Kubernetes nodes can be scheduled to Capacity. Pods can consume all the
available capacity on a node by default. This is an issue because nodes
typically run quite a few system daemons that power the OS and Kubernetes
itself. Unless resources are set aside for these system daemons, pods and system
daemons compete for resources and lead to resource starvation issues on the
node.
The kubelet exposes a feature named Node Allocatable that helps to reserve
compute resources for system daemons. Kubernetes recommends cluster
administrators to configure Node Allocatable based on their workload density
on each node.
Node Capacity
---------------------------
| kube-reserved |
|-------------------------|
| system-reserved |
|-------------------------|
| eviction-threshold |
|-------------------------|
| |
| allocatable |
| (available for pods) |
| |
| |
---------------------------
Allocatable on a Kubernetes node is defined as the amount of compute resources
that are available for pods. The scheduler does not over-subscribe
Allocatable. CPU, memory and ephemeral-storage are supported as of now.
Node Allocatable is exposed as part of v1.Node object in the API and as part
of kubectl describe node in the CLI.
Resources can be reserved for two categories of system daemons in the kubelet.
To properly enforce node allocatable constraints on the node, you must
enable the new cgroup hierarchy via the --cgroups-per-qos flag. This flag is
enabled by default. When enabled, the kubelet will parent all end-user pods
under a cgroup hierarchy managed by the kubelet.
The kubelet supports manipulation of the cgroup hierarchy on
the host using a cgroup driver. The driver is configured via the
--cgroup-driver flag.
The supported values are the following:
cgroupfs is the default driver that performs direct manipulation of the
cgroup filesystem on the host in order to manage cgroup sandboxes.systemd is an alternative driver that manages cgroup sandboxes using
transient slices for resources that are supported by that init system.Depending on the configuration of the associated container runtime,
operators may have to choose a particular cgroup driver to ensure
proper system behavior. For example, if operators use the systemd
cgroup driver provided by the docker runtime, the kubelet must
be configured to use the systemd cgroup driver.
--kube-reserved=[cpu=100m][,][memory=100Mi][,][ephemeral-storage=1Gi]--kube-reserved-cgroup=kube-reserved is meant to capture resource reservation for kubernetes system
daemons like the kubelet, container runtime, node problem detector, etc.
It is not meant to reserve resources for system daemons that are run as pods.
kube-reserved is typically a function of pod density on the nodes. This
performance dashboard exposes cpu and
memory usage profiles of kubelet and docker engine at multiple levels of
pod density. This blog
post
explains how the dashboard can be interpreted to come up with a suitable
kube-reserved reservation.
To optionally enforce kube-reserved on system daemons, specify the parent
control group for kube daemons as the value for --kube-reserved-cgroup kubelet
flag.
It is recommended that the kubernetes system daemons are placed under a top
level control group (runtime.slice on systemd machines for example). Each
system daemon should ideally run within its own child control group. Refer to
this
doc
for more details on recommended control group hierarchy.
Note that Kubelet does not create --kube-reserved-cgroup if it doesn’t
exist. Kubelet will fail if an invalid cgroup is specified.
--system-reserved=[cpu=100mi][,][memory=100Mi][,][ephemeral-storage=1Gi]--system-reserved-cgroup=system-reserved is meant to capture resource reservation for OS system daemons
like sshd, udev, etc. system-reserved should reserve memory for the
kernel too since kernel memory is not accounted to pods in Kubernetes at this time.
Reserving resources for user login sessions is also recommended (user.slice in
systemd world).
To optionally enforce system-reserved on system daemons, specify the parent
control group for OS system daemons as the value for --system-reserved-cgroup
kubelet flag.
It is recommended that the OS system daemons are placed under a top level
control group (system.slice on systemd machines for example).
Note that Kubelet does not create --system-reserved-cgroup if it doesn’t
exist. Kubelet will fail if an invalid cgroup is specified.
