The Concepts section helps you learn about the parts of the Kubernetes system and the abstractions Kubernetes uses to represent your cluster, and helps you obtain a deeper understanding of how Kubernetes works.
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Concepts
- 1: Overview
- 1.1: Objects In Kubernetes
- 1.1.1: Kubernetes Object Management
- 1.1.2: Object Names and IDs
- 1.1.3: Labels and Selectors
- 1.1.4: Namespaces
- 1.1.5: Annotations
- 1.1.6: Field Selectors
- 1.1.7: Finalizers
- 1.1.8: Owners and Dependents
- 1.1.9: Recommended Labels
- 1.2: Kubernetes Components
- 1.3: The Kubernetes API
- 2: Cluster Architecture
- 2.1: Nodes
- 2.2: Communication between Nodes and the Control Plane
- 2.3: Controllers
- 2.4: Leases
- 2.5: Cloud Controller Manager
- 2.6: About cgroup v2
- 2.7: Container Runtime Interface (CRI)
- 2.8: Garbage Collection
- 2.9: Mixed Version Proxy
- 3: Containers
- 3.1: Images
- 3.2: Container Environment
- 3.3: Runtime Class
- 3.4: Container Lifecycle Hooks
- 4: Workloads
- 4.1: Pods
- 4.1.1: Pod Lifecycle
- 4.1.2: Init Containers
- 4.1.3: Sidecar Containers
- 4.1.4: Ephemeral Containers
- 4.1.5: Disruptions
- 4.1.6: Pod Quality of Service Classes
- 4.1.7: User Namespaces
- 4.1.8: Downward API
- 4.2: Workload Management
- 4.2.1: Deployments
- 4.2.2: ReplicaSet
- 4.2.3: StatefulSets
- 4.2.4: DaemonSet
- 4.2.5: Jobs
- 4.2.6: Automatic Cleanup for Finished Jobs
- 4.2.7: CronJob
- 4.2.8: ReplicationController
- 4.3: Autoscaling Workloads
- 5: Services, Load Balancing, and Networking
- 5.1: Service
- 5.2: Ingress
- 5.3: Ingress Controllers
- 5.4: Gateway API
- 5.5: EndpointSlices
- 5.6: Network Policies
- 5.7: DNS for Services and Pods
- 5.8: IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack
- 5.9: Topology Aware Routing
- 5.10: Networking on Windows
- 5.11: Service ClusterIP allocation
- 5.12: Service Internal Traffic Policy
- 6: Storage
- 6.1: Volumes
- 6.2: Persistent Volumes
- 6.3: Projected Volumes
- 6.4: Ephemeral Volumes
- 6.5: Storage Classes
- 6.6: Volume Attributes Classes
- 6.7: Dynamic Volume Provisioning
- 6.8: Volume Snapshots
- 6.9: Volume Snapshot Classes
- 6.10: CSI Volume Cloning
- 6.11: Storage Capacity
- 6.12: Node-specific Volume Limits
- 6.13: Volume Health Monitoring
- 6.14: Windows Storage
- 7: Configuration
- 7.1: Configuration Best Practices
- 7.2: ConfigMaps
- 7.3: Secrets
- 7.4: Resource Management for Pods and Containers
- 7.5: Organizing Cluster Access Using kubeconfig Files
- 7.6: Resource Management for Windows nodes
- 8: Security
- 8.1: Cloud Native Security and Kubernetes
- 8.2: Pod Security Standards
- 8.3: Pod Security Admission
- 8.4: Service Accounts
- 8.5: Pod Security Policies
- 8.6: Security For Windows Nodes
- 8.7: Controlling Access to the Kubernetes API
- 8.8: Role Based Access Control Good Practices
- 8.9: Good practices for Kubernetes Secrets
- 8.10: Multi-tenancy
- 8.11: Hardening Guide - Authentication Mechanisms
- 8.12: Kubernetes API Server Bypass Risks
- 8.13: Security Checklist
- 9: Policies
- 9.1: Limit Ranges
- 9.2: Resource Quotas
- 9.3: Process ID Limits And Reservations
- 9.4: Node Resource Managers
- 10: Scheduling, Preemption and Eviction
- 10.1: Kubernetes Scheduler
- 10.2: Assigning Pods to Nodes
- 10.3: Pod Overhead
- 10.4: Pod Scheduling Readiness
- 10.5: Pod Topology Spread Constraints
- 10.6: Taints and Tolerations
- 10.7: Scheduling Framework
- 10.8: Dynamic Resource Allocation
- 10.9: Scheduler Performance Tuning
- 10.10: Resource Bin Packing
- 10.11: Pod Priority and Preemption
- 10.12: Node-pressure Eviction
- 10.13: API-initiated Eviction
- 11: Cluster Administration
- 11.1: Certificates
- 11.2: Managing Resources
- 11.3: Cluster Networking
- 11.4: Logging Architecture
- 11.5: Metrics For Kubernetes System Components
- 11.6: System Logs
- 11.7: Traces For Kubernetes System Components
- 11.8: Proxies in Kubernetes
- 11.9: API Priority and Fairness
- 11.10: Installing Addons
- 12: Windows in Kubernetes
- 13: Extending Kubernetes
- 13.1: Compute, Storage, and Networking Extensions
- 13.1.1: Network Plugins
- 13.1.2: Device Plugins
- 13.2: Extending the Kubernetes API
- 13.2.1: Custom Resources
- 13.2.2: Kubernetes API Aggregation Layer
- 13.3: Operator pattern
1 - Overview
This page is an overview of Kubernetes.
Kubernetes is a portable, extensible, open source platform for managing containerized workloads and services, that facilitates both declarative configuration and automation. It has a large, rapidly growing ecosystem. Kubernetes services, support, and tools are widely available.
The name Kubernetes originates from Greek, meaning helmsman or pilot. K8s as an abbreviation results from counting the eight letters between the "K" and the "s". Google open-sourced the Kubernetes project in 2014. Kubernetes combines over 15 years of Google's experience running production workloads at scale with best-of-breed ideas and practices from the community.
Going back in time
Let's take a look at why Kubernetes is so useful by going back in time.
Traditional deployment era: Early on, organizations ran applications on physical servers. There was no way to define resource boundaries for applications in a physical server, and this caused resource allocation issues. For example, if multiple applications run on a physical server, there can be instances where one application would take up most of the resources, and as a result, the other applications would underperform. A solution for this would be to run each application on a different physical server. But this did not scale as resources were underutilized, and it was expensive for organizations to maintain many physical servers.
Virtualized deployment era: As a solution, virtualization was introduced. It allows you to run multiple Virtual Machines (VMs) on a single physical server's CPU. Virtualization allows applications to be isolated between VMs and provides a level of security as the information of one application cannot be freely accessed by another application.
Virtualization allows better utilization of resources in a physical server and allows better scalability because an application can be added or updated easily, reduces hardware costs, and much more. With virtualization you can present a set of physical resources as a cluster of disposable virtual machines.
Each VM is a full machine running all the components, including its own operating system, on top of the virtualized hardware.
Container deployment era: Containers are similar to VMs, but they have relaxed isolation properties to share the Operating System (OS) among the applications. Therefore, containers are considered lightweight. Similar to a VM, a container has its own filesystem, share of CPU, memory, process space, and more. As they are decoupled from the underlying infrastructure, they are portable across clouds and OS distributions.
Containers have become popular because they provide extra benefits, such as:
- Agile application creation and deployment: increased ease and efficiency of container image creation compared to VM image use.
- Continuous development, integration, and deployment: provides for reliable and frequent container image build and deployment with quick and efficient rollbacks (due to image immutability).
- Dev and Ops separation of concerns: create application container images at build/release time rather than deployment time, thereby decoupling applications from infrastructure.
- Observability: not only surfaces OS-level information and metrics, but also application health and other signals.
- Environmental consistency across development, testing, and production: runs the same on a laptop as it does in the cloud.
- Cloud and OS distribution portability: runs on Ubuntu, RHEL, CoreOS, on-premises, on major public clouds, and anywhere else.
- Application-centric management: raises the level of abstraction from running an OS on virtual hardware to running an application on an OS using logical resources.
- Loosely coupled, distributed, elastic, liberated micro-services: applications are broken into smaller, independent pieces and can be deployed and managed dynamically – not a monolithic stack running on one big single-purpose machine.
- Resource isolation: predictable application performance.
- Resource utilization: high efficiency and density.
Why you need Kubernetes and what it can do
Containers are a good way to bundle and run your applications. In a production environment, you need to manage the containers that run the applications and ensure that there is no downtime. For example, if a container goes down, another container needs to start. Wouldn't it be easier if this behavior was handled by a system?
That's how Kubernetes comes to the rescue! Kubernetes provides you with a framework to run distributed systems resiliently. It takes care of scaling and failover for your application, provides deployment patterns, and more. For example: Kubernetes can easily manage a canary deployment for your system.
Kubernetes provides you with:
- Service discovery and load balancing Kubernetes can expose a container using the DNS name or using their own IP address. If traffic to a container is high, Kubernetes is able to load balance and distribute the network traffic so that the deployment is stable.
- Storage orchestration Kubernetes allows you to automatically mount a storage system of your choice, such as local storages, public cloud providers, and more.
- Automated rollouts and rollbacks You can describe the desired state for your deployed containers using Kubernetes, and it can change the actual state to the desired state at a controlled rate. For example, you can automate Kubernetes to create new containers for your deployment, remove existing containers and adopt all their resources to the new container.
- Automatic bin packing You provide Kubernetes with a cluster of nodes that it can use to run containerized tasks. You tell Kubernetes how much CPU and memory (RAM) each container needs. Kubernetes can fit containers onto your nodes to make the best use of your resources.
- Self-healing Kubernetes restarts containers that fail, replaces containers, kills containers that don't respond to your user-defined health check, and doesn't advertise them to clients until they are ready to serve.
- Secret and configuration management Kubernetes lets you store and manage sensitive information, such as passwords, OAuth tokens, and SSH keys. You can deploy and update secrets and application configuration without rebuilding your container images, and without exposing secrets in your stack configuration.
- Batch execution In addition to services, Kubernetes can manage your batch and CI workloads, replacing containers that fail, if desired.
- Horizontal scaling Scale your application up and down with a simple command, with a UI, or automatically based on CPU usage.
- IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack Allocation of IPv4 and IPv6 addresses to Pods and Services
- Designed for extensibility Add features to your Kubernetes cluster without changing upstream source code.
What Kubernetes is not
Kubernetes is not a traditional, all-inclusive PaaS (Platform as a Service) system. Since Kubernetes operates at the container level rather than at the hardware level, it provides some generally applicable features common to PaaS offerings, such as deployment, scaling, load balancing, and lets users integrate their logging, monitoring, and alerting solutions. However, Kubernetes is not monolithic, and these default solutions are optional and pluggable. Kubernetes provides the building blocks for building developer platforms, but preserves user choice and flexibility where it is important.
Kubernetes:
- Does not limit the types of applications supported. Kubernetes aims to support an extremely diverse variety of workloads, including stateless, stateful, and data-processing workloads. If an application can run in a container, it should run great on Kubernetes.
- Does not deploy source code and does not build your application. Continuous Integration, Delivery, and Deployment (CI/CD) workflows are determined by organization cultures and preferences as well as technical requirements.
- Does not provide application-level services, such as middleware (for example, message buses), data-processing frameworks (for example, Spark), databases (for example, MySQL), caches, nor cluster storage systems (for example, Ceph) as built-in services. Such components can run on Kubernetes, and/or can be accessed by applications running on Kubernetes through portable mechanisms, such as the Open Service Broker.
- Does not dictate logging, monitoring, or alerting solutions. It provides some integrations as proof of concept, and mechanisms to collect and export metrics.
- Does not provide nor mandate a configuration language/system (for example, Jsonnet). It provides a declarative API that may be targeted by arbitrary forms of declarative specifications.
- Does not provide nor adopt any comprehensive machine configuration, maintenance, management, or self-healing systems.
- Additionally, Kubernetes is not a mere orchestration system. In fact, it eliminates the need for orchestration. The technical definition of orchestration is execution of a defined workflow: first do A, then B, then C. In contrast, Kubernetes comprises a set of independent, composable control processes that continuously drive the current state towards the provided desired state. It shouldn't matter how you get from A to C. Centralized control is also not required. This results in a system that is easier to use and more powerful, robust, resilient, and extensible.
What's next
- Take a look at the Kubernetes Components
- Take a look at the The Kubernetes API
- Take a look at the Cluster Architecture
- Ready to Get Started?
1.1 - Objects In Kubernetes
This page explains how Kubernetes objects are represented in the Kubernetes API, and how you can
express them in .yaml
format.
Understanding Kubernetes objects
Kubernetes objects are persistent entities in the Kubernetes system. Kubernetes uses these entities to represent the state of your cluster. Specifically, they can describe:
- What containerized applications are running (and on which nodes)
- The resources available to those applications
- The policies around how those applications behave, such as restart policies, upgrades, and fault-tolerance
A Kubernetes object is a "record of intent"--once you create the object, the Kubernetes system will constantly work to ensure that object exists. By creating an object, you're effectively telling the Kubernetes system what you want your cluster's workload to look like; this is your cluster's desired state.
To work with Kubernetes objects—whether to create, modify, or delete them—you'll need to use the
Kubernetes API. When you use the kubectl
command-line
interface, for example, the CLI makes the necessary Kubernetes API calls for you. You can also use
the Kubernetes API directly in your own programs using one of the
Client Libraries.
Object spec and status
Almost every Kubernetes object includes two nested object fields that govern
the object's configuration: the object spec
and the object status
.
For objects that have a spec
, you have to set this when you create the object,
providing a description of the characteristics you want the resource to have:
its desired state.
The status
describes the current state of the object, supplied and updated
by the Kubernetes system and its components. The Kubernetes
control plane continually
and actively manages every object's actual state to match the desired state you
supplied.
For example: in Kubernetes, a Deployment is an object that can represent an
application running on your cluster. When you create the Deployment, you
might set the Deployment spec
to specify that you want three replicas of
the application to be running. The Kubernetes system reads the Deployment
spec and starts three instances of your desired application--updating
the status to match your spec. If any of those instances should fail
(a status change), the Kubernetes system responds to the difference
between spec and status by making a correction--in this case, starting
a replacement instance.
For more information on the object spec, status, and metadata, see the Kubernetes API Conventions.
Describing a Kubernetes object
When you create an object in Kubernetes, you must provide the object spec that describes its
desired state, as well as some basic information about the object (such as a name). When you use
the Kubernetes API to create the object (either directly or via kubectl
), that API request must
include that information as JSON in the request body.
Most often, you provide the information to kubectl
in file known as a manifest.
By convention, manifests are YAML (you could also use JSON format).
Tools such as kubectl
convert the information from a manifest into JSON or another supported
serialization format when making the API request over HTTP.
Here's an example manifest that shows the required fields and object spec for a Kubernetes Deployment:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: nginx-deployment
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
app: nginx
replicas: 2 # tells deployment to run 2 pods matching the template
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: nginx
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx:1.14.2
ports:
- containerPort: 80
One way to create a Deployment using a manifest file like the one above is to use the
kubectl apply
command
in the kubectl
command-line interface, passing the .yaml
file as an argument. Here's an example:
kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/application/deployment.yaml
The output is similar to this:
deployment.apps/nginx-deployment created
Required fields
In the manifest (YAML or JSON file) for the Kubernetes object you want to create, you'll need to set values for the following fields:
apiVersion
- Which version of the Kubernetes API you're using to create this objectkind
- What kind of object you want to createmetadata
- Data that helps uniquely identify the object, including aname
string,UID
, and optionalnamespace
spec
- What state you desire for the object
The precise format of the object spec
is different for every Kubernetes object, and contains
nested fields specific to that object. The Kubernetes API Reference
can help you find the spec format for all of the objects you can create using Kubernetes.
For example, see the spec
field
for the Pod API reference.
For each Pod, the .spec
field specifies the pod and its desired state (such as the container image name for
each container within that pod).
Another example of an object specification is the
spec
field
for the StatefulSet API. For StatefulSet, the .spec
field specifies the StatefulSet and
its desired state.
Within the .spec
of a StatefulSet is a template
for Pod objects. That template describes Pods that the StatefulSet controller will create in order to
satisfy the StatefulSet specification.
Different kinds of object can also have different .status
; again, the API reference pages
detail the structure of that .status
field, and its content for each different type of object.
Server side field validation
Starting with Kubernetes v1.25, the API server offers server side
field validation
that detects unrecognized or duplicate fields in an object. It provides all the functionality
of kubectl --validate
on the server side.
The kubectl
tool uses the --validate
flag to set the level of field validation. It accepts the
values ignore
, warn
, and strict
while also accepting the values true
(equivalent to strict
)
and false
(equivalent to ignore
). The default validation setting for kubectl
is --validate=true
.
Strict
- Strict field validation, errors on validation failure
Warn
- Field validation is performed, but errors are exposed as warnings rather than failing the request
Ignore
- No server side field validation is performed
When kubectl
cannot connect to an API server that supports field validation it will fall back
to using client-side validation. Kubernetes 1.27 and later versions always offer field validation;
older Kubernetes releases might not. If your cluster is older than v1.27, check the documentation
for your version of Kubernetes.
What's next
If you're new to Kubernetes, read more about the following:
- Pods which are the most important basic Kubernetes objects.
- Deployment objects.
- Controllers in Kubernetes.
- kubectl and kubectl commands.
Kubernetes Object Management
explains how to use kubectl
to manage objects.
You might need to install kubectl if you don't already have it available.
To learn about the Kubernetes API in general, visit:
To learn about objects in Kubernetes in more depth, read other pages in this section:
1.1.1 - Kubernetes Object Management
The kubectl
command-line tool supports several different ways to create and manage
Kubernetes objects. This document provides an overview of the different
approaches. Read the Kubectl book for
details of managing objects by Kubectl.
Management techniques
Management technique | Operates on | Recommended environment | Supported writers | Learning curve |
---|---|---|---|---|
Imperative commands | Live objects | Development projects | 1+ | Lowest |
Imperative object configuration | Individual files | Production projects | 1 | Moderate |
Declarative object configuration | Directories of files | Production projects | 1+ | Highest |
Imperative commands
When using imperative commands, a user operates directly on live objects
in a cluster. The user provides operations to
the kubectl
command as arguments or flags.
This is the recommended way to get started or to run a one-off task in a cluster. Because this technique operates directly on live objects, it provides no history of previous configurations.
Examples
Run an instance of the nginx container by creating a Deployment object:
kubectl create deployment nginx --image nginx
Trade-offs
Advantages compared to object configuration:
- Commands are expressed as a single action word.
- Commands require only a single step to make changes to the cluster.
Disadvantages compared to object configuration:
- Commands do not integrate with change review processes.
- Commands do not provide an audit trail associated with changes.
- Commands do not provide a source of records except for what is live.
- Commands do not provide a template for creating new objects.
Imperative object configuration
In imperative object configuration, the kubectl command specifies the operation (create, replace, etc.), optional flags and at least one file name. The file specified must contain a full definition of the object in YAML or JSON format.
See the API reference for more details on object definitions.
replace
command replaces the existing
spec with the newly provided one, dropping all changes to the object missing from
the configuration file. This approach should not be used with resource
types whose specs are updated independently of the configuration file.
Services of type LoadBalancer
, for example, have their externalIPs
field updated
independently from the configuration by the cluster.
Examples
Create the objects defined in a configuration file:
kubectl create -f nginx.yaml
Delete the objects defined in two configuration files:
kubectl delete -f nginx.yaml -f redis.yaml
Update the objects defined in a configuration file by overwriting the live configuration:
kubectl replace -f nginx.yaml
Trade-offs
Advantages compared to imperative commands:
- Object configuration can be stored in a source control system such as Git.
- Object configuration can integrate with processes such as reviewing changes before push and audit trails.
- Object configuration provides a template for creating new objects.
Disadvantages compared to imperative commands:
- Object configuration requires basic understanding of the object schema.
- Object configuration requires the additional step of writing a YAML file.
Advantages compared to declarative object configuration:
- Imperative object configuration behavior is simpler and easier to understand.
- As of Kubernetes version 1.5, imperative object configuration is more mature.
Disadvantages compared to declarative object configuration:
- Imperative object configuration works best on files, not directories.
- Updates to live objects must be reflected in configuration files, or they will be lost during the next replacement.
Declarative object configuration
When using declarative object configuration, a user operates on object
configuration files stored locally, however the user does not define the
operations to be taken on the files. Create, update, and delete operations
are automatically detected per-object by kubectl
. This enables working on
directories, where different operations might be needed for different objects.
patch
API operation to write only
observed differences, instead of using the replace
API operation to replace the entire object configuration.
Examples
Process all object configuration files in the configs
directory, and create or
patch the live objects. You can first diff
to see what changes are going to be
made, and then apply:
kubectl diff -f configs/
kubectl apply -f configs/
Recursively process directories:
kubectl diff -R -f configs/
kubectl apply -R -f configs/
Trade-offs
Advantages compared to imperative object configuration:
- Changes made directly to live objects are retained, even if they are not merged back into the configuration files.
- Declarative object configuration has better support for operating on directories and automatically detecting operation types (create, patch, delete) per-object.
Disadvantages compared to imperative object configuration:
- Declarative object configuration is harder to debug and understand results when they are unexpected.
- Partial updates using diffs create complex merge and patch operations.
What's next
- Managing Kubernetes Objects Using Imperative Commands
- Imperative Management of Kubernetes Objects Using Configuration Files
- Declarative Management of Kubernetes Objects Using Configuration Files
- Declarative Management of Kubernetes Objects Using Kustomize
- Kubectl Command Reference
- Kubectl Book
- Kubernetes API Reference
1.1.2 - Object Names and IDs
Each object in your cluster has a Name that is unique for that type of resource. Every Kubernetes object also has a UID that is unique across your whole cluster.
For example, you can only have one Pod named myapp-1234
within the same namespace, but you can have one Pod and one Deployment that are each named myapp-1234
.
For non-unique user-provided attributes, Kubernetes provides labels and annotations.
Names
A client-provided string that refers to an object in a resource URL, such as /api/v1/pods/some-name
.
Only one object of a given kind can have a given name at a time. However, if you delete the object, you can make a new object with the same name.
Names must be unique across all API versions of the same resource. API resources are distinguished by their API group, resource type, namespace (for namespaced resources), and name. In other words, API version is irrelevant in this context.
Below are four types of commonly used name constraints for resources.
DNS Subdomain Names
Most resource types require a name that can be used as a DNS subdomain name as defined in RFC 1123. This means the name must:
- contain no more than 253 characters
- contain only lowercase alphanumeric characters, '-' or '.'
- start with an alphanumeric character
- end with an alphanumeric character
RFC 1123 Label Names
Some resource types require their names to follow the DNS label standard as defined in RFC 1123. This means the name must:
- contain at most 63 characters
- contain only lowercase alphanumeric characters or '-'
- start with an alphanumeric character
- end with an alphanumeric character
RFC 1035 Label Names
Some resource types require their names to follow the DNS label standard as defined in RFC 1035. This means the name must:
- contain at most 63 characters
- contain only lowercase alphanumeric characters or '-'
- start with an alphabetic character
- end with an alphanumeric character
Path Segment Names
Some resource types require their names to be able to be safely encoded as a path segment. In other words, the name may not be "." or ".." and the name may not contain "/" or "%".
Here's an example manifest for a Pod named nginx-demo
.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: nginx-demo
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx:1.14.2
ports:
- containerPort: 80
UIDs
A Kubernetes systems-generated string to uniquely identify objects.
Every object created over the whole lifetime of a Kubernetes cluster has a distinct UID. It is intended to distinguish between historical occurrences of similar entities.
Kubernetes UIDs are universally unique identifiers (also known as UUIDs). UUIDs are standardized as ISO/IEC 9834-8 and as ITU-T X.667.
What's next
- Read about labels and annotations in Kubernetes.
- See the Identifiers and Names in Kubernetes design document.
1.1.3 - Labels and Selectors
Labels are key/value pairs that are attached to objects such as Pods. Labels are intended to be used to specify identifying attributes of objects that are meaningful and relevant to users, but do not directly imply semantics to the core system. Labels can be used to organize and to select subsets of objects. Labels can be attached to objects at creation time and subsequently added and modified at any time. Each object can have a set of key/value labels defined. Each Key must be unique for a given object.
"metadata": {
"labels": {
"key1" : "value1",
"key2" : "value2"
}
}
Labels allow for efficient queries and watches and are ideal for use in UIs and CLIs. Non-identifying information should be recorded using annotations.
Motivation
Labels enable users to map their own organizational structures onto system objects in a loosely coupled fashion, without requiring clients to store these mappings.
Service deployments and batch processing pipelines are often multi-dimensional entities (e.g., multiple partitions or deployments, multiple release tracks, multiple tiers, multiple micro-services per tier). Management often requires cross-cutting operations, which breaks encapsulation of strictly hierarchical representations, especially rigid hierarchies determined by the infrastructure rather than by users.
Example labels:
"release" : "stable"
,"release" : "canary"
"environment" : "dev"
,"environment" : "qa"
,"environment" : "production"
"tier" : "frontend"
,"tier" : "backend"
,"tier" : "cache"
"partition" : "customerA"
,"partition" : "customerB"
"track" : "daily"
,"track" : "weekly"
These are examples of commonly used labels; you are free to develop your own conventions. Keep in mind that label Key must be unique for a given object.
Syntax and character set
Labels are key/value pairs. Valid label keys have two segments: an optional
prefix and name, separated by a slash (/
). The name segment is required and
must be 63 characters or less, beginning and ending with an alphanumeric
character ([a-z0-9A-Z]
) with dashes (-
), underscores (_
), dots (.
),
and alphanumerics between. The prefix is optional. If specified, the prefix
must be a DNS subdomain: a series of DNS labels separated by dots (.
),
not longer than 253 characters in total, followed by a slash (/
).
If the prefix is omitted, the label Key is presumed to be private to the user.
Automated system components (e.g. kube-scheduler
, kube-controller-manager
,
kube-apiserver
, kubectl
, or other third-party automation) which add labels
to end-user objects must specify a prefix.
The kubernetes.io/
and k8s.io/
prefixes are
reserved for Kubernetes core components.
Valid label value:
- must be 63 characters or less (can be empty),
- unless empty, must begin and end with an alphanumeric character (
[a-z0-9A-Z]
), - could contain dashes (
-
), underscores (_
), dots (.
), and alphanumerics between.
For example, here's a manifest for a Pod that has two labels
environment: production
and app: nginx
:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: label-demo
labels:
environment: production
app: nginx
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx:1.14.2
ports:
- containerPort: 80
Label selectors
Unlike names and UIDs, labels do not provide uniqueness. In general, we expect many objects to carry the same label(s).
Via a label selector, the client/user can identify a set of objects. The label selector is the core grouping primitive in Kubernetes.
The API currently supports two types of selectors: equality-based and set-based.
A label selector can be made of multiple requirements which are comma-separated.
In the case of multiple requirements, all must be satisfied so the comma separator
acts as a logical AND (&&
) operator.
The semantics of empty or non-specified selectors are dependent on the context, and API types that use selectors should document the validity and meaning of them.
||
) operator.
Ensure your filter statements are structured accordingly.
Equality-based requirement
Equality- or inequality-based requirements allow filtering by label keys and values.
Matching objects must satisfy all of the specified label constraints, though they may
have additional labels as well. Three kinds of operators are admitted =
,==
,!=
.
The first two represent equality (and are synonyms), while the latter represents inequality.
For example:
environment = production
tier != frontend
The former selects all resources with key equal to environment
and value equal to production
.
The latter selects all resources with key equal to tier
and value distinct from frontend
,
and all resources with no labels with the tier
key. One could filter for resources in production
excluding frontend
using the comma operator: environment=production,tier!=frontend
One usage scenario for equality-based label requirement is for Pods to specify
node selection criteria. For example, the sample Pod below selects nodes with
the label "accelerator=nvidia-tesla-p100
".
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: cuda-test
spec:
containers:
- name: cuda-test
image: "registry.k8s.io/cuda-vector-add:v0.1"
resources:
limits:
nvidia.com/gpu: 1
nodeSelector:
accelerator: nvidia-tesla-p100
Set-based requirement
Set-based label requirements allow filtering keys according to a set of values.
Three kinds of operators are supported: in
,notin
and exists
(only the key identifier).
For example:
environment in (production, qa)
tier notin (frontend, backend)
partition
!partition
- The first example selects all resources with key equal to
environment
and value equal toproduction
orqa
. - The second example selects all resources with key equal to
tier
and values other thanfrontend
andbackend
, and all resources with no labels with thetier
key. - The third example selects all resources including a label with key
partition
; no values are checked. - The fourth example selects all resources without a label with key
partition
; no values are checked.
Similarly the comma separator acts as an AND operator. So filtering resources
with a partition
key (no matter the value) and with environment
different
than qa
can be achieved using partition,environment notin (qa)
.
The set-based label selector is a general form of equality since
environment=production
is equivalent to environment in (production)
;
similarly for !=
and notin
.
Set-based requirements can be mixed with equality-based requirements.
For example: partition in (customerA, customerB),environment!=qa
.
API
LIST and WATCH filtering
LIST and WATCH operations may specify label selectors to filter the sets of objects returned using a query parameter. Both requirements are permitted (presented here as they would appear in a URL query string):
- equality-based requirements:
?labelSelector=environment%3Dproduction,tier%3Dfrontend
- set-based requirements:
?labelSelector=environment+in+%28production%2Cqa%29%2Ctier+in+%28frontend%29
Both label selector styles can be used to list or watch resources via a REST client.
For example, targeting apiserver
with kubectl
and using equality-based one may write:
kubectl get pods -l environment=production,tier=frontend
or using set-based requirements:
kubectl get pods -l 'environment in (production),tier in (frontend)'
As already mentioned set-based requirements are more expressive. For instance, they can implement the OR operator on values:
kubectl get pods -l 'environment in (production, qa)'
or restricting negative matching via notin operator:
kubectl get pods -l 'environment,environment notin (frontend)'
Set references in API objects
Some Kubernetes objects, such as services
and replicationcontrollers
,
also use label selectors to specify sets of other resources, such as
pods.
Service and ReplicationController
The set of pods that a service
targets is defined with a label selector.
Similarly, the population of pods that a replicationcontroller
should
manage is also defined with a label selector.
Label selectors for both objects are defined in json
or yaml
files using maps,
and only equality-based requirement selectors are supported:
"selector": {
"component" : "redis",
}
or
selector:
component: redis
This selector (respectively in json
or yaml
format) is equivalent to
component=redis
or component in (redis)
.
Resources that support set-based requirements
Newer resources, such as Job
,
Deployment
,
ReplicaSet
, and
DaemonSet
,
support set-based requirements as well.
selector:
matchLabels:
component: redis
matchExpressions:
- { key: tier, operator: In, values: [cache] }
- { key: environment, operator: NotIn, values: [dev] }
matchLabels
is a map of {key,value}
pairs. A single {key,value}
in the
matchLabels
map is equivalent to an element of matchExpressions
, whose key
field is "key", the operator
is "In", and the values
array contains only "value".
matchExpressions
is a list of pod selector requirements. Valid operators include
In, NotIn, Exists, and DoesNotExist. The values set must be non-empty in the case of
In and NotIn. All of the requirements, from both matchLabels
and matchExpressions
are ANDed together -- they must all be satisfied in order to match.
Selecting sets of nodes
One use case for selecting over labels is to constrain the set of nodes onto which a pod can schedule. See the documentation on node selection for more information.
Using labels effectively
You can apply a single label to any resources, but this is not always the best practice. There are many scenarios where multiple labels should be used to distinguish resource sets from one another.
For instance, different applications would use different values for the app
label, but a
multi-tier application, such as the guestbook example,
would additionally need to distinguish each tier. The frontend could carry the following labels:
labels:
app: guestbook
tier: frontend
while the Redis master and replica would have different tier
labels, and perhaps even an
additional role
label:
labels:
app: guestbook
tier: backend
role: master
and
labels:
app: guestbook
tier: backend
role: replica
The labels allow for slicing and dicing the resources along any dimension specified by a label:
kubectl apply -f examples/guestbook/all-in-one/guestbook-all-in-one.yaml
kubectl get pods -Lapp -Ltier -Lrole
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE APP TIER ROLE
guestbook-fe-4nlpb 1/1 Running 0 1m guestbook frontend <none>
guestbook-fe-ght6d 1/1 Running 0 1m guestbook frontend <none>
guestbook-fe-jpy62 1/1 Running 0 1m guestbook frontend <none>
guestbook-redis-master-5pg3b 1/1 Running 0 1m guestbook backend master
guestbook-redis-replica-2q2yf 1/1 Running 0 1m guestbook backend replica
guestbook-redis-replica-qgazl 1/1 Running 0 1m guestbook backend replica
my-nginx-divi2 1/1 Running 0 29m nginx <none> <none>
my-nginx-o0ef1 1/1 Running 0 29m nginx <none> <none>
kubectl get pods -lapp=guestbook,role=replica
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
guestbook-redis-replica-2q2yf 1/1 Running 0 3m
guestbook-redis-replica-qgazl 1/1 Running 0 3m
Updating labels
Sometimes you may want to relabel existing pods and other resources before creating
new resources. This can be done with kubectl label
.
For example, if you want to label all your NGINX Pods as frontend tier, run:
kubectl label pods -l app=nginx tier=fe
pod/my-nginx-2035384211-j5fhi labeled
pod/my-nginx-2035384211-u2c7e labeled
pod/my-nginx-2035384211-u3t6x labeled
This first filters all pods with the label "app=nginx", and then labels them with the "tier=fe". To see the pods you labeled, run:
kubectl get pods -l app=nginx -L tier
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE TIER
my-nginx-2035384211-j5fhi 1/1 Running 0 23m fe
my-nginx-2035384211-u2c7e 1/1 Running 0 23m fe
my-nginx-2035384211-u3t6x 1/1 Running 0 23m fe
This outputs all "app=nginx" pods, with an additional label column of pods' tier
(specified with -L
or --label-columns
).
For more information, please see kubectl label.
What's next
1.1.4 - Namespaces
In Kubernetes, namespaces provides a mechanism for isolating groups of resources within a single cluster. Names of resources need to be unique within a namespace, but not across namespaces. Namespace-based scoping is applicable only for namespaced objects (e.g. Deployments, Services, etc) and not for cluster-wide objects (e.g. StorageClass, Nodes, PersistentVolumes, etc).
When to Use Multiple Namespaces
Namespaces are intended for use in environments with many users spread across multiple teams, or projects. For clusters with a few to tens of users, you should not need to create or think about namespaces at all. Start using namespaces when you need the features they provide.
Namespaces provide a scope for names. Names of resources need to be unique within a namespace, but not across namespaces. Namespaces cannot be nested inside one another and each Kubernetes resource can only be in one namespace.
Namespaces are a way to divide cluster resources between multiple users (via resource quota).
It is not necessary to use multiple namespaces to separate slightly different resources, such as different versions of the same software: use labels to distinguish resources within the same namespace.
default
namespace. Instead, make other namespaces and use those.
Initial namespaces
Kubernetes starts with four initial namespaces:
default
- Kubernetes includes this namespace so that you can start using your new cluster without first creating a namespace.
kube-node-lease
- This namespace holds Lease objects associated with each node. Node leases allow the kubelet to send heartbeats so that the control plane can detect node failure.
kube-public
- This namespace is readable by all clients (including those not authenticated). This namespace is mostly reserved for cluster usage, in case that some resources should be visible and readable publicly throughout the whole cluster. The public aspect of this namespace is only a convention, not a requirement.
kube-system
- The namespace for objects created by the Kubernetes system.
Working with Namespaces
Creation and deletion of namespaces are described in the Admin Guide documentation for namespaces.
kube-
, since it is reserved for Kubernetes system namespaces.
Viewing namespaces
You can list the current namespaces in a cluster using:
kubectl get namespace
NAME STATUS AGE
default Active 1d
kube-node-lease Active 1d
kube-public Active 1d
kube-system Active 1d
Setting the namespace for a request
To set the namespace for a current request, use the --namespace
flag.
For example:
kubectl run nginx --image=nginx --namespace=<insert-namespace-name-here>
kubectl get pods --namespace=<insert-namespace-name-here>
Setting the namespace preference
You can permanently save the namespace for all subsequent kubectl commands in that context.
kubectl config set-context --current --namespace=<insert-namespace-name-here>
# Validate it
kubectl config view --minify | grep namespace:
Namespaces and DNS
When you create a Service,
it creates a corresponding DNS entry.
This entry is of the form <service-name>.<namespace-name>.svc.cluster.local
, which means
that if a container only uses <service-name>
, it will resolve to the service which
is local to a namespace. This is useful for using the same configuration across
multiple namespaces such as Development, Staging and Production. If you want to reach
across namespaces, you need to use the fully qualified domain name (FQDN).
As a result, all namespace names must be valid RFC 1123 DNS labels.
By creating namespaces with the same name as public top-level domains, Services in these namespaces can have short DNS names that overlap with public DNS records. Workloads from any namespace performing a DNS lookup without a trailing dot will be redirected to those services, taking precedence over public DNS.
To mitigate this, limit privileges for creating namespaces to trusted users. If required, you could additionally configure third-party security controls, such as admission webhooks, to block creating any namespace with the name of public TLDs.
Not all objects are in a namespace
Most Kubernetes resources (e.g. pods, services, replication controllers, and others) are in some namespaces. However namespace resources are not themselves in a namespace. And low-level resources, such as nodes and persistentVolumes, are not in any namespace.
To see which Kubernetes resources are and aren't in a namespace:
# In a namespace
kubectl api-resources --namespaced=true
# Not in a namespace
kubectl api-resources --namespaced=false
Automatic labelling
Kubernetes 1.22 [stable]
The Kubernetes control plane sets an immutable label
kubernetes.io/metadata.name
on all namespaces.
The value of the label is the namespace name.
What's next
- Learn more about creating a new namespace.
- Learn more about deleting a namespace.
1.1.5 - Annotations
You can use Kubernetes annotations to attach arbitrary non-identifying metadata to objects. Clients such as tools and libraries can retrieve this metadata.
Attaching metadata to objects
You can use either labels or annotations to attach metadata to Kubernetes objects. Labels can be used to select objects and to find collections of objects that satisfy certain conditions. In contrast, annotations are not used to identify and select objects. The metadata in an annotation can be small or large, structured or unstructured, and can include characters not permitted by labels. It is possible to use labels as well as annotations in the metadata of the same object.
Annotations, like labels, are key/value maps:
"metadata": {
"annotations": {
"key1" : "value1",
"key2" : "value2"
}
}
Here are some examples of information that could be recorded in annotations:
-
Fields managed by a declarative configuration layer. Attaching these fields as annotations distinguishes them from default values set by clients or servers, and from auto-generated fields and fields set by auto-sizing or auto-scaling systems.
-
Build, release, or image information like timestamps, release IDs, git branch, PR numbers, image hashes, and registry address.
-
Pointers to logging, monitoring, analytics, or audit repositories.
-
Client library or tool information that can be used for debugging purposes: for example, name, version, and build information.
-
User or tool/system provenance information, such as URLs of related objects from other ecosystem components.
-
Lightweight rollout tool metadata: for example, config or checkpoints.
-
Phone or pager numbers of persons responsible, or directory entries that specify where that information can be found, such as a team web site.
-
Directives from the end-user to the implementations to modify behavior or engage non-standard features.
Instead of using annotations, you could store this type of information in an external database or directory, but that would make it much harder to produce shared client libraries and tools for deployment, management, introspection, and the like.
Syntax and character set
Annotations are key/value pairs. Valid annotation keys have two segments: an optional prefix and name, separated by a slash (/
). The name segment is required and must be 63 characters or less, beginning and ending with an alphanumeric character ([a-z0-9A-Z]
) with dashes (-
), underscores (_
), dots (.
), and alphanumerics between. The prefix is optional. If specified, the prefix must be a DNS subdomain: a series of DNS labels separated by dots (.
), not longer than 253 characters in total, followed by a slash (/
).
If the prefix is omitted, the annotation Key is presumed to be private to the user. Automated system components (e.g. kube-scheduler
, kube-controller-manager
, kube-apiserver
, kubectl
, or other third-party automation) which add annotations to end-user objects must specify a prefix.
The kubernetes.io/
and k8s.io/
prefixes are reserved for Kubernetes core components.
For example, here's a manifest for a Pod that has the annotation imageregistry: https://hub.docker.com/
:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: annotations-demo
annotations:
imageregistry: "https://hub.docker.com/"
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx:1.14.2
ports:
- containerPort: 80
What's next
- Learn more about Labels and Selectors.
- Find Well-known labels, Annotations and Taints
1.1.6 - Field Selectors
Field selectors let you select Kubernetes objects based on the value of one or more resource fields. Here are some examples of field selector queries:
metadata.name=my-service
metadata.namespace!=default
status.phase=Pending
This kubectl
command selects all Pods for which the value of the status.phase
field is Running
:
kubectl get pods --field-selector status.phase=Running
kubectl
queries kubectl get pods
and kubectl get pods --field-selector ""
equivalent.
Supported fields
Supported field selectors vary by Kubernetes resource type. All resource types support the metadata.name
and metadata.namespace
fields. Using unsupported field selectors produces an error. For example:
kubectl get ingress --field-selector foo.bar=baz
Error from server (BadRequest): Unable to find "ingresses" that match label selector "", field selector "foo.bar=baz": "foo.bar" is not a known field selector: only "metadata.name", "metadata.namespace"
Supported operators
You can use the =
, ==
, and !=
operators with field selectors (=
and ==
mean the same thing). This kubectl
command, for example, selects all Kubernetes Services that aren't in the default
namespace:
kubectl get services --all-namespaces --field-selector metadata.namespace!=default
Chained selectors
As with label and other selectors, field selectors can be chained together as a comma-separated list. This kubectl
command selects all Pods for which the status.phase
does not equal Running
and the spec.restartPolicy
field equals Always
:
kubectl get pods --field-selector=status.phase!=Running,spec.restartPolicy=Always
Multiple resource types
You can use field selectors across multiple resource types. This kubectl
command selects all Statefulsets and Services that are not in the default
namespace:
kubectl get statefulsets,services --all-namespaces --field-selector metadata.namespace!=default
1.1.7 - Finalizers
Finalizers are namespaced keys that tell Kubernetes to wait until specific conditions are met before it fully deletes resources marked for deletion. Finalizers alert controllers to clean up resources the deleted object owned.
When you tell Kubernetes to delete an object that has finalizers specified for
it, the Kubernetes API marks the object for deletion by populating .metadata.deletionTimestamp
,
and returns a 202
status code (HTTP "Accepted"). The target object remains in a terminating state while the
control plane, or other components, take the actions defined by the finalizers.
After these actions are complete, the controller removes the relevant finalizers
from the target object. When the metadata.finalizers
field is empty,
Kubernetes considers the deletion complete and deletes the object.
You can use finalizers to control garbage collection of resources. For example, you can define a finalizer to clean up related resources or infrastructure before the controller deletes the target resource.
You can use finalizers to control garbage collection of objects by alerting controllers to perform specific cleanup tasks before deleting the target resource.
Finalizers don't usually specify the code to execute. Instead, they are typically lists of keys on a specific resource similar to annotations. Kubernetes specifies some finalizers automatically, but you can also specify your own.
How finalizers work
When you create a resource using a manifest file, you can specify finalizers in
the metadata.finalizers
field. When you attempt to delete the resource, the
API server handling the delete request notices the values in the finalizers
field
and does the following:
- Modifies the object to add a
metadata.deletionTimestamp
field with the time you started the deletion. - Prevents the object from being removed until all items are removed from its
metadata.finalizers
field - Returns a
202
status code (HTTP "Accepted")
The controller managing that finalizer notices the update to the object setting the
metadata.deletionTimestamp
, indicating deletion of the object has been requested.
The controller then attempts to satisfy the requirements of the finalizers
specified for that resource. Each time a finalizer condition is satisfied, the
controller removes that key from the resource's finalizers
field. When the
finalizers
field is emptied, an object with a deletionTimestamp
field set
is automatically deleted. You can also use finalizers to prevent deletion of unmanaged resources.
A common example of a finalizer is kubernetes.io/pv-protection
, which prevents
accidental deletion of PersistentVolume
objects. When a PersistentVolume
object is in use by a Pod, Kubernetes adds the pv-protection
finalizer. If you
try to delete the PersistentVolume
, it enters a Terminating
status, but the
controller can't delete it because the finalizer exists. When the Pod stops
using the PersistentVolume
, Kubernetes clears the pv-protection
finalizer,
and the controller deletes the volume.
-
When you
DELETE
an object, Kubernetes adds the deletion timestamp for that object and then immediately starts to restrict changes to the.metadata.finalizers
field for the object that is now pending deletion. You can remove existing finalizers (deleting an entry from thefinalizers
list) but you cannot add a new finalizer. You also cannot modify thedeletionTimestamp
for an object once it is set. -
After the deletion is requested, you can not resurrect this object. The only way is to delete it and make a new similar object.
Owner references, labels, and finalizers
Like labels, owner references describe the relationships between objects in Kubernetes, but are used for a different purpose. When a controller manages objects like Pods, it uses labels to track changes to groups of related objects. For example, when a Job creates one or more Pods, the Job controller applies labels to those pods and tracks changes to any Pods in the cluster with the same label.
The Job controller also adds owner references to those Pods, pointing at the Job that created the Pods. If you delete the Job while these Pods are running, Kubernetes uses the owner references (not labels) to determine which Pods in the cluster need cleanup.
Kubernetes also processes finalizers when it identifies owner references on a resource targeted for deletion.
In some situations, finalizers can block the deletion of dependent objects, which can cause the targeted owner object to remain for longer than expected without being fully deleted. In these situations, you should check finalizers and owner references on the target owner and dependent objects to troubleshoot the cause.
What's next
- Read Using Finalizers to Control Deletion on the Kubernetes blog.
1.1.8 - Owners and Dependents
In Kubernetes, some objects are owners of other objects. For example, a ReplicaSet is the owner of a set of Pods. These owned objects are dependents of their owner.
Ownership is different from the labels and selectors
mechanism that some resources also use. For example, consider a Service that
creates EndpointSlice
objects. The Service uses labels to allow the control plane to
determine which EndpointSlice
objects are used for that Service. In addition
to the labels, each EndpointSlice
that is managed on behalf of a Service has
an owner reference. Owner references help different parts of Kubernetes avoid
interfering with objects they don’t control.
Owner references in object specifications
Dependent objects have a metadata.ownerReferences
field that references their
owner object. A valid owner reference consists of the object name and a UID
within the same namespace as the dependent object. Kubernetes sets the value of
this field automatically for objects that are dependents of other objects like
ReplicaSets, DaemonSets, Deployments, Jobs and CronJobs, and ReplicationControllers.
You can also configure these relationships manually by changing the value of
this field. However, you usually don't need to and can allow Kubernetes to
automatically manage the relationships.
Dependent objects also have an ownerReferences.blockOwnerDeletion
field that
takes a boolean value and controls whether specific dependents can block garbage
collection from deleting their owner object. Kubernetes automatically sets this
field to true
if a controller
(for example, the Deployment controller) sets the value of the
metadata.ownerReferences
field. You can also set the value of the
blockOwnerDeletion
field manually to control which dependents block garbage
collection.
A Kubernetes admission controller controls user access to change this field for dependent resources, based on the delete permissions of the owner. This control prevents unauthorized users from delaying owner object deletion.
Cross-namespace owner references are disallowed by design. Namespaced dependents can specify cluster-scoped or namespaced owners. A namespaced owner must exist in the same namespace as the dependent. If it does not, the owner reference is treated as absent, and the dependent is subject to deletion once all owners are verified absent.
Cluster-scoped dependents can only specify cluster-scoped owners. In v1.20+, if a cluster-scoped dependent specifies a namespaced kind as an owner, it is treated as having an unresolvable owner reference, and is not able to be garbage collected.
In v1.20+, if the garbage collector detects an invalid cross-namespace ownerReference
,
or a cluster-scoped dependent with an ownerReference
referencing a namespaced kind, a warning Event
with a reason of OwnerRefInvalidNamespace
and an involvedObject
of the invalid dependent is reported.
You can check for that kind of Event by running
kubectl get events -A --field-selector=reason=OwnerRefInvalidNamespace
.
Ownership and finalizers
When you tell Kubernetes to delete a resource, the API server allows the
managing controller to process any finalizer rules
for the resource. Finalizers
prevent accidental deletion of resources your cluster may still need to function
correctly. For example, if you try to delete a PersistentVolume that is still
in use by a Pod, the deletion does not happen immediately because the
PersistentVolume
has the kubernetes.io/pv-protection
finalizer on it.
Instead, the volume remains in the Terminating
status until Kubernetes clears
the finalizer, which only happens after the PersistentVolume
is no longer
bound to a Pod.
Kubernetes also adds finalizers to an owner resource when you use either
foreground or orphan cascading deletion.
In foreground deletion, it adds the foreground
finalizer so that the
controller must delete dependent resources that also have
ownerReferences.blockOwnerDeletion=true
before it deletes the owner. If you
specify an orphan deletion policy, Kubernetes adds the orphan
finalizer so
that the controller ignores dependent resources after it deletes the owner
object.
What's next
- Learn more about Kubernetes finalizers.
- Learn about garbage collection.
- Read the API reference for object metadata.
1.1.9 - Recommended Labels
You can visualize and manage Kubernetes objects with more tools than kubectl and the dashboard. A common set of labels allows tools to work interoperably, describing objects in a common manner that all tools can understand.
In addition to supporting tooling, the recommended labels describe applications in a way that can be queried.
The metadata is organized around the concept of an application. Kubernetes is not a platform as a service (PaaS) and doesn't have or enforce a formal notion of an application. Instead, applications are informal and described with metadata. The definition of what an application contains is loose.
Shared labels and annotations share a common prefix: app.kubernetes.io
. Labels
without a prefix are private to users. The shared prefix ensures that shared labels
do not interfere with custom user labels.
Labels
In order to take full advantage of using these labels, they should be applied on every resource object.
Key | Description | Example | Type |
---|---|---|---|
app.kubernetes.io/name |
The name of the application | mysql |
string |
app.kubernetes.io/instance |
A unique name identifying the instance of an application | mysql-abcxzy |
string |
app.kubernetes.io/version |
The current version of the application (e.g., a SemVer 1.0, revision hash, etc.) | 5.7.21 |
string |
app.kubernetes.io/component |
The component within the architecture | database |
string |
app.kubernetes.io/part-of |
The name of a higher level application this one is part of | wordpress |
string |
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by |
The tool being used to manage the operation of an application | helm |
string |
To illustrate these labels in action, consider the following StatefulSet object:
# This is an excerpt
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: StatefulSet
metadata:
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: mysql
app.kubernetes.io/instance: mysql-abcxzy
app.kubernetes.io/version: "5.7.21"
app.kubernetes.io/component: database
app.kubernetes.io/part-of: wordpress
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: helm
Applications And Instances Of Applications
An application can be installed one or more times into a Kubernetes cluster and, in some cases, the same namespace. For example, WordPress can be installed more than once where different websites are different installations of WordPress.
The name of an application and the instance name are recorded separately. For
example, WordPress has a app.kubernetes.io/name
of wordpress
while it has
an instance name, represented as app.kubernetes.io/instance
with a value of
wordpress-abcxzy
. This enables the application and instance of the application
to be identifiable. Every instance of an application must have a unique name.
Examples
To illustrate different ways to use these labels the following examples have varying complexity.
A Simple Stateless Service
Consider the case for a simple stateless service deployed using Deployment
and Service
objects. The following two snippets represent how the labels could be used in their simplest form.
The Deployment
is used to oversee the pods running the application itself.
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: myservice
app.kubernetes.io/instance: myservice-abcxzy
...
The Service
is used to expose the application.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: myservice
app.kubernetes.io/instance: myservice-abcxzy
...
Web Application With A Database
Consider a slightly more complicated application: a web application (WordPress) using a database (MySQL), installed using Helm. The following snippets illustrate the start of objects used to deploy this application.
The start to the following Deployment
is used for WordPress:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: wordpress
app.kubernetes.io/instance: wordpress-abcxzy
app.kubernetes.io/version: "4.9.4"
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: helm
app.kubernetes.io/component: server
app.kubernetes.io/part-of: wordpress
...
The Service
is used to expose WordPress:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: wordpress
app.kubernetes.io/instance: wordpress-abcxzy
app.kubernetes.io/version: "4.9.4"
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: helm
app.kubernetes.io/component: server
app.kubernetes.io/part-of: wordpress
...
MySQL is exposed as a StatefulSet
with metadata for both it and the larger application it belongs to:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: StatefulSet
metadata:
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: mysql
app.kubernetes.io/instance: mysql-abcxzy
app.kubernetes.io/version: "5.7.21"
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: helm
app.kubernetes.io/component: database
app.kubernetes.io/part-of: wordpress
...
The Service
is used to expose MySQL as part of WordPress:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: mysql
app.kubernetes.io/instance: mysql-abcxzy
app.kubernetes.io/version: "5.7.21"
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: helm
app.kubernetes.io/component: database
app.kubernetes.io/part-of: wordpress
...
With the MySQL StatefulSet
and Service
you'll notice information about both MySQL and WordPress, the broader application, are included.
1.2 - Kubernetes Components
When you deploy Kubernetes, you get a cluster.
A Kubernetes cluster consists of a set of worker machines, called nodes, that run containerized applications. Every cluster has at least one worker node.
The worker node(s) host the Pods that are the components of the application workload. The control plane manages the worker nodes and the Pods in the cluster. In production environments, the control plane usually runs across multiple computers and a cluster usually runs multiple nodes, providing fault-tolerance and high availability.
