- AggregateCoreFilter
- AggregateInstanceExtraSpecsFilter
- AggregateMultiTenancyIsolation
- AggregateRamFilter
- AllHostsFilter
- AvailabilityZoneFilter
- ComputeCapabilitiesFilter
- ComputeFilter
- CoreFilter
- DifferentHostFilter
- DiskFilter
- GroupAffinityFilter
- GroupAntiAffinityFilter
- ImagePropertiesFilter
- IsolatedHostsFilter
- JsonFilter
- RamFilter
- RetryFilter
- SameHostFilter
- SimpleCIDRAffinityFilter
When the Filter Scheduler receives a request for a resource, it first applies filters to determine which hosts are eligible for consideration when dispatching a resource. Filters are binary: either a host is accepted by the filter, or it is rejected. Hosts that are accepted by the filter are then processed by a different algorithm to decide which hosts to use for that request, described in the Weights section.
The scheduler_available_filters
configuration option in nova.conf
provides the Compute service with the list of the filters
that are used by the scheduler. The default setting
specifies all of the filter that are included with the
Compute service:
scheduler_available_filters=nova.scheduler.filters.all_filters
This configuration option can be specified multiple
times. For example, if you implemented your own custom
filter in Python called
myfilter.MyFilter
and you wanted to
use both the built-in filters and your custom filter, your
nova.conf
file would
contain:
scheduler_available_filters=nova.scheduler.filters.all_filters scheduler_available_filters=myfilter.MyFilter
The scheduler_default_filters
configuration option in nova.conf
defines the list of filters that are applied by the
nova-scheduler
service. As
mentioned, the default filters are:
scheduler_default_filters=AvailabilityZoneFilter,RamFilter,ComputeFilter
The following sections describe the available filters.
Implements blueprint per-aggregate-resource-ratio.
AggregateCoreFilter supports per-aggregate
cpu_allocation_ratio
. If the
per-aggregate value is not found, the value falls back
to the global setting.
Matches properties defined in an instance type's
extra specs against admin-defined properties on a host
aggregate. Works with specifications that are unscoped,
or are scoped with aggregate_instance_extra_specs
.
See the host aggregates section for documentation
on how to use this filter.
Isolates tenants to specific host aggregates.
If a host is in an aggregate that has the metadata key
filter_tenant_id
it only
creates instances from that tenant (or list of
tenants). A host can be in different aggregates. If a
host does not belong to an aggregate with the metadata
key, it can create instances from all tenants.
Implements blueprint
per-aggregate-resource-ratio
.
Supports per-aggregate
ram_allocation_ratio
. If
per-aggregate value is not found, it falls back to the
default setting.
Filters hosts by availability zone. This filter must be enabled for the scheduler to respect availability zones in requests.
Matches properties defined in an instance type's extra specs against compute capabilities.
If an extra specs key contains a colon ":", anything before the colon is treated as a namespace, and anything after the colon is treated as the key to be matched. If a namespace is present and is not 'capabilities', it is ignored by this filter.
Note | |
---|---|
Disable the ComputeCapabilitiesFilter when using a Bare Metal configuration, due to bug 1129485 |
Passes all hosts that are operational and enabled.
In general, this filter should always be enabled.
Only schedule instances on hosts if there are sufficient CPU cores available. If this filter is not set, the scheduler may over provision a host based on cores (for example, the virtual cores running on an instance may exceed the physical cores).
This filter can be configured to allow a fixed
amount of vCPU overcommitment by using the
cpu_allocation_ratio
Configuration option in
nova.conf
. The default setting
is:
cpu_allocation_ratio=16.0
With this setting, if 8 vCPUs are on a node, the scheduler allows instances up to 128 vCPU to be run on that node.
To disallow vCPU overcommitment set:
cpu_allocation_ratio=1.0
Schedule the instance on a different host from a set
of instances. To take advantage of this filter, the
requester must pass a scheduler hint, using
different_host
as the key and a
list of instance uuids as the value. This filter is
the opposite of the SameHostFilter
.
Using the nova command-line tool,
use the --hint
flag. For
example:
$ nova boot --image cedef40a-ed67-4d10-800e-17455edce175 --flavor 1 \ --hint different_host=a0cf03a5-d921-4877-bb5c-86d26cf818e1 \ --hint different_host=8c19174f-4220-44f0-824a-cd1eeef10287 server-1
With the API, use the
os:scheduler_hints
key. For
example:
{ 'server': { 'name': 'server-1', 'imageRef': 'cedef40a-ed67-4d10-800e-17455edce175', 'flavorRef': '1' }, 'os:scheduler_hints': { 'different_host': ['a0cf03a5-d921-4877-bb5c-86d26cf818e1', '8c19174f-4220-44f0-824a-cd1eeef10287'], }
Only schedule instances on hosts if there is sufficient disk space available for root and ephemeral storage.
This filter can be configured to allow a fixed
amount of disk overcommitment by using the
disk_allocation_ratio
Configuration option in
nova.conf
. The default setting
is:
disk_allocation_ratio=1.0
Adjusting this value to greater than 1.0 enables scheduling instances while over committing disk resources on the node. This might be desirable if you use an image format that is sparse or copy on write such that each virtual instance does not require a 1:1 allocation of virtual disk to physical storage.
The GroupAffinityFilter ensures that an instance is
scheduled on to a host from a set of group hosts.