--eviction-hard=[memory.available<500Mi]Memory pressure at the node level leads to System OOMs which affects the entire
node and all pods running on it. Nodes can go offline temporarily until memory
has been reclaimed. To avoid (or reduce the probability of) system OOMs kubelet
provides Out of Resource management. Evictions are
supported for memory and ephemeral-storage only. By reserving some memory via
--eviction-hard flag, the kubelet attempts to evict pods whenever memory
availability on the node drops below the reserved value. Hypothetically, if
system daemons did not exist on a node, pods cannot use more than capacity -
eviction-hard. For this reason, resources reserved for evictions are not
available for pods.
--enforce-node-allocatable=pods[,][system-reserved][,][kube-reserved]The scheduler treats Allocatable as the available capacity for pods.
kubelet enforce Allocatable across pods by default. Enforcement is performed
by evicting pods whenever the overall usage across all pods exceeds
Allocatable. More details on eviction policy can be found
here. This enforcement is controlled by
specifying pods value to the kubelet flag --enforce-node-allocatable.
Optionally, kubelet can be made to enforce kube-reserved and
system-reserved by specifying kube-reserved & system-reserved values in
the same flag. Note that to enforce kube-reserved or system-reserved,
--kube-reserved-cgroup or --system-reserved-cgroup needs to be specified
respectively.
System daemons are expected to be treated similar to Guaranteed pods. System
daemons can burst within their bounding control groups and this behavior needs
to be managed as part of kubernetes deployments. For example, kubelet should
have its own control group and share Kube-reserved resources with the
container runtime. However, Kubelet cannot burst and use up all available Node
resources if kube-reserved is enforced.
Be extra careful while enforcing system-reserved reservation since it can lead
to critical system services being CPU starved or OOM killed on the node. The
recommendation is to enforce system-reserved only if a user has profiled their
nodes exhaustively to come up with precise estimates and is confident in their
ability to recover if any process in that group is oom_killed.
Allocatable on pods.kube-reserved based on usage heuristics.system-reserved over time.The resource requirements of kube system daemons may grow over time as more and
more features are added. Over time, kubernetes project will attempt to bring
down utilization of node system daemons, but that is not a priority as of now.
So expect a drop in Allocatable capacity in future releases.
Here is an example to illustrate Node Allocatable computation:
32Gi of memory, 16 CPUs and 100Gi of Storage--kube-reserved is set to cpu=1,memory=2Gi,ephemeral-storage=1Gi--system-reserved is set to cpu=500m,memory=1Gi,ephemeral-storage=1Gi--eviction-hard is set to memory.available<500Mi,nodefs.available<10%Under this scenario, Allocatable will be 14.5 CPUs, 28.5Gi of memory and
98Gi of local storage.
Scheduler ensures that the total memory requests across all pods on this node does
not exceed 28.5Gi and storage doesn’t exceed 88Gi.
Kubelet evicts pods whenever the overall memory usage across pods exceeds 28.5Gi,
or if overall disk usage exceeds 88Gi If all processes on the node consume as
much CPU as they can, pods together cannot consume more than 14.5 CPUs.
If kube-reserved and/or system-reserved is not enforced and system daemons
exceed their reservation, kubelet evicts pods whenever the overall node memory
usage is higher than 31.5Gi or storage is greater than 90Gi
As of Kubernetes version 1.2, it has been possible to optionally specify
kube-reserved and system-reserved reservations. The scheduler switched to
using Allocatable instead of Capacity when available in the same release.
As of Kubernetes version 1.6, eviction-thresholds are being considered by
computing Allocatable. To revert to the old behavior set
--experimental-allocatable-ignore-eviction kubelet flag to true.
As of Kubernetes version 1.6, kubelet enforces Allocatable on pods using
control groups. To revert to the old behavior unset --enforce-node-allocatable
kubelet flag. Note that unless --kube-reserved, or --system-reserved or
--eviction-hard flags have non-default values, Allocatable enforcement does
not affect existing deployments.
As of Kubernetes version 1.6, kubelet launches pods in their own cgroup
sandbox in a dedicated part of the cgroup hierarchy it manages. Operators are
required to drain their nodes prior to upgrade of the kubelet from prior
versions in order to ensure pods and their associated containers are launched in
the proper part of the cgroup hierarchy.
As of Kubernetes version 1.7, kubelet supports specifying storage as a resource
for kube-reserved and system-reserved.