This document outlines the various components you need to have for a complete and working Kubernetes cluster.
Control Plane Components
The control plane's components make global decisions about the cluster (for example, scheduling),
as well as detecting and responding to cluster events (for example, starting up a new
pod when a Deployment's
replicas
field is unsatisfied).
Control plane components can be run on any machine in the cluster. However, for simplicity, setup scripts typically start all control plane components on the same machine, and do not run user containers on this machine. See Creating Highly Available clusters with kubeadm for an example control plane setup that runs across multiple machines.
kube-apiserver
The API server is a component of the Kubernetes control plane that exposes the Kubernetes API. The API server is the front end for the Kubernetes control plane.
The main implementation of a Kubernetes API server is kube-apiserver. kube-apiserver is designed to scale horizontally—that is, it scales by deploying more instances. You can run several instances of kube-apiserver and balance traffic between those instances.
etcd
Consistent and highly-available key value store used as Kubernetes' backing store for all cluster data.
If your Kubernetes cluster uses etcd as its backing store, make sure you have a back up plan for the data.
You can find in-depth information about etcd in the official documentation.
kube-scheduler
Control plane component that watches for newly created Pods with no assigned node, and selects a node for them to run on.
Factors taken into account for scheduling decisions include: individual and collective resource requirements, hardware/software/policy constraints, affinity and anti-affinity specifications, data locality, inter-workload interference, and deadlines.
kube-controller-manager
Control plane component that runs controller processes.
Logically, each controller is a separate process, but to reduce complexity, they are all compiled into a single binary and run in a single process.
There are many different types of controllers. Some examples of them are:
- Node controller: Responsible for noticing and responding when nodes go down.
- Job controller: Watches for Job objects that represent one-off tasks, then creates Pods to run those tasks to completion.
- EndpointSlice controller: Populates EndpointSlice objects (to provide a link between Services and Pods).
- ServiceAccount controller: Create default ServiceAccounts for new namespaces.
The above is not an exhaustive list.
cloud-controller-manager
A Kubernetes control plane component that embeds cloud-specific control logic. The cloud controller manager lets you link your cluster into your cloud provider's API, and separates out the components that interact with that cloud platform from components that only interact with your cluster.The cloud-controller-manager only runs controllers that are specific to your cloud provider. If you are running Kubernetes on your own premises, or in a learning environment inside your own PC, the cluster does not have a cloud controller manager.
As with the kube-controller-manager, the cloud-controller-manager combines several logically independent control loops into a single binary that you run as a single process. You can scale horizontally (run more than one copy) to improve performance or to help tolerate failures.
The following controllers can have cloud provider dependencies:
- Node controller: For checking the cloud provider to determine if a node has been deleted in the cloud after it stops responding
- Route controller: For setting up routes in the underlying cloud infrastructure
- Service controller: For creating, updating and deleting cloud provider load balancers
Node Components
Node components run on every node, maintaining running pods and providing the Kubernetes runtime environment.
kubelet
An agent that runs on each node in the cluster. It makes sure that containers are running in a Pod.
The kubelet takes a set of PodSpecs that are provided through various mechanisms and ensures that the containers described in those PodSpecs are running and healthy. The kubelet doesn't manage containers which were not created by Kubernetes.
kube-proxy
kube-proxy is a network proxy that runs on each node in your cluster, implementing part of the Kubernetes Service concept.
kube-proxy maintains network rules on nodes. These network rules allow network communication to your Pods from network sessions inside or outside of your cluster.
kube-proxy uses the operating system packet filtering layer if there is one and it's available. Otherwise, kube-proxy forwards the traffic itself.
Container runtime
A fundamental component that empowers Kubernetes to run containers effectively. It is responsible for managing the execution and lifecycle of containers within the Kubernetes environment.
Kubernetes supports container runtimes such as containerd, CRI-O, and any other implementation of the Kubernetes CRI (Container Runtime Interface).
Addons
Addons use Kubernetes resources (DaemonSet,
Deployment, etc)
to implement cluster features. Because these are providing cluster-level features, namespaced resources
for addons belong within the kube-system
namespace.
Selected addons are described below; for an extended list of available addons, please see Addons.
DNS
While the other addons are not strictly required, all Kubernetes clusters should have cluster DNS, as many examples rely on it.
Cluster DNS is a DNS server, in addition to the other DNS server(s) in your environment, which serves DNS records for Kubernetes services.
Containers started by Kubernetes automatically include this DNS server in their DNS searches.
Web UI (Dashboard)
Dashboard is a general purpose, web-based UI for Kubernetes clusters. It allows users to manage and troubleshoot applications running in the cluster, as well as the cluster itself.
Container Resource Monitoring
Container Resource Monitoring records generic time-series metrics about containers in a central database, and provides a UI for browsing that data.
Cluster-level Logging
A cluster-level logging mechanism is responsible for saving container logs to a central log store with search/browsing interface.
Network Plugins
Network plugins are software components that implement the container network interface (CNI) specification. They are responsible for allocating IP addresses to pods and enabling them to communicate with each other within the cluster.
What's next
Learn more about the following:
- Nodes and their communication with the control plane.
- Kubernetes controllers.
- kube-scheduler which is the default scheduler for Kubernetes.
- Etcd's official documentation.
- Several container runtimes in Kubernetes.
- Integrating with cloud providers using cloud-controller-manager.
- kubectl commands.
1.3 - The Kubernetes API
The core of Kubernetes' control plane is the API server. The API server exposes an HTTP API that lets end users, different parts of your cluster, and external components communicate with one another.
The Kubernetes API lets you query and manipulate the state of API objects in Kubernetes (for example: Pods, Namespaces, ConfigMaps, and Events).
Most operations can be performed through the kubectl command-line interface or other command-line tools, such as kubeadm, which in turn use the API. However, you can also access the API directly using REST calls. Kubernetes provides a set of client libraries for those looking to write applications using the Kubernetes API.
Each Kubernetes cluster publishes the specification of the APIs that the cluster serves.
There are two mechanisms that Kubernetes uses to publish these API specifications; both are useful
to enable automatic interoperability. For example, the kubectl
tool fetches and caches the API
specification for enabling command-line completion and other features.
The two supported mechanisms are as follows:
-
The Discovery API provides information about the Kubernetes APIs: API names, resources, versions, and supported operations. This is a Kubernetes specific term as it is a separate API from the Kubernetes OpenAPI. It is intended to be a brief summary of the available resources and it does not detail specific schema for the resources. For reference about resource schemas, please refer to the OpenAPI document.
-
The Kubernetes OpenAPI Document provides (full) OpenAPI v2.0 and 3.0 schemas for all Kubernetes API endpoints. The OpenAPI v3 is the preferred method for accessing OpenAPI as it provides a more comprehensive and accurate view of the API. It includes all the available API paths, as well as all resources consumed and produced for every operations on every endpoints. It also includes any extensibility components that a cluster supports. The data is a complete specification and is significantly larger than that from the Discovery API.
Discovery API
Kubernetes publishes a list of all group versions and resources supported via the Discovery API. This includes the following for each resource:
- Name
- Cluster or namespaced scope
- Endpoint URL and supported verbs
- Alternative names
- Group, version, kind
The API is available both aggregated and unaggregated form. The aggregated discovery serves two endpoints while the unaggregated discovery serves a separate endpoint for each group version.
Aggregated discovery
Kubernetes v1.27 [beta]
Kubernetes offers beta support for aggregated discovery, publishing
all resources supported by a cluster through two endpoints (/api
and
/apis
). Requesting this
endpoint drastically reduces the number of requests sent to fetch the
discovery data from the cluster. You can access the data by
requesting the respective endpoints with an Accept
header indicating
the aggregated discovery resource:
Accept: application/json;v=v2beta1;g=apidiscovery.k8s.io;as=APIGroupDiscoveryList
.
Without indicating the resource type using the Accept
header, the default
response for the /api
and /apis
endpoint is an unaggregated discovery
document.
The discovery document for the built-in resources can be found in the Kubernetes GitHub repository. This Github document can be used as a reference of the base set of the available resources if a Kubernetes cluster is not available to query.
The endpoint also supports ETag and protobuf encoding.
Unaggregated discovery
Without discovery aggregation, discovery is published in levels, with the root endpoints publishing discovery information for downstream documents.
A list of all group versions supported by a cluster is published at
the /api
and /apis
endpoints. Example:
{
"kind": "APIGroupList",
"apiVersion": "v1",
"groups": [
{
"name": "apiregistration.k8s.io",
"versions": [
{
"groupVersion": "apiregistration.k8s.io/v1",
"version": "v1"
}
],
"preferredVersion": {
"groupVersion": "apiregistration.k8s.io/v1",
"version": "v1"
}
},
{
"name": "apps",
"versions": [
{
"groupVersion": "apps/v1",
"version": "v1"
}
],
"preferredVersion": {
"groupVersion": "apps/v1",
"version": "v1"
}
},
...
}
Additional requests are needed to obtain the discovery document for each group version at
/apis/<group>/<version>
(for example:
/apis/rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1alpha1
), which advertises the list of
resources served under a particular group version. These endpoints are used by
kubectl to fetch the list of resources supported by a cluster.
OpenAPI interface definition
For details about the OpenAPI specifications, see the OpenAPI documentation.
Kubernetes serves both OpenAPI v2.0 and OpenAPI v3.0. OpenAPI v3 is the
preferred method of accessing the OpenAPI because it offers a more comprehensive
(lossless) representation of Kubernetes resources. Due to limitations of OpenAPI
version 2, certain fields are dropped from the published OpenAPI including but not
limited to default
, nullable
, oneOf
.
OpenAPI V2
The Kubernetes API server serves an aggregated OpenAPI v2 spec via the
/openapi/v2
endpoint. You can request the response format using
request headers as follows:
Header | Possible values | Notes |
---|---|---|
Accept-Encoding |
gzip |
not supplying this header is also acceptable |
Accept |
application/com.github.proto-openapi.spec.v2@v1.0+protobuf |
mainly for intra-cluster use |
application/json |
default | |
* |
serves application/json |
OpenAPI V3
Kubernetes v1.27 [stable]
Kubernetes supports publishing a description of its APIs as OpenAPI v3.
A discovery endpoint /openapi/v3
is provided to see a list of all
group/versions available. This endpoint only returns JSON. These
group/versions are provided in the following format:
{
"paths": {
...,
"api/v1": {
"serverRelativeURL": "/openapi/v3/api/v1?hash=CC0E9BFD992D8C59AEC98A1E2336F899E8318D3CF4C68944C3DEC640AF5AB52D864AC50DAA8D145B3494F75FA3CFF939FCBDDA431DAD3CA79738B297795818CF"
},
"apis/admissionregistration.k8s.io/v1": {
"serverRelativeURL": "/openapi/v3/apis/admissionregistration.k8s.io/v1?hash=E19CC93A116982CE5422FC42B590A8AFAD92CDE9AE4D59B5CAAD568F083AD07946E6CB5817531680BCE6E215C16973CD39003B0425F3477CFD854E89A9DB6597"
},
....
}
}
The relative URLs are pointing to immutable OpenAPI descriptions, in
order to improve client-side caching. The proper HTTP caching headers
are also set by the API server for that purpose (Expires
to 1 year in
the future, and Cache-Control
to immutable
). When an obsolete URL is
used, the API server returns a redirect to the newest URL.
The Kubernetes API server publishes an OpenAPI v3 spec per Kubernetes
group version at the /openapi/v3/apis/<group>/<version>?hash=<hash>
endpoint.
Refer to the table below for accepted request headers.
Header | Possible values | Notes |
---|---|---|
Accept-Encoding |
gzip |
not supplying this header is also acceptable |
Accept |
application/com.github.proto-openapi.spec.v3@v1.0+protobuf |
mainly for intra-cluster use |
application/json |
default | |
* |
serves application/json |
A Golang implementation to fetch the OpenAPI V3 is provided in the package
k8s.io/client-go/openapi3
.
Kubernetes 1.29 publishes OpenAPI v2.0 and v3.0; there are no plans to support 3.1 in the near future.
Protobuf serialization
Kubernetes implements an alternative Protobuf based serialization format that is primarily intended for intra-cluster communication. For more information about this format, see the Kubernetes Protobuf serialization design proposal and the Interface Definition Language (IDL) files for each schema located in the Go packages that define the API objects.
Persistence
Kubernetes stores the serialized state of objects by writing them into etcd.
API Discovery
A list of all group versions supported by a cluster is published at
the /api
and /apis
endpoints. Each group version also advertises
the list of resources supported via /apis/<group>/<version>
(for
example: /apis/rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1alpha1
). These endpoints
are used by kubectl to fetch the list of resources supported by a
cluster.
Aggregated Discovery
Kubernetes v1.27 [beta]
Kubernetes offers beta support for aggregated discovery, publishing
all resources supported by a cluster through two endpoints (/api
and
/apis
) compared to one for every group version. Requesting this
endpoint drastically reduces the number of requests sent to fetch the
discovery for the average Kubernetes cluster. This may be accessed by
requesting the respective endpoints with an Accept header indicating
the aggregated discovery resource:
Accept: application/json;v=v2beta1;g=apidiscovery.k8s.io;as=APIGroupDiscoveryList
.
The endpoint also supports ETag and protobuf encoding.
API groups and versioning
To make it easier to eliminate fields or restructure resource representations,
Kubernetes supports multiple API versions, each at a different API path, such
as /api/v1
or /apis/rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1alpha1
.
Versioning is done at the API level rather than at the resource or field level to ensure that the API presents a clear, consistent view of system resources and behavior, and to enable controlling access to end-of-life and/or experimental APIs.
To make it easier to evolve and to extend its API, Kubernetes implements API groups that can be enabled or disabled.
API resources are distinguished by their API group, resource type, namespace (for namespaced resources), and name. The API server handles the conversion between API versions transparently: all the different versions are actually representations of the same persisted data. The API server may serve the same underlying data through multiple API versions.
For example, suppose there are two API versions, v1
and v1beta1
, for the same
resource. If you originally created an object using the v1beta1
version of its
API, you can later read, update, or delete that object using either the v1beta1
or the v1
API version, until the v1beta1
version is deprecated and removed.
At that point you can continue accessing and modifying the object using the v1
API.
API changes
Any system that is successful needs to grow and change as new use cases emerge or existing ones change. Therefore, Kubernetes has designed the Kubernetes API to continuously change and grow. The Kubernetes project aims to not break compatibility with existing clients, and to maintain that compatibility for a length of time so that other projects have an opportunity to adapt.
In general, new API resources and new resource fields can be added often and frequently. Elimination of resources or fields requires following the API deprecation policy.
Kubernetes makes a strong commitment to maintain compatibility for official Kubernetes APIs
once they reach general availability (GA), typically at API version v1
. Additionally,
Kubernetes maintains compatibility with data persisted via beta API versions of official Kubernetes APIs,
and ensures that data can be converted and accessed via GA API versions when the feature goes stable.
If you adopt a beta API version, you will need to transition to a subsequent beta or stable API version once the API graduates. The best time to do this is while the beta API is in its deprecation period, since objects are simultaneously accessible via both API versions. Once the beta API completes its deprecation period and is no longer served, the replacement API version must be used.
Refer to API versions reference for more details on the API version level definitions.
API Extension
The Kubernetes API can be extended in one of two ways:
- Custom resources let you declaratively define how the API server should provide your chosen resource API.
- You can also extend the Kubernetes API by implementing an aggregation layer.
What's next
- Learn how to extend the Kubernetes API by adding your own CustomResourceDefinition.
- Controlling Access To The Kubernetes API describes how the cluster manages authentication and authorization for API access.
- Learn about API endpoints, resource types and samples by reading API Reference.
- Learn about what constitutes a compatible change, and how to change the API, from API changes.
2 - Cluster Architecture
2.1 - Nodes
Kubernetes runs your workload by placing containers into Pods to run on Nodes. A node may be a virtual or physical machine, depending on the cluster. Each node is managed by the control plane and contains the services necessary to run Pods.
Typically you have several nodes in a cluster; in a learning or resource-limited environment, you might have only one node.
The components on a node include the kubelet, a container runtime, and the kube-proxy.
Management
There are two main ways to have Nodes added to the API server:
- The kubelet on a node self-registers to the control plane
- You (or another human user) manually add a Node object
After you create a Node object, or the kubelet on a node self-registers, the control plane checks whether the new Node object is valid. For example, if you try to create a Node from the following JSON manifest:
{
"kind": "Node",
"apiVersion": "v1",
"metadata": {
"name": "10.240.79.157",
"labels": {
"name": "my-first-k8s-node"
}
}
}
Kubernetes creates a Node object internally (the representation). Kubernetes checks
that a kubelet has registered to the API server that matches the metadata.name
field of the Node. If the node is healthy (i.e. all necessary services are running),
then it is eligible to run a Pod. Otherwise, that node is ignored for any cluster activity
until it becomes healthy.
Kubernetes keeps the object for the invalid Node and continues checking to see whether it becomes healthy.
You, or a controller, must explicitly delete the Node object to stop that health checking.
The name of a Node object must be a valid DNS subdomain name.
Node name uniqueness
The name identifies a Node. Two Nodes cannot have the same name at the same time. Kubernetes also assumes that a resource with the same name is the same object. In case of a Node, it is implicitly assumed that an instance using the same name will have the same state (e.g. network settings, root disk contents) and attributes like node labels. This may lead to inconsistencies if an instance was modified without changing its name. If the Node needs to be replaced or updated significantly, the existing Node object needs to be removed from API server first and re-added after the update.
Self-registration of Nodes
When the kubelet flag --register-node
is true (the default), the kubelet will attempt to
register itself with the API server. This is the preferred pattern, used by most distros.
For self-registration, the kubelet is started with the following options:
-
--kubeconfig
- Path to credentials to authenticate itself to the API server. -
--cloud-provider
- How to talk to a cloud provider to read metadata about itself. -
--register-node
- Automatically register with the API server. -
--register-with-taints
- Register the node with the given list of taints (comma separated<key>=<value>:<effect>
).No-op if
register-node
is false. -
--node-ip
- Optional comma-separated list of the IP addresses for the node. You can only specify a single address for each address family. For example, in a single-stack IPv4 cluster, you set this value to be the IPv4 address that the kubelet should use for the node. See configure IPv4/IPv6 dual stack for details of running a dual-stack cluster.If you don't provide this argument, the kubelet uses the node's default IPv4 address, if any; if the node has no IPv4 addresses then the kubelet uses the node's default IPv6 address.
-
--node-labels
- Labels to add when registering the node in the cluster (see label restrictions enforced by the NodeRestriction admission plugin). -
--node-status-update-frequency
- Specifies how often kubelet posts its node status to the API server.
When the Node authorization mode and NodeRestriction admission plugin are enabled, kubelets are only authorized to create/modify their own Node resource.
As mentioned in the Node name uniqueness section,
when Node configuration needs to be updated, it is a good practice to re-register
the node with the API server. For example, if the kubelet is being restarted with
a new set of --node-labels
, but the same Node name is used, the change will
not take effect, as labels are only set (or modified) upon Node registration with the API server.
Pods already scheduled on the Node may misbehave or cause issues if the Node configuration will be changed on kubelet restart. For example, already running Pod may be tainted against the new labels assigned to the Node, while other Pods, that are incompatible with that Pod will be scheduled based on this new label. Node re-registration ensures all Pods will be drained and properly re-scheduled.
Manual Node administration
You can create and modify Node objects using kubectl.
When you want to create Node objects manually, set the kubelet flag --register-node=false
.
You can modify Node objects regardless of the setting of --register-node
.
For example, you can set labels on an existing Node or mark it unschedulable.
You can use labels on Nodes in conjunction with node selectors on Pods to control scheduling. For example, you can constrain a Pod to only be eligible to run on a subset of the available nodes.
Marking a node as unschedulable prevents the scheduler from placing new pods onto that Node but does not affect existing Pods on the Node. This is useful as a preparatory step before a node reboot or other maintenance.
To mark a Node unschedulable, run:
kubectl cordon $NODENAME
See Safely Drain a Node for more details.
Node status
A Node's status contains the following information:
You can use kubectl
to view a Node's status and other details:
kubectl describe node <insert-node-name-here>
See Node Status for more details.
Node heartbeats
Heartbeats, sent by Kubernetes nodes, help your cluster determine the availability of each node, and to take action when failures are detected.
For nodes there are two forms of heartbeats:
- Updates to the
.status
of a Node. - Lease objects
within the
kube-node-lease
namespace. Each Node has an associated Lease object.
Node controller
The node controller is a Kubernetes control plane component that manages various aspects of nodes.
The node controller has multiple roles in a node's life. The first is assigning a CIDR block to the node when it is registered (if CIDR assignment is turned on).
The second is keeping the node controller's internal list of nodes up to date with the cloud provider's list of available machines. When running in a cloud environment and whenever a node is unhealthy, the node controller asks the cloud provider if the VM for that node is still available. If not, the node controller deletes the node from its list of nodes.
The third is monitoring the nodes' health. The node controller is responsible for:
- In the case that a node becomes unreachable, updating the
Ready
condition in the Node's.status
field. In this case the node controller sets theReady
condition toUnknown
. - If a node remains unreachable: triggering
API-initiated eviction
for all of the Pods on the unreachable node. By default, the node controller
waits 5 minutes between marking the node as
Unknown
and submitting the first eviction request.
By default, the node controller checks the state of each node every 5 seconds.
This period can be configured using the --node-monitor-period
flag on the
kube-controller-manager
component.
Rate limits on eviction
In most cases, the node controller limits the eviction rate to
--node-eviction-rate
(default 0.1) per second, meaning it won't evict pods
from more than 1 node per 10 seconds.
The node eviction behavior changes when a node in a given availability zone
becomes unhealthy. The node controller checks what percentage of nodes in the zone
are unhealthy (the Ready
condition is Unknown
or False
) at the same time:
- If the fraction of unhealthy nodes is at least
--unhealthy-zone-threshold
(default 0.55), then the eviction rate is reduced. - If the cluster is small (i.e. has less than or equal to
--large-cluster-size-threshold
nodes - default 50), then evictions are stopped. - Otherwise, the eviction rate is reduced to
--secondary-node-eviction-rate
(default 0.01) per second.
The reason these policies are implemented per availability zone is because one availability zone might become partitioned from the control plane while the others remain connected. If your cluster does not span multiple cloud provider availability zones, then the eviction mechanism does not take per-zone unavailability into account.
A key reason for spreading your nodes across availability zones is so that the
workload can be shifted to healthy zones when one entire zone goes down.
Therefore, if all nodes in a zone are unhealthy, then the node controller evicts at
the normal rate of --node-eviction-rate
. The corner case is when all zones are
completely unhealthy (none of the nodes in the cluster are healthy). In such a
case, the node controller assumes that there is some problem with connectivity
between the control plane and the nodes, and doesn't perform any evictions.
(If there has been an outage and some nodes reappear, the node controller does
evict pods from the remaining nodes that are unhealthy or unreachable).
The node controller is also responsible for evicting pods running on nodes with
NoExecute
taints, unless those pods tolerate that taint.
The node controller also adds taints
corresponding to node problems like node unreachable or not ready. This means
that the scheduler won't place Pods onto unhealthy nodes.
Resource capacity tracking
Node objects track information about the Node's resource capacity: for example, the amount of memory available and the number of CPUs. Nodes that self register report their capacity during registration. If you manually add a Node, then you need to set the node's capacity information when you add it.
The Kubernetes scheduler ensures that there are enough resources for all the Pods on a Node. The scheduler checks that the sum of the requests of containers on the node is no greater than the node's capacity. That sum of requests includes all containers managed by the kubelet, but excludes any containers started directly by the container runtime, and also excludes any processes running outside of the kubelet's control.
Node topology
Kubernetes v1.27 [stable]
If you have enabled the TopologyManager
feature gate, then
the kubelet can use topology hints when making resource assignment decisions.
See Control Topology Management Policies on a Node
for more information.
Graceful node shutdown
Kubernetes v1.21 [beta]
The kubelet attempts to detect node system shutdown and terminates pods running on the node.
Kubelet ensures that pods follow the normal pod termination process during the node shutdown. During node shutdown, the kubelet does not accept new Pods (even if those Pods are already bound to the node).
The Graceful node shutdown feature depends on systemd since it takes advantage of systemd inhibitor locks to delay the node shutdown with a given duration.
Graceful node shutdown is controlled with the GracefulNodeShutdown
feature gate which is
enabled by default in 1.21.
Note that by default, both configuration options described below,
shutdownGracePeriod
and shutdownGracePeriodCriticalPods
are set to zero,
thus not activating the graceful node shutdown functionality.
To activate the feature, the two kubelet config settings should be configured appropriately and
set to non-zero values.
Once systemd detects or notifies node shutdown, the kubelet sets a NotReady
condition on
the Node, with the reason
set to "node is shutting down"
. The kube-scheduler honors this condition
and does not schedule any Pods onto the affected node; other third-party schedulers are
expected to follow the same logic. This means that new Pods won't be scheduled onto that node
and therefore none will start.
The kubelet also rejects Pods during the PodAdmission
phase if an ongoing
node shutdown has been detected, so that even Pods with a
toleration for
node.kubernetes.io/not-ready:NoSchedule
do not start there.
At the same time when kubelet is setting that condition on its Node via the API, the kubelet also begins terminating any Pods that are running locally.
During a graceful shutdown, kubelet terminates pods in two phases:
- Terminate regular pods running on the node.
- Terminate critical pods running on the node.
Graceful node shutdown feature is configured with two
KubeletConfiguration
options:
shutdownGracePeriod
:- Specifies the total duration that the node should delay the shutdown by. This is the total grace period for pod termination for both regular and critical pods.
shutdownGracePeriodCriticalPods
:- Specifies the duration used to terminate
critical pods
during a node shutdown. This value should be less than
shutdownGracePeriod
.
- Specifies the duration used to terminate
critical pods
during a node shutdown. This value should be less than
Ready
state.
However, Pods which already started the process of termination will not be restored by kubelet
and will need to be re-scheduled.
For example, if shutdownGracePeriod=30s
, and
shutdownGracePeriodCriticalPods=10s
, kubelet will delay the node shutdown by
30 seconds. During the shutdown, the first 20 (30-10) seconds would be reserved
for gracefully terminating normal pods, and the last 10 seconds would be
reserved for terminating critical pods.
When pods were evicted during the graceful node shutdown, they are marked as shutdown.
Running kubectl get pods
shows the status of the evicted pods as Terminated
.
And kubectl describe pod
indicates that the pod was evicted because of node shutdown:
Reason: Terminated
Message: Pod was terminated in response to imminent node shutdown.
Pod Priority based graceful node shutdown
Kubernetes v1.24 [beta]
To provide more flexibility during graceful node shutdown around the ordering of pods during shutdown, graceful node shutdown honors the PriorityClass for Pods, provided that you enabled this feature in your cluster. The feature allows cluster administers to explicitly define the ordering of pods during graceful node shutdown based on priority classes.
The Graceful Node Shutdown feature, as described above, shuts down pods in two phases, non-critical pods, followed by critical pods. If additional flexibility is needed to explicitly define the ordering of pods during shutdown in a more granular way, pod priority based graceful shutdown can be used.
When graceful node shutdown honors pod priorities, this makes it possible to do graceful node shutdown in multiple phases, each phase shutting down a particular priority class of pods. The kubelet can be configured with the exact phases and shutdown time per phase.
Assuming the following custom pod priority classes in a cluster,
Pod priority class name | Pod priority class value |
---|---|
custom-class-a |
100000 |
custom-class-b |
10000 |
custom-class-c |
1000 |
regular/unset |
0 |
Within the kubelet configuration
the settings for shutdownGracePeriodByPodPriority
could look like:
Pod priority class value | Shutdown period |
---|---|
100000 | 10 seconds |
10000 | 180 seconds |
1000 | 120 seconds |
0 | 60 seconds |
The corresponding kubelet config YAML configuration would be:
shutdownGracePeriodByPodPriority:
- priority: 100000
shutdownGracePeriodSeconds: 10
- priority: 10000
shutdownGracePeriodSeconds: 180
- priority: 1000
shutdownGracePeriodSeconds: 120
- priority: 0
shutdownGracePeriodSeconds: 60
The above table implies that any pod with priority
value >= 100000 will get
just 10 seconds to stop, any pod with value >= 10000 and < 100000 will get 180
seconds to stop, any pod with value >= 1000 and < 10000 will get 120 seconds to stop.
Finally, all other pods will get 60 seconds to stop.
One doesn't have to specify values corresponding to all of the classes. For example, you could instead use these settings:
Pod priority class value | Shutdown period |
---|---|
100000 | 300 seconds |
1000 | 120 seconds |
0 | 60 seconds |
In the above case, the pods with custom-class-b
will go into the same bucket
as custom-class-c
for shutdown.
If there are no pods in a particular range, then the kubelet does not wait for pods in that priority range. Instead, the kubelet immediately skips to the next priority class value range.
If this feature is enabled and no configuration is provided, then no ordering action will be taken.
Using this feature requires enabling the GracefulNodeShutdownBasedOnPodPriority
feature gate,
and setting ShutdownGracePeriodByPodPriority
in the
kubelet config
to the desired configuration containing the pod priority class values and
their respective shutdown periods.
Metrics graceful_shutdown_start_time_seconds
and graceful_shutdown_end_time_seconds
are emitted under the kubelet subsystem to monitor node shutdowns.
Non-graceful node shutdown handling
Kubernetes v1.28 [stable]
A node shutdown action may not be detected by kubelet's Node Shutdown Manager, either because the command does not trigger the inhibitor locks mechanism used by kubelet or because of a user error, i.e., the ShutdownGracePeriod and ShutdownGracePeriodCriticalPods are not configured properly. Please refer to above section Graceful Node Shutdown for more details.
When a node is shutdown but not detected by kubelet's Node Shutdown Manager, the pods that are part of a StatefulSet will be stuck in terminating status on the shutdown node and cannot move to a new running node. This is because kubelet on the shutdown node is not available to delete the pods so the StatefulSet cannot create a new pod with the same name. If there are volumes used by the pods, the VolumeAttachments will not be deleted from the original shutdown node so the volumes used by these pods cannot be attached to a new running node. As a result, the application running on the StatefulSet cannot function properly. If the original shutdown node comes up, the pods will be deleted by kubelet and new pods will be created on a different running node. If the original shutdown node does not come up, these pods will be stuck in terminating status on the shutdown node forever.
To mitigate the above situation, a user can manually add the taint node.kubernetes.io/out-of-service
with either NoExecute
or NoSchedule
effect to a Node marking it out-of-service.
If the NodeOutOfServiceVolumeDetach
feature gate
is enabled on kube-controller-manager,
and a Node is marked out-of-service with this taint, the pods on the node will be forcefully deleted
if there are no matching tolerations on it and volume detach operations for the pods terminating on
the node will happen immediately. This allows the Pods on the out-of-service node to recover quickly
on a different node.
During a non-graceful shutdown, Pods are terminated in the two phases:
- Force delete the Pods that do not have matching
out-of-service
tolerations. - Immediately perform detach volume operation for such pods.
- Before adding the taint
node.kubernetes.io/out-of-service
, it should be verified that the node is already in shutdown or power off state (not in the middle of restarting). - The user is required to manually remove the out-of-service taint after the pods are moved to a new node and the user has checked that the shutdown node has been recovered since the user was the one who originally added the taint.
Swap memory management
Kubernetes v1.28 [beta]
To enable swap on a node, the NodeSwap
feature gate must be enabled on
the kubelet, and the --fail-swap-on
command line flag or failSwapOn
configuration setting
must be set to false.
A user can also optionally configure memorySwap.swapBehavior
in order to
specify how a node will use swap memory. For example,
memorySwap:
swapBehavior: UnlimitedSwap
UnlimitedSwap
(default): Kubernetes workloads can use as much swap memory as they request, up to the system limit.LimitedSwap
: The utilization of swap memory by Kubernetes workloads is subject to limitations. Only Pods of Burstable QoS are permitted to employ swap.
If configuration for memorySwap
is not specified and the feature gate is
enabled, by default the kubelet will apply the same behaviour as the
UnlimitedSwap
setting.
With LimitedSwap
, Pods that do not fall under the Burstable QoS classification (i.e.
BestEffort
/Guaranteed
Qos Pods) are prohibited from utilizing swap memory.
To maintain the aforementioned security and node health guarantees, these Pods
are not permitted to use swap memory when LimitedSwap
is in effect.
Prior to detailing the calculation of the swap limit, it is necessary to define the following terms:
nodeTotalMemory
: The total amount of physical memory available on the node.totalPodsSwapAvailable
: The total amount of swap memory on the node that is available for use by Pods (some swap memory may be reserved for system use).containerMemoryRequest
: The container's memory request.
Swap limitation is configured as:
(containerMemoryRequest / nodeTotalMemory) * totalPodsSwapAvailable
.
It is important to note that, for containers within Burstable QoS Pods, it is possible to opt-out of swap usage by specifying memory requests that are equal to memory limits. Containers configured in this manner will not have access to swap memory.
Swap is supported only with cgroup v2, cgroup v1 is not supported.
For more information, and to assist with testing and provide feedback, please see the blog-post about Kubernetes 1.28: NodeSwap graduates to Beta1, KEP-2400 and its design proposal.
What's next
Learn more about the following:
- Components that make up a node.
- API definition for Node.
- Node section of the architecture design document.
- Taints and Tolerations.
- Node Resource Managers.
- Resource Management for Windows nodes.
2.2 - Communication between Nodes and the Control Plane
This document catalogs the communication paths between the API server and the Kubernetes cluster. The intent is to allow users to customize their installation to harden the network configuration such that the cluster can be run on an untrusted network (or on fully public IPs on a cloud provider).
Node to Control Plane
Kubernetes has a "hub-and-spoke" API pattern. All API usage from nodes (or the pods they run) terminates at the API server. None of the other control plane components are designed to expose remote services. The API server is configured to listen for remote connections on a secure HTTPS port (typically 443) with one or more forms of client authentication enabled. One or more forms of authorization should be enabled, especially if anonymous requests or service account tokens are allowed.
Nodes should be provisioned with the public root certificate for the cluster such that they can connect securely to the API server along with valid client credentials. A good approach is that the client credentials provided to the kubelet are in the form of a client certificate. See kubelet TLS bootstrapping for automated provisioning of kubelet client certificates.
Pods that wish to connect to the API server can do so securely by leveraging a service account so
that Kubernetes will automatically inject the public root certificate and a valid bearer token
into the pod when it is instantiated.
The kubernetes
service (in default
namespace) is configured with a virtual IP address that is
redirected (via kube-proxy
) to the HTTPS endpoint on the API server.
The control plane components also communicate with the API server over the secure port.
As a result, the default operating mode for connections from the nodes and pod running on the nodes to the control plane is secured by default and can run over untrusted and/or public networks.
Control plane to node
There are two primary communication paths from the control plane (the API server) to the nodes. The first is from the API server to the kubelet process which runs on each node in the cluster. The second is from the API server to any node, pod, or service through the API server's proxy functionality.
API server to kubelet
The connections from the API server to the kubelet are used for:
- Fetching logs for pods.
- Attaching (usually through
kubectl
) to running pods. - Providing the kubelet's port-forwarding functionality.
These connections terminate at the kubelet's HTTPS endpoint. By default, the API server does not verify the kubelet's serving certificate, which makes the connection subject to man-in-the-middle attacks and unsafe to run over untrusted and/or public networks.
To verify this connection, use the --kubelet-certificate-authority
flag to provide the API
server with a root certificate bundle to use to verify the kubelet's serving certificate.
If that is not possible, use SSH tunneling between the API server and kubelet if required to avoid connecting over an untrusted or public network.
Finally, Kubelet authentication and/or authorization should be enabled to secure the kubelet API.
API server to nodes, pods, and services
The connections from the API server to a node, pod, or service default to plain HTTP connections
and are therefore neither authenticated nor encrypted. They can be run over a secure HTTPS
connection by prefixing https:
to the node, pod, or service name in the API URL, but they will
not validate the certificate provided by the HTTPS endpoint nor provide client credentials. So
while the connection will be encrypted, it will not provide any guarantees of integrity. These
connections are not currently safe to run over untrusted or public networks.
SSH tunnels
Kubernetes supports SSH tunnels to protect the control plane to nodes communication paths. In this configuration, the API server initiates an SSH tunnel to each node in the cluster (connecting to the SSH server listening on port 22) and passes all traffic destined for a kubelet, node, pod, or service through the tunnel. This tunnel ensures that the traffic is not exposed outside of the network in which the nodes are running.
Konnectivity service
Kubernetes v1.18 [beta]
As a replacement to the SSH tunnels, the Konnectivity service provides TCP level proxy for the control plane to cluster communication. The Konnectivity service consists of two parts: the Konnectivity server in the control plane network and the Konnectivity agents in the nodes network. The Konnectivity agents initiate connections to the Konnectivity server and maintain the network connections. After enabling the Konnectivity service, all control plane to nodes traffic goes through these connections.
Follow the Konnectivity service task to set up the Konnectivity service in your cluster.
What's next
- Read about the Kubernetes control plane components
- Learn more about Hubs and Spoke model
- Learn how to Secure a Cluster
- Learn more about the Kubernetes API
- Set up Konnectivity service
- Use Port Forwarding to Access Applications in a Cluster
- Learn how to Fetch logs for Pods, use kubectl port-forward
2.3 - Controllers
In robotics and automation, a control loop is a non-terminating loop that regulates the state of a system.
Here is one example of a control loop: a thermostat in a room.
When you set the temperature, that's telling the thermostat about your desired state. The actual room temperature is the current state. The thermostat acts to bring the current state closer to the desired state, by turning equipment on or off.
In Kubernetes, controllers are control loops that watch the state of your cluster, then make or request changes where needed. Each controller tries to move the current cluster state closer to the desired state.Controller pattern
A controller tracks at least one Kubernetes resource type. These objects have a spec field that represents the desired state. The controller(s) for that resource are responsible for making the current state come closer to that desired state.
The controller might carry the action out itself; more commonly, in Kubernetes, a controller will send messages to the API server that have useful side effects. You'll see examples of this below.
Control via API server
The Job controller is an example of a Kubernetes built-in controller. Built-in controllers manage state by interacting with the cluster API server.
Job is a Kubernetes resource that runs a Pod, or perhaps several Pods, to carry out a task and then stop.
(Once scheduled, Pod objects become part of the desired state for a kubelet).
When the Job controller sees a new task it makes sure that, somewhere in your cluster, the kubelets on a set of Nodes are running the right number of Pods to get the work done. The Job controller does not run any Pods or containers itself. Instead, the Job controller tells the API server to create or remove Pods. Other components in the control plane act on the new information (there are new Pods to schedule and run), and eventually the work is done.
After you create a new Job, the desired state is for that Job to be completed. The Job controller makes the current state for that Job be nearer to your desired state: creating Pods that do the work you wanted for that Job, so that the Job is closer to completion.
Controllers also update the objects that configure them.
For example: once the work is done for a Job, the Job controller
updates that Job object to mark it Finished
.
(This is a bit like how some thermostats turn a light off to indicate that your room is now at the temperature you set).
Direct control
In contrast with Job, some controllers need to make changes to things outside of your cluster.
For example, if you use a control loop to make sure there are enough Nodes in your cluster, then that controller needs something outside the current cluster to set up new Nodes when needed.
Controllers that interact with external state find their desired state from the API server, then communicate directly with an external system to bring the current state closer in line.
(There actually is a controller that horizontally scales the nodes in your cluster.)
The important point here is that the controller makes some changes to bring about your desired state, and then reports the current state back to your cluster's API server. Other control loops can observe that reported data and take their own actions.
In the thermostat example, if the room is very cold then a different controller might also turn on a frost protection heater. With Kubernetes clusters, the control plane indirectly works with IP address management tools, storage services, cloud provider APIs, and other services by extending Kubernetes to implement that.
Desired versus current state
Kubernetes takes a cloud-native view of systems, and is able to handle constant change.
Your cluster could be changing at any point as work happens and control loops automatically fix failures. This means that, potentially, your cluster never reaches a stable state.
As long as the controllers for your cluster are running and able to make useful changes, it doesn't matter if the overall state is stable or not.
Design
As a tenet of its design, Kubernetes uses lots of controllers that each manage a particular aspect of cluster state. Most commonly, a particular control loop (controller) uses one kind of resource as its desired state, and has a different kind of resource that it manages to make that desired state happen. For example, a controller for Jobs tracks Job objects (to discover new work) and Pod objects (to run the Jobs, and then to see when the work is finished). In this case something else creates the Jobs, whereas the Job controller creates Pods.
It's useful to have simple controllers rather than one, monolithic set of control loops that are interlinked. Controllers can fail, so Kubernetes is designed to allow for that.
There can be several controllers that create or update the same kind of object. Behind the scenes, Kubernetes controllers make sure that they only pay attention to the resources linked to their controlling resource.
For example, you can have Deployments and Jobs; these both create Pods. The Job controller does not delete the Pods that your Deployment created, because there is information (labels) the controllers can use to tell those Pods apart.
Ways of running controllers
Kubernetes comes with a set of built-in controllers that run inside the kube-controller-manager. These built-in controllers provide important core behaviors.
The Deployment controller and Job controller are examples of controllers that come as part of Kubernetes itself ("built-in" controllers). Kubernetes lets you run a resilient control plane, so that if any of the built-in controllers were to fail, another part of the control plane will take over the work.
You can find controllers that run outside the control plane, to extend Kubernetes. Or, if you want, you can write a new controller yourself. You can run your own controller as a set of Pods, or externally to Kubernetes. What fits best will depend on what that particular controller does.
What's next
- Read about the Kubernetes control plane
- Discover some of the basic Kubernetes objects
- Learn more about the Kubernetes API
- If you want to write your own controller, see Kubernetes extension patterns and the sample-controller repository.
2.4 - Leases
Distributed systems often have a need for leases, which provide a mechanism to lock shared resources
and coordinate activity between members of a set.
In Kubernetes, the lease concept is represented by Lease
objects in the coordination.k8s.io
API Group,
which are used for system-critical capabilities such as node heartbeats and component-level leader election.
Node heartbeats
Kubernetes uses the Lease API to communicate kubelet node heartbeats to the Kubernetes API server.
For every Node
, there is a Lease
object with a matching name in the kube-node-lease
namespace. Under the hood, every kubelet heartbeat is an update request to this Lease
object, updating
the spec.renewTime
field for the Lease. The Kubernetes control plane uses the time stamp of this field
to determine the availability of this Node
.
See Node Lease objects for more details.
Leader election
Kubernetes also uses Leases to ensure only one instance of a component is running at any given time.
This is used by control plane components like kube-controller-manager
and kube-scheduler
in
HA configurations, where only one instance of the component should be actively running while the other
instances are on stand-by.
API server identity
Kubernetes v1.26 [beta]
Starting in Kubernetes v1.26, each kube-apiserver
uses the Lease API to publish its identity to the
rest of the system. While not particularly useful on its own, this provides a mechanism for clients to
discover how many instances of kube-apiserver
are operating the Kubernetes control plane.
Existence of kube-apiserver leases enables future capabilities that may require coordination between
each kube-apiserver.
You can inspect Leases owned by each kube-apiserver by checking for lease objects in the kube-system
namespace
with the name kube-apiserver-<sha256-hash>
. Alternatively you can use the label selector apiserver.kubernetes.io/identity=kube-apiserver
:
kubectl -n kube-system get lease -l apiserver.kubernetes.io/identity=kube-apiserver
NAME HOLDER AGE
apiserver-07a5ea9b9b072c4a5f3d1c3702 apiserver-07a5ea9b9b072c4a5f3d1c3702_0c8914f7-0f35-440e-8676-7844977d3a05 5m33s
apiserver-7be9e061c59d368b3ddaf1376e apiserver-7be9e061c59d368b3ddaf1376e_84f2a85d-37c1-4b14-b6b9-603e62e4896f 4m23s
apiserver-1dfef752bcb36637d2763d1868 apiserver-1dfef752bcb36637d2763d1868_c5ffa286-8a9a-45d4-91e7-61118ed58d2e 4m43s
The SHA256 hash used in the lease name is based on the OS hostname as seen by that API server. Each kube-apiserver should be
configured to use a hostname that is unique within the cluster. New instances of kube-apiserver that use the same hostname
will take over existing Leases using a new holder identity, as opposed to instantiating new Lease objects. You can check the
hostname used by kube-apisever by checking the value of the kubernetes.io/hostname
label:
kubectl -n kube-system get lease apiserver-07a5ea9b9b072c4a5f3d1c3702 -o yaml
apiVersion: coordination.k8s.io/v1
kind: Lease
metadata:
creationTimestamp: "2023-07-02T13:16:48Z"
labels:
apiserver.kubernetes.io/identity: kube-apiserver
kubernetes.io/hostname: master-1
name: apiserver-07a5ea9b9b072c4a5f3d1c3702
namespace: kube-system
resourceVersion: "334899"
uid: 90870ab5-1ba9-4523-b215-e4d4e662acb1
spec:
holderIdentity: apiserver-07a5ea9b9b072c4a5f3d1c3702_0c8914f7-0f35-440e-8676-7844977d3a05
leaseDurationSeconds: 3600
renewTime: "2023-07-04T21:58:48.065888Z"
Expired leases from kube-apiservers that no longer exist are garbage collected by new kube-apiservers after 1 hour.
You can disable API server identity leases by disabling the APIServerIdentity
feature gate.
Workloads
Your own workload can define its own use of Leases. For example, you might run a custom
controller where a primary or leader member
performs operations that its peers do not. You define a Lease so that the controller replicas can select
or elect a leader, using the Kubernetes API for coordination.
If you do use a Lease, it's a good practice to define a name for the Lease that is obviously linked to
the product or component. For example, if you have a component named Example Foo, use a Lease named
example-foo
.
If a cluster operator or another end user could deploy multiple instances of a component, select a name prefix and pick a mechanism (such as hash of the name of the Deployment) to avoid name collisions for the Leases.
You can use another approach so long as it achieves the same outcome: different software products do not conflict with one another.
2.5 - Cloud Controller Manager
Kubernetes v1.11 [beta]
Cloud infrastructure technologies let you run Kubernetes on public, private, and hybrid clouds. Kubernetes believes in automated, API-driven infrastructure without tight coupling between components.
The cloud-controller-manager is a Kubernetes control plane component that embeds cloud-specific control logic. The cloud controller manager lets you link your cluster into your cloud provider's API, and separates out the components that interact with that cloud platform from components that only interact with your cluster.
By decoupling the interoperability logic between Kubernetes and the underlying cloud infrastructure, the cloud-controller-manager component enables cloud providers to release features at a different pace compared to the main Kubernetes project.
The cloud-controller-manager is structured using a plugin mechanism that allows different cloud providers to integrate their platforms with Kubernetes.
Design
The cloud controller manager runs in the control plane as a replicated set of processes (usually, these are containers in Pods). Each cloud-controller-manager implements multiple controllers in a single process.
Cloud controller manager functions
The controllers inside the cloud controller manager include:
Node controller
The node controller is responsible for updating Node objects when new servers are created in your cloud infrastructure. The node controller obtains information about the hosts running inside your tenancy with the cloud provider. The node controller performs the following functions:
- Update a Node object with the corresponding server's unique identifier obtained from the cloud provider API.
- Annotating and labelling the Node object with cloud-specific information, such as the region the node is deployed into and the resources (CPU, memory, etc) that it has available.
- Obtain the node's hostname and network addresses.
- Verifying the node's health. In case a node becomes unresponsive, this controller checks with your cloud provider's API to see if the server has been deactivated / deleted / terminated. If the node has been deleted from the cloud, the controller deletes the Node object from your Kubernetes cluster.
Some cloud provider implementations split this into a node controller and a separate node lifecycle controller.
Route controller
The route controller is responsible for configuring routes in the cloud appropriately so that containers on different nodes in your Kubernetes cluster can communicate with each other.
Depending on the cloud provider, the route controller might also allocate blocks of IP addresses for the Pod network.
Service controller
Services integrate with cloud infrastructure components such as managed load balancers, IP addresses, network packet filtering, and target health checking. The service controller interacts with your cloud provider's APIs to set up load balancers and other infrastructure components when you declare a Service resource that requires them.
Authorization
This section breaks down the access that the cloud controller manager requires on various API objects, in order to perform its operations.
Node controller
The Node controller only works with Node objects. It requires full access to read and modify Node objects.
v1/Node
:
- get
- list
- create
- update
- patch
- watch
- delete
Route controller
The route controller listens to Node object creation and configures routes appropriately. It requires Get access to Node objects.
v1/Node
:
- get
Service controller
The service controller watches for Service object create, update and delete events and then configures Endpoints for those Services appropriately (for EndpointSlices, the kube-controller-manager manages these on demand).
To access Services, it requires list, and watch access. To update Services, it requires patch and update access.
To set up Endpoints resources for the Services, it requires access to create, list, get, watch, and update.
v1/Service
:
- list
- get
- watch
- patch
- update
Others
The implementation of the core of the cloud controller manager requires access to create Event objects, and to ensure secure operation, it requires access to create ServiceAccounts.
v1/Event
:
- create
- patch
- update
v1/ServiceAccount
:
- create
The RBAC ClusterRole for the cloud controller manager looks like:
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: ClusterRole
metadata:
name: cloud-controller-manager
rules:
- apiGroups:
- ""
resources:
- events
verbs:
- create
- patch
- update
- apiGroups:
- ""
resources:
- nodes
verbs:
- '*'
- apiGroups:
- ""
resources:
- nodes/status
verbs:
- patch
- apiGroups:
- ""
resources:
- services
verbs:
- list
- patch
- update
- watch
- apiGroups:
- ""
resources:
- serviceaccounts
verbs:
- create
- apiGroups:
- ""
resources:
- persistentvolumes
verbs:
- get
- list
- update
- watch
- apiGroups:
- ""
resources:
- endpoints
verbs:
- create
- get
- list
- watch
- update
What's next
-
Cloud Controller Manager Administration has instructions on running and managing the cloud controller manager.
-
To upgrade a HA control plane to use the cloud controller manager, see Migrate Replicated Control Plane To Use Cloud Controller Manager.
-
Want to know how to implement your own cloud controller manager, or extend an existing project?
- The cloud controller manager uses Go interfaces, specifically,
CloudProvider
interface defined incloud.go
from kubernetes/cloud-provider to allow implementations from any cloud to be plugged in. - The implementation of the shared controllers highlighted in this document (Node, Route, and Service),
and some scaffolding along with the shared cloudprovider interface, is part of the Kubernetes core.
Implementations specific to cloud providers are outside the core of Kubernetes and implement
the
CloudProvider
interface. - For more information about developing plugins, see Developing Cloud Controller Manager.
- The cloud controller manager uses Go interfaces, specifically,
2.6 - About cgroup v2
On Linux, control groups constrain resources that are allocated to processes.
The kubelet and the underlying container runtime need to interface with cgroups to enforce resource management for pods and containers which includes cpu/memory requests and limits for containerized workloads.
There are two versions of cgroups in Linux: cgroup v1 and cgroup v2. cgroup v2 is
the new generation of the cgroup
API.
What is cgroup v2?
Kubernetes v1.25 [stable]
cgroup v2 is the next version of the Linux cgroup
API. cgroup v2 provides a
unified control system with enhanced resource management
capabilities.
cgroup v2 offers several improvements over cgroup v1, such as the following:
- Single unified hierarchy design in API
- Safer sub-tree delegation to containers
- Newer features like Pressure Stall Information
- Enhanced resource allocation management and isolation across multiple resources
- Unified accounting for different types of memory allocations (network memory, kernel memory, etc)
- Accounting for non-immediate resource changes such as page cache write backs
Some Kubernetes features exclusively use cgroup v2 for enhanced resource management and isolation. For example, the MemoryQoS feature improves memory QoS and relies on cgroup v2 primitives.
Using cgroup v2
The recommended way to use cgroup v2 is to use a Linux distribution that enables and uses cgroup v2 by default.
To check if your distribution uses cgroup v2, refer to Identify cgroup version on Linux nodes.
Requirements
cgroup v2 has the following requirements:
- OS distribution enables cgroup v2
- Linux Kernel version is 5.8 or later
- Container runtime supports cgroup v2. For example:
- containerd v1.4 and later
- cri-o v1.20 and later
- The kubelet and the container runtime are configured to use the systemd cgroup driver
Linux Distribution cgroup v2 support
For a list of Linux distributions that use cgroup v2, refer to the cgroup v2 documentation
- Container Optimized OS (since M97)
- Ubuntu (since 21.10, 22.04+ recommended)
- Debian GNU/Linux (since Debian 11 bullseye)
- Fedora (since 31)
- Arch Linux (since April 2021)
- RHEL and RHEL-like distributions (since 9)
To check if your distribution is using cgroup v2, refer to your distribution's documentation or follow the instructions in Identify the cgroup version on Linux nodes.
You can also enable cgroup v2 manually on your Linux distribution by modifying
the kernel cmdline boot arguments. If your distribution uses GRUB,
systemd.unified_cgroup_hierarchy=1
should be added in GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX
under /etc/default/grub
, followed by sudo update-grub
. However, the
recommended approach is to use a distribution that already enables cgroup v2 by
default.
Migrating to cgroup v2
To migrate to cgroup v2, ensure that you meet the requirements, then upgrade to a kernel version that enables cgroup v2 by default.
The kubelet automatically detects that the OS is running on cgroup v2 and performs accordingly with no additional configuration required.
There should not be any noticeable difference in the user experience when switching to cgroup v2, unless users are accessing the cgroup file system directly, either on the node or from within the containers.
cgroup v2 uses a different API than cgroup v1, so if there are any applications that directly access the cgroup file system, they need to be updated to newer versions that support cgroup v2. For example:
- Some third-party monitoring and security agents may depend on the cgroup filesystem. Update these agents to versions that support cgroup v2.