To take advantage of this filter, the requester must pass a
scheduler hint, using group
as the
key and an arbitrary name as the value. Using
the nova command-line tool, use the
--hint
flag. For
example:
$ nova boot --image cedef40a-ed67-4d10-800e-17455edce175 --flavor 1 \ --hint group=foo server-1
The GroupAntiAffinityFilter ensures that each
instance in a group is on a different host. To take
advantage of this filter, the requester must pass a
scheduler hint, using group
as the
key and an arbitrary name as the value. Using
the nova command-line tool, use the
--hint
flag. For
example:
$ nova boot --image cedef40a-ed67-4d10-800e-17455edce175 --flavor 1 \ --hint group=foo server-1
Filters hosts based on properties defined on the instance's image. It passes hosts that can support the specified image properties contained in the instance. Properties include the architecture, hypervisor type, and virtual machine mode. for example, an instance might require a host that runs an ARM-based processor and QEMU as the hypervisor. An image can be decorated with these properties by using:
$ glance image-update img-uuid --property architecture=arm --property hypervisor_type=qemu
The image properties that the filter checks for are:
architecture
: Architecture describes the machine architecture required by the image. Examples are i686, x86_64, arm, and ppc64.hypervisor_type
: Hypervisor type describes the hypervisor required by the image. Examples are xen, kvm, qemu, xenapi, and powervm.vm_mode
: Virtual machine mode describes the hypervisor application binary interface (ABI) required by the image. Examples are 'xen' for Xen 3.0 paravirtual ABI, 'hvm' for native ABI, 'uml' for User Mode Linux paravirtual ABI, exe for container virt executable ABI.
Allows the admin to define a special (isolated) set of images and a special (isolated) set of hosts, such that the isolated images can only run on the isolated hosts, and the isolated hosts can only run isolated images.
The admin must specify the isolated set of images
and hosts in the nova.conf
file
using the isolated_hosts
and
isolated_images
configuration
options. For example:
isolated_hosts=server1,server2 isolated_images=342b492c-128f-4a42-8d3a-c5088cf27d13,ebd267a6-ca86-4d6c-9a0e-bd132d6b7d09
The JsonFilter allows a user to construct a custom filter by passing a scheduler hint in JSON format. The following operators are supported:
=
<
>
in
<=
>=
not
or
and
The filter supports the following variables:
$free_ram_mb
$free_disk_mb
$total_usable_ram_mb
$vcpus_total
$vcpus_used
Using the nova
command-line tool, use the --hint
flag:
$ nova boot --image 827d564a-e636-4fc4-a376-d36f7ebe1747 \ --flavor 1 --hint query='[">=","$free_ram_mb",1024]' server1
With the API, use the
os:scheduler_hints
key:
{ 'server': { 'name': 'server-1', 'imageRef': 'cedef40a-ed67-4d10-800e-17455edce175', 'flavorRef': '1' }, 'os:scheduler_hints': { 'query': '[">=","$free_ram_mb",1024]', } }
Only schedule instances on hosts that have sufficient RAM available. If this filter is not set, the scheduler may over provision a host based on RAM (for example, the RAM allocated by virtual machine instances may exceed the physical RAM).
This filter can be configured to allow a fixed
amount of RAM overcommitment by using the
ram_allocation_ratio
configuration option in
nova.conf
. The default setting
is:
ram_allocation_ratio=1.5
With this setting, if there is 1GB of free RAM, the scheduler allows instances up to size 1.5GB to be run on that instance.
Filter out hosts that have already been attempted for scheduling purposes. If the scheduler selects a host to respond to a service request, and the host fails to respond to the request, this filter prevents the scheduler from retrying that host for the service request.
This filter is only useful if the
scheduler_max_attempts
configuration option is set to a value greater than
zero.
Schedule the instance on the same host as another
instance in a set of instances. To take advantage of
this filter, the requester must pass a scheduler hint,
using same_host
as the key and a
list of instance uuids as the value. This filter is
the opposite of the
DifferentHostFilter
. Using the
nova command-line tool, use the
--hint
flag:
$ nova boot --image cedef40a-ed67-4d10-800e-17455edce175 --flavor 1 \ --hint same_host=a0cf03a5-d921-4877-bb5c-86d26cf818e1 \ --hint same_host=8c19174f-4220-44f0-824a-cd1eeef10287 server-1
With the API, use the
os:scheduler_hints
key:
{ 'server': { 'name': 'server-1', 'imageRef': 'cedef40a-ed67-4d10-800e-17455edce175', 'flavorRef': '1' }, 'os:scheduler_hints': { 'same_host': ['a0cf03a5-d921-4877-bb5c-86d26cf818e1', '8c19174f-4220-44f0-824a-cd1eeef10287'], } }
Schedule the instance based on host IP subnet range. To take advantage of this filter, the requester must specify a range of valid IP address in CIDR format, by passing two scheduler hints:
build_near_host_ip
The first IP address in the subnet (for example,
192.168.1.1
)cidr
The CIDR that corresponds to the subnet (for example,
/24
)
Using the nova command-line tool,
use the --hint
flag. For example,
to specify the IP subnet
192.168.1.1/24
$ nova boot --image cedef40a-ed67-4d10-800e-17455edce175 --flavor 1 \ --hint build_near_host_ip=192.168.1.1 --hint cidr=/24 server-1
With the API, use the
os:scheduler_hints
key:
{ { 'server': { 'name': 'server-1', 'imageRef': 'cedef40a-ed67-4d10-800e-17455edce175', 'flavorRef': '1' }, 'os:scheduler_hints': { 'build_near_host_ip': '192.168.1.1', 'cidr': '24' } }