behavior.