- If you run cAdvisor as a stand-alone DaemonSet for monitoring pods and containers, update it to v0.43.0 or later.
- If you deploy Java applications, prefer to use versions which fully support cgroup v2:
- OpenJDK / HotSpot: jdk8u372, 11.0.16, 15 and later
- IBM Semeru Runtimes: 8.0.382.0, 11.0.20.0, 17.0.8.0, and later
- IBM Java: 8.0.8.6 and later
- If you are using the uber-go/automaxprocs package, make sure the version you use is v1.5.1 or higher.
Identify the cgroup version on Linux Nodes
The cgroup version depends on the Linux distribution being used and the
default cgroup version configured on the OS. To check which cgroup version your
distribution uses, run the stat -fc %T /sys/fs/cgroup/
command on
the node:
stat -fc %T /sys/fs/cgroup/
For cgroup v2, the output is cgroup2fs
.
For cgroup v1, the output is tmpfs.
What's next
- Learn more about cgroups
- Learn more about container runtime
- Learn more about cgroup drivers
2.7 - Container Runtime Interface (CRI)
The CRI is a plugin interface which enables the kubelet to use a wide variety of container runtimes, without having a need to recompile the cluster components.
You need a working container runtime on each Node in your cluster, so that the kubelet can launch Pods and their containers.
The Container Runtime Interface (CRI) is the main protocol for the communication between the kubelet and Container Runtime.
The Kubernetes Container Runtime Interface (CRI) defines the main gRPC protocol for the communication between the node components kubelet and container runtime.
The API
Kubernetes v1.23 [stable]
The kubelet acts as a client when connecting to the container runtime via gRPC.
The runtime and image service endpoints have to be available in the container
runtime, which can be configured separately within the kubelet by using the
--image-service-endpoint
command line flags.
For Kubernetes v1.29, the kubelet prefers to use CRI v1
.
If a container runtime does not support v1
of the CRI, then the kubelet tries to
negotiate any older supported version.
The v1.29 kubelet can also negotiate CRI v1alpha2
, but
this version is considered as deprecated.
If the kubelet cannot negotiate a supported CRI version, the kubelet gives up
and doesn't register as a node.
Upgrading
When upgrading Kubernetes, the kubelet tries to automatically select the latest CRI version on restart of the component. If that fails, then the fallback will take place as mentioned above. If a gRPC re-dial was required because the container runtime has been upgraded, then the container runtime must also support the initially selected version or the redial is expected to fail. This requires a restart of the kubelet.
What's next
- Learn more about the CRI protocol definition
2.8 - Garbage Collection
Garbage collection is a collective term for the various mechanisms Kubernetes uses to clean up cluster resources. This allows the clean up of resources like the following:
- Terminated pods
- Completed Jobs
- Objects without owner references
- Unused containers and container images
- Dynamically provisioned PersistentVolumes with a StorageClass reclaim policy of Delete
- Stale or expired CertificateSigningRequests (CSRs)
- Nodes deleted in the following scenarios:
- On a cloud when the cluster uses a cloud controller manager
- On-premises when the cluster uses an addon similar to a cloud controller manager
- Node Lease objects
Owners and dependents
Many objects in Kubernetes link to each other through owner references. Owner references tell the control plane which objects are dependent on others. Kubernetes uses owner references to give the control plane, and other API clients, the opportunity to clean up related resources before deleting an object. In most cases, Kubernetes manages owner references automatically.
Ownership is different from the labels and selectors
mechanism that some resources also use. For example, consider a
Service that creates
EndpointSlice
objects. The Service uses labels to allow the control plane to
determine which EndpointSlice
objects are used for that Service. In addition
to the labels, each EndpointSlice
that is managed on behalf of a Service has
an owner reference. Owner references help different parts of Kubernetes avoid
interfering with objects they don’t control.
Cross-namespace owner references are disallowed by design. Namespaced dependents can specify cluster-scoped or namespaced owners. A namespaced owner must exist in the same namespace as the dependent. If it does not, the owner reference is treated as absent, and the dependent is subject to deletion once all owners are verified absent.
Cluster-scoped dependents can only specify cluster-scoped owners. In v1.20+, if a cluster-scoped dependent specifies a namespaced kind as an owner, it is treated as having an unresolvable owner reference, and is not able to be garbage collected.
In v1.20+, if the garbage collector detects an invalid cross-namespace ownerReference
,
or a cluster-scoped dependent with an ownerReference
referencing a namespaced kind, a warning Event
with a reason of OwnerRefInvalidNamespace
and an involvedObject
of the invalid dependent is reported.
You can check for that kind of Event by running
kubectl get events -A --field-selector=reason=OwnerRefInvalidNamespace
.
Cascading deletion
Kubernetes checks for and deletes objects that no longer have owner references, like the pods left behind when you delete a ReplicaSet. When you delete an object, you can control whether Kubernetes deletes the object's dependents automatically, in a process called cascading deletion. There are two types of cascading deletion, as follows:
- Foreground cascading deletion
- Background cascading deletion
You can also control how and when garbage collection deletes resources that have owner references using Kubernetes finalizers.
Foreground cascading deletion
In foreground cascading deletion, the owner object you're deleting first enters a deletion in progress state. In this state, the following happens to the owner object:
- The Kubernetes API server sets the object's
metadata.deletionTimestamp
field to the time the object was marked for deletion. - The Kubernetes API server also sets the
metadata.finalizers
field toforegroundDeletion
. - The object remains visible through the Kubernetes API until the deletion process is complete.
After the owner object enters the deletion in progress state, the controller deletes the dependents. After deleting all the dependent objects, the controller deletes the owner object. At this point, the object is no longer visible in the Kubernetes API.
During foreground cascading deletion, the only dependents that block owner
deletion are those that have the ownerReference.blockOwnerDeletion=true
field.
See Use foreground cascading deletion
to learn more.
Background cascading deletion
In background cascading deletion, the Kubernetes API server deletes the owner object immediately and the controller cleans up the dependent objects in the background. By default, Kubernetes uses background cascading deletion unless you manually use foreground deletion or choose to orphan the dependent objects.
See Use background cascading deletion to learn more.
Orphaned dependents
When Kubernetes deletes an owner object, the dependents left behind are called orphan objects. By default, Kubernetes deletes dependent objects. To learn how to override this behaviour, see Delete owner objects and orphan dependents.
Garbage collection of unused containers and images
The kubelet performs garbage collection on unused images every two minutes and on unused containers every minute. You should avoid using external garbage collection tools, as these can break the kubelet behavior and remove containers that should exist.
To configure options for unused container and image garbage collection, tune the
kubelet using a configuration file
and change the parameters related to garbage collection using the
KubeletConfiguration
resource type.
Container image lifecycle
Kubernetes manages the lifecycle of all images through its image manager, which is part of the kubelet, with the cooperation of cadvisor. The kubelet considers the following disk usage limits when making garbage collection decisions:
HighThresholdPercent
LowThresholdPercent
Disk usage above the configured HighThresholdPercent
value triggers garbage
collection, which deletes images in order based on the last time they were used,
starting with the oldest first. The kubelet deletes images
until disk usage reaches the LowThresholdPercent
value.
Garbage collection for unused container images
Kubernetes v1.29 [alpha]
As an alpha feature, you can specify the maximum time a local image can be unused for, regardless of disk usage. This is a kubelet setting that you configure for each node.
To configure the setting, enable the ImageMaximumGCAge
feature gate for the kubelet,
and also set a value for the ImageMaximumGCAge
field in the kubelet configuration file.
The value is specified as a Kubernetes duration; for example, you can set the configuration
field to 3d12h
, which means 3 days and 12 hours.
Container garbage collection
The kubelet garbage collects unused containers based on the following variables, which you can define:
MinAge
: the minimum age at which the kubelet can garbage collect a container. Disable by setting to0
.MaxPerPodContainer
: the maximum number of dead containers each Pod can have. Disable by setting to less than0
.MaxContainers
: the maximum number of dead containers the cluster can have. Disable by setting to less than0
.
In addition to these variables, the kubelet garbage collects unidentified and deleted containers, typically starting with the oldest first.
MaxPerPodContainer
and MaxContainers
may potentially conflict with each other
in situations where retaining the maximum number of containers per Pod
(MaxPerPodContainer
) would go outside the allowable total of global dead
containers (MaxContainers
). In this situation, the kubelet adjusts
MaxPerPodContainer
to address the conflict. A worst-case scenario would be to
downgrade MaxPerPodContainer
to 1
and evict the oldest containers.
Additionally, containers owned by pods that have been deleted are removed once
they are older than MinAge
.
Configuring garbage collection
You can tune garbage collection of resources by configuring options specific to the controllers managing those resources. The following pages show you how to configure garbage collection:
What's next
- Learn more about ownership of Kubernetes objects.
- Learn more about Kubernetes finalizers.
- Learn about the TTL controller that cleans up finished Jobs.
2.9 - Mixed Version Proxy
Kubernetes v1.28 [alpha]
Kubernetes 1.29 includes an alpha feature that lets an API Server proxy a resource requests to other peer API servers. This is useful when there are multiple API servers running different versions of Kubernetes in one cluster (for example, during a long-lived rollout to a new release of Kubernetes).
This enables cluster administrators to configure highly available clusters that can be upgraded more safely, by directing resource requests (made during the upgrade) to the correct kube-apiserver. That proxying prevents users from seeing unexpected 404 Not Found errors that stem from the upgrade process.
This mechanism is called the Mixed Version Proxy.
Enabling the Mixed Version Proxy
Ensure that UnknownVersionInteroperabilityProxy
feature gate
is enabled when you start the API Server:
kube-apiserver \
--feature-gates=UnknownVersionInteroperabilityProxy=true \
# required command line arguments for this feature
--peer-ca-file=<path to kube-apiserver CA cert>
--proxy-client-cert-file=<path to aggregator proxy cert>,
--proxy-client-key-file=<path to aggregator proxy key>,
--requestheader-client-ca-file=<path to aggregator CA cert>,
# requestheader-allowed-names can be set to blank to allow any Common Name
--requestheader-allowed-names=<valid Common Names to verify proxy client cert against>,
# optional flags for this feature
--peer-advertise-ip=`IP of this kube-apiserver that should be used by peers to proxy requests`
--peer-advertise-port=`port of this kube-apiserver that should be used by peers to proxy requests`
# …and other flags as usual
Proxy transport and authentication between API servers
-
The source kube-apiserver reuses the existing APIserver client authentication flags
--proxy-client-cert-file
and--proxy-client-key-file
to present its identity that will be verified by its peer (the destination kube-apiserver). The destination API server verifies that peer connection based on the configuration you specify using the--requestheader-client-ca-file
command line argument. -
To authenticate the destination server's serving certs, you must configure a certificate authority bundle by specifying the
--peer-ca-file
command line argument to the source API server.
Configuration for peer API server connectivity
To set the network location of a kube-apiserver that peers will use to proxy requests, use the
--peer-advertise-ip
and --peer-advertise-port
command line arguments to kube-apiserver or specify
these fields in the API server configuration file.
If these flags are unspecified, peers will use the value from either --advertise-address
or
--bind-address
command line argument to the kube-apiserver.
If those too, are unset, the host's default interface is used.
Mixed version proxying
When you enable mixed version proxying, the aggregation layer loads a special filter that does the following:
- When a resource request reaches an API server that cannot serve that API (either because it is at a version pre-dating the introduction of the API or the API is turned off on the API server) the API server attempts to send the request to a peer API server that can serve the requested API. It does so by identifying API groups / versions / resources that the local server doesn't recognise, and tries to proxy those requests to a peer API server that is capable of handling the request.
- If the peer API server fails to respond, the source API server responds with 503 ("Service Unavailable") error.
How it works under the hood
When an API Server receives a resource request, it first checks which API servers can
serve the requested resource. This check happens using the internal
StorageVersion
API.
-
If the resource is known to the API server that received the request (for example,
GET /api/v1/pods/some-pod
), the request is handled locally. -
If there is no internal
StorageVersion
object found for the requested resource (for example,GET /my-api/v1/my-resource
) and the configured APIService specifies proxying to an extension API server, that proxying happens following the usual flow for extension APIs. -
If a valid internal
StorageVersion
object is found for the requested resource (for example,GET /batch/v1/jobs
) and the API server trying to handle the request (the handling API server) has thebatch
API disabled, then the handling API server fetches the peer API servers that do serve the relevant API group / version / resource (api/v1/batch
in this case) using the information in the fetchedStorageVersion
object. The handling API server then proxies the request to one of the matching peer kube-apiservers that are aware of the requested resource.-
If there is no peer known for that API group / version / resource, the handling API server passes the request to its own handler chain which should eventually return a 404 ("Not Found") response.
-
If the handling API server has identified and selected a peer API server, but that peer fails to respond (for reasons such as network connectivity issues, or a data race between the request being received and a controller registering the peer's info into the control plane), then the handling API server responds with a 503 ("Service Unavailable") error.
-
3 - Containers
Each container that you run is repeatable; the standardization from having dependencies included means that you get the same behavior wherever you run it.
Containers decouple applications from the underlying host infrastructure. This makes deployment easier in different cloud or OS environments.
Each node in a Kubernetes cluster runs the containers that form the Pods assigned to that node. Containers in a Pod are co-located and co-scheduled to run on the same node.
Container images
A container image is a ready-to-run software package containing everything needed to run an application: the code and any runtime it requires, application and system libraries, and default values for any essential settings.
Containers are intended to be stateless and immutable: you should not change the code of a container that is already running. If you have a containerized application and want to make changes, the correct process is to build a new image that includes the change, then recreate the container to start from the updated image.
Container runtimes
A fundamental component that empowers Kubernetes to run containers effectively. It is responsible for managing the execution and lifecycle of containers within the Kubernetes environment.
Kubernetes supports container runtimes such as containerd, CRI-O, and any other implementation of the Kubernetes CRI (Container Runtime Interface).
Usually, you can allow your cluster to pick the default container runtime for a Pod. If you need to use more than one container runtime in your cluster, you can specify the RuntimeClass for a Pod to make sure that Kubernetes runs those containers using a particular container runtime.
You can also use RuntimeClass to run different Pods with the same container runtime but with different settings.
3.1 - Images
A container image represents binary data that encapsulates an application and all its software dependencies. Container images are executable software bundles that can run standalone and that make very well defined assumptions about their runtime environment.
You typically create a container image of your application and push it to a registry before referring to it in a Pod.
This page provides an outline of the container image concept.
Image names
Container images are usually given a name such as pause
, example/mycontainer
, or kube-apiserver
.
Images can also include a registry hostname; for example: fictional.registry.example/imagename
,
and possibly a port number as well; for example: fictional.registry.example:10443/imagename
.
If you don't specify a registry hostname, Kubernetes assumes that you mean the Docker public registry.
After the image name part you can add a tag (in the same way you would when using with commands
like docker
or podman
). Tags let you identify different versions of the same series of images.
Image tags consist of lowercase and uppercase letters, digits, underscores (_
),
periods (.
), and dashes (-
).
There are additional rules about where you can place the separator
characters (_
, -
, and .
) inside an image tag.
If you don't specify a tag, Kubernetes assumes you mean the tag latest
.
Updating images
When you first create a Deployment,
StatefulSet, Pod, or other
object that includes a Pod template, then by default the pull policy of all
containers in that pod will be set to IfNotPresent
if it is not explicitly
specified. This policy causes the
kubelet to skip pulling an
image if it already exists.
Image pull policy
The imagePullPolicy
for a container and the tag of the image affect when the
kubelet attempts to pull (download) the specified image.
Here's a list of the values you can set for imagePullPolicy
and the effects
these values have:
IfNotPresent
- the image is pulled only if it is not already present locally.
Always
- every time the kubelet launches a container, the kubelet queries the container image registry to resolve the name to an image digest. If the kubelet has a container image with that exact digest cached locally, the kubelet uses its cached image; otherwise, the kubelet pulls the image with the resolved digest, and uses that image to launch the container.
Never
- the kubelet does not try fetching the image. If the image is somehow already present locally, the kubelet attempts to start the container; otherwise, startup fails. See pre-pulled images for more details.
The caching semantics of the underlying image provider make even
imagePullPolicy: Always
efficient, as long as the registry is reliably accessible.
Your container runtime can notice that the image layers already exist on the node
so that they don't need to be downloaded again.
You should avoid using the :latest
tag when deploying containers in production as
it is harder to track which version of the image is running and more difficult to
roll back properly.
Instead, specify a meaningful tag such as v1.42.0
and/or a digest.
To make sure the Pod always uses the same version of a container image, you can specify
the image's digest;
replace <image-name>:<tag>
with <image-name>@<digest>
(for example, image@sha256:45b23dee08af5e43a7fea6c4cf9c25ccf269ee113168c19722f87876677c5cb2
).
When using image tags, if the image registry were to change the code that the tag on that image represents, you might end up with a mix of Pods running the old and new code. An image digest uniquely identifies a specific version of the image, so Kubernetes runs the same code every time it starts a container with that image name and digest specified. Specifying an image by digest fixes the code that you run so that a change at the registry cannot lead to that mix of versions.
There are third-party admission controllers that mutate Pods (and pod templates) when they are created, so that the running workload is defined based on an image digest rather than a tag. That might be useful if you want to make sure that all your workload is running the same code no matter what tag changes happen at the registry.
Default image pull policy
When you (or a controller) submit a new Pod to the API server, your cluster sets the
imagePullPolicy
field when specific conditions are met:
- if you omit the
imagePullPolicy
field, and you specify the digest for the container image, theimagePullPolicy
is automatically set toIfNotPresent
. - if you omit the
imagePullPolicy
field, and the tag for the container image is:latest
,imagePullPolicy
is automatically set toAlways
; - if you omit the
imagePullPolicy
field, and you don't specify the tag for the container image,imagePullPolicy
is automatically set toAlways
; - if you omit the
imagePullPolicy
field, and you specify the tag for the container image that isn't:latest
, theimagePullPolicy
is automatically set toIfNotPresent
.
The value of imagePullPolicy
of the container is always set when the object is
first created, and is not updated if the image's tag or digest later changes.
For example, if you create a Deployment with an image whose tag is not
:latest
, and later update that Deployment's image to a :latest
tag, the
imagePullPolicy
field will not change to Always
. You must manually change
the pull policy of any object after its initial creation.
Required image pull
If you would like to always force a pull, you can do one of the following:
- Set the
imagePullPolicy
of the container toAlways
. - Omit the
imagePullPolicy
and use:latest
as the tag for the image to use; Kubernetes will set the policy toAlways
when you submit the Pod. - Omit the
imagePullPolicy
and the tag for the image to use; Kubernetes will set the policy toAlways
when you submit the Pod. - Enable the AlwaysPullImages admission controller.
ImagePullBackOff
When a kubelet starts creating containers for a Pod using a container runtime,
it might be possible the container is in Waiting
state because of ImagePullBackOff
.
The status ImagePullBackOff
means that a container could not start because Kubernetes
could not pull a container image (for reasons such as invalid image name, or pulling
from a private registry without imagePullSecret
). The BackOff
part indicates
that Kubernetes will keep trying to pull the image, with an increasing back-off delay.
Kubernetes raises the delay between each attempt until it reaches a compiled-in limit, which is 300 seconds (5 minutes).
Image pull per runtime class
Kubernetes v1.29 [alpha]
If you enable the RuntimeClassInImageCriApi
feature gate,
the kubelet references container images by a tuple of (image name, runtime handler) rather than just the
image name or digest. Your container runtime
may adapt its behavior based on the selected runtime handler.
Pulling images based on runtime class will be helpful for VM based containers like windows hyperV containers.
Serial and parallel image pulls
By default, kubelet pulls images serially. In other words, kubelet sends only one image pull request to the image service at a time. Other image pull requests have to wait until the one being processed is complete.
Nodes make image pull decisions in isolation. Even when you use serialized image pulls, two different nodes can pull the same image in parallel.
If you would like to enable parallel image pulls, you can set the field
serializeImagePulls
to false in the kubelet configuration.
With serializeImagePulls
set to false, image pull requests will be sent to the image service immediately,
and multiple images will be pulled at the same time.
When enabling parallel image pulls, please make sure the image service of your container runtime can handle parallel image pulls.
The kubelet never pulls multiple images in parallel on behalf of one Pod. For example, if you have a Pod that has an init container and an application container, the image pulls for the two containers will not be parallelized. However, if you have two Pods that use different images, the kubelet pulls the images in parallel on behalf of the two different Pods, when parallel image pulls is enabled.
Maximum parallel image pulls
Kubernetes v1.27 [alpha]
When serializeImagePulls
is set to false, the kubelet defaults to no limit on the
maximum number of images being pulled at the same time. If you would like to
limit the number of parallel image pulls, you can set the field maxParallelImagePulls
in kubelet configuration. With maxParallelImagePulls
set to n, only n images
can be pulled at the same time, and any image pull beyond n will have to wait
until at least one ongoing image pull is complete.
Limiting the number parallel image pulls would prevent image pulling from consuming too much network bandwidth or disk I/O, when parallel image pulling is enabled.
You can set maxParallelImagePulls
to a positive number that is greater than or
equal to 1. If you set maxParallelImagePulls
to be greater than or equal to 2, you
must set the serializeImagePulls
to false. The kubelet will fail to start with invalid
maxParallelImagePulls
settings.
Multi-architecture images with image indexes
As well as providing binary images, a container registry can also serve a
container image index.
An image index can point to multiple image manifests
for architecture-specific versions of a container. The idea is that you can have a name for an image
(for example: pause
, example/mycontainer
, kube-apiserver
) and allow different systems to
fetch the right binary image for the machine architecture they are using.
Kubernetes itself typically names container images with a suffix -$(ARCH)
. For backward
compatibility, please generate the older images with suffixes. The idea is to generate say pause
image which has the manifest for all the arch(es) and say pause-amd64
which is backwards
compatible for older configurations or YAML files which may have hard coded the images with
suffixes.
Using a private registry
Private registries may require keys to read images from them.
Credentials can be provided in several ways:
- Configuring Nodes to Authenticate to a Private Registry
- all pods can read any configured private registries
- requires node configuration by cluster administrator
- Kubelet Credential Provider to dynamically fetch credentials for private registries
- kubelet can be configured to use credential provider exec plugin for the respective private registry.
- Pre-pulled Images
- all pods can use any images cached on a node
- requires root access to all nodes to set up
- Specifying ImagePullSecrets on a Pod
- only pods which provide own keys can access the private registry
- Vendor-specific or local extensions
- if you're using a custom node configuration, you (or your cloud provider) can implement your mechanism for authenticating the node to the container registry.
These options are explained in more detail below.
Configuring nodes to authenticate to a private registry
Specific instructions for setting credentials depends on the container runtime and registry you chose to use. You should refer to your solution's documentation for the most accurate information.
For an example of configuring a private container image registry, see the Pull an Image from a Private Registry task. That example uses a private registry in Docker Hub.
Kubelet credential provider for authenticated image pulls
You can configure the kubelet to invoke a plugin binary to dynamically fetch registry credentials for a container image. This is the most robust and versatile way to fetch credentials for private registries, but also requires kubelet-level configuration to enable.
See Configure a kubelet image credential provider for more details.
Interpretation of config.json
The interpretation of config.json
varies between the original Docker
implementation and the Kubernetes interpretation. In Docker, the auths
keys
can only specify root URLs, whereas Kubernetes allows glob URLs as well as
prefix-matched paths. The only limitation is that glob patterns (*
) have to
include the dot (.
) for each subdomain. The amount of matched subdomains has
to be equal to the amount of glob patterns (*.
), for example:
*.kubernetes.io
will not matchkubernetes.io
, butabc.kubernetes.io
*.*.kubernetes.io
will not matchabc.kubernetes.io
, butabc.def.kubernetes.io
prefix.*.io
will matchprefix.kubernetes.io
*-good.kubernetes.io
will matchprefix-good.kubernetes.io
This means that a config.json
like this is valid:
{
"auths": {
"my-registry.io/images": { "auth": "…" },
"*.my-registry.io/images": { "auth": "…" }
}
}
Image pull operations would now pass the credentials to the CRI container runtime for every valid pattern. For example the following container image names would match successfully:
my-registry.io/images
my-registry.io/images/my-image
my-registry.io/images/another-image
sub.my-registry.io/images/my-image
But not:
a.sub.my-registry.io/images/my-image
a.b.sub.my-registry.io/images/my-image
The kubelet performs image pulls sequentially for every found credential. This
means, that multiple entries in config.json
for different paths are possible, too:
{
"auths": {
"my-registry.io/images": {
"auth": "…"
},
"my-registry.io/images/subpath": {
"auth": "…"
}
}
}
If now a container specifies an image my-registry.io/images/subpath/my-image
to be pulled, then the kubelet will try to download them from both
authentication sources if one of them fails.
Pre-pulled images
By default, the kubelet tries to pull each image from the specified registry.
However, if the imagePullPolicy
property of the container is set to IfNotPresent
or Never
,
then a local image is used (preferentially or exclusively, respectively).
If you want to rely on pre-pulled images as a substitute for registry authentication, you must ensure all nodes in the cluster have the same pre-pulled images.
This can be used to preload certain images for speed or as an alternative to authenticating to a private registry.
All pods will have read access to any pre-pulled images.
Specifying imagePullSecrets on a Pod
Kubernetes supports specifying container image registry keys on a Pod.
imagePullSecrets
must all be in the same namespace as the Pod. The referenced
Secrets must be of type kubernetes.io/dockercfg
or kubernetes.io/dockerconfigjson
.
Creating a Secret with a Docker config
You need to know the username, registry password and client email address for authenticating to the registry, as well as its hostname. Run the following command, substituting the appropriate uppercase values:
kubectl create secret docker-registry <name> \
--docker-server=DOCKER_REGISTRY_SERVER \
--docker-username=DOCKER_USER \
--docker-password=DOCKER_PASSWORD \
--docker-email=DOCKER_EMAIL
If you already have a Docker credentials file then, rather than using the above
command, you can import the credentials file as a Kubernetes
Secrets.
Create a Secret based on existing Docker credentials
explains how to set this up.
This is particularly useful if you are using multiple private container
registries, as kubectl create secret docker-registry
creates a Secret that
only works with a single private registry.
Referring to an imagePullSecrets on a Pod
Now, you can create pods which reference that secret by adding an imagePullSecrets
section to a Pod definition. Each item in the imagePullSecrets
array can only
reference a Secret in the same namespace.
For example:
cat <<EOF > pod.yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: foo
namespace: awesomeapps
spec:
containers:
- name: foo
image: janedoe/awesomeapp:v1
imagePullSecrets:
- name: myregistrykey
EOF
cat <<EOF >> ./kustomization.yaml
resources:
- pod.yaml
EOF
This needs to be done for each pod that is using a private registry.
However, setting of this field can be automated by setting the imagePullSecrets in a ServiceAccount resource.
Check Add ImagePullSecrets to a Service Account for detailed instructions.
You can use this in conjunction with a per-node .docker/config.json
. The credentials
will be merged.
Use cases
There are a number of solutions for configuring private registries. Here are some common use cases and suggested solutions.
- Cluster running only non-proprietary (e.g. open-source) images. No need to hide images.
- Use public images from a public registry
- No configuration required.
- Some cloud providers automatically cache or mirror public images, which improves availability and reduces the time to pull images.
- Use public images from a public registry
- Cluster running some proprietary images which should be hidden to those outside the company, but
visible to all cluster users.
- Use a hosted private registry
- Manual configuration may be required on the nodes that need to access to private registry
- Or, run an internal private registry behind your firewall with open read access.
- No Kubernetes configuration is required.
- Use a hosted container image registry service that controls image access
- It will work better with cluster autoscaling than manual node configuration.
- Or, on a cluster where changing the node configuration is inconvenient, use
imagePullSecrets
.
- Use a hosted private registry
- Cluster with proprietary images, a few of which require stricter access control.
- Ensure AlwaysPullImages admission controller is active. Otherwise, all Pods potentially have access to all images.
- Move sensitive data into a "Secret" resource, instead of packaging it in an image.
- A multi-tenant cluster where each tenant needs own private registry.
- Ensure AlwaysPullImages admission controller is active. Otherwise, all Pods of all tenants potentially have access to all images.
- Run a private registry with authorization required.
- Generate registry credential for each tenant, put into secret, and populate secret to each tenant namespace.
- The tenant adds that secret to imagePullSecrets of each namespace.
If you need access to multiple registries, you can create one secret for each registry.
Legacy built-in kubelet credential provider
In older versions of Kubernetes, the kubelet had a direct integration with cloud provider credentials. This gave it the ability to dynamically fetch credentials for image registries.
There were three built-in implementations of the kubelet credential provider integration: ACR (Azure Container Registry), ECR (Elastic Container Registry), and GCR (Google Container Registry).
For more information on the legacy mechanism, read the documentation for the version of Kubernetes that you are using. Kubernetes v1.26 through to v1.29 do not include the legacy mechanism, so you would need to either:
- configure a kubelet image credential provider on each node
- specify image pull credentials using
imagePullSecrets
and at least one Secret
What's next
- Read the OCI Image Manifest Specification.
- Learn about container image garbage collection.
- Learn more about pulling an Image from a Private Registry.
3.2 - Container Environment
This page describes the resources available to Containers in the Container environment.
Container environment
The Kubernetes Container environment provides several important resources to Containers:
- A filesystem, which is a combination of an image and one or more volumes.
- Information about the Container itself.
- Information about other objects in the cluster.
Container information
The hostname of a Container is the name of the Pod in which the Container is running.
It is available through the hostname
command or the
gethostname
function call in libc.
The Pod name and namespace are available as environment variables through the downward API.
User defined environment variables from the Pod definition are also available to the Container, as are any environment variables specified statically in the container image.
Cluster information
A list of all services that were running when a Container was created is available to that Container as environment variables. This list is limited to services within the same namespace as the new Container's Pod and Kubernetes control plane services.
For a service named foo that maps to a Container named bar, the following variables are defined:
FOO_SERVICE_HOST=<the host the service is running on>
FOO_SERVICE_PORT=<the port the service is running on>
Services have dedicated IP addresses and are available to the Container via DNS, if DNS addon is enabled.
What's next
- Learn more about Container lifecycle hooks.
- Get hands-on experience attaching handlers to Container lifecycle events.
3.3 - Runtime Class
Kubernetes v1.20 [stable]
This page describes the RuntimeClass resource and runtime selection mechanism.
RuntimeClass is a feature for selecting the container runtime configuration. The container runtime configuration is used to run a Pod's containers.
Motivation
You can set a different RuntimeClass between different Pods to provide a balance of performance versus security. For example, if part of your workload deserves a high level of information security assurance, you might choose to schedule those Pods so that they run in a container runtime that uses hardware virtualization. You'd then benefit from the extra isolation of the alternative runtime, at the expense of some additional overhead.
You can also use RuntimeClass to run different Pods with the same container runtime but with different settings.
Setup
- Configure the CRI implementation on nodes (runtime dependent)
- Create the corresponding RuntimeClass resources
1. Configure the CRI implementation on nodes
The configurations available through RuntimeClass are Container Runtime Interface (CRI) implementation dependent. See the corresponding documentation (below) for your CRI implementation for how to configure.
The configurations have a corresponding handler
name, referenced by the RuntimeClass. The
handler must be a valid DNS label name.
2. Create the corresponding RuntimeClass resources
The configurations setup in step 1 should each have an associated handler
name, which identifies
the configuration. For each handler, create a corresponding RuntimeClass object.
The RuntimeClass resource currently only has 2 significant fields: the RuntimeClass name
(metadata.name
) and the handler (handler
). The object definition looks like this:
# RuntimeClass is defined in the node.k8s.io API group
apiVersion: node.k8s.io/v1
kind: RuntimeClass
metadata:
# The name the RuntimeClass will be referenced by.
# RuntimeClass is a non-namespaced resource.
name: myclass
# The name of the corresponding CRI configuration
handler: myconfiguration
The name of a RuntimeClass object must be a valid DNS subdomain name.
Usage
Once RuntimeClasses are configured for the cluster, you can specify a
runtimeClassName
in the Pod spec to use it. For example:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: mypod
spec:
runtimeClassName: myclass
# ...
This will instruct the kubelet to use the named RuntimeClass to run this pod. If the named
RuntimeClass does not exist, or the CRI cannot run the corresponding handler, the pod will enter the
Failed
terminal phase. Look for a
corresponding event for an
error message.
If no runtimeClassName
is specified, the default RuntimeHandler will be used, which is equivalent
to the behavior when the RuntimeClass feature is disabled.
CRI Configuration
For more details on setting up CRI runtimes, see CRI installation.
containerd
Runtime handlers are configured through containerd's configuration at
/etc/containerd/config.toml
. Valid handlers are configured under the runtimes section:
[plugins."io.containerd.grpc.v1.cri".containerd.runtimes.${HANDLER_NAME}]
See containerd's config documentation for more details:
CRI-O
Runtime handlers are configured through CRI-O's configuration at /etc/crio/crio.conf
. Valid
handlers are configured under the
crio.runtime table:
[crio.runtime.runtimes.${HANDLER_NAME}]
runtime_path = "${PATH_TO_BINARY}"
See CRI-O's config documentation for more details.
Scheduling
Kubernetes v1.16 [beta]
By specifying the scheduling
field for a RuntimeClass, you can set constraints to
ensure that Pods running with this RuntimeClass are scheduled to nodes that support it.
If scheduling
is not set, this RuntimeClass is assumed to be supported by all nodes.
To ensure pods land on nodes supporting a specific RuntimeClass, that set of nodes should have a
common label which is then selected by the runtimeclass.scheduling.nodeSelector
field. The
RuntimeClass's nodeSelector is merged with the pod's nodeSelector in admission, effectively taking
the intersection of the set of nodes selected by each. If there is a conflict, the pod will be
rejected.
If the supported nodes are tainted to prevent other RuntimeClass pods from running on the node, you
can add tolerations
to the RuntimeClass. As with the nodeSelector
, the tolerations are merged
with the pod's tolerations in admission, effectively taking the union of the set of nodes tolerated
by each.
To learn more about configuring the node selector and tolerations, see Assigning Pods to Nodes.
Pod Overhead
Kubernetes v1.24 [stable]
You can specify overhead resources that are associated with running a Pod. Declaring overhead allows the cluster (including the scheduler) to account for it when making decisions about Pods and resources.
Pod overhead is defined in RuntimeClass through the overhead
field. Through the use of this field,
you can specify the overhead of running pods utilizing this RuntimeClass and ensure these overheads
are accounted for in Kubernetes.
What's next
- RuntimeClass Design
- RuntimeClass Scheduling Design
- Read about the Pod Overhead concept
- PodOverhead Feature Design
3.4 - Container Lifecycle Hooks
This page describes how kubelet managed Containers can use the Container lifecycle hook framework to run code triggered by events during their management lifecycle.
Overview
Analogous to many programming language frameworks that have component lifecycle hooks, such as Angular, Kubernetes provides Containers with lifecycle hooks. The hooks enable Containers to be aware of events in their management lifecycle and run code implemented in a handler when the corresponding lifecycle hook is executed.
Container hooks
There are two hooks that are exposed to Containers:
PostStart
This hook is executed immediately after a container is created. However, there is no guarantee that the hook will execute before the container ENTRYPOINT. No parameters are passed to the handler.
PreStop
This hook is called immediately before a container is terminated due to an API request or management
event such as a liveness/startup probe failure, preemption, resource contention and others. A call
to the PreStop
hook fails if the container is already in a terminated or completed state and the
hook must complete before the TERM signal to stop the container can be sent. The Pod's termination
grace period countdown begins before the PreStop
hook is executed, so regardless of the outcome of
the handler, the container will eventually terminate within the Pod's termination grace period. No
parameters are passed to the handler.
A more detailed description of the termination behavior can be found in Termination of Pods.
Hook handler implementations
Containers can access a hook by implementing and registering a handler for that hook. There are three types of hook handlers that can be implemented for Containers:
- Exec - Executes a specific command, such as
pre-stop.sh
, inside the cgroups and namespaces of the Container. Resources consumed by the command are counted against the Container. - HTTP - Executes an HTTP request against a specific endpoint on the Container.
- Sleep - Pauses the container for a specified duration.
The "Sleep" action is available when the feature gate
PodLifecycleSleepAction
is enabled.
Hook handler execution
When a Container lifecycle management hook is called,
the Kubernetes management system executes the handler according to the hook action,
httpGet
, tcpSocket
and sleep
are executed by the kubelet process, and exec
is executed in the container.
Hook handler calls are synchronous within the context of the Pod containing the Container.
This means that for a PostStart
hook,
the Container ENTRYPOINT and hook fire asynchronously.
However, if the hook takes too long to run or hangs,
the Container cannot reach a running
state.
PreStop
hooks are not executed asynchronously from the signal to stop the Container; the hook must
complete its execution before the TERM signal can be sent. If a PreStop
hook hangs during
execution, the Pod's phase will be Terminating
and remain there until the Pod is killed after its
terminationGracePeriodSeconds
expires. This grace period applies to the total time it takes for
both the PreStop
hook to execute and for the Container to stop normally. If, for example,
terminationGracePeriodSeconds
is 60, and the hook takes 55 seconds to complete, and the Container
takes 10 seconds to stop normally after receiving the signal, then the Container will be killed
before it can stop normally, since terminationGracePeriodSeconds
is less than the total time
(55+10) it takes for these two things to happen.
If either a PostStart
or PreStop
hook fails,
it kills the Container.
Users should make their hook handlers as lightweight as possible. There are cases, however, when long running commands make sense, such as when saving state prior to stopping a Container.
Hook delivery guarantees
Hook delivery is intended to be at least once,
which means that a hook may be called multiple times for any given event,
such as for PostStart
or PreStop
.
It is up to the hook implementation to handle this correctly.
Generally, only single deliveries are made. If, for example, an HTTP hook receiver is down and is unable to take traffic, there is no attempt to resend. In some rare cases, however, double delivery may occur. For instance, if a kubelet restarts in the middle of sending a hook, the hook might be resent after the kubelet comes back up.
Debugging Hook handlers
The logs for a Hook handler are not exposed in Pod events.
If a handler fails for some reason, it broadcasts an event.
For PostStart
, this is the FailedPostStartHook
event,
and for PreStop
, this is the FailedPreStopHook
event.
To generate a failed FailedPostStartHook
event yourself, modify the lifecycle-events.yaml file to change the postStart command to "badcommand" and apply it.
Here is some example output of the resulting events you see from running kubectl describe pod lifecycle-demo
:
Events:
Type Reason Age From Message
---- ------ ---- ---- -------
Normal Scheduled 7s default-scheduler Successfully assigned default/lifecycle-demo to ip-XXX-XXX-XX-XX.us-east-2...
Normal Pulled 6s kubelet Successfully pulled image "nginx" in 229.604315ms
Normal Pulling 4s (x2 over 6s) kubelet Pulling image "nginx"
Normal Created 4s (x2 over 5s) kubelet Created container lifecycle-demo-container
Normal Started 4s (x2 over 5s) kubelet Started container lifecycle-demo-container
Warning FailedPostStartHook 4s (x2 over 5s) kubelet Exec lifecycle hook ([badcommand]) for Container "lifecycle-demo-container" in Pod "lifecycle-demo_default(30229739-9651-4e5a-9a32-a8f1688862db)" failed - error: command 'badcommand' exited with 126: , message: "OCI runtime exec failed: exec failed: container_linux.go:380: starting container process caused: exec: \"badcommand\": executable file not found in $PATH: unknown\r\n"
Normal Killing 4s (x2 over 5s) kubelet FailedPostStartHook
Normal Pulled 4s kubelet Successfully pulled image "nginx" in 215.66395ms
Warning BackOff 2s (x2 over 3s) kubelet Back-off restarting failed container
What's next
- Learn more about the Container environment.
- Get hands-on experience attaching handlers to Container lifecycle events.
4 - Workloads
A workload is an application running on Kubernetes. Whether your workload is a single component or several that work together, on Kubernetes you run it inside a set of pods. In Kubernetes, a Pod represents a set of running containers on your cluster.
Kubernetes pods have a defined lifecycle. For example, once a pod is running in your cluster then a critical fault on the node where that pod is running means that all the pods on that node fail. Kubernetes treats that level of failure as final: you would need to create a new Pod to recover, even if the node later becomes healthy.
However, to make life considerably easier, you don't need to manage each Pod directly. Instead, you can use workload resources that manage a set of pods on your behalf. These resources configure controllers that make sure the right number of the right kind of pod are running, to match the state you specified.
Kubernetes provides several built-in workload resources:
- Deployment and ReplicaSet (replacing the legacy resource ReplicationController). Deployment is a good fit for managing a stateless application workload on your cluster, where any Pod in the Deployment is interchangeable and can be replaced if needed.
- StatefulSet lets you run one or more related Pods that do track state somehow. For example, if your workload records data persistently, you can run a StatefulSet that matches each Pod with a PersistentVolume. Your code, running in the Pods for that StatefulSet, can replicate data to other Pods in the same StatefulSet to improve overall resilience.
- DaemonSet defines Pods that provide facilities that are local to nodes. Every time you add a node to your cluster that matches the specification in a DaemonSet, the control plane schedules a Pod for that DaemonSet onto the new node. Each pod in a DaemonSet performs a job similar to a system daemon on a classic Unix / POSIX server. A DaemonSet might be fundamental to the operation of your cluster, such as a plugin to run cluster networking, it might help you to manage the node, or it could provide optional behavior that enhances the container platform you are running.
- Job and CronJob provide different ways to define tasks that run to completion and then stop. You can use a Job to define a task that runs to completion, just once. You can use a CronJob to run the same Job multiple times according a schedule.
In the wider Kubernetes ecosystem, you can find third-party workload resources that provide additional behaviors. Using a custom resource definition, you can add in a third-party workload resource if you want a specific behavior that's not part of Kubernetes' core. For example, if you wanted to run a group of Pods for your application but stop work unless all the Pods are available (perhaps for some high-throughput distributed task), then you can implement or install an extension that does provide that feature.
What's next
As well as reading about each API kind for workload management, you can read how to do specific tasks:
- Run a stateless application using a Deployment
- Run a stateful application either as a single instance or as a replicated set
- Run automated tasks with a CronJob
To learn about Kubernetes' mechanisms for separating code from configuration, visit Configuration.
There are two supporting concepts that provide backgrounds about how Kubernetes manages pods for applications:
- Garbage collection tidies up objects from your cluster after their owning resource has been removed.
- The time-to-live after finished controller removes Jobs once a defined time has passed since they completed.
Once your application is running, you might want to make it available on the internet as a Service or, for web application only, using an Ingress.
4.1 - Pods
Pods are the smallest deployable units of computing that you can create and manage in Kubernetes.
A Pod (as in a pod of whales or pea pod) is a group of one or more containers, with shared storage and network resources, and a specification for how to run the containers. A Pod's contents are always co-located and co-scheduled, and run in a shared context. A Pod models an application-specific "logical host": it contains one or more application containers which are relatively tightly coupled. In non-cloud contexts, applications executed on the same physical or virtual machine are analogous to cloud applications executed on the same logical host.
As well as application containers, a Pod can contain init containers that run during Pod startup. You can also inject ephemeral containers for debugging a running Pod.
What is a Pod?
The shared context of a Pod is a set of Linux namespaces, cgroups, and potentially other facets of isolation - the same things that isolate a container. Within a Pod's context, the individual applications may have further sub-isolations applied.
A Pod is similar to a set of containers with shared namespaces and shared filesystem volumes.
Pods in a Kubernetes cluster are used in two main ways:
-
Pods that run a single container. The "one-container-per-Pod" model is the most common Kubernetes use case; in this case, you can think of a Pod as a wrapper around a single container; Kubernetes manages Pods rather than managing the containers directly.
-
Pods that run multiple containers that need to work together. A Pod can encapsulate an application composed of multiple co-located containers that are tightly coupled and need to share resources. These co-located containers form a single cohesive unit.
Grouping multiple co-located and co-managed containers in a single Pod is a relatively advanced use case. You should use this pattern only in specific instances in which your containers are tightly coupled.
You don't need to run multiple containers to provide replication (for resilience or capacity); if you need multiple replicas, see Workload management.
Using Pods
The following is an example of a Pod which consists of a container running the image nginx:1.14.2
.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: nginx
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx:1.14.2
ports:
- containerPort: 80
To create the Pod shown above, run the following command:
kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/pods/simple-pod.yaml
Pods are generally not created directly and are created using workload resources. See Working with Pods for more information on how Pods are used with workload resources.
Workload resources for managing pods
Usually you don't need to create Pods directly, even singleton Pods. Instead, create them using workload resources such as Deployment or Job. If your Pods need to track state, consider the StatefulSet resource.
Each Pod is meant to run a single instance of a given application. If you want to scale your application horizontally (to provide more overall resources by running more instances), you should use multiple Pods, one for each instance. In Kubernetes, this is typically referred to as replication. Replicated Pods are usually created and managed as a group by a workload resource and its controller.
See Pods and controllers for more information on how Kubernetes uses workload resources, and their controllers, to implement application scaling and auto-healing.
Pods natively provide two kinds of shared resources for their constituent containers: networking and storage.
Working with Pods
You'll rarely create individual Pods directly in Kubernetes—even singleton Pods. This is because Pods are designed as relatively ephemeral, disposable entities. When a Pod gets created (directly by you, or indirectly by a controller), the new Pod is scheduled to run on a Node in your cluster. The Pod remains on that node until the Pod finishes execution, the Pod object is deleted, the Pod is evicted for lack of resources, or the node fails.
The name of a Pod must be a valid DNS subdomain value, but this can produce unexpected results for the Pod hostname. For best compatibility, the name should follow the more restrictive rules for a DNS label.
Pod OS
Kubernetes v1.25 [stable]
You should set the .spec.os.name
field to either windows
or linux
to indicate the OS on
which you want the pod to run. These two are the only operating systems supported for now by
Kubernetes. In future, this list may be expanded.
In Kubernetes v1.29, the value you set for this field has no
effect on scheduling of the pods.
Setting the .spec.os.name
helps to identify the pod OS
authoritatively and is used for validation. The kubelet refuses to run a Pod where you have
specified a Pod OS, if this isn't the same as the operating system for the node where
that kubelet is running.
The Pod security standards also use this
field to avoid enforcing policies that aren't relevant to that operating system.
Pods and controllers
You can use workload resources to create and manage multiple Pods for you. A controller for the resource handles replication and rollout and automatic healing in case of Pod failure. For example, if a Node fails, a controller notices that Pods on that Node have stopped working and creates a replacement Pod. The scheduler places the replacement Pod onto a healthy Node.
Here are some examples of workload resources that manage one or more Pods:
Pod templates
Controllers for workload resources create Pods from a pod template and manage those Pods on your behalf.
PodTemplates are specifications for creating Pods, and are included in workload resources such as Deployments, Jobs, and DaemonSets.
Each controller for a workload resource uses the PodTemplate
inside the workload
object to make actual Pods. The PodTemplate
is part of the desired state of whatever
workload resource you used to run your app.
The sample below is a manifest for a simple Job with a template
that starts one
container. The container in that Pod prints a message then pauses.
apiVersion: batch/v1
kind: Job
metadata:
name: hello
spec:
template:
# This is the pod template
spec:
containers:
- name: hello
image: busybox:1.28
command: ['sh', '-c', 'echo "Hello, Kubernetes!" && sleep 3600']
restartPolicy: OnFailure
# The pod template ends here
Modifying the pod template or switching to a new pod template has no direct effect on the Pods that already exist. If you change the pod template for a workload resource, that resource needs to create replacement Pods that use the updated template.
For example, the StatefulSet controller ensures that the running Pods match the current pod template for each StatefulSet object. If you edit the StatefulSet to change its pod template, the StatefulSet starts to create new Pods based on the updated template. Eventually, all of the old Pods are replaced with new Pods, and the update is complete.
Each workload resource implements its own rules for handling changes to the Pod template. If you want to read more about StatefulSet specifically, read Update strategy in the StatefulSet Basics tutorial.
On Nodes, the kubelet does not directly observe or manage any of the details around pod templates and updates; those details are abstracted away. That abstraction and separation of concerns simplifies system semantics, and makes it feasible to extend the cluster's behavior without changing existing code.
Pod update and replacement
As mentioned in the previous section, when the Pod template for a workload resource is changed, the controller creates new Pods based on the updated template instead of updating or patching the existing Pods.
Kubernetes doesn't prevent you from managing Pods directly. It is possible to
update some fields of a running Pod, in place. However, Pod update operations
like
patch
, and
replace
have some limitations:
-
Most of the metadata about a Pod is immutable. For example, you cannot change the
namespace
,name
,uid
, orcreationTimestamp
fields; thegeneration
field is unique. It only accepts updates that increment the field's current value. -
If the
metadata.deletionTimestamp
is set, no new entry can be added to themetadata.finalizers
list. -
Pod updates may not change fields other than
spec.containers[*].image
,spec.initContainers[*].image
,spec.activeDeadlineSeconds
orspec.tolerations
. Forspec.tolerations
, you can only add new entries. -
When updating the
spec.activeDeadlineSeconds
field, two types of updates are allowed:- setting the unassigned field to a positive number;
- updating the field from a positive number to a smaller, non-negative number.
Resource sharing and communication
Pods enable data sharing and communication among their constituent containers.
Storage in Pods
A Pod can specify a set of shared storage volumes. All containers in the Pod can access the shared volumes, allowing those containers to share data. Volumes also allow persistent data in a Pod to survive in case one of the containers within needs to be restarted. See Storage for more information on how Kubernetes implements shared storage and makes it available to Pods.
Pod networking
Each Pod is assigned a unique IP address for each address family. Every
container in a Pod shares the network namespace, including the IP address and
network ports. Inside a Pod (and only then), the containers that belong to the Pod
can communicate with one another using localhost
. When containers in a Pod communicate
with entities outside the Pod,
they must coordinate how they use the shared network resources (such as ports).
Within a Pod, containers share an IP address and port space, and
can find each other via localhost
. The containers in a Pod can also communicate
with each other using standard inter-process communications like SystemV semaphores
or POSIX shared memory. Containers in different Pods have distinct IP addresses
and can not communicate by OS-level IPC without special configuration.
Containers that want to interact with a container running in a different Pod can
use IP networking to communicate.
Containers within the Pod see the system hostname as being the same as the configured
name
for the Pod. There's more about this in the networking
section.
Privileged mode for containers
Any container in a pod can run in privileged mode to use operating system administrative capabilities that would otherwise be inaccessible. This is available for both Windows and Linux.
Linux privileged containers
In Linux, any container in a Pod can enable privileged mode using the privileged
(Linux) flag
on the security context of the
container spec. This is useful for containers that want to use operating system administrative
capabilities such as manipulating the network stack or accessing hardware devices.
Windows privileged containers
Kubernetes v1.26 [stable]
In Windows, you can create a Windows HostProcess pod by setting the
windowsOptions.hostProcess
flag on the security context of the pod spec. All containers in these
pods must run as Windows HostProcess containers. HostProcess pods run directly on the host and can also be used
to perform administrative tasks as is done with Linux privileged containers.
Static Pods
Static Pods are managed directly by the kubelet daemon on a specific node, without the API server observing them. Whereas most Pods are managed by the control plane (for example, a Deployment), for static Pods, the kubelet directly supervises each static Pod (and restarts it if it fails).
Static Pods are always bound to one Kubelet on a specific node. The main use for static Pods is to run a self-hosted control plane: in other words, using the kubelet to supervise the individual control plane components.
The kubelet automatically tries to create a mirror Pod on the Kubernetes API server for each static Pod. This means that the Pods running on a node are visible on the API server, but cannot be controlled from there. See the guide Create static Pods for more information.
spec
of a static Pod cannot refer to other API objects
(e.g., ServiceAccount,
ConfigMap,
Secret, etc).
Pods with multiple containers
Pods are designed to support multiple cooperating processes (as containers) that form a cohesive unit of service. The containers in a Pod are automatically co-located and co-scheduled on the same physical or virtual machine in the cluster. The containers can share resources and dependencies, communicate with one another, and coordinate when and how they are terminated.
Pods in a Kubernetes cluster are used in two main ways:
- Pods that run a single container. The "one-container-per-Pod" model is the most common Kubernetes use case; in this case, you can think of a Pod as a wrapper around a single container; Kubernetes manages Pods rather than managing the containers directly.
- Pods that run multiple containers that need to work together. A Pod can encapsulate an application composed of multiple co-located containers that are tightly coupled and need to share resources. These co-located containers form a single cohesive unit of service—for example, one container serving data stored in a shared volume to the public, while a separate sidecar container refreshes or updates those files. The Pod wraps these containers, storage resources, and an ephemeral network identity together as a single unit.
For example, you might have a container that acts as a web server for files in a shared volume, and a separate sidecar container that updates those files from a remote source, as in the following diagram:
Some Pods have init containers as well as app containers. By default, init containers run and complete before the app containers are started.
You can also have sidecar containers that provide auxiliary services to the main application Pod (for example: a service mesh).
Kubernetes v1.29 [beta]
Enabled by default, the SidecarContainers
feature gate
allows you to specify restartPolicy: Always
for init containers.
Setting the Always
restart policy ensures that the containers where you set it are
treated as sidecars that are kept running during the entire lifetime of the Pod.
Containers that you explicitly define as sidecar containers
start up before the main application Pod and remain running until the Pod is
shut down.
Container probes
A probe is a diagnostic performed periodically by the kubelet on a container. To perform a diagnostic, the kubelet can invoke different actions:
ExecAction
(performed with the help of the container runtime)TCPSocketAction
(checked directly by the kubelet)HTTPGetAction
(checked directly by the kubelet)
You can read more about probes in the Pod Lifecycle documentation.
What's next
- Learn about the lifecycle of a Pod.
- Learn about RuntimeClass and how you can use it to configure different Pods with different container runtime configurations.
- Read about PodDisruptionBudget and how you can use it to manage application availability during disruptions.
- Pod is a top-level resource in the Kubernetes REST API. The Pod object definition describes the object in detail.
- The Distributed System Toolkit: Patterns for Composite Containers explains common layouts for Pods with more than one container.
- Read about Pod topology spread constraints
To understand the context for why Kubernetes wraps a common Pod API in other resources (such as StatefulSets or Deployments), you can read about the prior art, including:
4.1.1 - Pod Lifecycle
This page describes the lifecycle of a Pod. Pods follow a defined lifecycle, starting
in the Pending
phase, moving through Running
if at least one
of its primary containers starts OK, and then through either the Succeeded
or
Failed
phases depending on whether any container in the Pod terminated in failure.
Whilst a Pod is running, the kubelet is able to restart containers to handle some kind of faults. Within a Pod, Kubernetes tracks different container states and determines what action to take to make the Pod healthy again.
In the Kubernetes API, Pods have both a specification and an actual status. The status for a Pod object consists of a set of Pod conditions. You can also inject custom readiness information into the condition data for a Pod, if that is useful to your application.
Pods are only scheduled once in their lifetime. Once a Pod is scheduled (assigned) to a Node, the Pod runs on that Node until it stops or is terminated.
Pod lifetime
Like individual application containers, Pods are considered to be relatively ephemeral (rather than durable) entities. Pods are created, assigned a unique ID (UID), and scheduled to nodes where they remain until termination (according to restart policy) or deletion. If a Node dies, the Pods scheduled to that node are scheduled for deletion after a timeout period.
Pods do not, by themselves, self-heal. If a Pod is scheduled to a node that then fails, the Pod is deleted; likewise, a Pod won't survive an eviction due to a lack of resources or Node maintenance. Kubernetes uses a higher-level abstraction, called a controller, that handles the work of managing the relatively disposable Pod instances.
A given Pod (as defined by a UID) is never "rescheduled" to a different node; instead, that Pod can be replaced by a new, near-identical Pod, with even the same name if desired, but with a different UID.
When something is said to have the same lifetime as a Pod, such as a volume, that means that the thing exists as long as that specific Pod (with that exact UID) exists. If that Pod is deleted for any reason, and even if an identical replacement is created, the related thing (a volume, in this example) is also destroyed and created anew.
A multi-container Pod that contains a file puller and a web server that uses a persistent volume for shared storage between the containers.
Pod phase
A Pod's status
field is a
PodStatus
object, which has a phase
field.
The phase of a Pod is a simple, high-level summary of where the Pod is in its lifecycle. The phase is not intended to be a comprehensive rollup of observations of container or Pod state, nor is it intended to be a comprehensive state machine.
The number and meanings of Pod phase values are tightly guarded.
Other than what is documented here, nothing should be assumed about Pods that
have a given phase
value.
Here are the possible values for phase
:
Value | Description |
---|---|
Pending |
The Pod has been accepted by the Kubernetes cluster, but one or more of the containers has not been set up and made ready to run. This includes time a Pod spends waiting to be scheduled as well as the time spent downloading container images over the network. |
Running |
The Pod has been bound to a node, and all of the containers have been created. At least one container is still running, or is in the process of starting or restarting. |
Succeeded |
All containers in the Pod have terminated in success, and will not be restarted. |
Failed |
All containers in the Pod have terminated, and at least one container has terminated in failure. That is, the container either exited with non-zero status or was terminated by the system. |
Unknown |
For some reason the state of the Pod could not be obtained. This phase typically occurs due to an error in communicating with the node where the Pod should be running. |
Terminating
by some kubectl commands.
This Terminating
status is not one of the Pod phases.
A Pod is granted a term to terminate gracefully, which defaults to 30 seconds.
You can use the flag --force
to terminate a Pod by force.
Since Kubernetes 1.27, the kubelet transitions deleted Pods, except for
static Pods and
force-deleted Pods
without a finalizer, to a terminal phase (Failed
or Succeeded
depending on
the exit statuses of the pod containers) before their deletion from the API server.
If a node dies or is disconnected from the rest of the cluster, Kubernetes
applies a policy for setting the phase
of all Pods on the lost node to Failed.
Container states
As well as the phase of the Pod overall, Kubernetes tracks the state of each container inside a Pod. You can use container lifecycle hooks to trigger events to run at certain points in a container's lifecycle.
Once the scheduler
assigns a Pod to a Node, the kubelet starts creating containers for that Pod
using a container runtime.
There are three possible container states: Waiting
, Running
, and Terminated
.
To check the state of a Pod's containers, you can use
kubectl describe pod <name-of-pod>
. The output shows the state for each container
within that Pod.
Each state has a specific meaning:
Waiting
If a container is not in either the Running
or Terminated
state, it is Waiting
.
A container in the Waiting
state is still running the operations it requires in
order to complete start up: for example, pulling the container image from a container
image registry, or applying Secret
data.
When you use kubectl
to query a Pod with a container that is Waiting
, you also see
a Reason field to summarize why the container is in that state.
Running
The Running
status indicates that a container is executing without issues. If there
was a postStart
hook configured, it has already executed and finished. When you use
kubectl
to query a Pod with a container that is Running
, you also see information
about when the container entered the Running
state.
Terminated
A container in the Terminated
state began execution and then either ran to
completion or failed for some reason. When you use kubectl
to query a Pod with
a container that is Terminated
, you see a reason, an exit code, and the start and
finish time for that container's period of execution.
If a container has a preStop
hook configured, this hook runs before the container enters
the Terminated
state.
Container restart policy
The spec
of a Pod has a restartPolicy
field with possible values Always, OnFailure,
and Never. The default value is Always.
The restartPolicy
for a Pod applies to app containers
in the Pod and to regular init containers.
Sidecar containers
ignore the Pod-level restartPolicy
field: in Kubernetes, a sidecar is defined as an
entry inside initContainers
that has its container-level restartPolicy
set to Always
.
For init containers that exit with an error, the kubelet restarts the init container if
the Pod level restartPolicy
is either OnFailure
or Always
.
When the kubelet is handling container restarts according to the configured restart
policy, that only applies to restarts that make replacement containers inside the
same Pod and running on the same node. After containers in a Pod exit, the kubelet
restarts them with an exponential back-off delay (10s, 20s, 40s, …), that is capped at
five minutes. Once a container has executed for 10 minutes without any problems, the
kubelet resets the restart backoff timer for that container.
Sidecar containers and Pod lifecycle
explains the behaviour of init containers
when specify restartpolicy
field on it.
Pod conditions
A Pod has a PodStatus, which has an array of PodConditions through which the Pod has or has not passed. Kubelet manages the following PodConditions:
PodScheduled
: the Pod has been scheduled to a node.PodReadyToStartContainers
: (beta feature; enabled by default) the Pod sandbox has been successfully created and networking configured.ContainersReady
: all containers in the Pod are ready.Initialized
: all init containers have completed successfully.Ready
: the Pod is able to serve requests and should be added to the load balancing pools of all matching Services.
Field name | Description |
---|---|
type |
Name of this Pod condition. |
status |
Indicates whether that condition is applicable, with possible values "True ", "False ", or "Unknown ". |
lastProbeTime |
Timestamp of when the Pod condition was last probed. |
lastTransitionTime |
Timestamp for when the Pod last transitioned from one status to another. |
reason |
Machine-readable, UpperCamelCase text indicating the reason for the condition's last transition. |
message |
Human-readable message indicating details about the last status transition. |
Pod readiness
Kubernetes v1.14 [stable]
Your application can inject extra feedback or signals into PodStatus:
Pod readiness. To use this, set readinessGates
in the Pod's spec
to
specify a list of additional conditions that the kubelet evaluates for Pod readiness.
Readiness gates are determined by the current state of status.condition
fields for the Pod. If Kubernetes cannot find such a condition in the
status.conditions
field of a Pod, the status of the condition
is defaulted to "False
".
Here is an example:
kind: Pod
...
spec:
readinessGates:
- conditionType: "www.example.com/feature-1"
status:
conditions:
- type: Ready # a built in PodCondition
status: "False"
lastProbeTime: null
lastTransitionTime: 2018-01-01T00:00:00Z
- type: "www.example.com/feature-1" # an extra PodCondition
status: "False"
lastProbeTime: null
lastTransitionTime: 2018-01-01T00:00:00Z
containerStatuses:
- containerID: docker://abcd...
ready: true
...
The Pod conditions you add must have names that meet the Kubernetes label key format.
Status for Pod readiness
The kubectl patch
command does not support patching object status.
To set these status.conditions
for the Pod, applications and
operators should use
the PATCH
action.
You can use a Kubernetes client library to
write code that sets custom Pod conditions for Pod readiness.
For a Pod that uses custom conditions, that Pod is evaluated to be ready only when both the following statements apply:
- All containers in the Pod are ready.
- All conditions specified in
readinessGates
areTrue
.
When a Pod's containers are Ready but at least one custom condition is missing or
False
, the kubelet sets the Pod's condition to ContainersReady
.
Pod network readiness
Kubernetes v1.29 [beta]
PodHasNetwork
.
After a Pod gets scheduled on a node, it needs to be admitted by the kubelet and
to have any required storage volumes mounted. Once these phases are complete,
the kubelet works with
a container runtime (using Container runtime interface (CRI)) to set up a
runtime sandbox and configure networking for the Pod. If the
PodReadyToStartContainersCondition
feature gate is enabled
(it is enabled by default for Kubernetes 1.29), the
PodReadyToStartContainers
condition will be added to the status.conditions
field of a Pod.
The PodReadyToStartContainers
condition is set to False
by the Kubelet when it detects a
Pod does not have a runtime sandbox with networking configured. This occurs in
the following scenarios:
- Early in the lifecycle of the Pod, when the kubelet has not yet begun to set up a sandbox for the Pod using the container runtime.
- Later in the lifecycle of the Pod, when the Pod sandbox has been destroyed due to either:
- the node rebooting, without the Pod getting evicted
- for container runtimes that use virtual machines for isolation, the Pod sandbox virtual machine rebooting, which then requires creating a new sandbox and fresh container network configuration.
The PodReadyToStartContainers
condition is set to True
by the kubelet after the
successful completion of sandbox creation and network configuration for the Pod
by the runtime plugin. The kubelet can start pulling container images and create
containers after PodReadyToStartContainers
condition has been set to True
.
For a Pod with init containers, the kubelet sets the Initialized
condition to
True
after the init containers have successfully completed (which happens
after successful sandbox creation and network configuration by the runtime
plugin). For a Pod without init containers, the kubelet sets the Initialized
condition to True
before sandbox creation and network configuration starts.
Pod scheduling readiness
Kubernetes v1.26 [alpha]
See Pod Scheduling Readiness for more information.
Container probes
A probe is a diagnostic performed periodically by the kubelet on a container. To perform a diagnostic, the kubelet either executes code within the container, or makes a network request.
Check mechanisms
There are four different ways to check a container using a probe. Each probe must define exactly one of these four mechanisms:
exec
- Executes a specified command inside the container. The diagnostic is considered successful if the command exits with a status code of 0.
grpc
- Performs a remote procedure call using gRPC.
The target should implement
gRPC health checks.
The diagnostic is considered successful if the
status
of the response isSERVING
. httpGet
- Performs an HTTP
GET
request against the Pod's IP address on a specified port and path. The diagnostic is considered successful if the response has a status code greater than or equal to 200 and less than 400. tcpSocket
- Performs a TCP check against the Pod's IP address on a specified port. The diagnostic is considered successful if the port is open. If the remote system (the container) closes the connection immediately after it opens, this counts as healthy.
exec
probe's implementation involves the creation/forking of multiple processes each time when executed.
As a result, in case of the clusters having higher pod densities, lower intervals of initialDelaySeconds
, periodSeconds
, configuring any probe with exec mechanism might introduce an overhead on the cpu usage of the node.
In such scenarios, consider using the alternative probe mechanisms to avoid the overhead.
Probe outcome
Each probe has one of three results:
Success
- The container passed the diagnostic.
Failure
- The container failed the diagnostic.
Unknown
- The diagnostic failed (no action should be taken, and the kubelet will make further checks).
Types of probe
The kubelet can optionally perform and react to three kinds of probes on running containers:
livenessProbe
- Indicates whether the container is running. If
the liveness probe fails, the kubelet kills the container, and the container
is subjected to its restart policy. If a container does not
provide a liveness probe, the default state is
Success
. readinessProbe
- Indicates whether the container is ready to respond to requests.
If the readiness probe fails, the endpoints controller removes the Pod's IP
address from the endpoints of all Services that match the Pod. The default
state of readiness before the initial delay is
Failure
. If a container does not provide a readiness probe, the default state isSuccess
. startupProbe
- Indicates whether the application within the container is started.
All other probes are disabled if a startup probe is provided, until it succeeds.
If the startup probe fails, the kubelet kills the container, and the container
is subjected to its restart policy. If a container does not
provide a startup probe, the default state is
Success
.
For more information about how to set up a liveness, readiness, or startup probe, see Configure Liveness, Readiness and Startup Probes.
When should you use a liveness probe?
If the process in your container is able to crash on its own whenever it
encounters an issue or becomes unhealthy, you do not necessarily need a liveness
probe; the kubelet will automatically perform the correct action in accordance
with the Pod's restartPolicy
.
If you'd like your container to be killed and restarted if a probe fails, then
specify a liveness probe, and specify a restartPolicy
of Always or OnFailure.
When should you use a readiness probe?
If you'd like to start sending traffic to a Pod only when a probe succeeds, specify a readiness probe. In this case, the readiness probe might be the same as the liveness probe, but the existence of the readiness probe in the spec means that the Pod will start without receiving any traffic and only start receiving traffic after the probe starts succeeding.
If you want your container to be able to take itself down for maintenance, you can specify a readiness probe that checks an endpoint specific to readiness that is different from the liveness probe.
If your app has a strict dependency on back-end services, you can implement both a liveness and a readiness probe. The liveness probe passes when the app itself is healthy, but the readiness probe additionally checks that each required back-end service is available. This helps you avoid directing traffic to Pods that can only respond with error messages.
If your container needs to work on loading large data, configuration files, or migrations during startup, you can use a startup probe. However, if you want to detect the difference between an app that has failed and an app that is still processing its startup data, you might prefer a readiness probe.
When should you use a startup probe?
Startup probes are useful for Pods that have containers that take a long time to come into service. Rather than set a long liveness interval, you can configure a separate configuration for probing the container as it starts up, allowing a time longer than the liveness interval would allow.
If your container usually starts in more than
initialDelaySeconds + failureThreshold × periodSeconds
, you should specify a
startup probe that checks the same endpoint as the liveness probe. The default for
periodSeconds
is 10s. You should then set its failureThreshold
high enough to
allow the container to start, without changing the default values of the liveness
probe. This helps to protect against deadlocks.
Termination of Pods
Because Pods represent processes running on nodes in the cluster, it is important to
allow those processes to gracefully terminate when they are no longer needed (rather
than being abruptly stopped with a KILL
signal and having no chance to clean up).
The design aim is for you to be able to request deletion and know when processes terminate, but also be able to ensure that deletes eventually complete. When you request deletion of a Pod, the cluster records and tracks the intended grace period before the Pod is allowed to be forcefully killed. With that forceful shutdown tracking in place, the kubelet attempts graceful shutdown.
Typically, with this graceful termination of the pod, kubelet makes requests to the container runtime to attempt to stop the containers in the pod by first sending a TERM (aka. SIGTERM) signal, with a grace period timeout, to the main process in each container. The requests to stop the containers are processed by the container runtime asynchronously. There is no guarantee to the order of processing for these requests. Many container runtimes respect the STOPSIGNAL
value defined in the container image and, if different, send the container image configured STOPSIGNAL instead of TERM.
Once the grace period has expired, the KILL signal is sent to any remaining
processes, and the Pod is then deleted from the
API Server. If the kubelet or the
container runtime's management service is restarted while waiting for processes to terminate, the
cluster retries from the start including the full original grace period.
An example flow:
-
You use the
kubectl
tool to manually delete a specific Pod, with the default grace period (30 seconds). -
The Pod in the API server is updated with the time beyond which the Pod is considered "dead" along with the grace period. If you use
kubectl describe
to check the Pod you're deleting, that Pod shows up as "Terminating". On the node where the Pod is running: as soon as the kubelet sees that a Pod has been marked as terminating (a graceful shutdown duration has been set), the kubelet begins the local Pod shutdown process.-
If one of the Pod's containers has defined a
preStop
hook and theterminationGracePeriodSeconds
in the Pod spec is not set to 0, the kubelet runs that hook inside of the container. The defaultterminationGracePeriodSeconds
setting is 30 seconds.If the
preStop
hook is still running after the grace period expires, the kubelet requests a small, one-off grace period extension of 2 seconds.Note: If thepreStop
hook needs longer to complete than the default grace period allows, you must modifyterminationGracePeriodSeconds
to suit this. -
The kubelet triggers the container runtime to send a TERM signal to process 1 inside each container.
Note: The containers in the Pod receive the TERM signal at different times and in an arbitrary order. If the order of shutdowns matters, consider using apreStop
hook to synchronize.
-
-
At the same time as the kubelet is starting graceful shutdown of the Pod, the control plane evaluates whether to remove that shutting-down Pod from EndpointSlice (and Endpoints) objects, where those objects represent a Service with a configured selector. ReplicaSets and other workload resources no longer treat the shutting-down Pod as a valid, in-service replica.
Pods that shut down slowly should not continue to serve regular traffic and should start terminating and finish processing open connections. Some applications need to go beyond finishing open connections and need more graceful termination, for example, session draining and completion.
Any endpoints that represent the terminating Pods are not immediately removed from EndpointSlices, and a status indicating terminating state is exposed from the EndpointSlice API (and the legacy Endpoints API). Terminating endpoints always have their
ready
status asfalse
(for backward compatibility with versions before 1.26), so load balancers will not use it for regular traffic.If traffic draining on terminating Pod is needed, the actual readiness can be checked as a condition
serving
. You can find more details on how to implement connections draining in the tutorial Pods And Endpoints Termination Flow
EndpointSliceTerminatingCondition
feature gate enabled
in your cluster (the gate is on by default from Kubernetes 1.22, and locked to default in 1.26),
then the Kubernetes control plane removes a Pod from any relevant EndpointSlices as soon as the Pod's
termination grace period begins. The behavior above is described when the
feature gate EndpointSliceTerminatingCondition
is enabled.
Beginning with Kubernetes 1.29, if your Pod includes one or more sidecar containers (init containers with an Always restart policy), the kubelet will delay sending the TERM signal to these sidecar containers until the last main container has fully terminated. The sidecar containers will be terminated in the reverse order they are defined in the Pod spec. This ensures that sidecar containers continue serving the other containers in the Pod until they are no longer needed.
Note that slow termination of a main container will also delay the termination of the sidecar containers. If the grace period expires before the termination process is complete, the Pod may enter emergency termination. In this case, all remaining containers in the Pod will be terminated simultaneously with a short grace period.
Similarly, if the Pod has a preStop hook that exceeds the termination grace period, emergency termination may occur. In general, if you have used preStop hooks to control the termination order without sidecar containers, you can now remove them and allow the kubelet to manage sidecar termination automatically.
- When the grace period expires, the kubelet triggers forcible shutdown. The container runtime sends
SIGKILL
to any processes still running in any container in the Pod. The kubelet also cleans up a hiddenpause
container if that container runtime uses one. - The kubelet transitions the Pod into a terminal phase (
Failed
orSucceeded
depending on the end state of its containers). This step is guaranteed since version 1.27. - The kubelet triggers forcible removal of Pod object from the API server, by setting grace period to 0 (immediate deletion).
- The API server deletes the Pod's API object, which is then no longer visible from any client.
Forced Pod termination
By default, all deletes are graceful within 30 seconds. The kubectl delete
command supports
the --grace-period=<seconds>
option which allows you to override the default and specify your
own value.
Setting the grace period to 0
forcibly and immediately deletes the Pod from the API
server. If the Pod was still running on a node, that forcible deletion triggers the kubelet to
begin immediate cleanup.
--force
along with --grace-period=0
in order to perform force deletions.
When a force deletion is performed, the API server does not wait for confirmation from the kubelet that the Pod has been terminated on the node it was running on. It removes the Pod in the API immediately so a new Pod can be created with the same name. On the node, Pods that are set to terminate immediately will still be given a small grace period before being force killed.
If you need to force-delete Pods that are part of a StatefulSet, refer to the task documentation for deleting Pods from a StatefulSet.
Garbage collection of Pods
For failed Pods, the API objects remain in the cluster's API until a human or controller process explicitly removes them.
The Pod garbage collector (PodGC), which is a controller in the control plane, cleans up
terminated Pods (with a phase of Succeeded
or Failed
), when the number of Pods exceeds the
configured threshold (determined by terminated-pod-gc-threshold
in the kube-controller-manager).
This avoids a resource leak as Pods are created and terminated over time.
Additionally, PodGC cleans up any Pods which satisfy any of the following conditions:
- are orphan Pods - bound to a node which no longer exists,
- are unscheduled terminating Pods,
- are terminating Pods, bound to a non-ready node tainted with
node.kubernetes.io/out-of-service
, when theNodeOutOfServiceVolumeDetach
feature gate is enabled.
When the PodDisruptionConditions
feature gate is enabled, along with
cleaning up the Pods, PodGC will also mark them as failed if they are in a non-terminal
phase. Also, PodGC adds a Pod disruption condition when cleaning up an orphan Pod.
See Pod disruption conditions
for more details.
What's next
-
Get hands-on experience attaching handlers to container lifecycle events.
-
Get hands-on experience configuring Liveness, Readiness and Startup Probes.
-
Learn more about container lifecycle hooks.
-
Learn more about sidecar containers.
-
For detailed information about Pod and container status in the API, see the API reference documentation covering
status
for Pod.
4.1.2 - Init Containers
This page provides an overview of init containers: specialized containers that run before app containers in a Pod. Init containers can contain utilities or setup scripts not present in an app image.
You can specify init containers in the Pod specification alongside the containers
array (which describes app containers).
In Kubernetes, a sidecar container is a container that starts before the main application container and continues to run. This document is about init containers: containers that run to completion during Pod initialization.
Understanding init containers
A Pod can have multiple containers running apps within it, but it can also have one or more init containers, which are run before the app containers are started.
Init containers are exactly like regular containers, except:
- Init containers always run to completion.
- Each init container must complete successfully before the next one starts.
If a Pod's init container fails, the kubelet repeatedly restarts that init container until it succeeds.
However, if the Pod has a restartPolicy
of Never, and an init container fails during startup of that Pod, Kubernetes treats the overall Pod as failed.
To specify an init container for a Pod, add the initContainers
field into
the Pod specification,
as an array of container
items (similar to the app containers
field and its contents).
See Container in the
API reference for more details.
The status of the init containers is returned in .status.initContainerStatuses
field as an array of the container statuses (similar to the .status.containerStatuses
field).
Differences from regular containers
Init containers support all the fields and features of app containers, including resource limits, volumes, and security settings. However, the resource requests and limits for an init container are handled differently, as documented in Resource sharing within containers.
Regular init containers (in other words: excluding sidecar containers) do not support the
lifecycle
, livenessProbe
, readinessProbe
, or startupProbe
fields. Init containers
must run to completion before the Pod can be ready; sidecar containers continue running
during a Pod's lifetime, and do support some probes. See sidecar container
for further details about sidecar containers.
If you specify multiple init containers for a Pod, kubelet runs each init container sequentially. Each init container must succeed before the next can run. When all of the init containers have run to completion, kubelet initializes the application containers for the Pod and runs them as usual.
Differences from sidecar containers
Init containers run and complete their tasks before the main application container starts. Unlike sidecar containers, init containers are not continuously running alongside the main containers.
Init containers run to completion sequentially, and the main container does not start until all the init containers have successfully completed.
init containers do not support lifecycle
, livenessProbe
, readinessProbe
, or
startupProbe
whereas sidecar containers support all these probes to control their lifecycle.
Init containers share the same resources (CPU, memory, network) with the main application containers but do not interact directly with them. They can, however, use shared volumes for data exchange.
Using init containers
Because init containers have separate images from app containers, they have some advantages for start-up related code:
- Init containers can contain utilities or custom code for setup that are not present in an app
image. For example, there is no need to make an image
FROM
another image just to use a tool likesed
,awk
,python
, ordig
during setup. - The application image builder and deployer roles can work independently without the need to jointly build a single app image.
- Init containers can run with a different view of the filesystem than app containers in the same Pod. Consequently, they can be given access to Secrets that app containers cannot access.
- Because init containers run to completion before any app containers start, init containers offer a mechanism to block or delay app container startup until a set of preconditions are met. Once preconditions are met, all of the app containers in a Pod can start in parallel.
- Init containers can securely run utilities or custom code that would otherwise make an app container image less secure. By keeping unnecessary tools separate you can limit the attack surface of your app container image.
Examples
Here are some ideas for how to use init containers:
-
Wait for a Service to be created, using a shell one-line command like:
for i in {1..100}; do sleep 1; if nslookup myservice; then exit 0; fi; done; exit 1
-
Register this Pod with a remote server from the downward API with a command like:
curl -X POST http://$MANAGEMENT_SERVICE_HOST:$MANAGEMENT_SERVICE_PORT/register -d 'instance=$(<POD_NAME>)&ip=$(<POD_IP>)'
-
Wait for some time before starting the app container with a command like
sleep 60
-
Clone a Git repository into a Volume
-
Place values into a configuration file and run a template tool to dynamically generate a configuration file for the main app container. For example, place the
POD_IP
value in a configuration and generate the main app configuration file using Jinja.
Init containers in use
This example defines a simple Pod that has two init containers.
The first waits for myservice
, and the second waits for mydb
. Once both
init containers complete, the Pod runs the app container from its spec
section.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: myapp-pod
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp
spec:
containers:
- name: myapp-container
image: busybox:1.28
command: ['sh', '-c', 'echo The app is running! && sleep 3600']
initContainers:
- name: init-myservice
image: busybox:1.28
command: ['sh', '-c', "until nslookup myservice.$(cat /var/run/secrets/kubernetes.io/serviceaccount/namespace).svc.cluster.local; do echo waiting for myservice; sleep 2; done"]
- name: init-mydb
image: busybox:1.28
command: ['sh', '-c', "until nslookup mydb.$(cat /var/run/secrets/kubernetes.io/serviceaccount/namespace).svc.cluster.local; do echo waiting for mydb; sleep 2; done"]
You can start this Pod by running:
kubectl apply -f myapp.yaml
The output is similar to this:
pod/myapp-pod created
And check on its status with:
kubectl get -f myapp.yaml
The output is similar to this:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
myapp-pod 0/1 Init:0/2 0 6m
or for more details:
kubectl describe -f myapp.yaml
The output is similar to this:
Name: myapp-pod
Namespace: default
[...]
Labels: app.kubernetes.io/name=MyApp
Status: Pending
[...]
Init Containers:
init-myservice:
[...]
State: Running
[...]
init-mydb:
[...]
State: Waiting
Reason: PodInitializing
Ready: False
[...]
Containers:
myapp-container:
[...]
State: Waiting
Reason: PodInitializing
Ready: False
[...]
Events:
FirstSeen LastSeen Count From SubObjectPath Type Reason Message
--------- -------- ----- ---- ------------- -------- ------ -------
16s 16s 1 {default-scheduler } Normal Scheduled Successfully assigned myapp-pod to 172.17.4.201
16s 16s 1 {kubelet 172.17.4.201} spec.initContainers{init-myservice} Normal Pulling pulling image "busybox"
13s 13s 1 {kubelet 172.17.4.201} spec.initContainers{init-myservice} Normal Pulled Successfully pulled image "busybox"
13s 13s 1 {kubelet 172.17.4.201} spec.initContainers{init-myservice} Normal Created Created container init-myservice
13s 13s 1 {kubelet 172.17.4.201} spec.initContainers{init-myservice} Normal Started Started container init-myservice
To see logs for the init containers in this Pod, run:
kubectl logs myapp-pod -c init-myservice # Inspect the first init container
kubectl logs myapp-pod -c init-mydb # Inspect the second init container
At this point, those init containers will be waiting to discover Services named
mydb
and myservice
.
Here's a configuration you can use to make those Services appear:
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: myservice
spec:
ports:
- protocol: TCP
port: 80
targetPort: 9376
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: mydb
spec:
ports:
- protocol: TCP
port: 80
targetPort: 9377
To create the mydb
and myservice
services:
kubectl apply -f services.yaml
The output is similar to this:
service/myservice created
service/mydb created
You'll then see that those init containers complete, and that the myapp-pod
Pod moves into the Running state:
kubectl get -f myapp.yaml
The output is similar to this:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
myapp-pod 1/1 Running 0 9m
This simple example should provide some inspiration for you to create your own init containers. What's next contains a link to a more detailed example.
Detailed behavior
During Pod startup, the kubelet delays running init containers until the networking and storage are ready. Then the kubelet runs the Pod's init containers in the order they appear in the Pod's spec.
Each init container must exit successfully before
the next container starts. If a container fails to start due to the runtime or
exits with failure, it is retried according to the Pod restartPolicy
. However,
if the Pod restartPolicy
is set to Always, the init containers use
restartPolicy
OnFailure.
A Pod cannot be Ready
until all init containers have succeeded. The ports on an
init container are not aggregated under a Service. A Pod that is initializing
is in the Pending
state but should have a condition Initialized
set to false.
If the Pod restarts, or is restarted, all init containers must execute again.
Changes to the init container spec are limited to the container image field. Altering an init container image field is equivalent to restarting the Pod.
Because init containers can be restarted, retried, or re-executed, init container
code should be idempotent. In particular, code that writes to files on EmptyDirs
should be prepared for the possibility that an output file already exists.
Init containers have all of the fields of an app container. However, Kubernetes
prohibits readinessProbe
from being used because init containers cannot
define readiness distinct from completion. This is enforced during validation.
Use activeDeadlineSeconds
on the Pod to prevent init containers from failing forever.
The active deadline includes init containers.
However it is recommended to use activeDeadlineSeconds
only if teams deploy their application
as a Job, because activeDeadlineSeconds
has an effect even after initContainer finished.
The Pod which is already running correctly would be killed by activeDeadlineSeconds
if you set.
The name of each app and init container in a Pod must be unique; a validation error is thrown for any container sharing a name with another.
Resource sharing within containers
Given the order of execution for init, sidecar and app containers, the following rules for resource usage apply:
- The highest of any particular resource request or limit defined on all init containers is the effective init request/limit. If any resource has no resource limit specified this is considered as the highest limit.
- The Pod's effective request/limit for a resource is the higher of:
- the sum of all app containers request/limit for a resource
- the effective init request/limit for a resource
- Scheduling is done based on effective requests/limits, which means init containers can reserve resources for initialization that are not used during the life of the Pod.
- The QoS (quality of service) tier of the Pod's effective QoS tier is the QoS tier for init containers and app containers alike.
Quota and limits are applied based on the effective Pod request and limit.
Pod level control groups (cgroups) are based on the effective Pod request and limit, the same as the scheduler.
Pod restart reasons
A Pod can restart, causing re-execution of init containers, for the following reasons:
- The Pod infrastructure container is restarted. This is uncommon and would have to be done by someone with root access to nodes.
- All containers in a Pod are terminated while
restartPolicy
is set to Always, forcing a restart, and the init container completion record has been lost due to garbage collection.
The Pod will not be restarted when the init container image is changed, or the init container completion record has been lost due to garbage collection. This applies for Kubernetes v1.20 and later. If you are using an earlier version of Kubernetes, consult the documentation for the version you are using.
What's next
Learn more about the following:
- Creating a Pod that has an init container.
- Debug init containers.
- Overview of kubelet and kubectl.
- Types of probes: liveness, readiness, startup probe.
- Sidecar containers.
4.1.3 - Sidecar Containers
Kubernetes v1.29 [beta]
Sidecar containers are the secondary containers that run along with the main application container within the same Pod. These containers are used to enhance or to extend the functionality of the main application container by providing additional services, or functionality such as logging, monitoring, security, or data synchronization, without directly altering the primary application code.
Enabling sidecar containers
Enabled by default with Kubernetes 1.29, a
feature gate named
SidecarContainers
allows you to specify a restartPolicy
for containers listed in a
Pod's initContainers
field. These restartable sidecar containers are independent with
other init containers and main
application container within the same pod. These can be started, stopped, or restarted
without effecting the main application container and other init containers.
Sidecar containers and Pod lifecycle
If an init container is created with its restartPolicy
set to Always
, it will
start and remain running during the entire life of the Pod. This can be helpful for
running supporting services separated from the main application containers.
If a readinessProbe
is specified for this init container, its result will be used
to determine the ready
state of the Pod.
Since these containers are defined as init containers, they benefit from the same ordering and sequential guarantees as other init containers, allowing them to be mixed with other init containers into complex Pod initialization flows.
Compared to regular init containers, sidecars defined within initContainers
continue to
run after they have started. This is important when there is more than one entry inside
.spec.initContainers
for a Pod. After a sidecar-style init container is running (the kubelet
has set the started
status for that init container to true), the kubelet then starts the
next init container from the ordered .spec.initContainers
list.
That status either becomes true because there is a process running in the
container and no startup probe defined, or as a result of its startupProbe
succeeding.
Here's an example of a Deployment with two containers, one of which is a sidecar:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: myapp
labels:
app: myapp
spec:
replicas: 1
selector:
matchLabels:
app: myapp
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: myapp
spec:
containers:
- name: myapp
image: alpine:latest
command: ['sh', '-c', 'while true; do echo "logging" >> /opt/logs.txt; sleep 1; done']
volumeMounts:
- name: data
mountPath: /opt
initContainers:
- name: logshipper
image: alpine:latest
restartPolicy: Always
command: ['sh', '-c', 'tail -F /opt/logs.txt']
volumeMounts:
- name: data
mountPath: /opt
volumes:
- name: data
emptyDir: {}
This feature is also useful for running Jobs with sidecars, as the sidecar container will not prevent the Job from completing after the main container has finished.
Here's an example of a Job with two containers, one of which is a sidecar:
apiVersion: batch/v1
kind: Job
metadata:
name: myjob
spec:
template:
spec:
containers:
- name: myjob
image: alpine:latest
command: ['sh', '-c', 'echo "logging" > /opt/logs.txt']
volumeMounts:
- name: data
mountPath: /opt
initContainers:
- name: logshipper
image: alpine:latest
restartPolicy: Always
command: ['sh', '-c', 'tail -F /opt/logs.txt']
volumeMounts:
- name: data
mountPath: /opt
restartPolicy: Never
volumes:
- name: data
emptyDir: {}
Differences from regular containers
Sidecar containers run alongside regular containers in the same pod. However, they do not execute the primary application logic; instead, they provide supporting functionality to the main application.
Sidecar containers have their own independent lifecycles. They can be started, stopped, and restarted independently of regular containers. This means you can update, scale, or maintain sidecar containers without affecting the primary application.
Sidecar containers share the same network and storage namespaces with the primary container This co-location allows them to interact closely and share resources.
Differences from init containers
Sidecar containers work alongside the main container, extending its functionality and providing additional services.
Sidecar containers run concurrently with the main application container. They are active throughout the lifecycle of the pod and can be started and stopped independently of the main container. Unlike init containers, sidecar containers support probes to control their lifecycle.
These containers can interact directly with the main application containers, sharing the same network namespace, filesystem, and environment variables. They work closely together to provide additional functionality.
Resource sharing within containers
Given the order of execution for init, sidecar and app containers, the following rules for resource usage apply:
- The highest of any particular resource request or limit defined on all init containers is the effective init request/limit. If any resource has no resource limit specified this is considered as the highest limit.
- The Pod's effective request/limit for a resource is the sum of
pod overhead and the higher of:
- the sum of all non-init containers(app and sidecar containers) request/limit for a resource
- the effective init request/limit for a resource
- Scheduling is done based on effective requests/limits, which means init containers can reserve resources for initialization that are not used during the life of the Pod.
- The QoS (quality of service) tier of the Pod's effective QoS tier is the QoS tier for all init, sidecar and app containers alike.
Quota and limits are applied based on the effective Pod request and limit.
Pod level control groups (cgroups) are based on the effective Pod request and limit, the same as the scheduler.
What's next
- Read a blog post on native sidecar containers.
- Read about creating a Pod that has an init container.
- Learn about the types of probes: liveness, readiness, startup probe.
- Learn about pod overhead.
4.1.4 - Ephemeral Containers
Kubernetes v1.25 [stable]
This page provides an overview of ephemeral containers: a special type of container that runs temporarily in an existing Pod to accomplish user-initiated actions such as troubleshooting. You use ephemeral containers to inspect services rather than to build applications.
Understanding ephemeral containers
Pods are the fundamental building block of Kubernetes applications. Since Pods are intended to be disposable and replaceable, you cannot add a container to a Pod once it has been created. Instead, you usually delete and replace Pods in a controlled fashion using deployments.
Sometimes it's necessary to inspect the state of an existing Pod, however, for example to troubleshoot a hard-to-reproduce bug. In these cases you can run an ephemeral container in an existing Pod to inspect its state and run arbitrary commands.
What is an ephemeral container?
Ephemeral containers differ from other containers in that they lack guarantees
for resources or execution, and they will never be automatically restarted, so
they are not appropriate for building applications. Ephemeral containers are
described using the same ContainerSpec
as regular containers, but many fields
are incompatible and disallowed for ephemeral containers.
- Ephemeral containers may not have ports, so fields such as
ports
,livenessProbe
,readinessProbe
are disallowed. - Pod resource allocations are immutable, so setting
resources
is disallowed. - For a complete list of allowed fields, see the EphemeralContainer reference documentation.
Ephemeral containers are created using a special ephemeralcontainers
handler
in the API rather than by adding them directly to pod.spec
, so it's not
possible to add an ephemeral container using kubectl edit
.
Like regular containers, you may not change or remove an ephemeral container after you have added it to a Pod.
Uses for ephemeral containers
Ephemeral containers are useful for interactive troubleshooting when kubectl exec
is insufficient because a container has crashed or a container image
doesn't include debugging utilities.
In particular, distroless images
enable you to deploy minimal container images that reduce attack surface
and exposure to bugs and vulnerabilities. Since distroless images do not include a
shell or any debugging utilities, it's difficult to troubleshoot distroless
images using kubectl exec
alone.
When using ephemeral containers, it's helpful to enable process namespace sharing so you can view processes in other containers.
What's next
- Learn how to debug pods using ephemeral containers.
4.1.5 - Disruptions
This guide is for application owners who want to build highly available applications, and thus need to understand what types of disruptions can happen to Pods.
It is also for cluster administrators who want to perform automated cluster actions, like upgrading and autoscaling clusters.
Voluntary and involuntary disruptions
Pods do not disappear until someone (a person or a controller) destroys them, or there is an unavoidable hardware or system software error.
We call these unavoidable cases involuntary disruptions to an application. Examples are:
- a hardware failure of the physical machine backing the node
- cluster administrator deletes VM (instance) by mistake
- cloud provider or hypervisor failure makes VM disappear
- a kernel panic
- the node disappears from the cluster due to cluster network partition
- eviction of a pod due to the node being out-of-resources.
Except for the out-of-resources condition, all these conditions should be familiar to most users; they are not specific to Kubernetes.
We call other cases voluntary disruptions. These include both actions initiated by the application owner and those initiated by a Cluster Administrator. Typical application owner actions include:
- deleting the deployment or other controller that manages the pod
- updating a deployment's pod template causing a restart
- directly deleting a pod (e.g. by accident)
Cluster administrator actions include:
- Draining a node for repair or upgrade.
- Draining a node from a cluster to scale the cluster down (learn about Cluster Autoscaling ).
- Removing a pod from a node to permit something else to fit on that node.
These actions might be taken directly by the cluster administrator, or by automation run by the cluster administrator, or by your cluster hosting provider.
Ask your cluster administrator or consult your cloud provider or distribution documentation to determine if any sources of voluntary disruptions are enabled for your cluster. If none are enabled, you can skip creating Pod Disruption Budgets.
Dealing with disruptions
Here are some ways to mitigate involuntary disruptions:
- Ensure your pod requests the resources it needs.
- Replicate your application if you need higher availability. (Learn about running replicated stateless and stateful applications.)
- For even higher availability when running replicated applications, spread applications across racks (using anti-affinity) or across zones (if using a multi-zone cluster.)
The frequency of voluntary disruptions varies. On a basic Kubernetes cluster, there are no automated voluntary disruptions (only user-triggered ones). However, your cluster administrator or hosting provider may run some additional services which cause voluntary disruptions. For example, rolling out node software updates can cause voluntary disruptions. Also, some implementations of cluster (node) autoscaling may cause voluntary disruptions to defragment and compact nodes. Your cluster administrator or hosting provider should have documented what level of voluntary disruptions, if any, to expect. Certain configuration options, such as using PriorityClasses in your pod spec can also cause voluntary (and involuntary) disruptions.
Pod disruption budgets
Kubernetes v1.21 [stable]
Kubernetes offers features to help you run highly available applications even when you introduce frequent voluntary disruptions.
As an application owner, you can create a PodDisruptionBudget (PDB) for each application. A PDB limits the number of Pods of a replicated application that are down simultaneously from voluntary disruptions. For example, a quorum-based application would like to ensure that the number of replicas running is never brought below the number needed for a quorum. A web front end might want to ensure that the number of replicas serving load never falls below a certain percentage of the total.
Cluster managers and hosting providers should use tools which respect PodDisruptionBudgets by calling the Eviction API instead of directly deleting pods or deployments.
For example, the kubectl drain
subcommand lets you mark a node as going out of
service. When you run kubectl drain
, the tool tries to evict all of the Pods on
the Node you're taking out of service. The eviction request that kubectl
submits on
your behalf may be temporarily rejected, so the tool periodically retries all failed
requests until all Pods on the target node are terminated, or until a configurable timeout
is reached.
A PDB specifies the number of replicas that an application can tolerate having, relative to how
many it is intended to have. For example, a Deployment which has a .spec.replicas: 5
is
supposed to have 5 pods at any given time. If its PDB allows for there to be 4 at a time,
then the Eviction API will allow voluntary disruption of one (but not two) pods at a time.
The group of pods that comprise the application is specified using a label selector, the same as the one used by the application's controller (deployment, stateful-set, etc).
The "intended" number of pods is computed from the .spec.replicas
of the workload resource
that is managing those pods. The control plane discovers the owning workload resource by
examining the .metadata.ownerReferences
of the Pod.
Involuntary disruptions cannot be prevented by PDBs; however they do count against the budget.
Pods which are deleted or unavailable due to a rolling upgrade to an application do count against the disruption budget, but workload resources (such as Deployment and StatefulSet) are not limited by PDBs when doing rolling upgrades. Instead, the handling of failures during application updates is configured in the spec for the specific workload resource.
It is recommended to set AlwaysAllow
Unhealthy Pod Eviction Policy
to your PodDisruptionBudgets to support eviction of misbehaving applications during a node drain.
The default behavior is to wait for the application pods to become healthy
before the drain can proceed.
When a pod is evicted using the eviction API, it is gracefully
terminated, honoring the
terminationGracePeriodSeconds
setting in its PodSpec.
PodDisruptionBudget example
Consider a cluster with 3 nodes, node-1
through node-3
.
The cluster is running several applications. One of them has 3 replicas initially called
pod-a
, pod-b
, and pod-c
. Another, unrelated pod without a PDB, called pod-x
, is also shown.
Initially, the pods are laid out as follows:
node-1 | node-2 | node-3 |
---|---|---|
pod-a available | pod-b available | pod-c available |
pod-x available |
All 3 pods are part of a deployment, and they collectively have a PDB which requires there be at least 2 of the 3 pods to be available at all times.
For example, assume the cluster administrator wants to reboot into a new kernel version to fix a bug in the kernel.
The cluster administrator first tries to drain node-1
using the kubectl drain
command.
That tool tries to evict pod-a
and pod-x
. This succeeds immediately.
Both pods go into the terminating
state at the same time.
This puts the cluster in this state:
node-1 draining | node-2 | node-3 |
---|---|---|
pod-a terminating | pod-b available | pod-c available |
pod-x terminating |
The deployment notices that one of the pods is terminating, so it creates a replacement
called pod-d
. Since node-1
is cordoned, it lands on another node. Something has
also created pod-y
as a replacement for pod-x
.
(Note: for a StatefulSet, pod-a
, which would be called something like pod-0
, would need
to terminate completely before its replacement, which is also called pod-0
but has a
different UID, could be created. Otherwise, the example applies to a StatefulSet as well.)
Now the cluster is in this state:
node-1 draining | node-2 | node-3 |
---|---|---|
pod-a terminating | pod-b available | pod-c available |
pod-x terminating | pod-d starting | pod-y |
At some point, the pods terminate, and the cluster looks like this:
node-1 drained | node-2 | node-3 |
---|---|---|
pod-b available | pod-c available | |
pod-d starting | pod-y |
At this point, if an impatient cluster administrator tries to drain node-2
or
node-3
, the drain command will block, because there are only 2 available
pods for the deployment, and its PDB requires at least 2. After some time passes, pod-d
becomes available.
The cluster state now looks like this:
node-1 drained | node-2 | node-3 |
---|---|---|
pod-b available | pod-c available | |
pod-d available | pod-y |
Now, the cluster administrator tries to drain node-2
.
The drain command will try to evict the two pods in some order, say
pod-b
first and then pod-d
. It will succeed at evicting pod-b
.
But, when it tries to evict pod-d
, it will be refused because that would leave only
one pod available for the deployment.
The deployment creates a replacement for pod-b
called pod-e
.
Because there are not enough resources in the cluster to schedule
pod-e
the drain will again block. The cluster may end up in this
state:
node-1 drained | node-2 | node-3 | no node |
---|---|---|---|
pod-b terminating | pod-c available | pod-e pending | |
pod-d available | pod-y |
At this point, the cluster administrator needs to add a node back to the cluster to proceed with the upgrade.
You can see how Kubernetes varies the rate at which disruptions can happen, according to:
- how many replicas an application needs
- how long it takes to gracefully shutdown an instance
- how long it takes a new instance to start up
- the type of controller
- the cluster's resource capacity
Pod disruption conditions
Kubernetes v1.26 [beta]
PodDisruptionConditions
feature gate
enabled in your cluster.
When enabled, a dedicated Pod DisruptionTarget
condition is added to indicate
that the Pod is about to be deleted due to a disruption.
The reason
field of the condition additionally
indicates one of the following reasons for the Pod termination:
PreemptionByScheduler
- Pod is due to be preempted by a scheduler in order to accommodate a new Pod with a higher priority. For more information, see Pod priority preemption.
DeletionByTaintManager
- Pod is due to be deleted by Taint Manager (which is part of the node lifecycle controller within
kube-controller-manager
) due to aNoExecute
taint that the Pod does not tolerate; see taint-based evictions. EvictionByEvictionAPI
- Pod has been marked for eviction using the Kubernetes API .
DeletionByPodGC
- Pod, that is bound to a no longer existing Node, is due to be deleted by Pod garbage collection.
TerminationByKubelet
- Pod has been terminated by the kubelet, because of either node pressure eviction or the graceful node shutdown.
DisruptionTarget
condition might be added to a Pod, but that Pod might then not actually be
deleted. In such a situation, after some time, the
Pod disruption condition will be cleared.
When the PodDisruptionConditions
feature gate is enabled,
along with cleaning up the pods, the Pod garbage collector (PodGC) will also mark them as failed if they are in a non-terminal
phase (see also Pod garbage collection).
When using a Job (or CronJob), you may want to use these Pod disruption conditions as part of your Job's Pod failure policy.
Separating Cluster Owner and Application Owner Roles
Often, it is useful to think of the Cluster Manager and Application Owner as separate roles with limited knowledge of each other. This separation of responsibilities may make sense in these scenarios:
- when there are many application teams sharing a Kubernetes cluster, and there is natural specialization of roles
- when third-party tools or services are used to automate cluster management
Pod Disruption Budgets support this separation of roles by providing an interface between the roles.
If you do not have such a separation of responsibilities in your organization, you may not need to use Pod Disruption Budgets.
How to perform Disruptive Actions on your Cluster
If you are a Cluster Administrator, and you need to perform a disruptive action on all the nodes in your cluster, such as a node or system software upgrade, here are some options:
- Accept downtime during the upgrade.
- Failover to another complete replica cluster.
- No downtime, but may be costly both for the duplicated nodes and for human effort to orchestrate the switchover.
- Write disruption tolerant applications and use PDBs.
- No downtime.
- Minimal resource duplication.
- Allows more automation of cluster administration.
- Writing disruption-tolerant applications is tricky, but the work to tolerate voluntary disruptions largely overlaps with work to support autoscaling and tolerating involuntary disruptions.
What's next
-
Follow steps to protect your application by configuring a Pod Disruption Budget.
-
Learn more about draining nodes
-
Learn about updating a deployment including steps to maintain its availability during the rollout.
4.1.6 - Pod Quality of Service Classes
This page introduces Quality of Service (QoS) classes in Kubernetes, and explains how Kubernetes assigns a QoS class to each Pod as a consequence of the resource constraints that you specify for the containers in that Pod. Kubernetes relies on this classification to make decisions about which Pods to evict when there are not enough available resources on a Node.
Quality of Service classes
Kubernetes classifies the Pods that you run and allocates each Pod into a specific
quality of service (QoS) class. Kubernetes uses that classification to influence how different
pods are handled. Kubernetes does this classification based on the
resource requests
of the Containers in that Pod, along with
how those requests relate to resource limits.
This is known as Quality of Service
(QoS) class. Kubernetes assigns every Pod a QoS class based on the resource requests
and limits of its component Containers. QoS classes are used by Kubernetes to decide
which Pods to evict from a Node experiencing
Node Pressure. The possible
QoS classes are Guaranteed
, Burstable
, and BestEffort
. When a Node runs out of resources,
Kubernetes will first evict BestEffort
Pods running on that Node, followed by Burstable
and
finally Guaranteed
Pods. When this eviction is due to resource pressure, only Pods exceeding
resource requests are candidates for eviction.
Guaranteed
Pods that are Guaranteed
have the strictest resource limits and are least likely
to face eviction. They are guaranteed not to be killed until they exceed their limits
or there are no lower-priority Pods that can be preempted from the Node. They may
not acquire resources beyond their specified limits. These Pods can also make
use of exclusive CPUs using the
static
CPU management policy.
Criteria
For a Pod to be given a QoS class of Guaranteed
:
- Every Container in the Pod must have a memory limit and a memory request.
- For every Container in the Pod, the memory limit must equal the memory request.
- Every Container in the Pod must have a CPU limit and a CPU request.
- For every Container in the Pod, the CPU limit must equal the CPU request.
Burstable
Pods that are Burstable
have some lower-bound resource guarantees based on the request, but
do not require a specific limit. If a limit is not specified, it defaults to a
limit equivalent to the capacity of the Node, which allows the Pods to flexibly increase
their resources if resources are available. In the event of Pod eviction due to Node
resource pressure, these Pods are evicted only after all BestEffort
Pods are evicted.
Because a Burstable
Pod can include a Container that has no resource limits or requests, a Pod
that is Burstable
can try to use any amount of node resources.
Criteria
A Pod is given a QoS class of Burstable
if:
- The Pod does not meet the criteria for QoS class
Guaranteed
. - At least one Container in the Pod has a memory or CPU request or limit.
BestEffort
Pods in the BestEffort
QoS class can use node resources that aren't specifically assigned
to Pods in other QoS classes. For example, if you have a node with 16 CPU cores available to the
kubelet, and you assign 4 CPU cores to a Guaranteed
Pod, then a Pod in the BestEffort
QoS class can try to use any amount of the remaining 12 CPU cores.
The kubelet prefers to evict BestEffort
Pods if the node comes under resource pressure.
Criteria
A Pod has a QoS class of BestEffort
if it doesn't meet the criteria for either Guaranteed
or Burstable
. In other words, a Pod is BestEffort
only if none of the Containers in the Pod have a
memory limit or a memory request, and none of the Containers in the Pod have a
CPU limit or a CPU request.
Containers in a Pod can request other resources (not CPU or memory) and still be classified as
BestEffort
.
Memory QoS with cgroup v2
Kubernetes v1.29 []
Memory QoS uses the memory controller of cgroup v2 to guarantee memory resources in Kubernetes.
Memory requests and limits of containers in pod are used to set specific interfaces memory.min
and memory.high
provided by the memory controller. When memory.min
is set to memory requests,
memory resources are reserved and never reclaimed by the kernel; this is how Memory QoS ensures
memory availability for Kubernetes pods. And if memory limits are set in the container,
this means that the system needs to limit container memory usage; Memory QoS uses memory.high
to throttle workload approaching its memory limit, ensuring that the system is not overwhelmed
by instantaneous memory allocation.
Memory QoS relies on QoS class to determine which settings to apply; however, these are different mechanisms that both provide controls over quality of service.
Some behavior is independent of QoS class
Certain behavior is independent of the QoS class assigned by Kubernetes. For example:
-
Any Container exceeding a resource limit will be killed and restarted by the kubelet without affecting other Containers in that Pod.
-
If a Container exceeds its resource request and the node it runs on faces resource pressure, the Pod it is in becomes a candidate for eviction. If this occurs, all Containers in the Pod will be terminated. Kubernetes may create a replacement Pod, usually on a different node.
-
The resource request of a Pod is equal to the sum of the resource requests of its component Containers, and the resource limit of a Pod is equal to the sum of the resource limits of its component Containers.
-
The kube-scheduler does not consider QoS class when selecting which Pods to preempt. Preemption can occur when a cluster does not have enough resources to run all the Pods you defined.
What's next
- Learn about resource management for Pods and Containers.
- Learn about Node-pressure eviction.
- Learn about Pod priority and preemption.
- Learn about Pod disruptions.
- Learn how to assign memory resources to containers and pods.
- Learn how to assign CPU resources to containers and pods.
- Learn how to configure Quality of Service for Pods.
4.1.7 - User Namespaces
Kubernetes v1.25 [alpha]
This page explains how user namespaces are used in Kubernetes pods. A user namespace isolates the user running inside the container from the one in the host.
A process running as root in a container can run as a different (non-root) user in the host; in other words, the process has full privileges for operations inside the user namespace, but is unprivileged for operations outside the namespace.
You can use this feature to reduce the damage a compromised container can do to the host or other pods in the same node. There are several security vulnerabilities rated either HIGH or CRITICAL that were not exploitable when user namespaces is active. It is expected user namespace will mitigate some future vulnerabilities too.
Before you begin
This is a Linux-only feature and support is needed in Linux for idmap mounts on the filesystems used. This means:
- On the node, the filesystem you use for
/var/lib/kubelet/pods/
, or the custom directory you configure for this, needs idmap mount support. - All the filesystems used in the pod's volumes must support idmap mounts.
In practice this means you need at least Linux 6.3, as tmpfs started supporting idmap mounts in that version. This is usually needed as several Kubernetes features use tmpfs (the service account token that is mounted by default uses a tmpfs, Secrets use a tmpfs, etc.)
Some popular filesystems that support idmap mounts in Linux 6.3 are: btrfs, ext4, xfs, fat, tmpfs, overlayfs.
In addition, support is needed in the container runtime to use this feature with Kubernetes pods:
- CRI-O: version 1.25 (and later) supports user namespaces for containers.
containerd v1.7 is not compatible with the userns support in Kubernetes v1.27 to v1.29. Kubernetes v1.25 and v1.26 used an earlier implementation that is compatible with containerd v1.7, in terms of userns support. If you are using a version of Kubernetes other than 1.29, check the documentation for that version of Kubernetes for the most relevant information. If there is a newer release of containerd than v1.7 available for use, also check the containerd documentation for compatibility information.
You can see the status of user namespaces support in cri-dockerd tracked in an issue on GitHub.
Introduction
User namespaces is a Linux feature that allows to map users in the container to different users in the host. Furthermore, the capabilities granted to a pod in a user namespace are valid only in the namespace and void outside of it.
A pod can opt-in to use user namespaces by setting the pod.spec.hostUsers
field
to false
.
The kubelet will pick host UIDs/GIDs a pod is mapped to, and will do so in a way to guarantee that no two pods on the same node use the same mapping.
The runAsUser
, runAsGroup
, fsGroup
, etc. fields in the pod.spec
always
refer to the user inside the container.
The valid UIDs/GIDs when this feature is enabled is the range 0-65535. This
applies to files and processes (runAsUser
, runAsGroup
, etc.).
Files using a UID/GID outside this range will be seen as belonging to the
overflow ID, usually 65534 (configured in /proc/sys/kernel/overflowuid
and
/proc/sys/kernel/overflowgid
). However, it is not possible to modify those
files, even by running as the 65534 user/group.
Most applications that need to run as root but don't access other host namespaces or resources, should continue to run fine without any changes needed if user namespaces is activated.
Understanding user namespaces for pods
Several container runtimes with their default configuration (like Docker Engine, containerd, CRI-O) use Linux namespaces for isolation. Other technologies exist and can be used with those runtimes too (e.g. Kata Containers uses VMs instead of Linux namespaces). This page is applicable for container runtimes using Linux namespaces for isolation.
When creating a pod, by default, several new namespaces are used for isolation: a network namespace to isolate the network of the container, a PID namespace to isolate the view of processes, etc. If a user namespace is used, this will isolate the users in the container from the users in the node.
This means containers can run as root and be mapped to a non-root user on the
host. Inside the container the process will think it is running as root (and
therefore tools like apt
, yum
, etc. work fine), while in reality the process
doesn't have privileges on the host. You can verify this, for example, if you
check which user the container process is running by executing ps aux
from
the host. The user ps
shows is not the same as the user you see if you
execute inside the container the command id
.
This abstraction limits what can happen, for example, if the container manages to escape to the host. Given that the container is running as a non-privileged user on the host, it is limited what it can do to the host.
Furthermore, as users on each pod will be mapped to different non-overlapping users in the host, it is limited what they can do to other pods too.
Capabilities granted to a pod are also limited to the pod user namespace and mostly invalid out of it, some are even completely void. Here are two examples:
CAP_SYS_MODULE
does not have any effect if granted to a pod using user namespaces, the pod isn't able to load kernel modules.CAP_SYS_ADMIN
is limited to the pod's user namespace and invalid outside of it.
Without using a user namespace a container running as root, in the case of a container breakout, has root privileges on the node. And if some capability were granted to the container, the capabilities are valid on the host too. None of this is true when we use user namespaces.
If you want to know more details about what changes when user namespaces are in
use, see man 7 user_namespaces
.
Set up a node to support user namespaces
It is recommended that the host's files and host's processes use UIDs/GIDs in the range of 0-65535.
The kubelet will assign UIDs/GIDs higher than that to pods. Therefore, to guarantee as much isolation as possible, the UIDs/GIDs used by the host's files and host's processes should be in the range 0-65535.
Note that this recommendation is important to mitigate the impact of CVEs like CVE-2021-25741, where a pod can potentially read arbitrary files in the hosts. If the UIDs/GIDs of the pod and the host don't overlap, it is limited what a pod would be able to do: the pod UID/GID won't match the host's file owner/group.
Integration with Pod security admission checks
Kubernetes v1.29 [alpha]
For Linux Pods that enable user namespaces, Kubernetes relaxes the application of
Pod Security Standards in a controlled way.
This behavior can be controlled by the feature
gate
UserNamespacesPodSecurityStandards
, which allows an early opt-in for end
users. Admins have to ensure that user namespaces are enabled by all nodes
within the cluster if using the feature gate.
If you enable the associated feature gate and create a Pod that uses user
namespaces, the following fields won't be constrained even in contexts that enforce the
Baseline or Restricted pod security standard. This behavior does not
present a security concern because root
inside a Pod with user namespaces
actually refers to the user inside the container, that is never mapped to a
privileged user on the host. Here's the list of fields that are not checks for Pods in those
circumstances:
spec.securityContext.runAsNonRoot
spec.containers[*].securityContext.runAsNonRoot
spec.initContainers[*].securityContext.runAsNonRoot
spec.ephemeralContainers[*].securityContext.runAsNonRoot
spec.securityContext.runAsUser
spec.containers[*].securityContext.runAsUser
spec.initContainers[*].securityContext.runAsUser
spec.ephemeralContainers[*].securityContext.runAsUser
Limitations
When using a user namespace for the pod, it is disallowed to use other host
namespaces. In particular, if you set hostUsers: false
then you are not
allowed to set any of:
hostNetwork: true
hostIPC: true
hostPID: true
What's next
- Take a look at Use a User Namespace With a Pod
4.1.8 - Downward API
It is sometimes useful for a container to have information about itself, without being overly coupled to Kubernetes. The downward API allows containers to consume information about themselves or the cluster without using the Kubernetes client or API server.
An example is an existing application that assumes a particular well-known environment variable holds a unique identifier. One possibility is to wrap the application, but that is tedious and error-prone, and it violates the goal of low coupling. A better option would be to use the Pod's name as an identifier, and inject the Pod's name into the well-known environment variable.
In Kubernetes, there are two ways to expose Pod and container fields to a running container:
Together, these two ways of exposing Pod and container fields are called the downward API.
Available fields
Only some Kubernetes API fields are available through the downward API. This section lists which fields you can make available.
You can pass information from available Pod-level fields using fieldRef
.
At the API level, the spec
for a Pod always defines at least one
Container.
You can pass information from available Container-level fields using
resourceFieldRef
.
Information available via fieldRef
For some Pod-level fields, you can provide them to a container either as
an environment variable or using a downwardAPI
volume. The fields available
via either mechanism are:
metadata.name
- the pod's name
metadata.namespace
- the pod's namespace
metadata.uid
- the pod's unique ID
metadata.annotations['<KEY>']
- the value of the pod's annotation named
<KEY>
(for example,metadata.annotations['myannotation']
) metadata.labels['<KEY>']
- the text value of the pod's label named
<KEY>
(for example,metadata.labels['mylabel']
)
The following information is available through environment variables but not as a downwardAPI volume fieldRef:
spec.serviceAccountName
- the name of the pod's service account
spec.nodeName
- the name of the node where the Pod is executing
status.hostIP
- the primary IP address of the node to which the Pod is assigned
status.hostIPs
- the IP addresses is a dual-stack version of
status.hostIP
, the first is always the same asstatus.hostIP
. The field is available if you enable thePodHostIPs
feature gate. status.podIP
- the pod's primary IP address (usually, its IPv4 address)
status.podIPs
- the IP addresses is a dual-stack version of
status.podIP
, the first is always the same asstatus.podIP
The following information is available through a downwardAPI
volume
fieldRef
, but not as environment variables:
metadata.labels
- all of the pod's labels, formatted as
label-key="escaped-label-value"
with one label per line metadata.annotations
- all of the pod's annotations, formatted as
annotation-key="escaped-annotation-value"
with one annotation per line
Information available via resourceFieldRef
These container-level fields allow you to provide information about requests and limits for resources such as CPU and memory.
resource: limits.cpu
- A container's CPU limit
resource: requests.cpu
- A container's CPU request
resource: limits.memory
- A container's memory limit
resource: requests.memory
- A container's memory request
resource: limits.hugepages-*
- A container's hugepages limit
resource: requests.hugepages-*
- A container's hugepages request
resource: limits.ephemeral-storage
- A container's ephemeral-storage limit
resource: requests.ephemeral-storage
- A container's ephemeral-storage request
Fallback information for resource limits
If CPU and memory limits are not specified for a container, and you use the downward API to try to expose that information, then the kubelet defaults to exposing the maximum allocatable value for CPU and memory based on the node allocatable calculation.
What's next
You can read about downwardAPI
volumes.
You can try using the downward API to expose container- or Pod-level information:
4.2 - Workload Management
Kubernetes provides several built-in APIs for declarative management of your workloads and the components of those workloads.
Ultimately, your applications run as containers inside Pods; however, managing individual Pods would be a lot of effort. For example, if a Pod fails, you probably want to run a new Pod to replace it. Kubernetes can do that for you.
You use the Kubernetes API to create a workload object that represents a higher abstraction level than a Pod, and then the Kubernetes control plane automatically manages Pod objects on your behalf, based on the specification for the workload object you defined.
The built-in APIs for managing workloads are:
Deployment (and, indirectly, ReplicaSet), the most common way to run an application on your cluster. Deployment is a good fit for managing a stateless application workload on your cluster, where any Pod in the Deployment is interchangeable and can be replaced if needed. (Deployments are a replacement for the legacy ReplicationController API).
A StatefulSet lets you manage one or more Pods – all running the same application code – where the Pods rely on having a distinct identity. This is different from a Deployment where the Pods are expected to be interchangeable. The most common use for a StatefulSet is to be able to make a link between its Pods and their persistent storage. For example, you can run a StatefulSet that associates each Pod with a PersistentVolume. If one of the Pods in the StatefulSet fails, Kubernetes makes a replacement Pod that is connected to the same PersistentVolume.
A DaemonSet defines Pods that provide facilities that are local to a specific node; for example, a driver that lets containers on that node access a storage system. You use a DaemonSet when the driver, or other node-level service, has to run on the node where it's useful. Each Pod in a DaemonSet performs a role similar to a system daemon on a classic Unix / POSIX server. A DaemonSet might be fundamental to the operation of your cluster, such as a plugin to let that node access cluster networking, it might help you to manage the node, or it could provide less essential facilities that enhance the container platform you are running. You can run DaemonSets (and their pods) across every node in your cluster, or across just a subset (for example, only install the GPU accelerator driver on nodes that have a GPU installed).
You can use a Job and / or a CronJob to define tasks that run to completion and then stop. A Job represents a one-off task, whereas each CronJob repeats according to a schedule.
Other topics in this section:
4.2.1 - Deployments
A Deployment provides declarative updates for Pods and ReplicaSets.
You describe a desired state in a Deployment, and the Deployment Controller changes the actual state to the desired state at a controlled rate. You can define Deployments to create new ReplicaSets, or to remove existing Deployments and adopt all their resources with new Deployments.
Use Case
The following are typical use cases for Deployments:
- Create a Deployment to rollout a ReplicaSet. The ReplicaSet creates Pods in the background. Check the status of the rollout to see if it succeeds or not.
- Declare the new state of the Pods by updating the PodTemplateSpec of the Deployment. A new ReplicaSet is created and the Deployment manages moving the Pods from the old ReplicaSet to the new one at a controlled rate. Each new ReplicaSet updates the revision of the Deployment.
- Rollback to an earlier Deployment revision if the current state of the Deployment is not stable. Each rollback updates the revision of the Deployment.
- Scale up the Deployment to facilitate more load.
- Pause the rollout of a Deployment to apply multiple fixes to its PodTemplateSpec and then resume it to start a new rollout.
- Use the status of the Deployment as an indicator that a rollout has stuck.
- Clean up older ReplicaSets that you don't need anymore.
Creating a Deployment
The following is an example of a Deployment. It creates a ReplicaSet to bring up three nginx
Pods:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: nginx-deployment
labels:
app: nginx
spec:
replicas: 3
selector:
matchLabels:
app: nginx
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: nginx
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx:1.14.2
ports:
- containerPort: 80
In this example:
-
A Deployment named
nginx-deployment
is created, indicated by the.metadata.name
field. This name will become the basis for the ReplicaSets and Pods which are created later. See Writing a Deployment Spec for more details. -
The Deployment creates a ReplicaSet that creates three replicated Pods, indicated by the
.spec.replicas
field. -
The
.spec.selector
field defines how the created ReplicaSet finds which Pods to manage. In this case, you select a label that is defined in the Pod template (app: nginx
). However, more sophisticated selection rules are possible, as long as the Pod template itself satisfies the rule.Note: The.spec.selector.matchLabels
field is a map of {key,value} pairs. A single {key,value} in thematchLabels
map is equivalent to an element ofmatchExpressions
, whosekey
field is "key", theoperator
is "In", and thevalues
array contains only "value". All of the requirements, from bothmatchLabels
andmatchExpressions
, must be satisfied in order to match. -
The
template
field contains the following sub-fields:- The Pods are labeled
app: nginx
using the.metadata.labels
field. - The Pod template's specification, or
.template.spec
field, indicates that the Pods run one container,nginx
, which runs thenginx
Docker Hub image at version 1.14.2. - Create one container and name it
nginx
using the.spec.template.spec.containers[0].name
field.
- The Pods are labeled
Before you begin, make sure your Kubernetes cluster is up and running. Follow the steps given below to create the above Deployment:
-
Create the Deployment by running the following command:
kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/controllers/nginx-deployment.yaml
-
Run
kubectl get deployments
to check if the Deployment was created.If the Deployment is still being created, the output is similar to the following:
NAME READY UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE nginx-deployment 0/3 0 0 1s
When you inspect the Deployments in your cluster, the following fields are displayed:
NAME
lists the names of the Deployments in the namespace.READY
displays how many replicas of the application are available to your users. It follows the pattern ready/desired.UP-TO-DATE
displays the number of replicas that have been updated to achieve the desired state.AVAILABLE
displays how many replicas of the application are available to your users.AGE
displays the amount of time that the application has been running.
Notice how the number of desired replicas is 3 according to
.spec.replicas
field. -
To see the Deployment rollout status, run
kubectl rollout status deployment/nginx-deployment
.The output is similar to:
Waiting for rollout to finish: 2 out of 3 new replicas have been updated... deployment "nginx-deployment" successfully rolled out
-
Run the
kubectl get deployments
again a few seconds later. The output is similar to this:NAME READY UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE nginx-deployment 3/3 3 3 18s
Notice that the Deployment has created all three replicas, and all replicas are up-to-date (they contain the latest Pod template) and available.
-
To see the ReplicaSet (
rs
) created by the Deployment, runkubectl get rs
. The output is similar to this:NAME DESIRED CURRENT READY AGE nginx-deployment-75675f5897 3 3 3 18s
ReplicaSet output shows the following fields:
NAME
lists the names of the ReplicaSets in the namespace.DESIRED
displays the desired number of replicas of the application, which you define when you create the Deployment. This is the desired state.CURRENT
displays how many replicas are currently running.READY
displays how many replicas of the application are available to your users.AGE
displays the amount of time that the application has been running.
Notice that the name of the ReplicaSet is always formatted as
[DEPLOYMENT-NAME]-[HASH]
. This name will become the basis for the Pods which are created.The
HASH
string is the same as thepod-template-hash
label on the ReplicaSet. -
To see the labels automatically generated for each Pod, run
kubectl get pods --show-labels
. The output is similar to:NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE LABELS nginx-deployment-75675f5897-7ci7o 1/1 Running 0 18s app=nginx,pod-template-hash=75675f5897 nginx-deployment-75675f5897-kzszj 1/1 Running 0 18s app=nginx,pod-template-hash=75675f5897 nginx-deployment-75675f5897-qqcnn 1/1 Running 0 18s app=nginx,pod-template-hash=75675f5897
The created ReplicaSet ensures that there are three
nginx
Pods.
You must specify an appropriate selector and Pod template labels in a Deployment
(in this case, app: nginx
).
Do not overlap labels or selectors with other controllers (including other Deployments and StatefulSets). Kubernetes doesn't stop you from overlapping, and if multiple controllers have overlapping selectors those controllers might conflict and behave unexpectedly.
Pod-template-hash label
The pod-template-hash
label is added by the Deployment controller to every ReplicaSet that a Deployment creates or adopts.
This label ensures that child ReplicaSets of a Deployment do not overlap. It is generated by hashing the PodTemplate
of the ReplicaSet and using the resulting hash as the label value that is added to the ReplicaSet selector, Pod template labels,
and in any existing Pods that the ReplicaSet might have.
Updating a Deployment
.spec.template
)
is changed, for example if the labels or container images of the template are updated. Other updates, such as scaling the Deployment, do not trigger a rollout.
Follow the steps given below to update your Deployment:
-
Let's update the nginx Pods to use the
nginx:1.16.1
image instead of thenginx:1.14.2
image.kubectl set image deployment.v1.apps/nginx-deployment nginx=nginx:1.16.1
or use the following command:
kubectl set image deployment/nginx-deployment nginx=nginx:1.16.1
where
deployment/nginx-deployment
indicates the Deployment,nginx
indicates the Container the update will take place andnginx:1.16.1
indicates the new image and its tag.The output is similar to:
deployment.apps/nginx-deployment image updated
Alternatively, you can
edit
the Deployment and change.spec.template.spec.containers[0].image
fromnginx:1.14.2
tonginx:1.16.1
:kubectl edit deployment/nginx-deployment
The output is similar to:
deployment.apps/nginx-deployment edited
-
To see the rollout status, run:
kubectl rollout status deployment/nginx-deployment
The output is similar to this:
Waiting for rollout to finish: 2 out of 3 new replicas have been updated...
or
deployment "nginx-deployment" successfully rolled out
Get more details on your updated Deployment:
-
After the rollout succeeds, you can view the Deployment by running
kubectl get deployments
. The output is similar to this:NAME READY UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE nginx-deployment 3/3 3 3 36s
-
Run
kubectl get rs
to see that the Deployment updated the Pods by creating a new ReplicaSet and scaling it up to 3 replicas, as well as scaling down the old ReplicaSet to 0 replicas.kubectl get rs
The output is similar to this:
NAME DESIRED CURRENT READY AGE nginx-deployment-1564180365 3 3 3 6s nginx-deployment-2035384211 0 0 0 36s
-
Running
get pods
should now show only the new Pods:kubectl get pods
The output is similar to this:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE nginx-deployment-1564180365-khku8 1/1 Running 0 14s nginx-deployment-1564180365-nacti 1/1 Running 0 14s nginx-deployment-1564180365-z9gth 1/1 Running 0 14s
Next time you want to update these Pods, you only need to update the Deployment's Pod template again.
Deployment ensures that only a certain number of Pods are down while they are being updated. By default, it ensures that at least 75% of the desired number of Pods are up (25% max unavailable).
Deployment also ensures that only a certain number of Pods are created above the desired number of Pods. By default, it ensures that at most 125% of the desired number of Pods are up (25% max surge).
For example, if you look at the above Deployment closely, you will see that it first creates a new Pod, then deletes an old Pod, and creates another new one. It does not kill old Pods until a sufficient number of new Pods have come up, and does not create new Pods until a sufficient number of old Pods have been killed. It makes sure that at least 3 Pods are available and that at max 4 Pods in total are available. In case of a Deployment with 4 replicas, the number of Pods would be between 3 and 5.
-
Get details of your Deployment:
kubectl describe deployments
The output is similar to this:
Name: nginx-deployment Namespace: default CreationTimestamp: Thu, 30 Nov 2017 10:56:25 +0000 Labels: app=nginx Annotations: deployment.kubernetes.io/revision=2 Selector: app=nginx Replicas: 3 desired | 3 updated | 3 total | 3 available | 0 unavailable StrategyType: RollingUpdate MinReadySeconds: 0 RollingUpdateStrategy: 25% max unavailable, 25% max surge Pod Template: Labels: app=nginx Containers: nginx: Image: nginx:1.16.1 Port: 80/TCP Environment: <none> Mounts: <none> Volumes: <none> Conditions: Type Status Reason ---- ------ ------ Available True MinimumReplicasAvailable Progressing True NewReplicaSetAvailable OldReplicaSets: <none> NewReplicaSet: nginx-deployment-1564180365 (3/3 replicas created) Events: Type Reason Age From Message ---- ------ ---- ---- ------- Normal ScalingReplicaSet 2m deployment-controller Scaled up replica set nginx-deployment-2035384211 to 3 Normal ScalingReplicaSet 24s deployment-controller Scaled up replica set nginx-deployment-1564180365 to 1 Normal ScalingReplicaSet 22s deployment-controller Scaled down replica set nginx-deployment-2035384211 to 2 Normal ScalingReplicaSet 22s deployment-controller Scaled up replica set nginx-deployment-1564180365 to 2 Normal ScalingReplicaSet 19s deployment-controller Scaled down replica set nginx-deployment-2035384211 to 1 Normal ScalingReplicaSet 19s deployment-controller Scaled up replica set nginx-deployment-1564180365 to 3 Normal ScalingReplicaSet 14s deployment-controller Scaled down replica set nginx-deployment-2035384211 to 0
Here you see that when you first created the Deployment, it created a ReplicaSet (nginx-deployment-2035384211) and scaled it up to 3 replicas directly. When you updated the Deployment, it created a new ReplicaSet (nginx-deployment-1564180365) and scaled it up to 1 and waited for it to come up. Then it scaled down the old ReplicaSet to 2 and scaled up the new ReplicaSet to 2 so that at least 3 Pods were available and at most 4 Pods were created at all times. It then continued scaling up and down the new and the old ReplicaSet, with the same rolling update strategy. Finally, you'll have 3 available replicas in the new ReplicaSet, and the old ReplicaSet is scaled down to 0.
availableReplicas
, which must be between
replicas - maxUnavailable
and replicas + maxSurge
. As a result, you might notice that there are more Pods than
expected during a rollout, and that the total resources consumed by the Deployment is more than replicas + maxSurge
until the terminationGracePeriodSeconds
of the terminating Pods expires.
Rollover (aka multiple updates in-flight)
Each time a new Deployment is observed by the Deployment controller, a ReplicaSet is created to bring up
the desired Pods. If the Deployment is updated, the existing ReplicaSet that controls Pods whose labels
match .spec.selector
but whose template does not match .spec.template
are scaled down. Eventually, the new
ReplicaSet is scaled to .spec.replicas
and all old ReplicaSets is scaled to 0.
If you update a Deployment while an existing rollout is in progress, the Deployment creates a new ReplicaSet as per the update and start scaling that up, and rolls over the ReplicaSet that it was scaling up previously -- it will add it to its list of old ReplicaSets and start scaling it down.
For example, suppose you create a Deployment to create 5 replicas of nginx:1.14.2
,
but then update the Deployment to create 5 replicas of nginx:1.16.1
, when only 3
replicas of nginx:1.14.2
had been created. In that case, the Deployment immediately starts
killing the 3 nginx:1.14.2
Pods that it had created, and starts creating
nginx:1.16.1
Pods. It does not wait for the 5 replicas of nginx:1.14.2
to be created
before changing course.
Label selector updates
It is generally discouraged to make label selector updates and it is suggested to plan your selectors up front. In any case, if you need to perform a label selector update, exercise great caution and make sure you have grasped all of the implications.
apps/v1
, a Deployment's label selector is immutable after it gets created.
- Selector additions require the Pod template labels in the Deployment spec to be updated with the new label too, otherwise a validation error is returned. This change is a non-overlapping one, meaning that the new selector does not select ReplicaSets and Pods created with the old selector, resulting in orphaning all old ReplicaSets and creating a new ReplicaSet.
- Selector updates changes the existing value in a selector key -- result in the same behavior as additions.
- Selector removals removes an existing key from the Deployment selector -- do not require any changes in the Pod template labels. Existing ReplicaSets are not orphaned, and a new ReplicaSet is not created, but note that the removed label still exists in any existing Pods and ReplicaSets.
Rolling Back a Deployment
Sometimes, you may want to rollback a Deployment; for example, when the Deployment is not stable, such as crash looping. By default, all of the Deployment's rollout history is kept in the system so that you can rollback anytime you want (you can change that by modifying revision history limit).
.spec.template
) is changed,
for example if you update the labels or container images of the template. Other updates, such as scaling the Deployment,
do not create a Deployment revision, so that you can facilitate simultaneous manual- or auto-scaling.
This means that when you roll back to an earlier revision, only the Deployment's Pod template part is
rolled back.
-
Suppose that you made a typo while updating the Deployment, by putting the image name as
nginx:1.161
instead ofnginx:1.16.1
:kubectl set image deployment/nginx-deployment nginx=nginx:1.161
The output is similar to this:
deployment.apps/nginx-deployment image updated
-
The rollout gets stuck. You can verify it by checking the rollout status:
kubectl rollout status deployment/nginx-deployment
The output is similar to this:
Waiting for rollout to finish: 1 out of 3 new replicas have been updated...
-
Press Ctrl-C to stop the above rollout status watch. For more information on stuck rollouts, read more here.
-
You see that the number of old replicas (adding the replica count from
nginx-deployment-1564180365
andnginx-deployment-2035384211
) is 3, and the number of new replicas (fromnginx-deployment-3066724191
) is 1.kubectl get rs
The output is similar to this:
NAME DESIRED CURRENT READY AGE nginx-deployment-1564180365 3 3 3 25s nginx-deployment-2035384211 0 0 0 36s nginx-deployment-3066724191 1 1 0 6s
-
Looking at the Pods created, you see that 1 Pod created by new ReplicaSet is stuck in an image pull loop.
kubectl get pods
The output is similar to this:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE nginx-deployment-1564180365-70iae 1/1 Running 0 25s nginx-deployment-1564180365-jbqqo 1/1 Running 0 25s nginx-deployment-1564180365-hysrc 1/1 Running 0 25s nginx-deployment-3066724191-08mng 0/1 ImagePullBackOff 0 6s
Note: The Deployment controller stops the bad rollout automatically, and stops scaling up the new ReplicaSet. This depends on the rollingUpdate parameters (maxUnavailable
specifically) that you have specified. Kubernetes by default sets the value to 25%. -
Get the description of the Deployment:
kubectl describe deployment
The output is similar to this:
Name: nginx-deployment Namespace: default CreationTimestamp: Tue, 15 Mar 2016 14:48:04 -0700 Labels: app=nginx Selector: app=nginx Replicas: 3 desired | 1 updated | 4 total | 3 available | 1 unavailable StrategyType: RollingUpdate MinReadySeconds: 0 RollingUpdateStrategy: 25% max unavailable, 25% max surge Pod Template: Labels: app=nginx Containers: nginx: Image: nginx:1.161 Port: 80/TCP Host Port: 0/TCP Environment: <none> Mounts: <none> Volumes: <none> Conditions: Type Status Reason ---- ------ ------ Available True MinimumReplicasAvailable Progressing True ReplicaSetUpdated OldReplicaSets: nginx-deployment-1564180365 (3/3 replicas created) NewReplicaSet: nginx-deployment-3066724191 (1/1 replicas created) Events: FirstSeen LastSeen Count From SubObjectPath Type Reason Message --------- -------- ----- ---- ------------- -------- ------ ------- 1m 1m 1 {deployment-controller } Normal ScalingReplicaSet Scaled up replica set nginx-deployment-2035384211 to 3 22s 22s 1 {deployment-controller } Normal ScalingReplicaSet Scaled up replica set nginx-deployment-1564180365 to 1 22s 22s 1 {deployment-controller } Normal ScalingReplicaSet Scaled down replica set nginx-deployment-2035384211 to 2 22s 22s 1 {deployment-controller } Normal ScalingReplicaSet Scaled up replica set nginx-deployment-1564180365 to 2 21s 21s 1 {deployment-controller } Normal ScalingReplicaSet Scaled down replica set nginx-deployment-2035384211 to 1 21s 21s 1 {deployment-controller } Normal ScalingReplicaSet Scaled up replica set nginx-deployment-1564180365 to 3 13s 13s 1 {deployment-controller } Normal ScalingReplicaSet Scaled down replica set nginx-deployment-2035384211 to 0 13s 13s 1 {deployment-controller } Normal ScalingReplicaSet Scaled up replica set nginx-deployment-3066724191 to 1
To fix this, you need to rollback to a previous revision of Deployment that is stable.
Checking Rollout History of a Deployment
Follow the steps given below to check the rollout history:
-
First, check the revisions of this Deployment:
kubectl rollout history deployment/nginx-deployment
The output is similar to this:
deployments "nginx-deployment" REVISION CHANGE-CAUSE 1 kubectl apply --filename=https://k8s.io/examples/controllers/nginx-deployment.yaml 2 kubectl set image deployment/nginx-deployment nginx=nginx:1.16.1 3 kubectl set image deployment/nginx-deployment nginx=nginx:1.161
CHANGE-CAUSE
is copied from the Deployment annotationkubernetes.io/change-cause
to its revisions upon creation. You can specify theCHANGE-CAUSE
message by:- Annotating the Deployment with
kubectl annotate deployment/nginx-deployment kubernetes.io/change-cause="image updated to 1.16.1"
- Manually editing the manifest of the resource.
- Annotating the Deployment with
-
To see the details of each revision, run:
kubectl rollout history deployment/nginx-deployment --revision=2
The output is similar to this:
deployments "nginx-deployment" revision 2 Labels: app=nginx pod-template-hash=1159050644 Annotations: kubernetes.io/change-cause=kubectl set image deployment/nginx-deployment nginx=nginx:1.16.1 Containers: nginx: Image: nginx:1.16.1 Port: 80/TCP QoS Tier: cpu: BestEffort memory: BestEffort Environment Variables: <none> No volumes.
Rolling Back to a Previous Revision
Follow the steps given below to rollback the Deployment from the current version to the previous version, which is version 2.
-
Now you've decided to undo the current rollout and rollback to the previous revision:
kubectl rollout undo deployment/nginx-deployment
The output is similar to this:
deployment.apps/nginx-deployment rolled back
Alternatively, you can rollback to a specific revision by specifying it with
--to-revision
:kubectl rollout undo deployment/nginx-deployment --to-revision=2
The output is similar to this:
deployment.apps/nginx-deployment rolled back
For more details about rollout related commands, read
kubectl rollout
.The Deployment is now rolled back to a previous stable revision. As you can see, a
DeploymentRollback
event for rolling back to revision 2 is generated from Deployment controller. -
Check if the rollback was successful and the Deployment is running as expected, run:
kubectl get deployment nginx-deployment
The output is similar to this:
NAME READY UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE nginx-deployment 3/3 3 3 30m
-
Get the description of the Deployment:
kubectl describe deployment nginx-deployment
The output is similar to this:
Name: nginx-deployment Namespace: default CreationTimestamp: Sun, 02 Sep 2018 18:17:55 -0500 Labels: app=nginx Annotations: deployment.kubernetes.io/revision=4 kubernetes.io/change-cause=kubectl set image deployment/nginx-deployment nginx=nginx:1.16.1 Selector: app=nginx Replicas: 3 desired | 3 updated | 3 total | 3 available | 0 unavailable StrategyType: RollingUpdate MinReadySeconds: 0 RollingUpdateStrategy: 25% max unavailable, 25% max surge Pod Template: Labels: app=nginx Containers: nginx: Image: nginx:1.16.1 Port: 80/TCP Host Port: 0/TCP Environment: <none> Mounts: <none> Volumes: <none> Conditions: Type Status Reason ---- ------ ------ Available True MinimumReplicasAvailable Progressing True NewReplicaSetAvailable OldReplicaSets: <none> NewReplicaSet: nginx-deployment-c4747d96c (3/3 replicas created) Events: Type Reason Age From Message ---- ------ ---- ---- ------- Normal ScalingReplicaSet 12m deployment-controller Scaled up replica set nginx-deployment-75675f5897 to 3 Normal ScalingReplicaSet 11m deployment-controller Scaled up replica set nginx-deployment-c4747d96c to 1 Normal ScalingReplicaSet 11m deployment-controller Scaled down replica set nginx-deployment-75675f5897 to 2 Normal ScalingReplicaSet 11m deployment-controller Scaled up replica set nginx-deployment-c4747d96c to 2 Normal ScalingReplicaSet 11m deployment-controller Scaled down replica set nginx-deployment-75675f5897 to 1 Normal ScalingReplicaSet 11m deployment-controller Scaled up replica set nginx-deployment-c4747d96c to 3 Normal ScalingReplicaSet 11m deployment-controller Scaled down replica set nginx-deployment-75675f5897 to 0 Normal ScalingReplicaSet 11m deployment-controller Scaled up replica set nginx-deployment-595696685f to 1 Normal DeploymentRollback 15s deployment-controller Rolled back deployment "nginx-deployment" to revision 2 Normal ScalingReplicaSet 15s deployment-controller Scaled down replica set nginx-deployment-595696685f to 0
Scaling a Deployment
You can scale a Deployment by using the following command:
kubectl scale deployment/nginx-deployment --replicas=10
The output is similar to this:
deployment.apps/nginx-deployment scaled
Assuming horizontal Pod autoscaling is enabled in your cluster, you can set up an autoscaler for your Deployment and choose the minimum and maximum number of Pods you want to run based on the CPU utilization of your existing Pods.
kubectl autoscale deployment/nginx-deployment --min=10 --max=15 --cpu-percent=80
The output is similar to this:
deployment.apps/nginx-deployment scaled
Proportional scaling
RollingUpdate Deployments support running multiple versions of an application at the same time. When you or an autoscaler scales a RollingUpdate Deployment that is in the middle of a rollout (either in progress or paused), the Deployment controller balances the additional replicas in the existing active ReplicaSets (ReplicaSets with Pods) in order to mitigate risk. This is called proportional scaling.
For example, you are running a Deployment with 10 replicas, maxSurge=3, and maxUnavailable=2.
-
Ensure that the 10 replicas in your Deployment are running.
kubectl get deploy
The output is similar to this:
NAME DESIRED CURRENT UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE nginx-deployment 10 10 10 10 50s
-
You update to a new image which happens to be unresolvable from inside the cluster.
kubectl set image deployment/nginx-deployment nginx=nginx:sometag
The output is similar to this:
deployment.apps/nginx-deployment image updated
-
The image update starts a new rollout with ReplicaSet nginx-deployment-1989198191, but it's blocked due to the
maxUnavailable
requirement that you mentioned above. Check out the rollout status:kubectl get rs
The output is similar to this:
NAME DESIRED CURRENT READY AGE nginx-deployment-1989198191 5 5 0 9s nginx-deployment-618515232 8 8 8 1m
-
Then a new scaling request for the Deployment comes along. The autoscaler increments the Deployment replicas to 15. The Deployment controller needs to decide where to add these new 5 replicas. If you weren't using proportional scaling, all 5 of them would be added in the new ReplicaSet. With proportional scaling, you spread the additional replicas across all ReplicaSets. Bigger proportions go to the ReplicaSets with the most replicas and lower proportions go to ReplicaSets with less replicas. Any leftovers are added to the ReplicaSet with the most replicas. ReplicaSets with zero replicas are not scaled up.
In our example above, 3 replicas are added to the old ReplicaSet and 2 replicas are added to the new ReplicaSet. The rollout process should eventually move all replicas to the new ReplicaSet, assuming the new replicas become healthy. To confirm this, run:
kubectl get deploy
The output is similar to this:
NAME DESIRED CURRENT UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE
nginx-deployment 15 18 7 8 7m
The rollout status confirms how the replicas were added to each ReplicaSet.
kubectl get rs
The output is similar to this:
NAME DESIRED CURRENT READY AGE
nginx-deployment-1989198191 7 7 0 7m
nginx-deployment-618515232 11 11 11 7m
Pausing and Resuming a rollout of a Deployment
When you update a Deployment, or plan to, you can pause rollouts for that Deployment before you trigger one or more updates. When you're ready to apply those changes, you resume rollouts for the Deployment. This approach allows you to apply multiple fixes in between pausing and resuming without triggering unnecessary rollouts.
-
For example, with a Deployment that was created:
Get the Deployment details:
kubectl get deploy
The output is similar to this:
NAME DESIRED CURRENT UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE nginx 3 3 3 3 1m
Get the rollout status:
kubectl get rs
The output is similar to this:
NAME DESIRED CURRENT READY AGE nginx-2142116321 3 3 3 1m
-
Pause by running the following command:
kubectl rollout pause deployment/nginx-deployment
The output is similar to this:
deployment.apps/nginx-deployment paused
-
Then update the image of the Deployment:
kubectl set image deployment/nginx-deployment nginx=nginx:1.16.1
The output is similar to this:
deployment.apps/nginx-deployment image updated
-
Notice that no new rollout started:
kubectl rollout history deployment/nginx-deployment
The output is similar to this:
deployments "nginx" REVISION CHANGE-CAUSE 1 <none>
-
Get the rollout status to verify that the existing ReplicaSet has not changed:
kubectl get rs
The output is similar to this:
NAME DESIRED CURRENT READY AGE nginx-2142116321 3 3 3 2m
-
You can make as many updates as you wish, for example, update the resources that will be used:
kubectl set resources deployment/nginx-deployment -c=nginx --limits=cpu=200m,memory=512Mi
The output is similar to this:
deployment.apps/nginx-deployment resource requirements updated
The initial state of the Deployment prior to pausing its rollout will continue its function, but new updates to the Deployment will not have any effect as long as the Deployment rollout is paused.
-
Eventually, resume the Deployment rollout and observe a new ReplicaSet coming up with all the new updates:
kubectl rollout resume deployment/nginx-deployment
The output is similar to this:
deployment.apps/nginx-deployment resumed
-
Watch the status of the rollout until it's done.
kubectl get rs -w
The output is similar to this:
NAME DESIRED CURRENT READY AGE nginx-2142116321 2 2 2 2m nginx-3926361531 2 2 0 6s nginx-3926361531 2 2 1 18s nginx-2142116321 1 2 2 2m nginx-2142116321 1 2 2 2m nginx-3926361531 3 2 1 18s nginx-3926361531 3 2 1 18s nginx-2142116321 1 1 1 2m nginx-3926361531 3 3 1 18s nginx-3926361531 3 3 2 19s nginx-2142116321 0 1 1 2m nginx-2142116321 0 1 1 2m nginx-2142116321 0 0 0 2m nginx-3926361531 3 3 3 20s
-
Get the status of the latest rollout:
kubectl get rs
The output is similar to this:
NAME DESIRED CURRENT READY AGE nginx-2142116321 0 0 0 2m nginx-3926361531 3 3 3 28s
Deployment status
A Deployment enters various states during its lifecycle. It can be progressing while rolling out a new ReplicaSet, it can be complete, or it can fail to progress.
Progressing Deployment
Kubernetes marks a Deployment as progressing when one of the following tasks is performed:
- The Deployment creates a new ReplicaSet.
- The Deployment is scaling up its newest ReplicaSet.
- The Deployment is scaling down its older ReplicaSet(s).
- New Pods become ready or available (ready for at least MinReadySeconds).
When the rollout becomes “progressing”, the Deployment controller adds a condition with the following
attributes to the Deployment's .status.conditions
:
type: Progressing
status: "True"
reason: NewReplicaSetCreated
|reason: FoundNewReplicaSet
|reason: ReplicaSetUpdated
You can monitor the progress for a Deployment by using kubectl rollout status
.
Complete Deployment
Kubernetes marks a Deployment as complete when it has the following characteristics:
- All of the replicas associated with the Deployment have been updated to the latest version you've specified, meaning any updates you've requested have been completed.
- All of the replicas associated with the Deployment are available.
- No old replicas for the Deployment are running.
When the rollout becomes “complete”, the Deployment controller sets a condition with the following
attributes to the Deployment's .status.conditions
:
type: Progressing
status: "True"
reason: NewReplicaSetAvailable
This Progressing
condition will retain a status value of "True"
until a new rollout
is initiated. The condition holds even when availability of replicas changes (which
does instead affect the Available
condition).
You can check if a Deployment has completed by using kubectl rollout status
. If the rollout completed
successfully, kubectl rollout status
returns a zero exit code.
kubectl rollout status deployment/nginx-deployment
The output is similar to this:
Waiting for rollout to finish: 2 of 3 updated replicas are available...
deployment "nginx-deployment" successfully rolled out
and the exit status from kubectl rollout
is 0 (success):
echo $?
0
Failed Deployment
Your Deployment may get stuck trying to deploy its newest ReplicaSet without ever completing. This can occur due to some of the following factors:
- Insufficient quota
- Readiness probe failures
- Image pull errors
- Insufficient permissions
- Limit ranges
- Application runtime misconfiguration
One way you can detect this condition is to specify a deadline parameter in your Deployment spec:
(.spec.progressDeadlineSeconds
). .spec.progressDeadlineSeconds
denotes the
number of seconds the Deployment controller waits before indicating (in the Deployment status) that the
Deployment progress has stalled.
The following kubectl
command sets the spec with progressDeadlineSeconds
to make the controller report
lack of progress of a rollout for a Deployment after 10 minutes:
kubectl patch deployment/nginx-deployment -p '{"spec":{"progressDeadlineSeconds":600}}'
The output is similar to this:
deployment.apps/nginx-deployment patched
Once the deadline has been exceeded, the Deployment controller adds a DeploymentCondition with the following
attributes to the Deployment's .status.conditions
:
type: Progressing
status: "False"
reason: ProgressDeadlineExceeded
This condition can also fail early and is then set to status value of "False"
due to reasons as ReplicaSetCreateError
.
Also, the deadline is not taken into account anymore once the Deployment rollout completes.
See the Kubernetes API conventions for more information on status conditions.
reason: ProgressDeadlineExceeded
. Higher level orchestrators can take advantage of it and act accordingly, for
example, rollback the Deployment to its previous version.
You may experience transient errors with your Deployments, either due to a low timeout that you have set or due to any other kind of error that can be treated as transient. For example, let's suppose you have insufficient quota. If you describe the Deployment you will notice the following section:
kubectl describe deployment nginx-deployment
The output is similar to this:
<...>
Conditions:
Type Status Reason
---- ------ ------
Available True MinimumReplicasAvailable
Progressing True ReplicaSetUpdated
ReplicaFailure True FailedCreate
<...>
If you run kubectl get deployment nginx-deployment -o yaml
, the Deployment status is similar to this:
status:
availableReplicas: 2
conditions:
- lastTransitionTime: 2016-10-04T12:25:39Z
lastUpdateTime: 2016-10-04T12:25:39Z
message: Replica set "nginx-deployment-4262182780" is progressing.
reason: ReplicaSetUpdated
status: "True"
type: Progressing
- lastTransitionTime: 2016-10-04T12:25:42Z
lastUpdateTime: 2016-10-04T12:25:42Z
message: Deployment has minimum availability.
reason: MinimumReplicasAvailable
status: "True"
type: Available
- lastTransitionTime: 2016-10-04T12:25:39Z
lastUpdateTime: 2016-10-04T12:25:39Z
message: 'Error creating: pods "nginx-deployment-4262182780-" is forbidden: exceeded quota:
object-counts, requested: pods=1, used: pods=3, limited: pods=2'
reason: FailedCreate
status: "True"
type: ReplicaFailure
observedGeneration: 3
replicas: 2
unavailableReplicas: 2
Eventually, once the Deployment progress deadline is exceeded, Kubernetes updates the status and the reason for the Progressing condition:
Conditions:
Type Status Reason
---- ------ ------
Available True MinimumReplicasAvailable
Progressing False ProgressDeadlineExceeded
ReplicaFailure True FailedCreate
You can address an issue of insufficient quota by scaling down your Deployment, by scaling down other
controllers you may be running, or by increasing quota in your namespace. If you satisfy the quota
conditions and the Deployment controller then completes the Deployment rollout, you'll see the
Deployment's status update with a successful condition (status: "True"
and reason: NewReplicaSetAvailable
).
Conditions:
Type Status Reason
---- ------ ------
Available True MinimumReplicasAvailable
Progressing True NewReplicaSetAvailable
type: Available
with status: "True"
means that your Deployment has minimum availability. Minimum availability is dictated
by the parameters specified in the deployment strategy. type: Progressing
with status: "True"
means that your Deployment
is either in the middle of a rollout and it is progressing or that it has successfully completed its progress and the minimum
required new replicas are available (see the Reason of the condition for the particulars - in our case
reason: NewReplicaSetAvailable
means that the Deployment is complete).
You can check if a Deployment has failed to progress by using kubectl rollout status
. kubectl rollout status
returns a non-zero exit code if the Deployment has exceeded the progression deadline.
kubectl rollout status deployment/nginx-deployment
The output is similar to this:
Waiting for rollout to finish: 2 out of 3 new replicas have been updated...
error: deployment "nginx" exceeded its progress deadline
and the exit status from kubectl rollout
is 1 (indicating an error):
echo $?
1
Operating on a failed deployment
All actions that apply to a complete Deployment also apply to a failed Deployment. You can scale it up/down, roll back to a previous revision, or even pause it if you need to apply multiple tweaks in the Deployment Pod template.
Clean up Policy
You can set .spec.revisionHistoryLimit
field in a Deployment to specify how many old ReplicaSets for
this Deployment you want to retain. The rest will be garbage-collected in the background. By default,
it is 10.
Canary Deployment
If you want to roll out releases to a subset of users or servers using the Deployment, you can create multiple Deployments, one for each release, following the canary pattern described in managing resources.
Writing a Deployment Spec
As with all other Kubernetes configs, a Deployment needs .apiVersion
, .kind
, and .metadata
fields.
For general information about working with config files, see
deploying applications,
configuring containers, and using kubectl to manage resources documents.
When the control plane creates new Pods for a Deployment, the .metadata.name
of the
Deployment is part of the basis for naming those Pods. The name of a Deployment must be a valid
DNS subdomain
value, but this can produce unexpected results for the Pod hostnames. For best compatibility,
the name should follow the more restrictive rules for a
DNS label.
A Deployment also needs a .spec
section.
Pod Template
The .spec.template
and .spec.selector
are the only required fields of the .spec
.
The .spec.template
is a Pod template. It has exactly the same schema as a Pod, except it is nested and does not have an apiVersion
or kind
.
In addition to required fields for a Pod, a Pod template in a Deployment must specify appropriate labels and an appropriate restart policy. For labels, make sure not to overlap with other controllers. See selector.
Only a .spec.template.spec.restartPolicy
equal to Always
is
allowed, which is the default if not specified.
Replicas
.spec.replicas
is an optional field that specifies the number of desired Pods. It defaults to 1.
Should you manually scale a Deployment, example via kubectl scale deployment deployment --replicas=X
, and then you update that Deployment based on a manifest
(for example: by running kubectl apply -f deployment.yaml
),
then applying that manifest overwrites the manual scaling that you previously did.
If a HorizontalPodAutoscaler (or any
similar API for horizontal scaling) is managing scaling for a Deployment, don't set .spec.replicas
.
Instead, allow the Kubernetes
control plane to manage the
.spec.replicas
field automatically.
Selector
.spec.selector
is a required field that specifies a label selector
for the Pods targeted by this Deployment.
.spec.selector
must match .spec.template.metadata.labels
, or it will be rejected by the API.
In API version apps/v1
, .spec.selector
and .metadata.labels
do not default to .spec.template.metadata.labels
if not set. So they must be set explicitly. Also note that .spec.selector
is immutable after creation of the Deployment in apps/v1
.
A Deployment may terminate Pods whose labels match the selector if their template is different
from .spec.template
or if the total number of such Pods exceeds .spec.replicas
. It brings up new
Pods with .spec.template
if the number of Pods is less than the desired number.
If you have multiple controllers that have overlapping selectors, the controllers will fight with each other and won't behave correctly.
Strategy
.spec.strategy
specifies the strategy used to replace old Pods by new ones.
.spec.strategy.type
can be "Recreate" or "RollingUpdate". "RollingUpdate" is
the default value.
Recreate Deployment
All existing Pods are killed before new ones are created when .spec.strategy.type==Recreate
.
Rolling Update Deployment
The Deployment updates Pods in a rolling update
fashion when .spec.strategy.type==RollingUpdate
. You can specify maxUnavailable
and maxSurge
to control
the rolling update process.
Max Unavailable
.spec.strategy.rollingUpdate.maxUnavailable
is an optional field that specifies the maximum number
of Pods that can be unavailable during the update process. The value can be an absolute number (for example, 5)
or a percentage of desired Pods (for example, 10%). The absolute number is calculated from percentage by
rounding down. The value cannot be 0 if .spec.strategy.rollingUpdate.maxSurge
is 0. The default value is 25%.
For example, when this value is set to 30%, the old ReplicaSet can be scaled down to 70% of desired Pods immediately when the rolling update starts. Once new Pods are ready, old ReplicaSet can be scaled down further, followed by scaling up the new ReplicaSet, ensuring that the total number of Pods available at all times during the update is at least 70% of the desired Pods.
Max Surge
.spec.strategy.rollingUpdate.maxSurge
is an optional field that specifies the maximum number of Pods
that can be created over the desired number of Pods. The value can be an absolute number (for example, 5) or a
percentage of desired Pods (for example, 10%). The value cannot be 0 if MaxUnavailable
is 0. The absolute number
is calculated from the percentage by rounding up. The default value is 25%.
For example, when this value is set to 30%, the new ReplicaSet can be scaled up immediately when the rolling update starts, such that the total number of old and new Pods does not exceed 130% of desired Pods. Once old Pods have been killed, the new ReplicaSet can be scaled up further, ensuring that the total number of Pods running at any time during the update is at most 130% of desired Pods.
Here are some Rolling Update Deployment examples that use the maxUnavailable
and maxSurge
:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: nginx-deployment
labels:
app: nginx
spec:
replicas: 3
selector:
matchLabels:
app: nginx
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: nginx
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx:1.14.2
ports:
- containerPort: 80
strategy:
type: RollingUpdate
rollingUpdate:
maxUnavailable: 1
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: nginx-deployment
labels:
app: nginx
spec:
replicas: 3
selector:
matchLabels:
app: nginx
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: nginx
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx:1.14.2
ports:
- containerPort: 80
strategy:
type: RollingUpdate
rollingUpdate:
maxSurge: 1
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: nginx-deployment
labels:
app: nginx
spec:
replicas: 3
selector:
matchLabels:
app: nginx
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: nginx
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx:1.14.2
ports:
- containerPort: 80
strategy:
type: RollingUpdate
rollingUpdate:
maxSurge: 1
maxUnavailable: 1
Progress Deadline Seconds
.spec.progressDeadlineSeconds
is an optional field that specifies the number of seconds you want
to wait for your Deployment to progress before the system reports back that the Deployment has
failed progressing - surfaced as a condition with type: Progressing
, status: "False"
.
and reason: ProgressDeadlineExceeded
in the status of the resource. The Deployment controller will keep
retrying the Deployment. This defaults to 600. In the future, once automatic rollback will be implemented, the Deployment
controller will roll back a Deployment as soon as it observes such a condition.
If specified, this field needs to be greater than .spec.minReadySeconds
.
Min Ready Seconds
.spec.minReadySeconds
is an optional field that specifies the minimum number of seconds for which a newly
created Pod should be ready without any of its containers crashing, for it to be considered available.
This defaults to 0 (the Pod will be considered available as soon as it is ready). To learn more about when
a Pod is considered ready, see Container Probes.
Revision History Limit
A Deployment's revision history is stored in the ReplicaSets it controls.
.spec.revisionHistoryLimit
is an optional field that specifies the number of old ReplicaSets to retain
to allow rollback. These old ReplicaSets consume resources in etcd
and crowd the output of kubectl get rs
. The configuration of each Deployment revision is stored in its ReplicaSets; therefore, once an old ReplicaSet is deleted, you lose the ability to rollback to that revision of Deployment. By default, 10 old ReplicaSets will be kept, however its ideal value depends on the frequency and stability of new Deployments.
More specifically, setting this field to zero means that all old ReplicaSets with 0 replicas will be cleaned up. In this case, a new Deployment rollout cannot be undone, since its revision history is cleaned up.
Paused
.spec.paused
is an optional boolean field for pausing and resuming a Deployment. The only difference between
a paused Deployment and one that is not paused, is that any changes into the PodTemplateSpec of the paused
Deployment will not trigger new rollouts as long as it is paused. A Deployment is not paused by default when
it is created.
What's next
- Learn more about Pods.
- Run a stateless application using a Deployment.
- Read the Deployment to understand the Deployment API.
- Read about PodDisruptionBudget and how you can use it to manage application availability during disruptions.
- Use kubectl to create a Deployment.
4.2.2 - ReplicaSet
A ReplicaSet's purpose is to maintain a stable set of replica Pods running at any given time. As such, it is often used to guarantee the availability of a specified number of identical Pods.
How a ReplicaSet works
A ReplicaSet is defined with fields, including a selector that specifies how to identify Pods it can acquire, a number of replicas indicating how many Pods it should be maintaining, and a pod template specifying the data of new Pods it should create to meet the number of replicas criteria. A ReplicaSet then fulfills its purpose by creating and deleting Pods as needed to reach the desired number. When a ReplicaSet needs to create new Pods, it uses its Pod template.
A ReplicaSet is linked to its Pods via the Pods' metadata.ownerReferences field, which specifies what resource the current object is owned by. All Pods acquired by a ReplicaSet have their owning ReplicaSet's identifying information within their ownerReferences field. It's through this link that the ReplicaSet knows of the state of the Pods it is maintaining and plans accordingly.
A ReplicaSet identifies new Pods to acquire by using its selector. If there is a Pod that has no OwnerReference or the OwnerReference is not a Controller and it matches a ReplicaSet's selector, it will be immediately acquired by said ReplicaSet.
When to use a ReplicaSet
A ReplicaSet ensures that a specified number of pod replicas are running at any given time. However, a Deployment is a higher-level concept that manages ReplicaSets and provides declarative updates to Pods along with a lot of other useful features. Therefore, we recommend using Deployments instead of directly using ReplicaSets, unless you require custom update orchestration or don't require updates at all.
This actually means that you may never need to manipulate ReplicaSet objects: use a Deployment instead, and define your application in the spec section.
Example
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: ReplicaSet
metadata:
name: frontend
labels:
app: guestbook
tier: frontend
spec:
# modify replicas according to your case
replicas: 3
selector:
matchLabels:
tier: frontend
template:
metadata:
labels:
tier: frontend
spec:
containers:
- name: php-redis
image: us-docker.pkg.dev/google-samples/containers/gke/gb-frontend:v5
Saving this manifest into frontend.yaml
and submitting it to a Kubernetes cluster will
create the defined ReplicaSet and the Pods that it manages.
kubectl apply -f https://kubernetes.io/examples/controllers/frontend.yaml
You can then get the current ReplicaSets deployed:
kubectl get rs
And see the frontend one you created:
NAME DESIRED CURRENT READY AGE
frontend 3 3 3 6s
You can also check on the state of the ReplicaSet:
kubectl describe rs/frontend
And you will see output similar to:
Name: frontend
Namespace: default
Selector: tier=frontend
Labels: app=guestbook
tier=frontend
Annotations: <none>
Replicas: 3 current / 3 desired
Pods Status: 3 Running / 0 Waiting / 0 Succeeded / 0 Failed
Pod Template:
Labels: tier=frontend
Containers:
php-redis:
Image: us-docker.pkg.dev/google-samples/containers/gke/gb-frontend:v5
Port: <none>
Host Port: <none>
Environment: <none>
Mounts: <none>
Volumes: <none>
Events:
Type Reason Age From Message
---- ------ ---- ---- -------
Normal SuccessfulCreate 13s replicaset-controller Created pod: frontend-gbgfx
Normal SuccessfulCreate 13s replicaset-controller Created pod: frontend-rwz57
Normal SuccessfulCreate 13s replicaset-controller Created pod: frontend-wkl7w
And lastly you can check for the Pods brought up:
kubectl get pods
You should see Pod information similar to:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
frontend-gbgfx 1/1 Running 0 10m
frontend-rwz57 1/1 Running 0 10m
frontend-wkl7w 1/1 Running 0 10m
You can also verify that the owner reference of these pods is set to the frontend ReplicaSet. To do this, get the yaml of one of the Pods running:
kubectl get pods frontend-gbgfx -o yaml
The output will look similar to this, with the frontend ReplicaSet's info set in the metadata's ownerReferences field:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
creationTimestamp: "2024-02-28T22:30:44Z"
generateName: frontend-
labels:
tier: frontend
name: frontend-gbgfx
namespace: default
ownerReferences:
- apiVersion: apps/v1
blockOwnerDeletion: true
controller: true
kind: ReplicaSet
name: frontend
uid: e129deca-f864-481b-bb16-b27abfd92292
...
Non-Template Pod acquisitions
While you can create bare Pods with no problems, it is strongly recommended to make sure that the bare Pods do not have labels which match the selector of one of your ReplicaSets. The reason for this is because a ReplicaSet is not limited to owning Pods specified by its template-- it can acquire other Pods in the manner specified in the previous sections.
Take the previous frontend ReplicaSet example, and the Pods specified in the following manifest:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: pod1
labels:
tier: frontend
spec:
containers:
- name: hello1
image: gcr.io/google-samples/hello-app:2.0
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: pod2
labels:
tier: frontend
spec:
containers:
- name: hello2
image: gcr.io/google-samples/hello-app:1.0
As those Pods do not have a Controller (or any object) as their owner reference and match the selector of the frontend ReplicaSet, they will immediately be acquired by it.
Suppose you create the Pods after the frontend ReplicaSet has been deployed and has set up its initial Pod replicas to fulfill its replica count requirement:
kubectl apply -f https://kubernetes.io/examples/pods/pod-rs.yaml
The new Pods will be acquired by the ReplicaSet, and then immediately terminated as the ReplicaSet would be over its desired count.
Fetching the Pods:
kubectl get pods
The output shows that the new Pods are either already terminated, or in the process of being terminated:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
frontend-b2zdv 1/1 Running 0 10m
frontend-vcmts 1/1 Running 0 10m
frontend-wtsmm 1/1 Running 0 10m
pod1 0/1 Terminating 0 1s
pod2 0/1 Terminating 0 1s
If you create the Pods first:
kubectl apply -f https://kubernetes.io/examples/pods/pod-rs.yaml
And then create the ReplicaSet however:
kubectl apply -f https://kubernetes.io/examples/controllers/frontend.yaml
You shall see that the ReplicaSet has acquired the Pods and has only created new ones according to its spec until the number of its new Pods and the original matches its desired count. As fetching the Pods:
kubectl get pods
Will reveal in its output:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
frontend-hmmj2 1/1 Running 0 9s
pod1 1/1 Running 0 36s
pod2 1/1 Running 0 36s
In this manner, a ReplicaSet can own a non-homogeneous set of Pods
Writing a ReplicaSet manifest
As with all other Kubernetes API objects, a ReplicaSet needs the apiVersion
, kind
, and metadata
fields.
For ReplicaSets, the kind
is always a ReplicaSet.
When the control plane creates new Pods for a ReplicaSet, the .metadata.name
of the
ReplicaSet is part of the basis for naming those Pods. The name of a ReplicaSet must be a valid
DNS subdomain
value, but this can produce unexpected results for the Pod hostnames. For best compatibility,
the name should follow the more restrictive rules for a
DNS label.
A ReplicaSet also needs a .spec
section.
Pod Template
The .spec.template
is a pod template which is also
required to have labels in place. In our frontend.yaml
example we had one label: tier: frontend
.
Be careful not to overlap with the selectors of other controllers, lest they try to adopt this Pod.
For the template's restart policy field,
.spec.template.spec.restartPolicy
, the only allowed value is Always
, which is the default.
Pod Selector
The .spec.selector
field is a label selector. As discussed
earlier these are the labels used to identify potential Pods to acquire. In our
frontend.yaml
example, the selector was:
matchLabels:
tier: frontend
In the ReplicaSet, .spec.template.metadata.labels
must match spec.selector
, or it will
be rejected by the API.
.spec.selector
but different
.spec.template.metadata.labels
and .spec.template.spec
fields, each ReplicaSet ignores the
Pods created by the other ReplicaSet.
Replicas
You can specify how many Pods should run concurrently by setting .spec.replicas
. The ReplicaSet will create/delete
its Pods to match this number.
If you do not specify .spec.replicas
, then it defaults to 1.
Working with ReplicaSets
Deleting a ReplicaSet and its Pods
To delete a ReplicaSet and all of its Pods, use
kubectl delete
. The
Garbage collector automatically deletes all of
the dependent Pods by default.
When using the REST API or the client-go
library, you must set propagationPolicy
to
Background
or Foreground
in the -d
option. For example:
kubectl proxy --port=8080
curl -X DELETE 'localhost:8080/apis/apps/v1/namespaces/default/replicasets/frontend' \
-d '{"kind":"DeleteOptions","apiVersion":"v1","propagationPolicy":"Foreground"}' \
-H "Content-Type: application/json"
Deleting just a ReplicaSet
You can delete a ReplicaSet without affecting any of its Pods using
kubectl delete
with the --cascade=orphan
option.
When using the REST API or the client-go
library, you must set propagationPolicy
to Orphan
.
For example:
kubectl proxy --port=8080
curl -X DELETE 'localhost:8080/apis/apps/v1/namespaces/default/replicasets/frontend' \
-d '{"kind":"DeleteOptions","apiVersion":"v1","propagationPolicy":"Orphan"}' \
-H "Content-Type: application/json"
Once the original is deleted, you can create a new ReplicaSet to replace it. As long
as the old and new .spec.selector
are the same, then the new one will adopt the old Pods.
However, it will not make any effort to make existing Pods match a new, different pod template.
To update Pods to a new spec in a controlled way, use a
Deployment, as
ReplicaSets do not support a rolling update directly.
Isolating Pods from a ReplicaSet
You can remove Pods from a ReplicaSet by changing their labels. This technique may be used to remove Pods from service for debugging, data recovery, etc. Pods that are removed in this way will be replaced automatically ( assuming that the number of replicas is not also changed).
Scaling a ReplicaSet
A ReplicaSet can be easily scaled up or down by simply updating the .spec.replicas
field. The ReplicaSet controller
ensures that a desired number of Pods with a matching label selector are available and operational.
When scaling down, the ReplicaSet controller chooses which pods to delete by sorting the available pods to prioritize scaling down pods based on the following general algorithm:
- Pending (and unschedulable) pods are scaled down first
- If
controller.kubernetes.io/pod-deletion-cost
annotation is set, then the pod with the lower value will come first. - Pods on nodes with more replicas come before pods on nodes with fewer replicas.
- If the pods' creation times differ, the pod that was created more recently
comes before the older pod (the creation times are bucketed on an integer log scale
when the
LogarithmicScaleDown
feature gate is enabled)
If all of the above match, then selection is random.
Pod deletion cost
Kubernetes v1.22 [beta]
Using the controller.kubernetes.io/pod-deletion-cost
annotation, users can set a preference regarding which pods to remove first when downscaling a ReplicaSet.
The annotation should be set on the pod, the range is [-2147483648, 2147483647]. It represents the cost of deleting a pod compared to other pods belonging to the same ReplicaSet. Pods with lower deletion cost are preferred to be deleted before pods with higher deletion cost.
The implicit value for this annotation for pods that don't set it is 0; negative values are permitted. Invalid values will be rejected by the API server.
This feature is beta and enabled by default. You can disable it using the
feature gate
PodDeletionCost
in both kube-apiserver and kube-controller-manager.
- This is honored on a best-effort basis, so it does not offer any guarantees on pod deletion order.
- Users should avoid updating the annotation frequently, such as updating it based on a metric value, because doing so will generate a significant number of pod updates on the apiserver.
Example Use Case
The different pods of an application could have different utilization levels. On scale down, the application
may prefer to remove the pods with lower utilization. To avoid frequently updating the pods, the application
should update controller.kubernetes.io/pod-deletion-cost
once before issuing a scale down (setting the
annotation to a value proportional to pod utilization level). This works if the application itself controls
the down scaling; for example, the driver pod of a Spark deployment.
ReplicaSet as a Horizontal Pod Autoscaler Target
A ReplicaSet can also be a target for Horizontal Pod Autoscalers (HPA). That is, a ReplicaSet can be auto-scaled by an HPA. Here is an example HPA targeting the ReplicaSet we created in the previous example.
apiVersion: autoscaling/v1
kind: HorizontalPodAutoscaler
metadata:
name: frontend-scaler
spec:
scaleTargetRef:
kind: ReplicaSet
name: frontend
minReplicas: 3
maxReplicas: 10
targetCPUUtilizationPercentage: 50
Saving this manifest into hpa-rs.yaml
and submitting it to a Kubernetes cluster should
create the defined HPA that autoscales the target ReplicaSet depending on the CPU usage
of the replicated Pods.
kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/controllers/hpa-rs.yaml
Alternatively, you can use the kubectl autoscale
command to accomplish the same
(and it's easier!)
kubectl autoscale rs frontend --max=10 --min=3 --cpu-percent=50
Alternatives to ReplicaSet
Deployment (recommended)
Deployment
is an object which can own ReplicaSets and update
them and their Pods via declarative, server-side rolling updates.
While ReplicaSets can be used independently, today they're mainly used by Deployments as a mechanism to orchestrate Pod
creation, deletion and updates. When you use Deployments you don't have to worry about managing the ReplicaSets that
they create. Deployments own and manage their ReplicaSets.
As such, it is recommended to use Deployments when you want ReplicaSets.
Bare Pods
Unlike the case where a user directly created Pods, a ReplicaSet replaces Pods that are deleted or terminated for any reason, such as in the case of node failure or disruptive node maintenance, such as a kernel upgrade. For this reason, we recommend that you use a ReplicaSet even if your application requires only a single Pod. Think of it similarly to a process supervisor, only it supervises multiple Pods across multiple nodes instead of individual processes on a single node. A ReplicaSet delegates local container restarts to some agent on the node such as Kubelet.
Job
Use a Job
instead of a ReplicaSet for Pods that are
expected to terminate on their own (that is, batch jobs).
DaemonSet
Use a DaemonSet
instead of a ReplicaSet for Pods that provide a
machine-level function, such as machine monitoring or machine logging. These Pods have a lifetime that is tied
to a machine lifetime: the Pod needs to be running on the machine before other Pods start, and are
safe to terminate when the machine is otherwise ready to be rebooted/shutdown.
ReplicationController
ReplicaSets are the successors to ReplicationControllers. The two serve the same purpose, and behave similarly, except that a ReplicationController does not support set-based selector requirements as described in the labels user guide. As such, ReplicaSets are preferred over ReplicationControllers
What's next
- Learn about Pods.
- Learn about Deployments.
- Run a Stateless Application Using a Deployment, which relies on ReplicaSets to work.
ReplicaSet
is a top-level resource in the Kubernetes REST API. Read the ReplicaSet object definition to understand the API for replica sets.- Read about PodDisruptionBudget and how you can use it to manage application availability during disruptions.
4.2.3 - StatefulSets
StatefulSet is the workload API object used to manage stateful applications.
Manages the deployment and scaling of a set of Pods, and provides guarantees about the ordering and uniqueness of these Pods.
Like a Deployment, a StatefulSet manages Pods that are based on an identical container spec. Unlike a Deployment, a StatefulSet maintains a sticky identity for each of its Pods. These pods are created from the same spec, but are not interchangeable: each has a persistent identifier that it maintains across any rescheduling.
If you want to use storage volumes to provide persistence for your workload, you can use a StatefulSet as part of the solution. Although individual Pods in a StatefulSet are susceptible to failure, the persistent Pod identifiers make it easier to match existing volumes to the new Pods that replace any that have failed.
Using StatefulSets
StatefulSets are valuable for applications that require one or more of the following.
- Stable, unique network identifiers.
- Stable, persistent storage.
- Ordered, graceful deployment and scaling.
- Ordered, automated rolling updates.
In the above, stable is synonymous with persistence across Pod (re)scheduling. If an application doesn't require any stable identifiers or ordered deployment, deletion, or scaling, you should deploy your application using a workload object that provides a set of stateless replicas. Deployment or ReplicaSet may be better suited to your stateless needs.
Limitations
- The storage for a given Pod must either be provisioned by a
PersistentVolume Provisioner
based on the requested
storage class
, or pre-provisioned by an admin. - Deleting and/or scaling a StatefulSet down will not delete the volumes associated with the StatefulSet. This is done to ensure data safety, which is generally more valuable than an automatic purge of all related StatefulSet resources.
- StatefulSets currently require a Headless Service to be responsible for the network identity of the Pods. You are responsible for creating this Service.
- StatefulSets do not provide any guarantees on the termination of pods when a StatefulSet is deleted. To achieve ordered and graceful termination of the pods in the StatefulSet, it is possible to scale the StatefulSet down to 0 prior to deletion.
- When using Rolling Updates with the default
Pod Management Policy (
OrderedReady
), it's possible to get into a broken state that requires manual intervention to repair.
Components
The example below demonstrates the components of a StatefulSet.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: nginx
labels:
app: nginx
spec:
ports:
- port: 80
name: web
clusterIP: None
selector:
app: nginx
---
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: StatefulSet
metadata:
name: web
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
app: nginx # has to match .spec.template.metadata.labels
serviceName: "nginx"
replicas: 3 # by default is 1
minReadySeconds: 10 # by default is 0
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: nginx # has to match .spec.selector.matchLabels
spec:
terminationGracePeriodSeconds: 10
containers:
- name: nginx
image: registry.k8s.io/nginx-slim:0.8
ports:
- containerPort: 80
name: web
volumeMounts:
- name: www
mountPath: /usr/share/nginx/html
volumeClaimTemplates:
- metadata:
name: www
spec:
accessModes: [ "ReadWriteOnce" ]
storageClassName: "my-storage-class"
resources:
requests:
storage: 1Gi
ReadWriteOnce
access mode, for simplicity. For
production use, the Kubernetes project recommends using the ReadWriteOncePod
access mode instead.
In the above example:
- A Headless Service, named
nginx
, is used to control the network domain. - The StatefulSet, named
web
, has a Spec that indicates that 3 replicas of the nginx container will be launched in unique Pods. - The
volumeClaimTemplates
will provide stable storage using PersistentVolumes provisioned by a PersistentVolume Provisioner.
The name of a StatefulSet object must be a valid DNS label.
Pod Selector
You must set the .spec.selector
field of a StatefulSet to match the labels of its
.spec.template.metadata.labels
. Failing to specify a matching Pod Selector will result in a
validation error during StatefulSet creation.
Volume Claim Templates
You can set the .spec.volumeClaimTemplates
which can provide stable storage using
PersistentVolumes provisioned by a PersistentVolume
Provisioner.
Minimum ready seconds
Kubernetes v1.25 [stable]
.spec.minReadySeconds
is an optional field that specifies the minimum number of seconds for which a newly
created Pod should be running and ready without any of its containers crashing, for it to be considered available.
This is used to check progression of a rollout when using a Rolling Update strategy.
This field defaults to 0 (the Pod will be considered available as soon as it is ready). To learn more about when
a Pod is considered ready, see Container Probes.
Pod Identity
StatefulSet Pods have a unique identity that consists of an ordinal, a stable network identity, and stable storage. The identity sticks to the Pod, regardless of which node it's (re)scheduled on.
Ordinal Index
For a StatefulSet with N replicas, each Pod in the StatefulSet
will be assigned an integer ordinal, that is unique over the Set. By default,
pods will be assigned ordinals from 0 up through N-1. The StatefulSet controller
will also add a pod label with this index: apps.kubernetes.io/pod-index
.
Start ordinal
Kubernetes v1.27 [beta]
.spec.ordinals
is an optional field that allows you to configure the integer
ordinals assigned to each Pod. It defaults to nil. You must enable the
StatefulSetStartOrdinal
feature gate to
use this field. Once enabled, you can configure the following options:
.spec.ordinals.start
: If the.spec.ordinals.start
field is set, Pods will be assigned ordinals from.spec.ordinals.start
up through.spec.ordinals.start + .spec.replicas - 1
.
Stable Network ID
Each Pod in a StatefulSet derives its hostname from the name of the StatefulSet
and the ordinal of the Pod. The pattern for the constructed hostname
is $(statefulset name)-$(ordinal)
. The example above will create three Pods
named web-0,web-1,web-2
.
A StatefulSet can use a Headless Service
to control the domain of its Pods. The domain managed by this Service takes the form:
$(service name).$(namespace).svc.cluster.local
, where "cluster.local" is the
cluster domain.
As each Pod is created, it gets a matching DNS subdomain, taking the form:
$(podname).$(governing service domain)
, where the governing service is defined
by the serviceName
field on the StatefulSet.
Depending on how DNS is configured in your cluster, you may not be able to look up the DNS name for a newly-run Pod immediately. This behavior can occur when other clients in the cluster have already sent queries for the hostname of the Pod before it was created. Negative caching (normal in DNS) means that the results of previous failed lookups are remembered and reused, even after the Pod is running, for at least a few seconds.
If you need to discover Pods promptly after they are created, you have a few options:
- Query the Kubernetes API directly (for example, using a watch) rather than relying on DNS lookups.
- Decrease the time of caching in your Kubernetes DNS provider (typically this means editing the config map for CoreDNS, which currently caches for 30 seconds).
As mentioned in the limitations section, you are responsible for creating the Headless Service responsible for the network identity of the pods.
Here are some examples of choices for Cluster Domain, Service name, StatefulSet name, and how that affects the DNS names for the StatefulSet's Pods.
Cluster Domain | Service (ns/name) | StatefulSet (ns/name) | StatefulSet Domain | Pod DNS | Pod Hostname |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
cluster.local | default/nginx | default/web | nginx.default.svc.cluster.local | web-{0..N-1}.nginx.default.svc.cluster.local | web-{0..N-1} |
cluster.local | foo/nginx | foo/web | nginx.foo.svc.cluster.local | web-{0..N-1}.nginx.foo.svc.cluster.local | web-{0..N-1} |
kube.local | foo/nginx | foo/web | nginx.foo.svc.kube.local | web-{0..N-1}.nginx.foo.svc.kube.local | web-{0..N-1} |
cluster.local
unless
otherwise configured.
Stable Storage
For each VolumeClaimTemplate entry defined in a StatefulSet, each Pod receives one
PersistentVolumeClaim. In the nginx example above, each Pod receives a single PersistentVolume
with a StorageClass of my-storage-class
and 1 GiB of provisioned storage. If no StorageClass
is specified, then the default StorageClass will be used. When a Pod is (re)scheduled
onto a node, its volumeMounts
mount the PersistentVolumes associated with its
PersistentVolume Claims. Note that, the PersistentVolumes associated with the
Pods' PersistentVolume Claims are not deleted when the Pods, or StatefulSet are deleted.
This must be done manually.
Pod Name Label
When the StatefulSet controller creates a Pod,
it adds a label, statefulset.kubernetes.io/pod-name
, that is set to the name of
the Pod. This label allows you to attach a Service to a specific Pod in
the StatefulSet.
Pod index label
Kubernetes v1.28 [beta]
When the StatefulSet controller creates a Pod,
the new Pod is labelled with apps.kubernetes.io/pod-index
. The value of this label is the ordinal index of
the Pod. This label allows you to route traffic to a particular pod index, filter logs/metrics
using the pod index label, and more. Note the feature gate PodIndexLabel
must be enabled for this
feature, and it is enabled by default.
Deployment and Scaling Guarantees
- For a StatefulSet with N replicas, when Pods are being deployed, they are created sequentially, in order from {0..N-1}.
- When Pods are being deleted, they are terminated in reverse order, from {N-1..0}.
- Before a scaling operation is applied to a Pod, all of its predecessors must be Running and Ready.
- Before a Pod is terminated, all of its successors must be completely shutdown.
The StatefulSet should not specify a pod.Spec.TerminationGracePeriodSeconds
of 0. This practice
is unsafe and strongly discouraged. For further explanation, please refer to
force deleting StatefulSet Pods.
When the nginx example above is created, three Pods will be deployed in the order web-0, web-1, web-2. web-1 will not be deployed before web-0 is Running and Ready, and web-2 will not be deployed until web-1 is Running and Ready. If web-0 should fail, after web-1 is Running and Ready, but before web-2 is launched, web-2 will not be launched until web-0 is successfully relaunched and becomes Running and Ready.
If a user were to scale the deployed example by patching the StatefulSet such that
replicas=1
, web-2 would be terminated first. web-1 would not be terminated until web-2
is fully shutdown and deleted. If web-0 were to fail after web-2 has been terminated and
is completely shutdown, but prior to web-1's termination, web-1 would not be terminated
until web-0 is Running and Ready.
Pod Management Policies
StatefulSet allows you to relax its ordering guarantees while
preserving its uniqueness and identity guarantees via its .spec.podManagementPolicy
field.
OrderedReady Pod Management
OrderedReady
pod management is the default for StatefulSets. It implements the behavior
described above.
Parallel Pod Management
Parallel
pod management tells the StatefulSet controller to launch or
terminate all Pods in parallel, and to not wait for Pods to become Running
and Ready or completely terminated prior to launching or terminating another
Pod. This option only affects the behavior for scaling operations. Updates are not
affected.
Update strategies
A StatefulSet's .spec.updateStrategy
field allows you to configure
and disable automated rolling updates for containers, labels, resource request/limits, and
annotations for the Pods in a StatefulSet. There are two possible values:
OnDelete
- When a StatefulSet's
.spec.updateStrategy.type
is set toOnDelete
, the StatefulSet controller will not automatically update the Pods in a StatefulSet. Users must manually delete Pods to cause the controller to create new Pods that reflect modifications made to a StatefulSet's.spec.template
. RollingUpdate
- The
RollingUpdate
update strategy implements automated, rolling updates for the Pods in a StatefulSet. This is the default update strategy.
Rolling Updates
When a StatefulSet's .spec.updateStrategy.type
is set to RollingUpdate
, the
StatefulSet controller will delete and recreate each Pod in the StatefulSet. It will proceed
in the same order as Pod termination (from the largest ordinal to the smallest), updating
each Pod one at a time.
The Kubernetes control plane waits until an updated Pod is Running and Ready prior
to updating its predecessor. If you have set .spec.minReadySeconds
(see
Minimum Ready Seconds), the control plane additionally waits that
amount of time after the Pod turns ready, before moving on.
Partitioned rolling updates
The RollingUpdate
update strategy can be partitioned, by specifying a
.spec.updateStrategy.rollingUpdate.partition
. If a partition is specified, all Pods with an
ordinal that is greater than or equal to the partition will be updated when the StatefulSet's
.spec.template
is updated. All Pods with an ordinal that is less than the partition will not
be updated, and, even if they are deleted, they will be recreated at the previous version. If a
StatefulSet's .spec.updateStrategy.rollingUpdate.partition
is greater than its .spec.replicas
,
updates to its .spec.template
will not be propagated to its Pods.
In most cases you will not need to use a partition, but they are useful if you want to stage an
update, roll out a canary, or perform a phased roll out.
Maximum unavailable Pods
Kubernetes v1.24 [alpha]
You can control the maximum number of Pods that can be unavailable during an update
by specifying the .spec.updateStrategy.rollingUpdate.maxUnavailable
field.
The value can be an absolute number (for example, 5
) or a percentage of desired
Pods (for example, 10%
). Absolute number is calculated from the percentage value
by rounding it up. This field cannot be 0. The default setting is 1.
This field applies to all Pods in the range 0
to replicas - 1
. If there is any
unavailable Pod in the range 0
to replicas - 1
, it will be counted towards
maxUnavailable
.
maxUnavailable
field is in Alpha stage and it is honored only by API servers
that are running with the MaxUnavailableStatefulSet
feature gate
enabled.
Forced rollback
When using Rolling Updates with the default
Pod Management Policy (OrderedReady
),
it's possible to get into a broken state that requires manual intervention to repair.
If you update the Pod template to a configuration that never becomes Running and Ready (for example, due to a bad binary or application-level configuration error), StatefulSet will stop the rollout and wait.
In this state, it's not enough to revert the Pod template to a good configuration. Due to a known issue, StatefulSet will continue to wait for the broken Pod to become Ready (which never happens) before it will attempt to revert it back to the working configuration.
After reverting the template, you must also delete any Pods that StatefulSet had already attempted to run with the bad configuration. StatefulSet will then begin to recreate the Pods using the reverted template.
PersistentVolumeClaim retention
Kubernetes v1.27 [beta]
The optional .spec.persistentVolumeClaimRetentionPolicy
field controls if
and how PVCs are deleted during the lifecycle of a StatefulSet. You must enable the
StatefulSetAutoDeletePVC
feature gate
on the API server and the controller manager to use this field.
Once enabled, there are two policies you can configure for each StatefulSet:
whenDeleted
- configures the volume retention behavior that applies when the StatefulSet is deleted
whenScaled
- configures the volume retention behavior that applies when the replica count of the StatefulSet is reduced; for example, when scaling down the set.
For each policy that you can configure, you can set the value to either Delete
or Retain
.
Delete
- The PVCs created from the StatefulSet
volumeClaimTemplate
are deleted for each Pod affected by the policy. With thewhenDeleted
policy all PVCs from thevolumeClaimTemplate
are deleted after their Pods have been deleted. With thewhenScaled
policy, only PVCs corresponding to Pod replicas being scaled down are deleted, after their Pods have been deleted. Retain
(default)- PVCs from the
volumeClaimTemplate
are not affected when their Pod is deleted. This is the behavior before this new feature.
Bear in mind that these policies only apply when Pods are being removed due to the StatefulSet being deleted or scaled down. For example, if a Pod associated with a StatefulSet fails due to node failure, and the control plane creates a replacement Pod, the StatefulSet retains the existing PVC. The existing volume is unaffected, and the cluster will attach it to the node where the new Pod is about to launch.
The default for policies is Retain
, matching the StatefulSet behavior before this new feature.
Here is an example policy.
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: StatefulSet
...
spec:
persistentVolumeClaimRetentionPolicy:
whenDeleted: Retain
whenScaled: Delete
...
The StatefulSet controller adds
owner references
to its PVCs, which are then deleted by the garbage collector after the Pod is terminated. This enables the Pod to
cleanly unmount all volumes before the PVCs are deleted (and before the backing PV and
volume are deleted, depending on the retain policy). When you set the whenDeleted
policy to Delete
, an owner reference to the StatefulSet instance is placed on all PVCs
associated with that StatefulSet.
The whenScaled
policy must delete PVCs only when a Pod is scaled down, and not when a
Pod is deleted for another reason. When reconciling, the StatefulSet controller compares
its desired replica count to the actual Pods present on the cluster. Any StatefulSet Pod
whose id greater than the replica count is condemned and marked for deletion. If the
whenScaled
policy is Delete
, the condemned Pods are first set as owners to the
associated StatefulSet template PVCs, before the Pod is deleted. This causes the PVCs
to be garbage collected after only the condemned Pods have terminated.
This means that if the controller crashes and restarts, no Pod will be deleted before its owner reference has been updated appropriate to the policy. If a condemned Pod is force-deleted while the controller is down, the owner reference may or may not have been set up, depending on when the controller crashed. It may take several reconcile loops to update the owner references, so some condemned Pods may have set up owner references and others may not. For this reason we recommend waiting for the controller to come back up, which will verify owner references before terminating Pods. If that is not possible, the operator should verify the owner references on PVCs to ensure the expected objects are deleted when Pods are force-deleted.
Replicas
.spec.replicas
is an optional field that specifies the number of desired Pods. It defaults to 1.
Should you manually scale a deployment, example via kubectl scale statefulset statefulset --replicas=X
, and then you update that StatefulSet
based on a manifest (for example: by running kubectl apply -f statefulset.yaml
), then applying that manifest overwrites the manual scaling
that you previously did.
If a HorizontalPodAutoscaler
(or any similar API for horizontal scaling) is managing scaling for a
Statefulset, don't set .spec.replicas
. Instead, allow the Kubernetes
control plane to manage
the .spec.replicas
field automatically.
What's next
- Learn about Pods.
- Find out how to use StatefulSets
- Follow an example of deploying a stateful application.
- Follow an example of deploying Cassandra with Stateful Sets.
- Follow an example of running a replicated stateful application.
- Learn how to scale a StatefulSet.
- Learn what's involved when you delete a StatefulSet.
- Learn how to configure a Pod to use a volume for storage.
- Learn how to configure a Pod to use a PersistentVolume for storage.
StatefulSet
is a top-level resource in the Kubernetes REST API. Read the StatefulSet object definition to understand the API for stateful sets.- Read about PodDisruptionBudget and how you can use it to manage application availability during disruptions.
4.2.4 - DaemonSet
A DaemonSet ensures that all (or some) Nodes run a copy of a Pod. As nodes are added to the cluster, Pods are added to them. As nodes are removed from the cluster, those Pods are garbage collected. Deleting a DaemonSet will clean up the Pods it created.
Some typical uses of a DaemonSet are:
- running a cluster storage daemon on every node
- running a logs collection daemon on every node
- running a node monitoring daemon on every node
In a simple case, one DaemonSet, covering all nodes, would be used for each type of daemon. A more complex setup might use multiple DaemonSets for a single type of daemon, but with different flags and/or different memory and cpu requests for different hardware types.
Writing a DaemonSet Spec
Create a DaemonSet
You can describe a DaemonSet in a YAML file. For example, the daemonset.yaml
file below
describes a DaemonSet that runs the fluentd-elasticsearch Docker image:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: DaemonSet
metadata:
name: fluentd-elasticsearch
namespace: kube-system
labels:
k8s-app: fluentd-logging
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
name: fluentd-elasticsearch
template:
metadata:
labels:
name: fluentd-elasticsearch
spec:
tolerations:
# these tolerations are to have the daemonset runnable on control plane nodes
# remove them if your control plane nodes should not run pods
- key: node-role.kubernetes.io/control-plane
operator: Exists
effect: NoSchedule
- key: node-role.kubernetes.io/master
operator: Exists
effect: NoSchedule
containers:
- name: fluentd-elasticsearch
image: quay.io/fluentd_elasticsearch/fluentd:v2.5.2
resources:
limits:
memory: 200Mi
requests:
cpu: 100m
memory: 200Mi
volumeMounts:
- name: varlog
mountPath: /var/log
# it may be desirable to set a high priority class to ensure that a DaemonSet Pod
# preempts running Pods
# priorityClassName: important
terminationGracePeriodSeconds: 30
volumes:
- name: varlog
hostPath:
path: /var/log
Create a DaemonSet based on the YAML file:
kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/controllers/daemonset.yaml
Required Fields
As with all other Kubernetes config, a DaemonSet needs apiVersion
, kind
, and metadata
fields. For
general information about working with config files, see
running stateless applications
and object management using kubectl.
The name of a DaemonSet object must be a valid DNS subdomain name.
A DaemonSet also needs a
.spec
section.
Pod Template
The .spec.template
is one of the required fields in .spec
.
The .spec.template
is a pod template.
It has exactly the same schema as a Pod,
except it is nested and does not have an apiVersion
or kind
.
In addition to required fields for a Pod, a Pod template in a DaemonSet has to specify appropriate labels (see pod selector).
A Pod Template in a DaemonSet must have a RestartPolicy
equal to Always
, or be unspecified, which defaults to Always
.
Pod Selector
The .spec.selector
field is a pod selector. It works the same as the .spec.selector
of
a Job.
You must specify a pod selector that matches the labels of the
.spec.template
.
Also, once a DaemonSet is created,
its .spec.selector
can not be mutated. Mutating the pod selector can lead to the
unintentional orphaning of Pods, and it was found to be confusing to users.
The .spec.selector
is an object consisting of two fields:
matchLabels
- works the same as the.spec.selector
of a ReplicationController.matchExpressions
- allows to build more sophisticated selectors by specifying key, list of values and an operator that relates the key and values.
When the two are specified the result is ANDed.
The .spec.selector
must match the .spec.template.metadata.labels
.
Config with these two not matching will be rejected by the API.
Running Pods on select Nodes
If you specify a .spec.template.spec.nodeSelector
, then the DaemonSet controller will
create Pods on nodes which match that node selector.
Likewise if you specify a .spec.template.spec.affinity
,
then DaemonSet controller will create Pods on nodes which match that
node affinity.
If you do not specify either, then the DaemonSet controller will create Pods on all nodes.
How Daemon Pods are scheduled
A DaemonSet can be used to ensure that all eligible nodes run a copy of a Pod.
The DaemonSet controller creates a Pod for each eligible node and adds the
spec.affinity.nodeAffinity
field of the Pod to match the target host. After
the Pod is created, the default scheduler typically takes over and then binds
the Pod to the target host by setting the .spec.nodeName
field. If the new
Pod cannot fit on the node, the default scheduler may preempt (evict) some of
the existing Pods based on the
priority
of the new Pod.
.spec.template.spec.priorityClassName
of the DaemonSet to a
PriorityClass
with a higher priority to ensure that this eviction occurs.
The user can specify a different scheduler for the Pods of the DaemonSet, by
setting the .spec.template.spec.schedulerName
field of the DaemonSet.
The original node affinity specified at the
.spec.template.spec.affinity.nodeAffinity
field (if specified) is taken into
consideration by the DaemonSet controller when evaluating the eligible nodes,
but is replaced on the created Pod with the node affinity that matches the name
of the eligible node.
nodeAffinity:
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
nodeSelectorTerms:
- matchFields:
- key: metadata.name
operator: In
values:
- target-host-name
Taints and tolerations
The DaemonSet controller automatically adds a set of tolerations to DaemonSet Pods:
Toleration key | Effect | Details |
---|---|---|
node.kubernetes.io/not-ready |
NoExecute |
DaemonSet Pods can be scheduled onto nodes that are not healthy or ready to accept Pods. Any DaemonSet Pods running on such nodes will not be evicted. |
node.kubernetes.io/unreachable |
NoExecute |
DaemonSet Pods can be scheduled onto nodes that are unreachable from the node controller. Any DaemonSet Pods running on such nodes will not be evicted. |
node.kubernetes.io/disk-pressure |
NoSchedule |
DaemonSet Pods can be scheduled onto nodes with disk pressure issues. |
node.kubernetes.io/memory-pressure |
NoSchedule |
DaemonSet Pods can be scheduled onto nodes with memory pressure issues. |
node.kubernetes.io/pid-pressure |
NoSchedule |
DaemonSet Pods can be scheduled onto nodes with process pressure issues. |
node.kubernetes.io/unschedulable |
NoSchedule |
DaemonSet Pods can be scheduled onto nodes that are unschedulable. |
node.kubernetes.io/network-unavailable |
NoSchedule |
Only added for DaemonSet Pods that request host networking, i.e., Pods having spec.hostNetwork: true . Such DaemonSet Pods can be scheduled onto nodes with unavailable network. |
You can add your own tolerations to the Pods of a DaemonSet as well, by defining these in the Pod template of the DaemonSet.
Because the DaemonSet controller sets the
node.kubernetes.io/unschedulable:NoSchedule
toleration automatically,
Kubernetes can run DaemonSet Pods on nodes that are marked as unschedulable.
If you use a DaemonSet to provide an important node-level function, such as cluster networking, it is helpful that Kubernetes places DaemonSet Pods on nodes before they are ready. For example, without that special toleration, you could end up in a deadlock situation where the node is not marked as ready because the network plugin is not running there, and at the same time the network plugin is not running on that node because the node is not yet ready.
Communicating with Daemon Pods
Some possible patterns for communicating with Pods in a DaemonSet are:
- Push: Pods in the DaemonSet are configured to send updates to another service, such as a stats database. They do not have clients.
- NodeIP and Known Port: Pods in the DaemonSet can use a
hostPort
, so that the pods are reachable via the node IPs. Clients know the list of node IPs somehow, and know the port by convention. - DNS: Create a headless service
with the same pod selector, and then discover DaemonSets using the
endpoints
resource or retrieve multiple A records from DNS. - Service: Create a service with the same Pod selector, and use the service to reach a daemon on a random node. (No way to reach specific node.)
Updating a DaemonSet
If node labels are changed, the DaemonSet will promptly add Pods to newly matching nodes and delete Pods from newly not-matching nodes.
You can modify the Pods that a DaemonSet creates. However, Pods do not allow all fields to be updated. Also, the DaemonSet controller will use the original template the next time a node (even with the same name) is created.
You can delete a DaemonSet. If you specify --cascade=orphan
with kubectl
, then the Pods
will be left on the nodes. If you subsequently create a new DaemonSet with the same selector,
the new DaemonSet adopts the existing Pods. If any Pods need replacing the DaemonSet replaces
them according to its updateStrategy
.
You can perform a rolling update on a DaemonSet.
Alternatives to DaemonSet
Init scripts
It is certainly possible to run daemon processes by directly starting them on a node (e.g. using
init
, upstartd
, or systemd
). This is perfectly fine. However, there are several advantages to
running such processes via a DaemonSet:
- Ability to monitor and manage logs for daemons in the same way as applications.
- Same config language and tools (e.g. Pod templates,
kubectl
) for daemons and applications. - Running daemons in containers with resource limits increases isolation between daemons from app containers. However, this can also be accomplished by running the daemons in a container but not in a Pod.
Bare Pods
It is possible to create Pods directly which specify a particular node to run on. However, a DaemonSet replaces Pods that are deleted or terminated for any reason, such as in the case of node failure or disruptive node maintenance, such as a kernel upgrade. For this reason, you should use a DaemonSet rather than creating individual Pods.
Static Pods
It is possible to create Pods by writing a file to a certain directory watched by Kubelet. These are called static pods. Unlike DaemonSet, static Pods cannot be managed with kubectl or other Kubernetes API clients. Static Pods do not depend on the apiserver, making them useful in cluster bootstrapping cases. Also, static Pods may be deprecated in the future.
Deployments
DaemonSets are similar to Deployments in that they both create Pods, and those Pods have processes which are not expected to terminate (e.g. web servers, storage servers).
Use a Deployment for stateless services, like frontends, where scaling up and down the number of replicas and rolling out updates are more important than controlling exactly which host the Pod runs on. Use a DaemonSet when it is important that a copy of a Pod always run on all or certain hosts, if the DaemonSet provides node-level functionality that allows other Pods to run correctly on that particular node.
For example, network plugins often include a component that runs as a DaemonSet. The DaemonSet component makes sure that the node where it's running has working cluster networking.
What's next
- Learn about Pods.
- Learn about static Pods, which are useful for running Kubernetes control plane components.
- Find out how to use DaemonSets
- Perform a rolling update on a DaemonSet
- Perform a rollback on a DaemonSet (for example, if a roll out didn't work how you expected).
- Understand how Kubernetes assigns Pods to Nodes.
- Learn about device plugins and add ons, which often run as DaemonSets.
DaemonSet
is a top-level resource in the Kubernetes REST API. Read the DaemonSet object definition to understand the API for daemon sets.
4.2.5 - Jobs
A Job creates one or more Pods and will continue to retry execution of the Pods until a specified number of them successfully terminate. As pods successfully complete, the Job tracks the successful completions. When a specified number of successful completions is reached, the task (ie, Job) is complete. Deleting a Job will clean up the Pods it created. Suspending a Job will delete its active Pods until the Job is resumed again.
A simple case is to create one Job object in order to reliably run one Pod to completion. The Job object will start a new Pod if the first Pod fails or is deleted (for example due to a node hardware failure or a node reboot).
You can also use a Job to run multiple Pods in parallel.
If you want to run a Job (either a single task, or several in parallel) on a schedule, see CronJob.
Running an example Job
Here is an example Job config. It computes π to 2000 places and prints it out. It takes around 10s to complete.
apiVersion: batch/v1
kind: Job
metadata:
name: pi
spec:
template:
spec:
containers:
- name: pi
image: perl:5.34.0
command: ["perl", "-Mbignum=bpi", "-wle", "print bpi(2000)"]
restartPolicy: Never
backoffLimit: 4
You can run the example with this command:
kubectl apply -f https://kubernetes.io/examples/controllers/job.yaml
The output is similar to this:
job.batch/pi created
Check on the status of the Job with kubectl
:
Name: pi
Namespace: default
Selector: batch.kubernetes.io/controller-uid=c9948307-e56d-4b5d-8302-ae2d7b7da67c
Labels: batch.kubernetes.io/controller-uid=c9948307-e56d-4b5d-8302-ae2d7b7da67c
batch.kubernetes.io/job-name=pi
...
Annotations: batch.kubernetes.io/job-tracking: ""
Parallelism: 1
Completions: 1
Start Time: Mon, 02 Dec 2019 15:20:11 +0200
Completed At: Mon, 02 Dec 2019 15:21:16 +0200
Duration: 65s
Pods Statuses: 0 Running / 1 Succeeded / 0 Failed
Pod Template:
Labels: batch.kubernetes.io/controller-uid=c9948307-e56d-4b5d-8302-ae2d7b7da67c
batch.kubernetes.io/job-name=pi
Containers:
pi:
Image: perl:5.34.0
Port: <none>
Host Port: <none>
Command:
perl
-Mbignum=bpi
-wle
print bpi(2000)
Environment: <none>
Mounts: <none>
Volumes: <none>
Events:
Type Reason Age From Message
---- ------ ---- ---- -------
Normal SuccessfulCreate 21s job-controller Created pod: pi-xf9p4
Normal Completed 18s job-controller Job completed
apiVersion: batch/v1
kind: Job
metadata:
annotations: batch.kubernetes.io/job-tracking: ""
...
creationTimestamp: "2022-11-10T17:53:53Z"
generation: 1
labels:
batch.kubernetes.io/controller-uid: 863452e6-270d-420e-9b94-53a54146c223
batch.kubernetes.io/job-name: pi
name: pi
namespace: default
resourceVersion: "4751"
uid: 204fb678-040b-497f-9266-35ffa8716d14
spec:
backoffLimit: 4
completionMode: NonIndexed
completions: 1
parallelism: 1
selector:
matchLabels:
batch.kubernetes.io/controller-uid: 863452e6-270d-420e-9b94-53a54146c223
suspend: false
template:
metadata:
creationTimestamp: null
labels:
batch.kubernetes.io/controller-uid: 863452e6-270d-420e-9b94-53a54146c223
batch.kubernetes.io/job-name: pi
spec:
containers:
- command:
- perl
- -Mbignum=bpi
- -wle
- print bpi(2000)
image: perl:5.34.0
imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
name: pi
resources: {}
terminationMessagePath: /dev/termination-log
terminationMessagePolicy: File
dnsPolicy: ClusterFirst
restartPolicy: Never
schedulerName: default-scheduler
securityContext: {}
terminationGracePeriodSeconds: 30
status:
active: 1
ready: 0
startTime: "2022-11-10T17:53:57Z"
uncountedTerminatedPods: {}
To view completed Pods of a Job, use kubectl get pods
.
To list all the Pods that belong to a Job in a machine readable form, you can use a command like this:
pods=$(kubectl get pods --selector=batch.kubernetes.io/job-name=pi --output=jsonpath='{.items[*].metadata.name}')
echo $pods
The output is similar to this:
pi-5rwd7
Here, the selector is the same as the selector for the Job. The --output=jsonpath
option specifies an expression
with the name from each Pod in the returned list.
View the standard output of one of the pods:
kubectl logs $pods
Another way to view the logs of a Job:
kubectl logs jobs/pi
The output is similar to this:
3.1415926535897932384626433832795028841971693993751058209749445923078164062862089986280348253421170679821480865132823066470938446095505822317253594081284811174502841027019385211055596446229489549303819644288109756659334461284756482337867831652712019091456485669234603486104543266482133936072602491412737245870066063155881748815209209628292540917153643678925903600113305305488204665213841469519415116094330572703657595919530921861173819326117931051185480744623799627495673518857527248912279381830119491298336733624406566430860213949463952247371907021798609437027705392171762931767523846748184676694051320005681271452635608277857713427577896091736371787214684409012249534301465495853710507922796892589235420199561121290219608640344181598136297747713099605187072113499999983729780499510597317328160963185950244594553469083026425223082533446850352619311881710100031378387528865875332083814206171776691473035982534904287554687311595628638823537875937519577818577805321712268066130019278766111959092164201989380952572010654858632788659361533818279682303019520353018529689957736225994138912497217752834791315155748572424541506959508295331168617278558890750983817546374649393192550604009277016711390098488240128583616035637076601047101819429555961989467678374494482553797747268471040475346462080466842590694912933136770289891521047521620569660240580381501935112533824300355876402474964732639141992726042699227967823547816360093417216412199245863150302861829745557067498385054945885869269956909272107975093029553211653449872027559602364806654991198818347977535663698074265425278625518184175746728909777727938000816470600161452491921732172147723501414419735685481613611573525521334757418494684385233239073941433345477624168625189835694855620992192221842725502542568876717904946016534668049886272327917860857843838279679766814541009538837863609506800642251252051173929848960841284886269456042419652850222106611863067442786220391949450471237137869609563643719172874677646575739624138908658326459958133904780275901
Writing a Job spec
As with all other Kubernetes config, a Job needs apiVersion
, kind
, and metadata
fields.
When the control plane creates new Pods for a Job, the .metadata.name
of the
Job is part of the basis for naming those Pods. The name of a Job must be a valid
DNS subdomain
value, but this can produce unexpected results for the Pod hostnames. For best compatibility,
the name should follow the more restrictive rules for a
DNS label.
Even when the name is a DNS subdomain, the name must be no longer than 63
characters.
A Job also needs a .spec
section.
Job Labels
Job labels will have batch.kubernetes.io/
prefix for job-name
and controller-uid
.
Pod Template
The .spec.template
is the only required field of the .spec
.
The .spec.template
is a pod template.
It has exactly the same schema as a Pod,
except it is nested and does not have an apiVersion
or kind
.
In addition to required fields for a Pod, a pod template in a Job must specify appropriate labels (see pod selector) and an appropriate restart policy.
Only a RestartPolicy
equal to Never
or OnFailure
is allowed.
Pod selector
The .spec.selector
field is optional. In almost all cases you should not specify it.
See section specifying your own pod selector.
Parallel execution for Jobs
There are three main types of task suitable to run as a Job:
- Non-parallel Jobs
- normally, only one Pod is started, unless the Pod fails.
- the Job is complete as soon as its Pod terminates successfully.
- Parallel Jobs with a fixed completion count:
- specify a non-zero positive value for
.spec.completions
. - the Job represents the overall task, and is complete when there are
.spec.completions
successful Pods. - when using
.spec.completionMode="Indexed"
, each Pod gets a different index in the range 0 to.spec.completions-1
.
- specify a non-zero positive value for
- Parallel Jobs with a work queue:
- do not specify
.spec.completions
, default to.spec.parallelism
. - the Pods must coordinate amongst themselves or an external service to determine what each should work on. For example, a Pod might fetch a batch of up to N items from the work queue.
- each Pod is independently capable of determining whether or not all its peers are done, and thus that the entire Job is done.
- when any Pod from the Job terminates with success, no new Pods are created.
- once at least one Pod has terminated with success and all Pods are terminated, then the Job is completed with success.
- once any Pod has exited with success, no other Pod should still be doing any work for this task or writing any output. They should all be in the process of exiting.
- do not specify
For a non-parallel Job, you can leave both .spec.completions
and .spec.parallelism
unset.
When both are unset, both are defaulted to 1.
For a fixed completion count Job, you should set .spec.completions
to the number of completions needed.
You can set .spec.parallelism
, or leave it unset and it will default to 1.
For a work queue Job, you must leave .spec.completions
unset, and set .spec.parallelism
to
a non-negative integer.
For more information about how to make use of the different types of job, see the job patterns section.
Controlling parallelism
The requested parallelism (.spec.parallelism
) can be set to any non-negative value.
If it is unspecified, it defaults to 1.
If it is specified as 0, then the Job is effectively paused until it is increased.
Actual parallelism (number of pods running at any instant) may be more or less than requested parallelism, for a variety of reasons:
- For fixed completion count Jobs, the actual number of pods running in parallel will not exceed the number of
remaining completions. Higher values of
.spec.parallelism
are effectively ignored. - For work queue Jobs, no new Pods are started after any Pod has succeeded -- remaining Pods are allowed to complete, however.
- If the Job Controller has not had time to react.
- If the Job controller failed to create Pods for any reason (lack of
ResourceQuota
, lack of permission, etc.), then there may be fewer pods than requested. - The Job controller may throttle new Pod creation due to excessive previous pod failures in the same Job.
- When a Pod is gracefully shut down, it takes time to stop.
Completion mode
Kubernetes v1.24 [stable]
Jobs with fixed completion count - that is, jobs that have non null
.spec.completions
- can have a completion mode that is specified in .spec.completionMode
:
-
NonIndexed
(default): the Job is considered complete when there have been.spec.completions
successfully completed Pods. In other words, each Pod completion is homologous to each other. Note that Jobs that have null.spec.completions
are implicitlyNonIndexed
. -
Indexed
: the Pods of a Job get an associated completion index from 0 to.spec.completions-1
. The index is available through four mechanisms:- The Pod annotation
batch.kubernetes.io/job-completion-index
. - The Pod label
batch.kubernetes.io/job-completion-index
(for v1.28 and later). Note the feature gatePodIndexLabel
must be enabled to use this label, and it is enabled by default. - As part of the Pod hostname, following the pattern
$(job-name)-$(index)
. When you use an Indexed Job in combination with a Service, Pods within the Job can use the deterministic hostnames to address each other via DNS. For more information about how to configure this, see Job with Pod-to-Pod Communication. - From the containerized task, in the environment variable
JOB_COMPLETION_INDEX
.
The Job is considered complete when there is one successfully completed Pod for each index. For more information about how to use this mode, see Indexed Job for Parallel Processing with Static Work Assignment.
- The Pod annotation
Handling Pod and container failures
A container in a Pod may fail for a number of reasons, such as because the process in it exited with
a non-zero exit code, or the container was killed for exceeding a memory limit, etc. If this
happens, and the .spec.template.spec.restartPolicy = "OnFailure"
, then the Pod stays
on the node, but the container is re-run. Therefore, your program needs to handle the case when it is
restarted locally, or else specify .spec.template.spec.restartPolicy = "Never"
.
See pod lifecycle for more information on restartPolicy
.
An entire Pod can also fail, for a number of reasons, such as when the pod is kicked off the node
(node is upgraded, rebooted, deleted, etc.), or if a container of the Pod fails and the
.spec.template.spec.restartPolicy = "Never"
. When a Pod fails, then the Job controller
starts a new Pod. This means that your application needs to handle the case when it is restarted in a new
pod. In particular, it needs to handle temporary files, locks, incomplete output and the like
caused by previous runs.
By default, each pod failure is counted towards the .spec.backoffLimit
limit,
see pod backoff failure policy. However, you can
customize handling of pod failures by setting the Job's pod failure policy.
Additionally, you can choose to count the pod failures independently for each
index of an Indexed Job by setting the .spec.backoffLimitPerIndex
field
(for more information, see backoff limit per index).
Note that even if you specify .spec.parallelism = 1
and .spec.completions = 1
and
.spec.template.spec.restartPolicy = "Never"
, the same program may
sometimes be started twice.
If you do specify .spec.parallelism
and .spec.completions
both greater than 1, then there may be
multiple pods running at once. Therefore, your pods must also be tolerant of concurrency.
When the feature gates
PodDisruptionConditions
and JobPodFailurePolicy
are both enabled,
and the .spec.podFailurePolicy
field is set, the Job controller does not consider a terminating
Pod (a pod that has a .metadata.deletionTimestamp
field set) as a failure until that Pod is
terminal (its .status.phase
is Failed
or Succeeded
). However, the Job controller
creates a replacement Pod as soon as the termination becomes apparent. Once the
pod terminates, the Job controller evaluates .backoffLimit
and .podFailurePolicy
for the relevant Job, taking this now-terminated Pod into consideration.
If either of these requirements is not satisfied, the Job controller counts
a terminating Pod as an immediate failure, even if that Pod later terminates
with phase: "Succeeded"
.
Pod backoff failure policy
There are situations where you want to fail a Job after some amount of retries
due to a logical error in configuration etc.
To do so, set .spec.backoffLimit
to specify the number of retries before
considering a Job as failed. The back-off limit is set by default to 6. Failed
Pods associated with the Job are recreated by the Job controller with an
exponential back-off delay (10s, 20s, 40s ...) capped at six minutes.
The number of retries is calculated in two ways:
- The number of Pods with
.status.phase = "Failed"
. - When using
restartPolicy = "OnFailure"
, the number of retries in all the containers of Pods with.status.phase
equal toPending
orRunning
.
If either of the calculations reaches the .spec.backoffLimit
, the Job is
considered failed.
restartPolicy = "OnFailure"
, keep in mind that your Pod running the Job
will be terminated once the job backoff limit has been reached. This can make debugging
the Job's executable more difficult. We suggest setting
restartPolicy = "Never"
when debugging the Job or using a logging system to ensure output
from failed Jobs is not lost inadvertently.
Backoff limit per index
Kubernetes v1.29 [beta]
JobBackoffLimitPerIndex
feature gate
enabled in your cluster.
When you run an indexed Job, you can choose to handle retries
for pod failures independently for each index. To do so, set the
.spec.backoffLimitPerIndex
to specify the maximal number of pod failures
per index.
When the per-index backoff limit is exceeded for an index, Kubernetes considers the index as failed and adds it to the
.status.failedIndexes
field. The succeeded indexes, those with a successfully
executed pods, are recorded in the .status.completedIndexes
field, regardless of whether you set
the backoffLimitPerIndex
field.
Note that a failing index does not interrupt execution of other indexes. Once all indexes finish for a Job where you specified a backoff limit per index, if at least one of those indexes did fail, the Job controller marks the overall Job as failed, by setting the Failed condition in the status. The Job gets marked as failed even if some, potentially nearly all, of the indexes were processed successfully.
You can additionally limit the maximal number of indexes marked failed by
setting the .spec.maxFailedIndexes
field.
When the number of failed indexes exceeds the maxFailedIndexes
field, the
Job controller triggers termination of all remaining running Pods for that Job.
Once all pods are terminated, the entire Job is marked failed by the Job
controller, by setting the Failed condition in the Job status.
Here is an example manifest for a Job that defines a backoffLimitPerIndex
:
apiVersion: batch/v1
kind: Job
metadata:
name: job-backoff-limit-per-index-example
spec:
completions: 10
parallelism: 3
completionMode: Indexed # required for the feature
backoffLimitPerIndex: 1 # maximal number of failures per index
maxFailedIndexes: 5 # maximal number of failed indexes before terminating the Job execution
template:
spec:
restartPolicy: Never # required for the feature
containers:
- name: example
image: python
command: # The jobs fails as there is at least one failed index
# (all even indexes fail in here), yet all indexes
# are executed as maxFailedIndexes is not exceeded.
- python3
- -c
- |
import os, sys
print("Hello world")
if int(os.environ.get("JOB_COMPLETION_INDEX")) % 2 == 0:
sys.exit(1)
In the example above, the Job controller allows for one restart for each of the indexes. When the total number of failed indexes exceeds 5, then the entire Job is terminated.
Once the job is finished, the Job status looks as follows:
kubectl get -o yaml job job-backoff-limit-per-index-example
status:
completedIndexes: 1,3,5,7,9
failedIndexes: 0,2,4,6,8
succeeded: 5 # 1 succeeded pod for each of 5 succeeded indexes
failed: 10 # 2 failed pods (1 retry) for each of 5 failed indexes
conditions:
- message: Job has failed indexes
reason: FailedIndexes
status: "True"
type: Failed
Additionally, you may want to use the per-index backoff along with a
pod failure policy. When using
per-index backoff, there is a new FailIndex
action available which allows you to
avoid unnecessary retries within an index.
Pod failure policy
Kubernetes v1.26 [beta]
JobPodFailurePolicy
feature gate
enabled in your cluster. Additionally, it is recommended
to enable the PodDisruptionConditions
feature gate in order to be able to detect and handle
Pod disruption conditions in the Pod failure policy (see also:
Pod disruption conditions).
Both feature gates are available in Kubernetes 1.29.
A Pod failure policy, defined with the .spec.podFailurePolicy
field, enables
your cluster to handle Pod failures based on the container exit codes and the
Pod conditions.
In some situations, you may want to have a better control when handling Pod
failures than the control provided by the Pod backoff failure policy,
which is based on the Job's .spec.backoffLimit
. These are some examples of use cases:
- To optimize costs of running workloads by avoiding unnecessary Pod restarts, you can terminate a Job as soon as one of its Pods fails with an exit code indicating a software bug.
- To guarantee that your Job finishes even if there are disruptions, you can
ignore Pod failures caused by disruptions (such as preemption,
API-initiated eviction
or taint-based eviction) so
that they don't count towards the
.spec.backoffLimit
limit of retries.
You can configure a Pod failure policy, in the .spec.podFailurePolicy
field,
to meet the above use cases. This policy can handle Pod failures based on the
container exit codes and the Pod conditions.
Here is a manifest for a Job that defines a podFailurePolicy
:
apiVersion: batch/v1
kind: Job
metadata:
name: job-pod-failure-policy-example
spec:
completions: 12
parallelism: 3
template:
spec:
restartPolicy: Never
containers:
- name: main
image: docker.io/library/bash:5
command: ["bash"] # example command simulating a bug which triggers the FailJob action
args:
- -c
- echo "Hello world!" && sleep 5 && exit 42
backoffLimit: 6
podFailurePolicy:
rules:
- action: FailJob
onExitCodes:
containerName: main # optional
operator: In # one of: In, NotIn
values: [42]
- action: Ignore # one of: Ignore, FailJob, Count
onPodConditions:
- type: DisruptionTarget # indicates Pod disruption
In the example above, the first rule of the Pod failure policy specifies that
the Job should be marked failed if the main
container fails with the 42 exit
code. The following are the rules for the main
container specifically:
- an exit code of 0 means that the container succeeded
- an exit code of 42 means that the entire Job failed
- any other exit code represents that the container failed, and hence the entire
Pod. The Pod will be re-created if the total number of restarts is
below
backoffLimit
. If thebackoffLimit
is reached the entire Job failed.
restartPolicy: Never
,
the kubelet does not restart the main
container in that particular Pod.
The second rule of the Pod failure policy, specifying the Ignore
action for
failed Pods with condition DisruptionTarget
excludes Pod disruptions from
being counted towards the .spec.backoffLimit
limit of retries.
These are some requirements and semantics of the API:
- if you want to use a
.spec.podFailurePolicy
field for a Job, you must also define that Job's pod template with.spec.restartPolicy
set toNever
. - the Pod failure policy rules you specify under
spec.podFailurePolicy.rules
are evaluated in order. Once a rule matches a Pod failure, the remaining rules are ignored. When no rule matches the Pod failure, the default handling applies. - you may want to restrict a rule to a specific container by specifying its name
in
spec.podFailurePolicy.rules[*].onExitCodes.containerName
. When not specified the rule applies to all containers. When specified, it should match one the container orinitContainer
names in the Pod template. - you may specify the action taken when a Pod failure policy is matched by
spec.podFailurePolicy.rules[*].action
. Possible values are:FailJob
: use to indicate that the Pod's job should be marked as Failed and all running Pods should be terminated.Ignore
: use to indicate that the counter towards the.spec.backoffLimit
should not be incremented and a replacement Pod should be created.Count
: use to indicate that the Pod should be handled in the default way. The counter towards the.spec.backoffLimit
should be incremented.FailIndex
: use this action along with backoff limit per index to avoid unnecessary retries within the index of a failed pod.
podFailurePolicy
, the job controller only matches Pods in the
Failed
phase. Pods with a deletion timestamp that are not in a terminal phase
(Failed
or Succeeded
) are considered still terminating. This implies that
terminating pods retain a tracking finalizer
until they reach a terminal phase.
Since Kubernetes 1.27, Kubelet transitions deleted pods to a terminal phase
(see: Pod Phase). This
ensures that deleted pods have their finalizers removed by the Job controller.
Failed
phase. This behavior is similar
to podReplacementPolicy: Failed
. For more information, see Pod replacement policy.
Job termination and cleanup
When a Job completes, no more Pods are created, but the Pods are usually not deleted either.
Keeping them around allows you to still view the logs of completed pods to check for errors, warnings, or other diagnostic output.
The job object also remains after it is completed so that you can view its status. It is up to the user to delete
old jobs after noting their status. Delete the job with kubectl
(e.g. kubectl delete jobs/pi
or kubectl delete -f ./job.yaml
).
When you delete the job using kubectl
, all the pods it created are deleted too.
By default, a Job will run uninterrupted unless a Pod fails (restartPolicy=Never
)
or a Container exits in error (restartPolicy=OnFailure
), at which point the Job defers to the
.spec.backoffLimit
described above. Once .spec.backoffLimit
has been reached the Job will
be marked as failed and any running Pods will be terminated.
Another way to terminate a Job is by setting an active deadline.
Do this by setting the .spec.activeDeadlineSeconds
field of the Job to a number of seconds.
The activeDeadlineSeconds
applies to the duration of the job, no matter how many Pods are created.
Once a Job reaches activeDeadlineSeconds
, all of its running Pods are terminated and the Job status
will become type: Failed
with reason: DeadlineExceeded
.
Note that a Job's .spec.activeDeadlineSeconds
takes precedence over its .spec.backoffLimit
.
Therefore, a Job that is retrying one or more failed Pods will not deploy additional Pods once
it reaches the time limit specified by activeDeadlineSeconds
, even if the backoffLimit
is not yet reached.
Example:
apiVersion: batch/v1
kind: Job
metadata:
name: pi-with-timeout
spec:
backoffLimit: 5
activeDeadlineSeconds: 100
template:
spec:
containers:
- name: pi
image: perl:5.34.0
command: ["perl", "-Mbignum=bpi", "-wle", "print bpi(2000)"]
restartPolicy: Never
Note that both the Job spec and the Pod template spec
within the Job have an activeDeadlineSeconds
field. Ensure that you set this field at the proper level.
Keep in mind that the restartPolicy
applies to the Pod, and not to the Job itself:
there is no automatic Job restart once the Job status is type: Failed
.
That is, the Job termination mechanisms activated with .spec.activeDeadlineSeconds
and .spec.backoffLimit
result in a permanent Job failure that requires manual intervention to resolve.
Clean up finished jobs automatically
Finished Jobs are usually no longer needed in the system. Keeping them around in the system will put pressure on the API server. If the Jobs are managed directly by a higher level controller, such as CronJobs, the Jobs can be cleaned up by CronJobs based on the specified capacity-based cleanup policy.
TTL mechanism for finished Jobs
Kubernetes v1.23 [stable]
Another way to clean up finished Jobs (either Complete
or Failed
)
automatically is to use a TTL mechanism provided by a
TTL controller for
finished resources, by specifying the .spec.ttlSecondsAfterFinished
field of
the Job.
When the TTL controller cleans up the Job, it will delete the Job cascadingly, i.e. delete its dependent objects, such as Pods, together with the Job. Note that when the Job is deleted, its lifecycle guarantees, such as finalizers, will be honored.
For example:
apiVersion: batch/v1
kind: Job
metadata:
name: pi-with-ttl
spec:
ttlSecondsAfterFinished: 100
template:
spec:
containers:
- name: pi
image: perl:5.34.0
command: ["perl", "-Mbignum=bpi", "-wle", "print bpi(2000)"]
restartPolicy: Never
The Job pi-with-ttl
will be eligible to be automatically deleted, 100
seconds after it finishes.
If the field is set to 0
, the Job will be eligible to be automatically deleted
immediately after it finishes. If the field is unset, this Job won't be cleaned
up by the TTL controller after it finishes.
It is recommended to set ttlSecondsAfterFinished
field because unmanaged jobs
(Jobs that you created directly, and not indirectly through other workload APIs
such as CronJob) have a default deletion
policy of orphanDependents
causing Pods created by an unmanaged Job to be left around
after that Job is fully deleted.
Even though the control plane eventually
garbage collects
the Pods from a deleted Job after they either fail or complete, sometimes those
lingering pods may cause cluster performance degradation or in worst case cause the
cluster to go offline due to this degradation.
You can use LimitRanges and ResourceQuotas to place a cap on the amount of resources that a particular namespace can consume.
Job patterns
The Job object can be used to process a set of independent but related work items. These might be emails to be sent, frames to be rendered, files to be transcoded, ranges of keys in a NoSQL database to scan, and so on.
In a complex system, there may be multiple different sets of work items. Here we are just considering one set of work items that the user wants to manage together — a batch job.
There are several different patterns for parallel computation, each with strengths and weaknesses. The tradeoffs are:
- One Job object for each work item, versus a single Job object for all work items. One Job per work item creates some overhead for the user and for the system to manage large numbers of Job objects. A single Job for all work items is better for large numbers of items.
- Number of Pods created equals number of work items, versus each Pod can process multiple work items. When the number of Pods equals the number of work items, the Pods typically requires less modification to existing code and containers. Having each Pod process multiple work items is better for large numbers of items.
- Several approaches use a work queue. This requires running a queue service, and modifications to the existing program or container to make it use the work queue. Other approaches are easier to adapt to an existing containerised application.
- When the Job is associated with a headless Service, you can enable the Pods within a Job to communicate with each other to collaborate in a computation.
The tradeoffs are summarized here, with columns 2 to 4 corresponding to the above tradeoffs. The pattern names are also links to examples and more detailed description.
Pattern | Single Job object | Fewer pods than work items? | Use app unmodified? |
---|---|---|---|
Queue with Pod Per Work Item | ✓ | sometimes | |
Queue with Variable Pod Count | ✓ | ✓ | |
Indexed Job with Static Work Assignment | ✓ | ✓ | |
Job with Pod-to-Pod Communication | ✓ | sometimes | sometimes |
Job Template Expansion | ✓ |
When you specify completions with .spec.completions
, each Pod created by the Job controller
has an identical spec
.
This means that all pods for a task will have the same command line and the same
image, the same volumes, and (almost) the same environment variables. These patterns
are different ways to arrange for pods to work on different things.
This table shows the required settings for .spec.parallelism
and .spec.completions
for each of the patterns.
Here, W
is the number of work items.
Pattern | .spec.completions |
.spec.parallelism |
---|---|---|
Queue with Pod Per Work Item | W | any |
Queue with Variable Pod Count | null | any |
Indexed Job with Static Work Assignment | W | any |
Job with Pod-to-Pod Communication | W | W |
Job Template Expansion | 1 | should be 1 |
Advanced usage
Suspending a Job
Kubernetes v1.24 [stable]
When a Job is created, the Job controller will immediately begin creating Pods to satisfy the Job's requirements and will continue to do so until the Job is complete. However, you may want to temporarily suspend a Job's execution and resume it later, or start Jobs in suspended state and have a custom controller decide later when to start them.
To suspend a Job, you can update the .spec.suspend
field of
the Job to true; later, when you want to resume it again, update it to false.
Creating a Job with .spec.suspend
set to true will create it in the suspended
state.
When a Job is resumed from suspension, its .status.startTime
field will be
reset to the current time. This means that the .spec.activeDeadlineSeconds
timer will be stopped and reset when a Job is suspended and resumed.
When you suspend a Job, any running Pods that don't have a status of Completed
will be terminated.
with a SIGTERM signal. The Pod's graceful termination period will be honored and
your Pod must handle this signal in this period. This may involve saving
progress for later or undoing changes. Pods terminated this way will not count
towards the Job's completions
count.
An example Job definition in the suspended state can be like so:
kubectl get job myjob -o yaml
apiVersion: batch/v1
kind: Job
metadata:
name: myjob
spec:
suspend: true
parallelism: 1
completions: 5
template:
spec:
...
You can also toggle Job suspension by patching the Job using the command line.
Suspend an active Job:
kubectl patch job/myjob --type=strategic --patch '{"spec":{"suspend":true}}'
Resume a suspended Job:
kubectl patch job/myjob --type=strategic --patch '{"spec":{"suspend":false}}'
The Job's status can be used to determine if a Job is suspended or has been suspended in the past:
kubectl get jobs/myjob -o yaml
apiVersion: batch/v1
kind: Job
# .metadata and .spec omitted
status:
conditions:
- lastProbeTime: "2021-02-05T13:14:33Z"
lastTransitionTime: "2021-02-05T13:14:33Z"
status: "True"
type: Suspended
startTime: "2021-02-05T13:13:48Z"
The Job condition of type "Suspended" with status "True" means the Job is
suspended; the lastTransitionTime
field can be used to determine how long the
Job has been suspended for. If the status of that condition is "False", then the
Job was previously suspended and is now running. If such a condition does not
exist in the Job's status, the Job has never been stopped.
Events are also created when the Job is suspended and resumed:
kubectl describe jobs/myjob
Name: myjob
...
Events:
Type Reason Age From Message
---- ------ ---- ---- -------
Normal SuccessfulCreate 12m job-controller Created pod: myjob-hlrpl
Normal SuccessfulDelete 11m job-controller Deleted pod: myjob-hlrpl
Normal Suspended 11m job-controller Job suspended
Normal SuccessfulCreate 3s job-controller Created pod: myjob-jvb44
Normal Resumed 3s job-controller Job resumed
The last four events, particularly the "Suspended" and "Resumed" events, are
directly a result of toggling the .spec.suspend
field. In the time between
these two events, we see that no Pods were created, but Pod creation restarted
as soon as the Job was resumed.
Mutable Scheduling Directives
Kubernetes v1.27 [stable]
In most cases, a parallel job will want the pods to run with constraints, like all in the same zone, or all either on GPU model x or y but not a mix of both.
The suspend field is the first step towards achieving those semantics. Suspend allows a custom queue controller to decide when a job should start; However, once a job is unsuspended, a custom queue controller has no influence on where the pods of a job will actually land.
This feature allows updating a Job's scheduling directives before it starts, which gives custom queue controllers the ability to influence pod placement while at the same time offloading actual pod-to-node assignment to kube-scheduler. This is allowed only for suspended Jobs that have never been unsuspended before.
The fields in a Job's pod template that can be updated are node affinity, node selector, tolerations, labels, annotations and scheduling gates.
Specifying your own Pod selector
Normally, when you create a Job object, you do not specify .spec.selector
.
The system defaulting logic adds this field when the Job is created.
It picks a selector value that will not overlap with any other jobs.
However, in some cases, you might need to override this automatically set selector.
To do this, you can specify the .spec.selector
of the Job.
Be very careful when doing this. If you specify a label selector which is not
unique to the pods of that Job, and which matches unrelated Pods, then pods of the unrelated
job may be deleted, or this Job may count other Pods as completing it, or one or both
Jobs may refuse to create Pods or run to completion. If a non-unique selector is
chosen, then other controllers (e.g. ReplicationController) and their Pods may behave
in unpredictable ways too. Kubernetes will not stop you from making a mistake when
specifying .spec.selector
.
Here is an example of a case when you might want to use this feature.
Say Job old
is already running. You want existing Pods
to keep running, but you want the rest of the Pods it creates
to use a different pod template and for the Job to have a new name.
You cannot update the Job because these fields are not updatable.
Therefore, you delete Job old
but leave its pods
running, using kubectl delete jobs/old --cascade=orphan
.
Before deleting it, you make a note of what selector it uses:
kubectl get job old -o yaml
The output is similar to this:
kind: Job
metadata:
name: old
...
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
batch.kubernetes.io/controller-uid: a8f3d00d-c6d2-11e5-9f87-42010af00002
...
Then you create a new Job with name new
and you explicitly specify the same selector.
Since the existing Pods have label batch.kubernetes.io/controller-uid=a8f3d00d-c6d2-11e5-9f87-42010af00002
,
they are controlled by Job new
as well.
You need to specify manualSelector: true
in the new Job since you are not using
the selector that the system normally generates for you automatically.
kind: Job
metadata:
name: new
...
spec:
manualSelector: true
selector:
matchLabels:
batch.kubernetes.io/controller-uid: a8f3d00d-c6d2-11e5-9f87-42010af00002
...
The new Job itself will have a different uid from a8f3d00d-c6d2-11e5-9f87-42010af00002
. Setting
manualSelector: true
tells the system that you know what you are doing and to allow this
mismatch.
Job tracking with finalizers
Kubernetes v1.26 [stable]
The control plane keeps track of the Pods that belong to any Job and notices if
any such Pod is removed from the API server. To do that, the Job controller
creates Pods with the finalizer batch.kubernetes.io/job-tracking
. The
controller removes the finalizer only after the Pod has been accounted for in
the Job status, allowing the Pod to be removed by other controllers or users.
Elastic Indexed Jobs
Kubernetes v1.27 [beta]
You can scale Indexed Jobs up or down by mutating both .spec.parallelism
and .spec.completions
together such that .spec.parallelism == .spec.completions
.
When the ElasticIndexedJob
feature gate
on the API server
is disabled, .spec.completions
is immutable.
Use cases for elastic Indexed Jobs include batch workloads which require scaling an indexed Job, such as MPI, Horovord, Ray, and PyTorch training jobs.
Delayed creation of replacement pods
Kubernetes v1.29 [beta]
podReplacementPolicy
on Jobs if you enable the JobPodReplacementPolicy
feature gate
(enabled by default).
By default, the Job controller recreates Pods as soon they either fail or are terminating (have a deletion timestamp).
This means that, at a given time, when some of the Pods are terminating, the number of running Pods for a Job
can be greater than parallelism
or greater than one Pod per index (if you are using an Indexed Job).
You may choose to create replacement Pods only when the terminating Pod is fully terminal (has status.phase: Failed
).
To do this, set the .spec.podReplacementPolicy: Failed
.
The default replacement policy depends on whether the Job has a podFailurePolicy
set.
With no Pod failure policy defined for a Job, omitting the podReplacementPolicy
field selects the
TerminatingOrFailed
replacement policy:
the control plane creates replacement Pods immediately upon Pod deletion
(as soon as the control plane sees that a Pod for this Job has deletionTimestamp
set).
For Jobs with a Pod failure policy set, the default podReplacementPolicy
is Failed
, and no other
value is permitted.
See Pod failure policy to learn more about Pod failure policies for Jobs.
kind: Job
metadata:
name: new
...
spec:
podReplacementPolicy: Failed
...
Provided your cluster has the feature gate enabled, you can inspect the .status.terminating
field of a Job.
The value of the field is the number of Pods owned by the Job that are currently terminating.
kubectl get jobs/myjob -o yaml
apiVersion: batch/v1
kind: Job
# .metadata and .spec omitted
status:
terminating: 3 # three Pods are terminating and have not yet reached the Failed phase
Alternatives
Bare Pods
When the node that a Pod is running on reboots or fails, the pod is terminated and will not be restarted. However, a Job will create new Pods to replace terminated ones. For this reason, we recommend that you use a Job rather than a bare Pod, even if your application requires only a single Pod.
Replication Controller
Jobs are complementary to Replication Controllers. A Replication Controller manages Pods which are not expected to terminate (e.g. web servers), and a Job manages Pods that are expected to terminate (e.g. batch tasks).
As discussed in Pod Lifecycle, Job
is only appropriate
for pods with RestartPolicy
equal to OnFailure
or Never
.
(Note: If RestartPolicy
is not set, the default value is Always
.)
Single Job starts controller Pod
Another pattern is for a single Job to create a Pod which then creates other Pods, acting as a sort of custom controller for those Pods. This allows the most flexibility, but may be somewhat complicated to get started with and offers less integration with Kubernetes.
One example of this pattern would be a Job which starts a Pod which runs a script that in turn starts a Spark master controller (see spark example), runs a spark driver, and then cleans up.
An advantage of this approach is that the overall process gets the completion guarantee of a Job object, but maintains complete control over what Pods are created and how work is assigned to them.
What's next
- Learn about Pods.
- Read about different ways of running Jobs:
- Coarse Parallel Processing Using a Work Queue
- Fine Parallel Processing Using a Work Queue
- Use an indexed Job for parallel processing with static work assignment
- Create multiple Jobs based on a template: Parallel Processing using Expansions
- Follow the links within Clean up finished jobs automatically to learn more about how your cluster can clean up completed and / or failed tasks.
Job
is part of the Kubernetes REST API. Read the Job object definition to understand the API for jobs.- Read about
CronJob
, which you can use to define a series of Jobs that will run based on a schedule, similar to the UNIX toolcron
. - Practice how to configure handling of retriable and non-retriable pod failures
using
podFailurePolicy
, based on the step-by-step examples.
4.2.6 - Automatic Cleanup for Finished Jobs
Kubernetes v1.23 [stable]
When your Job has finished, it's useful to keep that Job in the API (and not immediately delete the Job) so that you can tell whether the Job succeeded or failed.
Kubernetes' TTL-after-finished controller provides a TTL (time to live) mechanism to limit the lifetime of Job objects that have finished execution.
Cleanup for finished Jobs
The TTL-after-finished controller is only supported for Jobs. You can use this mechanism to clean
up finished Jobs (either Complete
or Failed
) automatically by specifying the
.spec.ttlSecondsAfterFinished
field of a Job, as in this
example.
The TTL-after-finished controller assumes that a Job is eligible to be cleaned up
TTL seconds after the Job has finished. The timer starts once the
status condition of the Job changes to show that the Job is either Complete
or Failed
; once the TTL has
expired, that Job becomes eligible for
cascading removal. When the
TTL-after-finished controller cleans up a job, it will delete it cascadingly, that is to say it will delete
its dependent objects together with it.
Kubernetes honors object lifecycle guarantees on the Job, such as waiting for finalizers.
You can set the TTL seconds at any time. Here are some examples for setting the
.spec.ttlSecondsAfterFinished
field of a Job:
- Specify this field in the Job manifest, so that a Job can be cleaned up automatically some time after it finishes.
- Manually set this field of existing, already finished Jobs, so that they become eligible for cleanup.
- Use a mutating admission webhook to set this field dynamically at Job creation time. Cluster administrators can use this to enforce a TTL policy for finished jobs.
- Use a
mutating admission webhook
to set this field dynamically after the Job has finished, and choose
different TTL values based on job status, labels. For this case, the webhook needs
to detect changes to the
.status
of the Job and only set a TTL when the Job is being marked as completed. - Write your own controller to manage the cleanup TTL for Jobs that match a particular selector-selector.
Caveats
Updating TTL for finished Jobs
You can modify the TTL period, e.g. .spec.ttlSecondsAfterFinished
field of Jobs,
after the job is created or has finished. If you extend the TTL period after the
existing ttlSecondsAfterFinished
period has expired, Kubernetes doesn't guarantee
to retain that Job, even if an update to extend the TTL returns a successful API
response.
Time skew
Because the TTL-after-finished controller uses timestamps stored in the Kubernetes jobs to determine whether the TTL has expired or not, this feature is sensitive to time skew in your cluster, which may cause the control plane to clean up Job objects at the wrong time.
Clocks aren't always correct, but the difference should be very small. Please be aware of this risk when setting a non-zero TTL.
What's next
-
Refer to the Kubernetes Enhancement Proposal (KEP) for adding this mechanism.
4.2.7 - CronJob
Kubernetes v1.21 [stable]
A CronJob creates Jobs on a repeating schedule.
CronJob is meant for performing regular scheduled actions such as backups, report generation, and so on. One CronJob object is like one line of a crontab (cron table) file on a Unix system. It runs a Job periodically on a given schedule, written in Cron format.
CronJobs have limitations and idiosyncrasies. For example, in certain circumstances, a single CronJob can create multiple concurrent Jobs. See the limitations below.
When the control plane creates new Jobs and (indirectly) Pods for a CronJob, the .metadata.name
of the CronJob is part of the basis for naming those Pods. The name of a CronJob must be a valid
DNS subdomain
value, but this can produce unexpected results for the Pod hostnames. For best compatibility,
the name should follow the more restrictive rules for a
DNS label.
Even when the name is a DNS subdomain, the name must be no longer than 52
characters. This is because the CronJob controller will automatically append
11 characters to the name you provide and there is a constraint that the
length of a Job name is no more than 63 characters.
Example
This example CronJob manifest prints the current time and a hello message every minute:
apiVersion: batch/v1
kind: CronJob
metadata:
name: hello
spec:
schedule: "* * * * *"
jobTemplate:
spec:
template:
spec:
containers:
- name: hello
image: busybox:1.28
imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
command:
- /bin/sh
- -c
- date; echo Hello from the Kubernetes cluster
restartPolicy: OnFailure
(Running Automated Tasks with a CronJob takes you through this example in more detail).
Writing a CronJob spec
Schedule syntax
The .spec.schedule
field is required. The value of that field follows the Cron syntax:
# ┌───────────── minute (0 - 59)
# │ ┌───────────── hour (0 - 23)
# │ │ ┌───────────── day of the month (1 - 31)
# │ │ │ ┌───────────── month (1 - 12)
# │ │ │ │ ┌───────────── day of the week (0 - 6) (Sunday to Saturday)
# │ │ │ │ │ OR sun, mon, tue, wed, thu, fri, sat
# │ │ │ │ │
# │ │ │ │ │
# * * * * *
For example, 0 0 13 * 5
states that the task must be started every Friday at midnight, as well as on the 13th of each month at midnight.
The format also includes extended "Vixie cron" step values. As explained in the FreeBSD manual:
Step values can be used in conjunction with ranges. Following a range with
/<number>
specifies skips of the number's value through the range. For example,0-23/2
can be used in the hours field to specify command execution every other hour (the alternative in the V7 standard is0,2,4,6,8,10,12,14,16,18,20,22
). Steps are also permitted after an asterisk, so if you want to say "every two hours", just use*/2
.
?
) in the schedule has the same meaning as an asterisk *
, that is,
it stands for any of available value for a given field.
Other than the standard syntax, some macros like @monthly
can also be used:
Entry | Description | Equivalent to |
---|---|---|
@yearly (or @annually) | Run once a year at midnight of 1 January | 0 0 1 1 * |
@monthly | Run once a month at midnight of the first day of the month | 0 0 1 * * |
@weekly | Run once a week at midnight on Sunday morning | 0 0 * * 0 |
@daily (or @midnight) | Run once a day at midnight | 0 0 * * * |
@hourly | Run once an hour at the beginning of the hour | 0 * * * * |
To generate CronJob schedule expressions, you can also use web tools like crontab.guru.
Job template
The .spec.jobTemplate
defines a template for the Jobs that the CronJob creates, and it is required.
It has exactly the same schema as a Job, except that
it is nested and does not have an apiVersion
or kind
.
You can specify common metadata for the templated Jobs, such as
labels or
annotations.
For information about writing a Job .spec
, see Writing a Job Spec.
Deadline for delayed Job start
The .spec.startingDeadlineSeconds
field is optional.
This field defines a deadline (in whole seconds) for starting the Job, if that Job misses its scheduled time
for any reason.
After missing the deadline, the CronJob skips that instance of the Job (future occurrences are still scheduled). For example, if you have a backup Job that runs twice a day, you might allow it to start up to 8 hours late, but no later, because a backup taken any later wouldn't be useful: you would instead prefer to wait for the next scheduled run.
For Jobs that miss their configured deadline, Kubernetes treats them as failed Jobs.
If you don't specify startingDeadlineSeconds
for a CronJob, the Job occurrences have no deadline.
If the .spec.startingDeadlineSeconds
field is set (not null), the CronJob
controller measures the time between when a Job is expected to be created and
now. If the difference is higher than that limit, it will skip this execution.
For example, if it is set to 200
, it allows a Job to be created for up to 200
seconds after the actual schedule.
Concurrency policy
The .spec.concurrencyPolicy
field is also optional.
It specifies how to treat concurrent executions of a Job that is created by this CronJob.
The spec may specify only one of the following concurrency policies:
Allow
(default): The CronJob allows concurrently running JobsForbid
: The CronJob does not allow concurrent runs; if it is time for a new Job run and the previous Job run hasn't finished yet, the CronJob skips the new Job run. Also note that when the previous Job run finishes,.spec.startingDeadlineSeconds
is still taken into account and may result in a new Job run.Replace
: If it is time for a new Job run and the previous Job run hasn't finished yet, the CronJob replaces the currently running Job run with a new Job run
Note that concurrency policy only applies to the Jobs created by the same CronJob. If there are multiple CronJobs, their respective Jobs are always allowed to run concurrently.
Schedule suspension
You can suspend execution of Jobs for a CronJob, by setting the optional .spec.suspend
field
to true. The field defaults to false.
This setting does not affect Jobs that the CronJob has already started.
If you do set that field to true, all subsequent executions are suspended (they remain scheduled, but the CronJob controller does not start the Jobs to run the tasks) until you unsuspend the CronJob.
.spec.suspend
changes from true
to false
on an existing CronJob without a
starting deadline, the missed Jobs are scheduled immediately.
Jobs history limits
The .spec.successfulJobsHistoryLimit
and .spec.failedJobsHistoryLimit
fields are optional.
These fields specify how many completed and failed Jobs should be kept.
By default, they are set to 3 and 1 respectively. Setting a limit to 0
corresponds to keeping
none of the corresponding kind of Jobs after they finish.
For another way to clean up Jobs automatically, see Clean up finished Jobs automatically.
Time zones
Kubernetes v1.27 [stable]
For CronJobs with no time zone specified, the kube-controller-manager interprets schedules relative to its local time zone.
You can specify a time zone for a CronJob by setting .spec.timeZone
to the name
of a valid time zone.
For example, setting .spec.timeZone: "Etc/UTC"
instructs Kubernetes to interpret
the schedule relative to Coordinated Universal Time.
A time zone database from the Go standard library is included in the binaries and used as a fallback in case an external database is not available on the system.
CronJob limitations
Unsupported TimeZone specification
Specifying a timezone using CRON_TZ
or TZ
variables inside .spec.schedule
is not officially supported (and never has been).
Starting with Kubernetes 1.29 if you try to set a schedule that includes TZ
or CRON_TZ
timezone specification, Kubernetes will fail to create the resource with a validation
error.
Updates to CronJobs already using TZ
or CRON_TZ
will continue to report a
warning to the client.
Modifying a CronJob
By design, a CronJob contains a template for new Jobs. If you modify an existing CronJob, the changes you make will apply to new Jobs that start to run after your modification is complete. Jobs (and their Pods) that have already started continue to run without changes. That is, the CronJob does not update existing Jobs, even if those remain running.
Job creation
A CronJob creates a Job object approximately once per execution time of its schedule. The scheduling is approximate because there are certain circumstances where two Jobs might be created, or no Job might be created. Kubernetes tries to avoid those situations, but does not completely prevent them. Therefore, the Jobs that you define should be idempotent.
If startingDeadlineSeconds
is set to a large value or left unset (the default)
and if concurrencyPolicy
is set to Allow
, the Jobs will always run
at least once.
startingDeadlineSeconds
is set to a value less than 10 seconds, the CronJob may not be scheduled. This is because the CronJob controller checks things every 10 seconds.
For every CronJob, the CronJob Controller checks how many schedules it missed in the duration from its last scheduled time until now. If there are more than 100 missed schedules, then it does not start the Job and logs the error.
Cannot determine if job needs to be started. Too many missed start time (> 100). Set or decrease .spec.startingDeadlineSeconds or check clock skew.
It is important to note that if the startingDeadlineSeconds
field is set (not nil
), the controller counts how many missed Jobs occurred from the value of startingDeadlineSeconds
until now rather than from the last scheduled time until now. For example, if startingDeadlineSeconds
is 200
, the controller counts how many missed Jobs occurred in the last 200 seconds.
A CronJob is counted as missed if it has failed to be created at its scheduled time. For example, if concurrencyPolicy
is set to Forbid
and a CronJob was attempted to be scheduled when there was a previous schedule still running, then it would count as missed.
For example, suppose a CronJob is set to schedule a new Job every one minute beginning at 08:30:00
, and its
startingDeadlineSeconds
field is not set. If the CronJob controller happens to
be down from 08:29:00
to 10:21:00
, the Job will not start as the number of missed Jobs which missed their schedule is greater than 100.
To illustrate this concept further, suppose a CronJob is set to schedule a new Job every one minute beginning at 08:30:00
, and its
startingDeadlineSeconds
is set to 200 seconds. If the CronJob controller happens to
be down for the same period as the previous example (08:29:00
to 10:21:00
,) the Job will still start at 10:22:00. This happens as the controller now checks how many missed schedules happened in the last 200 seconds (i.e., 3 missed schedules), rather than from the last scheduled time until now.
The CronJob is only responsible for creating Jobs that match its schedule, and the Job in turn is responsible for the management of the Pods it represents.
What's next
- Learn about Pods and Jobs, two concepts that CronJobs rely upon.
- Read about the detailed format
of CronJob
.spec.schedule
fields. - For instructions on creating and working with CronJobs, and for an example of a CronJob manifest, see Running automated tasks with CronJobs.
CronJob
is part of the Kubernetes REST API. Read the CronJob API reference for more details.
4.2.8 - ReplicationController
Deployment
that configures a ReplicaSet
is now the recommended way to set up replication.
A ReplicationController ensures that a specified number of pod replicas are running at any one time. In other words, a ReplicationController makes sure that a pod or a homogeneous set of pods is always up and available.
How a ReplicationController works
If there are too many pods, the ReplicationController terminates the extra pods. If there are too few, the ReplicationController starts more pods. Unlike manually created pods, the pods maintained by a ReplicationController are automatically replaced if they fail, are deleted, or are terminated. For example, your pods are re-created on a node after disruptive maintenance such as a kernel upgrade. For this reason, you should use a ReplicationController even if your application requires only a single pod. A ReplicationController is similar to a process supervisor, but instead of supervising individual processes on a single node, the ReplicationController supervises multiple pods across multiple nodes.
ReplicationController is often abbreviated to "rc" in discussion, and as a shortcut in kubectl commands.
A simple case is to create one ReplicationController object to reliably run one instance of a Pod indefinitely. A more complex use case is to run several identical replicas of a replicated service, such as web servers.
Running an example ReplicationController
This example ReplicationController config runs three copies of the nginx web server.
apiVersion: v1
kind: ReplicationController
metadata:
name: nginx
spec:
replicas: 3
selector:
app: nginx
template:
metadata:
name: nginx
labels:
app: nginx
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx
ports:
- containerPort: 80
Run the example job by downloading the example file and then running this command:
kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/controllers/replication.yaml
The output is similar to this:
replicationcontroller/nginx created
Check on the status of the ReplicationController using this command:
kubectl describe replicationcontrollers/nginx
The output is similar to this:
Name: nginx
Namespace: default
Selector: app=nginx
Labels: app=nginx
Annotations: <none>
Replicas: 3 current / 3 desired
Pods Status: 0 Running / 3 Waiting / 0 Succeeded / 0 Failed
Pod Template:
Labels: app=nginx
Containers:
nginx:
Image: nginx
Port: 80/TCP
Environment: <none>
Mounts: <none>
Volumes: <none>
Events:
FirstSeen LastSeen Count From SubobjectPath Type Reason Message
--------- -------- ----- ---- ------------- ---- ------ -------
20s 20s 1 {replication-controller } Normal SuccessfulCreate Created pod: nginx-qrm3m
20s 20s 1 {replication-controller } Normal SuccessfulCreate Created pod: nginx-3ntk0
20s 20s 1 {replication-controller } Normal SuccessfulCreate Created pod: nginx-4ok8v
Here, three pods are created, but none is running yet, perhaps because the image is being pulled. A little later, the same command may show:
Pods Status: 3 Running / 0 Waiting / 0 Succeeded / 0 Failed
To list all the pods that belong to the ReplicationController in a machine readable form, you can use a command like this:
pods=$(kubectl get pods --selector=app=nginx --output=jsonpath={.items..metadata.name})
echo $pods
The output is similar to this:
nginx-3ntk0 nginx-4ok8v nginx-qrm3m
Here, the selector is the same as the selector for the ReplicationController (seen in the
kubectl describe
output), and in a different form in replication.yaml
. The --output=jsonpath
option
specifies an expression with the name from each pod in the returned list.
Writing a ReplicationController Manifest
As with all other Kubernetes config, a ReplicationController needs apiVersion
, kind
, and metadata
fields.
When the control plane creates new Pods for a ReplicationController, the .metadata.name
of the
ReplicationController is part of the basis for naming those Pods. The name of a ReplicationController must be a valid
DNS subdomain
value, but this can produce unexpected results for the Pod hostnames. For best compatibility,
the name should follow the more restrictive rules for a
DNS label.
For general information about working with configuration files, see object management.
A ReplicationController also needs a .spec
section.
Pod Template
The .spec.template
is the only required field of the .spec
.
The .spec.template
is a pod template. It has exactly the same schema as a Pod, except it is nested and does not have an apiVersion
or kind
.
In addition to required fields for a Pod, a pod template in a ReplicationController must specify appropriate labels and an appropriate restart policy. For labels, make sure not to overlap with other controllers. See pod selector.
Only a .spec.template.spec.restartPolicy
equal to Always
is allowed, which is the default if not specified.
For local container restarts, ReplicationControllers delegate to an agent on the node, for example the Kubelet.
Labels on the ReplicationController
The ReplicationController can itself have labels (.metadata.labels
). Typically, you
would set these the same as the .spec.template.metadata.labels
; if .metadata.labels
is not specified
then it defaults to .spec.template.metadata.labels
. However, they are allowed to be
different, and the .metadata.labels
do not affect the behavior of the ReplicationController.
Pod Selector
The .spec.selector
field is a label selector. A ReplicationController
manages all the pods with labels that match the selector. It does not distinguish
between pods that it created or deleted and pods that another person or process created or
deleted. This allows the ReplicationController to be replaced without affecting the running pods.
If specified, the .spec.template.metadata.labels
must be equal to the .spec.selector
, or it will
be rejected by the API. If .spec.selector
is unspecified, it will be defaulted to
.spec.template.metadata.labels
.
Also you should not normally create any pods whose labels match this selector, either directly, with another ReplicationController, or with another controller such as Job. If you do so, the ReplicationController thinks that it created the other pods. Kubernetes does not stop you from doing this.
If you do end up with multiple controllers that have overlapping selectors, you will have to manage the deletion yourself (see below).
Multiple Replicas
You can specify how many pods should run concurrently by setting .spec.replicas
to the number
of pods you would like to have running concurrently. The number running at any time may be higher
or lower, such as if the replicas were just increased or decreased, or if a pod is gracefully
shutdown, and a replacement starts early.
If you do not specify .spec.replicas
, then it defaults to 1.
Working with ReplicationControllers
Deleting a ReplicationController and its Pods
To delete a ReplicationController and all its pods, use kubectl delete
. Kubectl will scale the ReplicationController to zero and wait
for it to delete each pod before deleting the ReplicationController itself. If this kubectl
command is interrupted, it can be restarted.
When using the REST API or client library, you need to do the steps explicitly (scale replicas to 0, wait for pod deletions, then delete the ReplicationController).
Deleting only a ReplicationController
You can delete a ReplicationController without affecting any of its pods.
Using kubectl, specify the --cascade=orphan
option to kubectl delete
.
When using the REST API or client library, you can delete the ReplicationController object.
Once the original is deleted, you can create a new ReplicationController to replace it. As long
as the old and new .spec.selector
are the same, then the new one will adopt the old pods.
However, it will not make any effort to make existing pods match a new, different pod template.
To update pods to a new spec in a controlled way, use a rolling update.
Isolating pods from a ReplicationController
Pods may be removed from a ReplicationController's target set by changing their labels. This technique may be used to remove pods from service for debugging and data recovery. Pods that are removed in this way will be replaced automatically (assuming that the number of replicas is not also changed).
Common usage patterns
Rescheduling
As mentioned above, whether you have 1 pod you want to keep running, or 1000, a ReplicationController will ensure that the specified number of pods exists, even in the event of node failure or pod termination (for example, due to an action by another control agent).
Scaling
The ReplicationController enables scaling the number of replicas up or down, either manually or by an auto-scaling control agent, by updating the replicas
field.
Rolling updates
The ReplicationController is designed to facilitate rolling updates to a service by replacing pods one-by-one.
As explained in #1353, the recommended approach is to create a new ReplicationController with 1 replica, scale the new (+1) and old (-1) controllers one by one, and then delete the old controller after it reaches 0 replicas. This predictably updates the set of pods regardless of unexpected failures.
Ideally, the rolling update controller would take application readiness into account, and would ensure that a sufficient number of pods were productively serving at any given time.
The two ReplicationControllers would need to create pods with at least one differentiating label, such as the image tag of the primary container of the pod, since it is typically image updates that motivate rolling updates.
Multiple release tracks
In addition to running multiple releases of an application while a rolling update is in progress, it's common to run multiple releases for an extended period of time, or even continuously, using multiple release tracks. The tracks would be differentiated by labels.
For instance, a service might target all pods with tier in (frontend), environment in (prod)
. Now say you have 10 replicated pods that make up this tier. But you want to be able to 'canary' a new version of this component. You could set up a ReplicationController with replicas
set to 9 for the bulk of the replicas, with labels tier=frontend, environment=prod, track=stable
, and another ReplicationController with replicas
set to 1 for the canary, with labels tier=frontend, environment=prod, track=canary
. Now the service is covering both the canary and non-canary pods. But you can mess with the ReplicationControllers separately to test things out, monitor the results, etc.
Using ReplicationControllers with Services
Multiple ReplicationControllers can sit behind a single service, so that, for example, some traffic goes to the old version, and some goes to the new version.
A ReplicationController will never terminate on its own, but it isn't expected to be as long-lived as services. Services may be composed of pods controlled by multiple ReplicationControllers, and it is expected that many ReplicationControllers may be created and destroyed over the lifetime of a service (for instance, to perform an update of pods that run the service). Both services themselves and their clients should remain oblivious to the ReplicationControllers that maintain the pods of the services.
Writing programs for Replication
Pods created by a ReplicationController are intended to be fungible and semantically identical, though their configurations may become heterogeneous over time. This is an obvious fit for replicated stateless servers, but ReplicationControllers can also be used to maintain availability of master-elected, sharded, and worker-pool applications. Such applications should use dynamic work assignment mechanisms, such as the RabbitMQ work queues, as opposed to static/one-time customization of the configuration of each pod, which is considered an anti-pattern. Any pod customization performed, such as vertical auto-sizing of resources (for example, cpu or memory), should be performed by another online controller process, not unlike the ReplicationController itself.
Responsibilities of the ReplicationController
The ReplicationController ensures that the desired number of pods matches its label selector and are operational. Currently, only terminated pods are excluded from its count. In the future, readiness and other information available from the system may be taken into account, we may add more controls over the replacement policy, and we plan to emit events that could be used by external clients to implement arbitrarily sophisticated replacement and/or scale-down policies.
The ReplicationController is forever constrained to this narrow responsibility. It itself will not perform readiness nor liveness probes. Rather than performing auto-scaling, it is intended to be controlled by an external auto-scaler (as discussed in #492), which would change its replicas
field. We will not add scheduling policies (for example, spreading) to the ReplicationController. Nor should it verify that the pods controlled match the currently specified template, as that would obstruct auto-sizing and other automated processes. Similarly, completion deadlines, ordering dependencies, configuration expansion, and other features belong elsewhere. We even plan to factor out the mechanism for bulk pod creation (#170).
The ReplicationController is intended to be a composable building-block primitive. We expect higher-level APIs and/or tools to be built on top of it and other complementary primitives for user convenience in the future. The "macro" operations currently supported by kubectl (run, scale) are proof-of-concept examples of this. For instance, we could imagine something like Asgard managing ReplicationControllers, auto-scalers, services, scheduling policies, canaries, etc.
API Object
Replication controller is a top-level resource in the Kubernetes REST API. More details about the API object can be found at: ReplicationController API object.
Alternatives to ReplicationController
ReplicaSet
ReplicaSet
is the next-generation ReplicationController that supports the new set-based label selector.
It's mainly used by Deployment as a mechanism to orchestrate pod creation, deletion and updates.
Note that we recommend using Deployments instead of directly using Replica Sets, unless you require custom update orchestration or don't require updates at all.
Deployment (Recommended)
Deployment
is a higher-level API object that updates its underlying Replica Sets and their Pods. Deployments are recommended if you want the rolling update functionality, because they are declarative, server-side, and have additional features.
Bare Pods
Unlike in the case where a user directly created pods, a ReplicationController replaces pods that are deleted or terminated for any reason, such as in the case of node failure or disruptive node maintenance, such as a kernel upgrade. For this reason, we recommend that you use a ReplicationController even if your application requires only a single pod. Think of it similarly to a process supervisor, only it supervises multiple pods across multiple nodes instead of individual processes on a single node. A ReplicationController delegates local container restarts to some agent on the node, such as the kubelet.
Job
Use a Job
instead of a ReplicationController for pods that are expected to terminate on their own
(that is, batch jobs).
DaemonSet
Use a DaemonSet
instead of a ReplicationController for pods that provide a
machine-level function, such as machine monitoring or machine logging. These pods have a lifetime that is tied
to a machine lifetime: the pod needs to be running on the machine before other pods start, and are
safe to terminate when the machine is otherwise ready to be rebooted/shutdown.
What's next
- Learn about Pods.
- Learn about Deployment, the replacement for ReplicationController.
ReplicationController
is part of the Kubernetes REST API. Read the ReplicationController object definition to understand the API for replication controllers.
4.3 - Autoscaling Workloads
In Kubernetes, you can scale a workload depending on the current demand of resources. This allows your cluster to react to changes in resource demand more elastically and efficiently.
When you scale a workload, you can either increase or decrease the number of replicas managed by the workload, or adjust the resources available to the replicas in-place.
The first approach is referred to as horizontal scaling, while the second is referred to as vertical scaling.
There are manual and automatic ways to scale your workloads, depending on your use case.
Scaling workloads manually
Kubernetes supports manual scaling of workloads. Horizontal scaling can be done
using the kubectl
CLI.
For vertical scaling, you need to patch the resource definition of your workload.
See below for examples of both strategies.
- Horizontal scaling: Running multiple instances of your app
- Vertical scaling: Resizing CPU and memory resources assigned to containers
Scaling workloads automatically
Kubernetes also supports automatic scaling of workloads, which is the focus of this page.
The concept of Autoscaling in Kubernetes refers to the ability to automatically update an object that manages a set of Pods (for example a Deployment).
Scaling workloads horizontally
In Kubernetes, you can automatically scale a workload horizontally using a HorizontalPodAutoscaler (HPA).
It is implemented as a Kubernetes API resource and a controller and periodically adjusts the number of replicas in a workload to match observed resource utilization such as CPU or memory usage.
There is a walkthrough tutorial of configuring a HorizontalPodAutoscaler for a Deployment.
Scaling workloads vertically
Kubernetes v1.25 [stable]
You can automatically scale a workload vertically using a VerticalPodAutoscaler (VPA). Unlike the HPA, the VPA doesn't come with Kubernetes by default, but is a separate project that can be found on GitHub.
Once installed, it allows you to create CustomResourceDefinitions (CRDs) for your workloads which define how and when to scale the resources of the managed replicas.
At the moment, the VPA can operate in four different modes:
Mode | Description |
---|---|
Auto |
Currently, Recreate might change to in-place updates in the future |
Recreate |
The VPA assigns resource requests on pod creation as well as updates them on existing pods by evicting them when the requested resources differ significantly from the new recommendation |
Initial |
The VPA only assigns resource requests on pod creation and never changes them later. |
Off |
The VPA does not automatically change the resource requirements of the pods. The recommendations are calculated and can be inspected in the VPA object. |
Requirements for in-place resizing
Kubernetes v1.27 [alpha]
Resizing a workload in-place without restarting the Pods
or its Containers requires Kubernetes version 1.27 or later.
Additionally, the InPlaceVerticalScaling
feature gate needs to be enabled.
InPlacePodVerticalScaling
: Enables in-place Pod vertical scaling.
Autoscaling based on cluster size
For workloads that need to be scaled based on the size of the cluster (for example
cluster-dns
or other system components), you can use the
Cluster Proportional Autoscaler.
Just like the VPA, it is not part of the Kubernetes core, but hosted as its
own project on GitHub.
The Cluster Proportional Autoscaler watches the number of schedulable nodes and cores and scales the number of replicas of the target workload accordingly.
If the number of replicas should stay the same, you can scale your workloads vertically according to the cluster size using the Cluster Proportional Vertical Autoscaler. The project is currently in beta and can be found on GitHub.
While the Cluster Proportional Autoscaler scales the number of replicas of a workload, the Cluster Proportional Vertical Autoscaler adjusts the resource requests for a workload (for example a Deployment or DaemonSet) based on the number of nodes and/or cores in the cluster.
Event driven Autoscaling
It is also possible to scale workloads based on events, for example using the Kubernetes Event Driven Autoscaler (KEDA).
KEDA is a CNCF graduated enabling you to scale your workloads based on the number of events to be processed, for example the amount of messages in a queue. There exists a wide range of adapters for different event sources to choose from.
Autoscaling based on schedules
Another strategy for scaling your workloads is to schedule the scaling operations, for example in order to reduce resource consumption during off-peak hours.
Similar to event driven autoscaling, such behavior can be achieved using KEDA in conjunction with
its Cron
scaler. The Cron
scaler allows you to define schedules
(and time zones) for scaling your workloads in or out.
Scaling cluster infrastructure
If scaling workloads isn't enough to meet your needs, you can also scale your cluster infrastructure itself.
Scaling the cluster infrastructure normally means adding or removing nodes. This can be done using one of two available autoscalers:
Both scalers work by watching for pods marked as unschedulable or underutilized nodes and then adding or removing nodes as needed.
What's next
- Learn more about scaling horizontally
- Resize Container Resources In-Place
- Autoscale the DNS Service in a Cluster
5 - Services, Load Balancing, and Networking
The Kubernetes network model
Every Pod
in a cluster gets its own unique cluster-wide IP address.
This means you do not need to explicitly create links between Pods
and you
almost never need to deal with mapping container ports to host ports.
This creates a clean, backwards-compatible model where Pods
can be treated
much like VMs or physical hosts from the perspectives of port allocation,
naming, service discovery, load balancing,
application configuration, and migration.
Kubernetes imposes the following fundamental requirements on any networking implementation (barring any intentional network segmentation policies):
- pods can communicate with all other pods on any other node without NAT
- agents on a node (e.g. system daemons, kubelet) can communicate with all pods on that node
Note: For those platforms that support Pods
running in the host network (e.g.
Linux), when pods are attached to the host network of a node they can still communicate
with all pods on all nodes without NAT.
This model is not only less complex overall, but it is principally compatible with the desire for Kubernetes to enable low-friction porting of apps from VMs to containers. If your job previously ran in a VM, your VM had an IP and could talk to other VMs in your project. This is the same basic model.
Kubernetes IP addresses exist at the Pod
scope - containers within a Pod
share their network namespaces - including their IP address and MAC address.
This means that containers within a Pod
can all reach each other's ports on
localhost
. This also means that containers within a Pod
must coordinate port
usage, but this is no different from processes in a VM. This is called the
"IP-per-pod" model.
How this is implemented is a detail of the particular container runtime in use.
It is possible to request ports on the Node
itself which forward to your Pod
(called host ports), but this is a very niche operation. How that forwarding is
implemented is also a detail of the container runtime. The Pod
itself is
blind to the existence or non-existence of host ports.
Kubernetes networking addresses four concerns:
- Containers within a Pod use networking to communicate via loopback.
- Cluster networking provides communication between different Pods.
- The Service API lets you
expose an application running in Pods
to be reachable from outside your cluster.
- Ingress provides extra functionality specifically for exposing HTTP applications, websites and APIs.
- Gateway API is an add-on that provides an expressive, extensible, and role-oriented family of API kinds for modeling service networking.
- You can also use Services to publish services only for consumption inside your cluster.
The Connecting Applications with Services tutorial lets you learn about Services and Kubernetes networking with a hands-on example.
Cluster Networking explains how to set up networking for your cluster, and also provides an overview of the technologies involved.
5.1 - Service
In Kubernetes, a Service is a method for exposing a network application that is running as one or more Pods in your cluster.
A key aim of Services in Kubernetes is that you don't need to modify your existing application to use an unfamiliar service discovery mechanism. You can run code in Pods, whether this is a code designed for a cloud-native world, or an older app you've containerized. You use a Service to make that set of Pods available on the network so that clients can interact with it.
If you use a Deployment to run your app, that Deployment can create and destroy Pods dynamically. From one moment to the next, you don't know how many of those Pods are working and healthy; you might not even know what those healthy Pods are named. Kubernetes Pods are created and destroyed to match the desired state of your cluster. Pods are ephemeral resources (you should not expect that an individual Pod is reliable and durable).
Each Pod gets its own IP address (Kubernetes expects network plugins to ensure this). For a given Deployment in your cluster, the set of Pods running in one moment in time could be different from the set of Pods running that application a moment later.
This leads to a problem: if some set of Pods (call them "backends") provides functionality to other Pods (call them "frontends") inside your cluster, how do the frontends find out and keep track of which IP address to connect to, so that the frontend can use the backend part of the workload?
Enter Services.
Services in Kubernetes
The Service API, part of Kubernetes, is an abstraction to help you expose groups of Pods over a network. Each Service object defines a logical set of endpoints (usually these endpoints are Pods) along with a policy about how to make those pods accessible.
For example, consider a stateless image-processing backend which is running with 3 replicas. Those replicas are fungible—frontends do not care which backend they use. While the actual Pods that compose the backend set may change, the frontend clients should not need to be aware of that, nor should they need to keep track of the set of backends themselves.
The Service abstraction enables this decoupling.
The set of Pods targeted by a Service is usually determined by a selector that you define. To learn about other ways to define Service endpoints, see Services without selectors.
If your workload speaks HTTP, you might choose to use an Ingress to control how web traffic reaches that workload. Ingress is not a Service type, but it acts as the entry point for your cluster. An Ingress lets you consolidate your routing rules into a single resource, so that you can expose multiple components of your workload, running separately in your cluster, behind a single listener.
The Gateway API for Kubernetes provides extra capabilities beyond Ingress and Service. You can add Gateway to your cluster - it is a family of extension APIs, implemented using CustomResourceDefinitions - and then use these to configure access to network services that are running in your cluster.
Cloud-native service discovery
If you're able to use Kubernetes APIs for service discovery in your application, you can query the API server for matching EndpointSlices. Kubernetes updates the EndpointSlices for a Service whenever the set of Pods in a Service changes.
For non-native applications, Kubernetes offers ways to place a network port or load balancer in between your application and the backend Pods.
Either way, your workload can use these service discovery mechanisms to find the target it wants to connect to.
Defining a Service
A Service is an object
(the same way that a Pod or a ConfigMap is an object). You can create,
view or modify Service definitions using the Kubernetes API. Usually
you use a tool such as kubectl
to make those API calls for you.
For example, suppose you have a set of Pods that each listen on TCP port 9376
and are labelled as app.kubernetes.io/name=MyApp
. You can define a Service to
publish that TCP listener:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: my-service
spec:
selector:
app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp
ports:
- protocol: TCP
port: 80
targetPort: 9376
Applying this manifest creates a new Service named "my-service" with the default
ClusterIP service type. The Service
targets TCP port 9376 on any Pod with the app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp
label.
Kubernetes assigns this Service an IP address (the cluster IP), that is used by the virtual IP address mechanism. For more details on that mechanism, read Virtual IPs and Service Proxies.
The controller for that Service continuously scans for Pods that match its selector, and then makes any necessary updates to the set of EndpointSlices for the Service.
The name of a Service object must be a valid RFC 1035 label name.
port
to a targetPort
. By default and
for convenience, the targetPort
is set to the same value as the port
field.
Port definitions
Port definitions in Pods have names, and you can reference these names in the
targetPort
attribute of a Service. For example, we can bind the targetPort
of the Service to the Pod port in the following way:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: nginx
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/name: proxy
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx:stable
ports:
- containerPort: 80
name: http-web-svc
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: nginx-service
spec:
selector:
app.kubernetes.io/name: proxy
ports:
- name: name-of-service-port
protocol: TCP
port: 80
targetPort: http-web-svc
This works even if there is a mixture of Pods in the Service using a single configured name, with the same network protocol available via different port numbers. This offers a lot of flexibility for deploying and evolving your Services. For example, you can change the port numbers that Pods expose in the next version of your backend software, without breaking clients.
The default protocol for Services is TCP; you can also use any other supported protocol.
Because many Services need to expose more than one port, Kubernetes supports
multiple port definitions for a single Service.
Each port definition can have the same protocol
, or a different one.
Services without selectors
Services most commonly abstract access to Kubernetes Pods thanks to the selector, but when used with a corresponding set of EndpointSlices objects and without a selector, the Service can abstract other kinds of backends, including ones that run outside the cluster.
For example:
- You want to have an external database cluster in production, but in your test environment you use your own databases.
- You want to point your Service to a Service in a different Namespace or on another cluster.
- You are migrating a workload to Kubernetes. While evaluating the approach, you run only a portion of your backends in Kubernetes.
In any of these scenarios you can define a Service without specifying a selector to match Pods. For example:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: my-service
spec:
ports:
- protocol: TCP
port: 80
targetPort: 9376
Because this Service has no selector, the corresponding EndpointSlice (and legacy Endpoints) objects are not created automatically. You can map the Service to the network address and port where it's running, by adding an EndpointSlice object manually. For example:
apiVersion: discovery.k8s.io/v1
kind: EndpointSlice
metadata:
name: my-service-1 # by convention, use the name of the Service
# as a prefix for the name of the EndpointSlice
labels:
# You should set the "kubernetes.io/service-name" label.
# Set its value to match the name of the Service
kubernetes.io/service-name: my-service
addressType: IPv4
ports:
- name: '' # empty because port 9376 is not assigned as a well-known
# port (by IANA)
appProtocol: http
protocol: TCP
port: 9376
endpoints:
- addresses:
- "10.4.5.6"
- addresses:
- "10.1.2.3"
Custom EndpointSlices
When you create an EndpointSlice object for a Service, you can
use any name for the EndpointSlice. Each EndpointSlice in a namespace must have a
unique name. You link an EndpointSlice to a Service by setting the
kubernetes.io/service-name
label
on that EndpointSlice.
The endpoint IPs must not be: loopback (127.0.0.0/8 for IPv4, ::1/128 for IPv6), or link-local (169.254.0.0/16 and 224.0.0.0/24 for IPv4, fe80::/64 for IPv6).
The endpoint IP addresses cannot be the cluster IPs of other Kubernetes Services, because kube-proxy doesn't support virtual IPs as a destination.
For an EndpointSlice that you create yourself, or in your own code,
you should also pick a value to use for the label
endpointslice.kubernetes.io/managed-by
.
If you create your own controller code to manage EndpointSlices, consider using a
value similar to "my-domain.example/name-of-controller"
. If you are using a third
party tool, use the name of the tool in all-lowercase and change spaces and other
punctuation to dashes (-
).
If people are directly using a tool such as kubectl
to manage EndpointSlices,
use a name that describes this manual management, such as "staff"
or
"cluster-admins"
. You should
avoid using the reserved value "controller"
, which identifies EndpointSlices
managed by Kubernetes' own control plane.
Accessing a Service without a selector
Accessing a Service without a selector works the same as if it had a selector. In the example for a Service without a selector, traffic is routed to one of the two endpoints defined in the EndpointSlice manifest: a TCP connection to 10.1.2.3 or 10.4.5.6, on port 9376.
kubectl proxy <service-name>
where the service has no
selector will fail due to this constraint. This prevents the Kubernetes API server
from being used as a proxy to endpoints the caller may not be authorized to access.
An ExternalName
Service is a special case of Service that does not have
selectors and uses DNS names instead. For more information, see the
ExternalName section.
EndpointSlices
Kubernetes v1.21 [stable]
EndpointSlices are objects that represent a subset (a slice) of the backing network endpoints for a Service.
Your Kubernetes cluster tracks how many endpoints each EndpointSlice represents. If there are so many endpoints for a Service that a threshold is reached, then Kubernetes adds another empty EndpointSlice and stores new endpoint information there. By default, Kubernetes makes a new EndpointSlice once the existing EndpointSlices all contain at least 100 endpoints. Kubernetes does not make the new EndpointSlice until an extra endpoint needs to be added.
See EndpointSlices for more information about this API.
Endpoints
In the Kubernetes API, an Endpoints (the resource kind is plural) defines a list of network endpoints, typically referenced by a Service to define which Pods the traffic can be sent to.
The EndpointSlice API is the recommended replacement for Endpoints.
Over-capacity endpoints
Kubernetes limits the number of endpoints that can fit in a single Endpoints object. When there are over 1000 backing endpoints for a Service, Kubernetes truncates the data in the Endpoints object. Because a Service can be linked with more than one EndpointSlice, the 1000 backing endpoint limit only affects the legacy Endpoints API.
In that case, Kubernetes selects at most 1000 possible backend endpoints to store
into the Endpoints object, and sets an
annotation on the Endpoints:
endpoints.kubernetes.io/over-capacity: truncated
.
The control plane also removes that annotation if the number of backend Pods drops below 1000.
Traffic is still sent to backends, but any load balancing mechanism that relies on the legacy Endpoints API only sends traffic to at most 1000 of the available backing endpoints.
The same API limit means that you cannot manually update an Endpoints to have more than 1000 endpoints.
Application protocol
Kubernetes v1.20 [stable]
The appProtocol
field provides a way to specify an application protocol for
each Service port. This is used as a hint for implementations to offer
richer behavior for protocols that they understand.
The value of this field is mirrored by the corresponding
Endpoints and EndpointSlice objects.
This field follows standard Kubernetes label syntax. Valid values are one of:
-
Implementation-defined prefixed names such as
mycompany.com/my-custom-protocol
. -
Kubernetes-defined prefixed names:
Protocol | Description |
---|---|
kubernetes.io/h2c |
HTTP/2 over cleartext as described in RFC 7540 |
Multi-port Services
For some Services, you need to expose more than one port. Kubernetes lets you configure multiple port definitions on a Service object. When using multiple ports for a Service, you must give all of your ports names so that these are unambiguous. For example:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: my-service
spec:
selector:
app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp
ports:
- name: http
protocol: TCP
port: 80
targetPort: 9376
- name: https
protocol: TCP
port: 443
targetPort: 9377
As with Kubernetes names in general, names for ports
must only contain lowercase alphanumeric characters and -
. Port names must
also start and end with an alphanumeric character.
For example, the names 123-abc
and web
are valid, but 123_abc
and -web
are not.
Service type
For some parts of your application (for example, frontends) you may want to expose a Service onto an external IP address, one that's accessible from outside of your cluster.
Kubernetes Service types allow you to specify what kind of Service you want.
The available type
values and their behaviors are:
ClusterIP
- Exposes the Service on a cluster-internal IP. Choosing this value
makes the Service only reachable from within the cluster. This is the
default that is used if you don't explicitly specify a
type
for a Service. You can expose the Service to the public internet using an Ingress or a Gateway. NodePort
- Exposes the Service on each Node's IP at a static port (the
NodePort
). To make the node port available, Kubernetes sets up a cluster IP address, the same as if you had requested a Service oftype: ClusterIP
. LoadBalancer
- Exposes the Service externally using an external load balancer. Kubernetes does not directly offer a load balancing component; you must provide one, or you can integrate your Kubernetes cluster with a cloud provider.
ExternalName
- Maps the Service to the contents of the
externalName
field (for example, to the hostnameapi.foo.bar.example
). The mapping configures your cluster's DNS server to return aCNAME
record with that external hostname value. No proxying of any kind is set up.
The type
field in the Service API is designed as nested functionality - each level
adds to the previous. However there is an exception to this nested design. You can
define a LoadBalancer
Service by
disabling the load balancer NodePort
allocation.
type: ClusterIP
This default Service type assigns an IP address from a pool of IP addresses that your cluster has reserved for that purpose.
Several of the other types for Service build on the ClusterIP
type as a
foundation.
If you define a Service that has the .spec.clusterIP
set to "None"
then
Kubernetes does not assign an IP address. See headless Services
for more information.
Choosing your own IP address
You can specify your own cluster IP address as part of a Service
creation
request. To do this, set the .spec.clusterIP
field. For example, if you
already have an existing DNS entry that you wish to reuse, or legacy systems
that are configured for a specific IP address and difficult to re-configure.
The IP address that you choose must be a valid IPv4 or IPv6 address from within the
service-cluster-ip-range
CIDR range that is configured for the API server.
If you try to create a Service with an invalid clusterIP
address value, the API
server will return a 422 HTTP status code to indicate that there's a problem.
Read avoiding collisions to learn how Kubernetes helps reduce the risk and impact of two different Services both trying to use the same IP address.
type: NodePort
If you set the type
field to NodePort
, the Kubernetes control plane
allocates a port from a range specified by --service-node-port-range
flag (default: 30000-32767).
Each node proxies that port (the same port number on every Node) into your Service.
Your Service reports the allocated port in its .spec.ports[*].nodePort
field.
Using a NodePort gives you the freedom to set up your own load balancing solution, to configure environments that are not fully supported by Kubernetes, or even to expose one or more nodes' IP addresses directly.
For a node port Service, Kubernetes additionally allocates a port (TCP, UDP or
SCTP to match the protocol of the Service). Every node in the cluster configures
itself to listen on that assigned port and to forward traffic to one of the ready
endpoints associated with that Service. You'll be able to contact the type: NodePort
Service, from outside the cluster, by connecting to any node using the appropriate
protocol (for example: TCP), and the appropriate port (as assigned to that Service).
Choosing your own port
If you want a specific port number, you can specify a value in the nodePort
field. The control plane will either allocate you that port or report that
the API transaction failed.
This means that you need to take care of possible port collisions yourself.
You also have to use a valid port number, one that's inside the range configured
for NodePort use.
Here is an example manifest for a Service of type: NodePort
that specifies
a NodePort value (30007, in this example):
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: my-service
spec:
type: NodePort
selector:
app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp
ports:
- port: 80
# By default and for convenience, the `targetPort` is set to
# the same value as the `port` field.
targetPort: 80
# Optional field
# By default and for convenience, the Kubernetes control plane
# will allocate a port from a range (default: 30000-32767)
nodePort: 30007
Reserve Nodeport ranges to avoid collisions
Kubernetes v1.29 [stable]
The policy for assigning ports to NodePort services applies to both the auto-assignment and the manual assignment scenarios. When a user wants to create a NodePort service that uses a specific port, the target port may conflict with another port that has already been assigned.
To avoid this problem, the port range for NodePort services is divided into two bands. Dynamic port assignment uses the upper band by default, and it may use the lower band once the upper band has been exhausted. Users can then allocate from the lower band with a lower risk of port collision.
Custom IP address configuration for type: NodePort
Services
You can set up nodes in your cluster to use a particular IP address for serving node port services. You might want to do this if each node is connected to multiple networks (for example: one network for application traffic, and another network for traffic between nodes and the control plane).
If you want to specify particular IP address(es) to proxy the port, you can set the
--nodeport-addresses
flag for kube-proxy or the equivalent nodePortAddresses
field of the kube-proxy configuration file
to particular IP block(s).
This flag takes a comma-delimited list of IP blocks (e.g. 10.0.0.0/8
, 192.0.2.0/25
)
to specify IP address ranges that kube-proxy should consider as local to this node.
For example, if you start kube-proxy with the --nodeport-addresses=127.0.0.0/8
flag,
kube-proxy only selects the loopback interface for NodePort Services.
The default for --nodeport-addresses
is an empty list.
This means that kube-proxy should consider all available network interfaces for NodePort.
(That's also compatible with earlier Kubernetes releases.)
<NodeIP>:spec.ports[*].nodePort
and .spec.clusterIP:spec.ports[*].port
.
If the --nodeport-addresses
flag for kube-proxy or the equivalent field
in the kube-proxy configuration file is set, <NodeIP>
would be a filtered
node IP address (or possibly IP addresses).
type: LoadBalancer
On cloud providers which support external load balancers, setting the type
field to LoadBalancer
provisions a load balancer for your Service.
The actual creation of the load balancer happens asynchronously, and
information about the provisioned balancer is published in the Service's
.status.loadBalancer
field.
For example:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: my-service
spec:
selector:
app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp
ports:
- protocol: TCP
port: 80
targetPort: 9376
clusterIP: 10.0.171.239
type: LoadBalancer
status:
loadBalancer:
ingress:
- ip: 192.0.2.127
Traffic from the external load balancer is directed at the backend Pods. The cloud provider decides how it is load balanced.
To implement a Service of type: LoadBalancer
, Kubernetes typically starts off
by making the changes that are equivalent to you requesting a Service of
type: NodePort
. The cloud-controller-manager component then configures the external
load balancer to forward traffic to that assigned node port.
You can configure a load balanced Service to omit assigning a node port, provided that the cloud provider implementation supports this.
Some cloud providers allow you to specify the loadBalancerIP
. In those cases, the load-balancer is created
with the user-specified loadBalancerIP
. If the loadBalancerIP
field is not specified,
the load balancer is set up with an ephemeral IP address. If you specify a loadBalancerIP
but your cloud provider does not support the feature, the loadbalancerIP
field that you
set is ignored.
The.spec.loadBalancerIP
field for a Service was deprecated in Kubernetes v1.24.
This field was under-specified and its meaning varies across implementations. It also cannot support dual-stack networking. This field may be removed in a future API version.
If you're integrating with a provider that supports specifying the load balancer IP address(es) for a Service via a (provider specific) annotation, you should switch to doing that.
If you are writing code for a load balancer integration with Kubernetes, avoid using this field. You can integrate with Gateway rather than Service, or you can define your own (provider specific) annotations on the Service that specify the equivalent detail.
Load balancers with mixed protocol types
Kubernetes v1.26 [stable]
By default, for LoadBalancer type of Services, when there is more than one port defined, all ports must have the same protocol, and the protocol must be one which is supported by the cloud provider.
The feature gate MixedProtocolLBService
(enabled by default for the kube-apiserver as of v1.24) allows the use of
different protocols for LoadBalancer type of Services, when there is more than one port defined.
Disabling load balancer NodePort allocation
Kubernetes v1.24 [stable]
You can optionally disable node port allocation for a Service of type: LoadBalancer
, by setting
the field spec.allocateLoadBalancerNodePorts
to false
. This should only be used for load balancer implementations
that route traffic directly to pods as opposed to using node ports. By default, spec.allocateLoadBalancerNodePorts
is true
and type LoadBalancer Services will continue to allocate node ports. If spec.allocateLoadBalancerNodePorts
is set to false
on an existing Service with allocated node ports, those node ports will not be de-allocated automatically.
You must explicitly remove the nodePorts
entry in every Service port to de-allocate those node ports.
Specifying class of load balancer implementation
Kubernetes v1.24 [stable]
For a Service with type
set to LoadBalancer
, the .spec.loadBalancerClass
field
enables you to use a load balancer implementation other than the cloud provider default.
By default, .spec.loadBalancerClass
is not set and a LoadBalancer
type of Service uses the cloud provider's default load balancer implementation if the
cluster is configured with a cloud provider using the --cloud-provider
component
flag.
If you specify .spec.loadBalancerClass
, it is assumed that a load balancer
implementation that matches the specified class is watching for Services.
Any default load balancer implementation (for example, the one provided by
the cloud provider) will ignore Services that have this field set.
spec.loadBalancerClass
can be set on a Service of type LoadBalancer
only.
Once set, it cannot be changed.
The value of spec.loadBalancerClass
must be a label-style identifier,
with an optional prefix such as "internal-vip
" or "example.com/internal-vip
".
Unprefixed names are reserved for end-users.
Specifying IPMode of load balancer status
Kubernetes v1.29 [alpha]
Starting as Alpha in Kubernetes 1.29,
a feature gate
named LoadBalancerIPMode
allows you to set the .status.loadBalancer.ingress.ipMode
for a Service with type
set to LoadBalancer
.
The .status.loadBalancer.ingress.ipMode
specifies how the load-balancer IP behaves.
It may be specified only when the .status.loadBalancer.ingress.ip
field is also specified.
There are two possible values for .status.loadBalancer.ingress.ipMode
: "VIP" and "Proxy".
The default value is "VIP" meaning that traffic is delivered to the node
with the destination set to the load-balancer's IP and port.
There are two cases when setting this to "Proxy", depending on how the load-balancer
from the cloud provider delivers the traffics:
- If the traffic is delivered to the node then DNATed to the pod, the destination would be set to the node's IP and node port;
- If the traffic is delivered directly to the pod, the destination would be set to the pod's IP and port.
Service implementations may use this information to adjust traffic routing.
Internal load balancer
In a mixed environment it is sometimes necessary to route traffic from Services inside the same (virtual) network address block.
In a split-horizon DNS environment you would need two Services to be able to route both external and internal traffic to your endpoints.
To set an internal load balancer, add one of the following annotations to your Service depending on the cloud service provider you're using:
Select one of the tabs.
metadata:
name: my-service
annotations:
networking.gke.io/load-balancer-type: "Internal"
metadata:
name: my-service
annotations:
service.beta.kubernetes.io/aws-load-balancer-internal: "true"
metadata:
name: my-service
annotations:
service.beta.kubernetes.io/azure-load-balancer-internal: "true"
metadata:
name: my-service
annotations:
service.kubernetes.io/ibm-load-balancer-cloud-provider-ip-type: "private"
metadata:
name: my-service
annotations:
service.beta.kubernetes.io/openstack-internal-load-balancer: "true"
metadata:
name: my-service
annotations:
service.beta.kubernetes.io/cce-load-balancer-internal-vpc: "true"
metadata:
annotations:
service.kubernetes.io/qcloud-loadbalancer-internal-subnetid: subnet-xxxxx
metadata:
annotations:
service.beta.kubernetes.io/alibaba-cloud-loadbalancer-address-type: "intranet"
metadata:
name: my-service
annotations:
service.beta.kubernetes.io/oci-load-balancer-internal: true
type: ExternalName
Services of type ExternalName map a Service to a DNS name, not to a typical selector such as
my-service
or cassandra
. You specify these Services with the spec.externalName
parameter.
This Service definition, for example, maps
the my-service
Service in the prod
namespace to my.database.example.com
:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: my-service
namespace: prod
spec:
type: ExternalName
externalName: my.database.example.com
A Service of type: ExternalName
accepts an IPv4 address string,
but treats that string as a DNS name comprised of digits,
not as an IP address (the internet does not however allow such names in DNS).
Services with external names that resemble IPv4
addresses are not resolved by DNS servers.
If you want to map a Service directly to a specific IP address, consider using headless Services.
When looking up the host my-service.prod.svc.cluster.local
, the cluster DNS Service
returns a CNAME
record with the value my.database.example.com
. Accessing
my-service
works in the same way as other Services but with the crucial
difference that redirection happens at the DNS level rather than via proxying or
forwarding. Should you later decide to move your database into your cluster, you
can start its Pods, add appropriate selectors or endpoints, and change the
Service's type
.
You may have trouble using ExternalName for some common protocols, including HTTP and HTTPS. If you use ExternalName then the hostname used by clients inside your cluster is different from the name that the ExternalName references.
For protocols that use hostnames this difference may lead to errors or unexpected responses.
HTTP requests will have a Host:
header that the origin server does not recognize;
TLS servers will not be able to provide a certificate matching the hostname that the client connected to.
Headless Services
Sometimes you don't need load-balancing and a single Service IP. In
this case, you can create what are termed headless Services, by explicitly
specifying "None"
for the cluster IP address (.spec.clusterIP
).
You can use a headless Service to interface with other service discovery mechanisms, without being tied to Kubernetes' implementation.
For headless Services, a cluster IP is not allocated, kube-proxy does not handle these Services, and there is no load balancing or proxying done by the platform for them. How DNS is automatically configured depends on whether the Service has selectors defined:
With selectors
For headless Services that define selectors, the endpoints controller creates EndpointSlices in the Kubernetes API, and modifies the DNS configuration to return A or AAAA records (IPv4 or IPv6 addresses) that point directly to the Pods backing the Service.
Without selectors
For headless Services that do not define selectors, the control plane does not create EndpointSlice objects. However, the DNS system looks for and configures either:
- DNS CNAME records for
type: ExternalName
Services. - DNS A / AAAA records for all IP addresses of the Service's ready endpoints,
for all Service types other than
ExternalName
.- For IPv4 endpoints, the DNS system creates A records.
- For IPv6 endpoints, the DNS system creates AAAA records.
When you define a headless Service without a selector, the port
must
match the targetPort
.
Discovering services
For clients running inside your cluster, Kubernetes supports two primary modes of finding a Service: environment variables and DNS.
Environment variables
When a Pod is run on a Node, the kubelet adds a set of environment variables
for each active Service. It adds {SVCNAME}_SERVICE_HOST
and {SVCNAME}_SERVICE_PORT
variables,
where the Service name is upper-cased and dashes are converted to underscores.
For example, the Service redis-primary
which exposes TCP port 6379 and has been
allocated cluster IP address 10.0.0.11, produces the following environment
variables:
REDIS_PRIMARY_SERVICE_HOST=10.0.0.11
REDIS_PRIMARY_SERVICE_PORT=6379
REDIS_PRIMARY_PORT=tcp://10.0.0.11:6379
REDIS_PRIMARY_PORT_6379_TCP=tcp://10.0.0.11:6379
REDIS_PRIMARY_PORT_6379_TCP_PROTO=tcp
REDIS_PRIMARY_PORT_6379_TCP_PORT=6379
REDIS_PRIMARY_PORT_6379_TCP_ADDR=10.0.0.11
When you have a Pod that needs to access a Service, and you are using the environment variable method to publish the port and cluster IP to the client Pods, you must create the Service before the client Pods come into existence. Otherwise, those client Pods won't have their environment variables populated.
If you only use DNS to discover the cluster IP for a Service, you don't need to worry about this ordering issue.
Kubernetes also supports and provides variables that are compatible with Docker
Engine's "legacy container links" feature.
You can read makeLinkVariables
to see how this is implemented in Kubernetes.
DNS
You can (and almost always should) set up a DNS service for your Kubernetes cluster using an add-on.
A cluster-aware DNS server, such as CoreDNS, watches the Kubernetes API for new Services and creates a set of DNS records for each one. If DNS has been enabled throughout your cluster then all Pods should automatically be able to resolve Services by their DNS name.
For example, if you have a Service called my-service
in a Kubernetes
namespace my-ns
, the control plane and the DNS Service acting together
create a DNS record for my-service.my-ns
. Pods in the my-ns
namespace
should be able to find the service by doing a name lookup for my-service
(my-service.my-ns
would also work).
Pods in other namespaces must qualify the name as my-service.my-ns
. These names
will resolve to the cluster IP assigned for the Service.
Kubernetes also supports DNS SRV (Service) records for named ports. If the
my-service.my-ns
Service has a port named http
with the protocol set to
TCP
, you can do a DNS SRV query for _http._tcp.my-service.my-ns
to discover
the port number for http
, as well as the IP address.
The Kubernetes DNS server is the only way to access ExternalName
Services.
You can find more information about ExternalName
resolution in
DNS for Services and Pods.
Virtual IP addressing mechanism
Read Virtual IPs and Service Proxies explains the mechanism Kubernetes provides to expose a Service with a virtual IP address.
Traffic policies
You can set the .spec.internalTrafficPolicy
and .spec.externalTrafficPolicy
fields
to control how Kubernetes routes traffic to healthy (“ready”) backends.
See Traffic Policies for more details.
Session stickiness
If you want to make sure that connections from a particular client are passed to the same Pod each time, you can configure session affinity based on the client's IP address. Read session affinity to learn more.
External IPs
If there are external IPs that route to one or more cluster nodes, Kubernetes Services
can be exposed on those externalIPs
. When network traffic arrives into the cluster, with
the external IP (as destination IP) and the port matching that Service, rules and routes
that Kubernetes has configured ensure that the traffic is routed to one of the endpoints
for that Service.
When you define a Service, you can specify externalIPs
for any
service type.
In the example below, the Service named "my-service"
can be accessed by clients using TCP,
on "198.51.100.32:80"
(calculated from .spec.externalIPs[]
and .spec.ports[].port
).
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: my-service
spec:
selector:
app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp
ports:
- name: http
protocol: TCP
port: 80
targetPort: 49152
externalIPs:
- 198.51.100.32
externalIPs
; these are the responsibility
of the cluster administrator.
API Object
Service is a top-level resource in the Kubernetes REST API. You can find more details about the Service API object.
What's next
Learn more about Services and how they fit into Kubernetes:
- Follow the Connecting Applications with Services tutorial.
- Read about Ingress, which exposes HTTP and HTTPS routes from outside the cluster to Services within your cluster.
- Read about Gateway, an extension to Kubernetes that provides more flexibility than Ingress.
For more context, read the following:
5.2 - Ingress
Kubernetes v1.19 [stable]
An API object that manages external access to the services in a cluster, typically HTTP.
Ingress may provide load balancing, SSL termination and name-based virtual hosting.
Terminology
For clarity, this guide defines the following terms:
- Node: A worker machine in Kubernetes, part of a cluster.
- Cluster: A set of Nodes that run containerized applications managed by Kubernetes. For this example, and in most common Kubernetes deployments, nodes in the cluster are not part of the public internet.
- Edge router: A router that enforces the firewall policy for your cluster. This could be a gateway managed by a cloud provider or a physical piece of hardware.
- Cluster network: A set of links, logical or physical, that facilitate communication within a cluster according to the Kubernetes networking model.
- Service: A Kubernetes Service that identifies a set of Pods using label selectors. Unless mentioned otherwise, Services are assumed to have virtual IPs only routable within the cluster network.
What is Ingress?
Ingress exposes HTTP and HTTPS routes from outside the cluster to services within the cluster. Traffic routing is controlled by rules defined on the Ingress resource.
Here is a simple example where an Ingress sends all its traffic to one Service:
An Ingress may be configured to give Services externally-reachable URLs, load balance traffic, terminate SSL / TLS, and offer name-based virtual hosting. An Ingress controller is responsible for fulfilling the Ingress, usually with a load balancer, though it may also configure your edge router or additional frontends to help handle the traffic.
An Ingress does not expose arbitrary ports or protocols. Exposing services other than HTTP and HTTPS to the internet typically uses a service of type Service.Type=NodePort or Service.Type=LoadBalancer.
Prerequisites
You must have an Ingress controller to satisfy an Ingress. Only creating an Ingress resource has no effect.
You may need to deploy an Ingress controller such as ingress-nginx. You can choose from a number of Ingress controllers.
Ideally, all Ingress controllers should fit the reference specification. In reality, the various Ingress controllers operate slightly differently.
The Ingress resource
A minimal Ingress resource example:
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: minimal-ingress
annotations:
nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/rewrite-target: /
spec:
ingressClassName: nginx-example
rules:
- http:
paths:
- path: /testpath
pathType: Prefix
backend:
service:
name: test
port:
number: 80
An Ingress needs apiVersion
, kind
, metadata
and spec
fields.
The name of an Ingress object must be a valid
DNS subdomain name.
For general information about working with config files, see deploying applications, configuring containers, managing resources.
Ingress frequently uses annotations to configure some options depending on the Ingress controller, an example of which
is the rewrite-target annotation.
Different Ingress controllers support different annotations.
Review the documentation for your choice of Ingress controller to learn which annotations are supported.
The Ingress spec has all the information needed to configure a load balancer or proxy server. Most importantly, it contains a list of rules matched against all incoming requests. Ingress resource only supports rules for directing HTTP(S) traffic.
If the ingressClassName
is omitted, a default Ingress class
should be defined.
There are some ingress controllers, that work without the definition of a
default IngressClass
. For example, the Ingress-NGINX controller can be
configured with a flag
--watch-ingress-without-class
. It is recommended though, to specify the
default IngressClass
as shown below.
Ingress rules
Each HTTP rule contains the following information:
- An optional host. In this example, no host is specified, so the rule applies to all inbound HTTP traffic through the IP address specified. If a host is provided (for example, foo.bar.com), the rules apply to that host.
- A list of paths (for example,
/testpath
), each of which has an associated backend defined with aservice.name
and aservice.port.name
orservice.port.number
. Both the host and path must match the content of an incoming request before the load balancer directs traffic to the referenced Service. - A backend is a combination of Service and port names as described in the Service doc or a custom resource backend by way of a CRD. HTTP (and HTTPS) requests to the Ingress that match the host and path of the rule are sent to the listed backend.
A defaultBackend
is often configured in an Ingress controller to service any requests that do not
match a path in the spec.
DefaultBackend
An Ingress with no rules sends all traffic to a single default backend and .spec.defaultBackend
is the backend that should handle requests in that case.
The defaultBackend
is conventionally a configuration option of the
Ingress controller and
is not specified in your Ingress resources.
If no .spec.rules
are specified, .spec.defaultBackend
must be specified.
If defaultBackend
is not set, the handling of requests that do not match any of the rules will be up to the
ingress controller (consult the documentation for your ingress controller to find out how it handles this case).
If none of the hosts or paths match the HTTP request in the Ingress objects, the traffic is routed to your default backend.
Resource backends
A Resource
backend is an ObjectRef to another Kubernetes resource within the
same namespace as the Ingress object. A Resource
is a mutually exclusive
setting with Service, and will fail validation if both are specified. A common
usage for a Resource
backend is to ingress data to an object storage backend
with static assets.
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: ingress-resource-backend
spec:
defaultBackend:
resource:
apiGroup: k8s.example.com
kind: StorageBucket
name: static-assets
rules:
- http:
paths:
- path: /icons
pathType: ImplementationSpecific
backend:
resource:
apiGroup: k8s.example.com
kind: StorageBucket
name: icon-assets
After creating the Ingress above, you can view it with the following command:
kubectl describe ingress ingress-resource-backend
Name: ingress-resource-backend
Namespace: default
Address:
Default backend: APIGroup: k8s.example.com, Kind: StorageBucket, Name: static-assets
Rules:
Host Path Backends
---- ---- --------
*
/icons APIGroup: k8s.example.com, Kind: StorageBucket, Name: icon-assets
Annotations: <none>
Events: <none>
Path types
Each path in an Ingress is required to have a corresponding path type. Paths
that do not include an explicit pathType
will fail validation. There are three
supported path types:
-
ImplementationSpecific
: With this path type, matching is up to the IngressClass. Implementations can treat this as a separatepathType
or treat it identically toPrefix
orExact
path types. -
Exact
: Matches the URL path exactly and with case sensitivity. -
Prefix
: Matches based on a URL path prefix split by/
. Matching is case sensitive and done on a path element by element basis. A path element refers to the list of labels in the path split by the/
separator. A request is a match for path p if every p is an element-wise prefix of p of the request path.Note: If the last element of the path is a substring of the last element in request path, it is not a match (for example:/foo/bar
matches/foo/bar/baz
, but does not match/foo/barbaz
).
Examples
Kind | Path(s) | Request path(s) | Matches? |
---|---|---|---|
Prefix | / |
(all paths) | Yes |
Exact | /foo |
/foo |
Yes |
Exact | /foo |
/bar |
No |
Exact | /foo |
/foo/ |
No |
Exact | /foo/ |
/foo |
No |
Prefix | /foo |
/foo , /foo/ |
Yes |
Prefix | /foo/ |
/foo , /foo/ |
Yes |
Prefix | /aaa/bb |
/aaa/bbb |
No |
Prefix | /aaa/bbb |
/aaa/bbb |
Yes |
Prefix | /aaa/bbb/ |
/aaa/bbb |
Yes, ignores trailing slash |
Prefix | /aaa/bbb |
/aaa/bbb/ |
Yes, matches trailing slash |
Prefix | /aaa/bbb |
/aaa/bbb/ccc |
Yes, matches subpath |
Prefix | /aaa/bbb |
/aaa/bbbxyz |
No, does not match string prefix |
Prefix | / , /aaa |
/aaa/ccc |
Yes, matches /aaa prefix |
Prefix | / , /aaa , /aaa/bbb |
/aaa/bbb |
Yes, matches /aaa/bbb prefix |
Prefix | / , /aaa , /aaa/bbb |
/ccc |
Yes, matches / prefix |
Prefix | /aaa |
/ccc |
No, uses default backend |
Mixed | /foo (Prefix), /foo (Exact) |
/foo |
Yes, prefers Exact |
Multiple matches
In some cases, multiple paths within an Ingress will match a request. In those cases precedence will be given first to the longest matching path. If two paths are still equally matched, precedence will be given to paths with an exact path type over prefix path type.
Hostname wildcards
Hosts can be precise matches (for example “foo.bar.com
”) or a wildcard (for
example “*.foo.com
”). Precise matches require that the HTTP host
header
matches the host
field. Wildcard matches require the HTTP host
header is
equal to the suffix of the wildcard rule.
Host | Host header | Match? |
---|---|---|
*.foo.com |
bar.foo.com |
Matches based on shared suffix |
*.foo.com |
baz.bar.foo.com |
No match, wildcard only covers a single DNS label |
*.foo.com |
foo.com |
No match, wildcard only covers a single DNS label |
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: ingress-wildcard-host
spec:
rules:
- host: "foo.bar.com"
http:
paths:
- pathType: Prefix
path: "/bar"
backend:
service:
name: service1
port:
number: 80
- host: "*.foo.com"
http:
paths:
- pathType: Prefix
path: "/foo"
backend:
service:
name: service2
port:
number: 80
Ingress class
Ingresses can be implemented by different controllers, often with different configuration. Each Ingress should specify a class, a reference to an IngressClass resource that contains additional configuration including the name of the controller that should implement the class.
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: IngressClass
metadata:
name: external-lb
spec:
controller: example.com/ingress-controller
parameters:
apiGroup: k8s.example.com
kind: IngressParameters
name: external-lb
The .spec.parameters
field of an IngressClass lets you reference another
resource that provides configuration related to that IngressClass.
The specific type of parameters to use depends on the ingress controller
that you specify in the .spec.controller
field of the IngressClass.
IngressClass scope
Depending on your ingress controller, you may be able to use parameters that you set cluster-wide, or just for one namespace.
The default scope for IngressClass parameters is cluster-wide.
If you set the .spec.parameters
field and don't set
.spec.parameters.scope
, or if you set .spec.parameters.scope
to
Cluster
, then the IngressClass refers to a cluster-scoped resource.
The kind
(in combination the apiGroup
) of the parameters
refers to a cluster-scoped API (possibly a custom resource), and
the name
of the parameters identifies a specific cluster scoped
resource for that API.
For example:
---
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: IngressClass
metadata:
name: external-lb-1
spec:
controller: example.com/ingress-controller
parameters:
# The parameters for this IngressClass are specified in a
# ClusterIngressParameter (API group k8s.example.net) named
# "external-config-1". This definition tells Kubernetes to
# look for a cluster-scoped parameter resource.
scope: Cluster
apiGroup: k8s.example.net
kind: ClusterIngressParameter
name: external-config-1
Kubernetes v1.23 [stable]
If you set the .spec.parameters
field and set
.spec.parameters.scope
to Namespace
, then the IngressClass refers
to a namespaced-scoped resource. You must also set the namespace
field within .spec.parameters
to the namespace that contains
the parameters you want to use.
The kind
(in combination the apiGroup
) of the parameters
refers to a namespaced API (for example: ConfigMap), and
the name
of the parameters identifies a specific resource
in the namespace you specified in namespace
.
Namespace-scoped parameters help the cluster operator delegate control over the configuration (for example: load balancer settings, API gateway definition) that is used for a workload. If you used a cluster-scoped parameter then either:
- the cluster operator team needs to approve a different team's changes every time there's a new configuration change being applied.
- the cluster operator must define specific access controls, such as RBAC roles and bindings, that let the application team make changes to the cluster-scoped parameters resource.
The IngressClass API itself is always cluster-scoped.
Here is an example of an IngressClass that refers to parameters that are namespaced:
---
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: IngressClass
metadata:
name: external-lb-2
spec:
controller: example.com/ingress-controller
parameters:
# The parameters for this IngressClass are specified in an
# IngressParameter (API group k8s.example.com) named "external-config",
# that's in the "external-configuration" namespace.
scope: Namespace
apiGroup: k8s.example.com
kind: IngressParameter
namespace: external-configuration
name: external-config
Deprecated annotation
Before the IngressClass resource and ingressClassName
field were added in
Kubernetes 1.18, Ingress classes were specified with a
kubernetes.io/ingress.class
annotation on the Ingress. This annotation was
never formally defined, but was widely supported by Ingress controllers.
The newer ingressClassName
field on Ingresses is a replacement for that
annotation, but is not a direct equivalent. While the annotation was generally
used to reference the name of the Ingress controller that should implement the
Ingress, the field is a reference to an IngressClass resource that contains
additional Ingress configuration, including the name of the Ingress controller.
Default IngressClass
You can mark a particular IngressClass as default for your cluster. Setting the
ingressclass.kubernetes.io/is-default-class
annotation to true
on an
IngressClass resource will ensure that new Ingresses without an
ingressClassName
field specified will be assigned this default IngressClass.
ingressClassName
specified. You can resolve this by ensuring that at most 1
IngressClass is marked as default in your cluster.
There are some ingress controllers, that work without the definition of a
default IngressClass
. For example, the Ingress-NGINX controller can be
configured with a flag
--watch-ingress-without-class
. It is recommended though, to specify the
default IngressClass
:
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: IngressClass
metadata:
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/component: controller
name: nginx-example
annotations:
ingressclass.kubernetes.io/is-default-class: "true"
spec:
controller: k8s.io/ingress-nginx
Types of Ingress
Ingress backed by a single Service
There are existing Kubernetes concepts that allow you to expose a single Service (see alternatives). You can also do this with an Ingress by specifying a default backend with no rules.
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: test-ingress
spec:
defaultBackend:
service:
name: test
port:
number: 80
If you create it using kubectl apply -f
you should be able to view the state
of the Ingress you added:
kubectl get ingress test-ingress
NAME CLASS HOSTS ADDRESS PORTS AGE
test-ingress external-lb * 203.0.113.123 80 59s
Where 203.0.113.123
is the IP allocated by the Ingress controller to satisfy
this Ingress.
<pending>
.
Simple fanout
A fanout configuration routes traffic from a single IP address to more than one Service, based on the HTTP URI being requested. An Ingress allows you to keep the number of load balancers down to a minimum. For example, a setup like:
It would require an Ingress such as:
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: simple-fanout-example
spec:
rules:
- host: foo.bar.com
http:
paths:
- path: /foo
pathType: Prefix
backend:
service:
name: service1
port:
number: 4200
- path: /bar
pathType: Prefix
backend:
service:
name: service2
port:
number: 8080
When you create the Ingress with kubectl apply -f
:
kubectl describe ingress simple-fanout-example
Name: simple-fanout-example
Namespace: default
Address: 178.91.123.132
Default backend: default-http-backend:80 (10.8.2.3:8080)
Rules:
Host Path Backends
---- ---- --------
foo.bar.com
/foo service1:4200 (10.8.0.90:4200)
/bar service2:8080 (10.8.0.91:8080)
Events:
Type Reason Age From Message
---- ------ ---- ---- -------
Normal ADD 22s loadbalancer-controller default/test
The Ingress controller provisions an implementation-specific load balancer
that satisfies the Ingress, as long as the Services (service1
, service2
) exist.
When it has done so, you can see the address of the load balancer at the
Address field.
Name based virtual hosting
Name-based virtual hosts support routing HTTP traffic to multiple host names at the same IP address.
The following Ingress tells the backing load balancer to route requests based on the Host header.
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: name-virtual-host-ingress
spec:
rules:
- host: foo.bar.com
http:
paths:
- pathType: Prefix
path: "/"
backend:
service:
name: service1
port:
number: 80
- host: bar.foo.com
http:
paths:
- pathType: Prefix
path: "/"
backend:
service:
name: service2
port:
number: 80
If you create an Ingress resource without any hosts defined in the rules, then any web traffic to the IP address of your Ingress controller can be matched without a name based virtual host being required.
For example, the following Ingress routes traffic
requested for first.bar.com
to service1
, second.bar.com
to service2
,
and any traffic whose request host header doesn't match first.bar.com
and second.bar.com
to service3
.
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: name-virtual-host-ingress-no-third-host
spec:
rules:
- host: first.bar.com
http:
paths:
- pathType: Prefix
path: "/"
backend:
service:
name: service1
port:
number: 80
- host: second.bar.com
http:
paths:
- pathType: Prefix
path: "/"
backend:
service:
name: service2
port:
number: 80
- http:
paths:
- pathType: Prefix
path: "/"
backend:
service:
name: service3
port:
number: 80
TLS
You can secure an Ingress by specifying a Secret
that contains a TLS private key and certificate. The Ingress resource only
supports a single TLS port, 443, and assumes TLS termination at the ingress point
(traffic to the Service and its Pods is in plaintext).
If the TLS configuration section in an Ingress specifies different hosts, they are
multiplexed on the same port according to the hostname specified through the
SNI TLS extension (provided the Ingress controller supports SNI). The TLS secret
must contain keys named tls.crt
and tls.key
that contain the certificate
and private key to use for TLS. For example:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: testsecret-tls
namespace: default
data:
tls.crt: base64 encoded cert
tls.key: base64 encoded key
type: kubernetes.io/tls
Referencing this secret in an Ingress tells the Ingress controller to
secure the channel from the client to the load balancer using TLS. You need to make
sure the TLS secret you created came from a certificate that contains a Common
Name (CN), also known as a Fully Qualified Domain Name (FQDN) for https-example.foo.com
.
hosts
in the tls
section need to explicitly match the host
in the rules
section.
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: tls-example-ingress
spec:
tls:
- hosts:
- https-example.foo.com
secretName: testsecret-tls
rules:
- host: https-example.foo.com
http:
paths:
- path: /
pathType: Prefix
backend:
service:
name: service1
port:
number: 80
Load balancing
An Ingress controller is bootstrapped with some load balancing policy settings that it applies to all Ingress, such as the load balancing algorithm, backend weight scheme, and others. More advanced load balancing concepts (e.g. persistent sessions, dynamic weights) are not yet exposed through the Ingress. You can instead get these features through the load balancer used for a Service.
It's also worth noting that even though health checks are not exposed directly through the Ingress, there exist parallel concepts in Kubernetes such as readiness probes that allow you to achieve the same end result. Please review the controller specific documentation to see how they handle health checks (for example: nginx, or GCE).
Updating an Ingress
To update an existing Ingress to add a new Host, you can update it by editing the resource:
kubectl describe ingress test
Name: test
Namespace: default
Address: 178.91.123.132
Default backend: default-http-backend:80 (10.8.2.3:8080)
Rules:
Host Path Backends
---- ---- --------
foo.bar.com
/foo service1:80 (10.8.0.90:80)
Annotations:
nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/rewrite-target: /
Events:
Type Reason Age From Message
---- ------ ---- ---- -------
Normal ADD 35s loadbalancer-controller default/test
kubectl edit ingress test
This pops up an editor with the existing configuration in YAML format. Modify it to include the new Host:
spec:
rules:
- host: foo.bar.com
http:
paths:
- backend:
service:
name: service1
port:
number: 80
path: /foo
pathType: Prefix
- host: bar.baz.com
http:
paths:
- backend:
service:
name: service2
port:
number: 80
path: /foo
pathType: Prefix
..
After you save your changes, kubectl updates the resource in the API server, which tells the Ingress controller to reconfigure the load balancer.
Verify this:
kubectl describe ingress test
Name: test
Namespace: default
Address: 178.91.123.132
Default backend: default-http-backend:80 (10.8.2.3:8080)
Rules:
Host Path Backends
---- ---- --------
foo.bar.com
/foo service1:80 (10.8.0.90:80)
bar.baz.com
/foo service2:80 (10.8.0.91:80)
Annotations:
nginx.ingress.kubernetes.io/rewrite-target: /
Events:
Type Reason Age From Message
---- ------ ---- ---- -------
Normal ADD 45s loadbalancer-controller default/test
You can achieve the same outcome by invoking kubectl replace -f
on a modified Ingress YAML file.
Failing across availability zones
Techniques for spreading traffic across failure domains differ between cloud providers. Please check the documentation of the relevant Ingress controller for details.
Alternatives
You can expose a Service in multiple ways that don't directly involve the Ingress resource:
What's next
- Learn about the Ingress API
- Learn about Ingress controllers
- Set up Ingress on Minikube with the NGINX Controller
5.3 - Ingress Controllers
In order for the Ingress resource to work, the cluster must have an ingress controller running.
Unlike other types of controllers which run as part of the kube-controller-manager
binary, Ingress controllers
are not started automatically with a cluster. Use this page to choose the ingress controller implementation
that best fits your cluster.
Kubernetes as a project supports and maintains AWS, GCE, and nginx ingress controllers.
Additional controllers
- AKS Application Gateway Ingress Controller is an ingress controller that configures the Azure Application Gateway.
- Alibaba Cloud MSE Ingress is an ingress controller that configures the Alibaba Cloud Native Gateway, which is also the commercial version of Higress.
- Apache APISIX ingress controller is an Apache APISIX-based ingress controller.
- Avi Kubernetes Operator provides L4-L7 load-balancing using VMware NSX Advanced Load Balancer.
- BFE Ingress Controller is a BFE-based ingress controller.
- Cilium Ingress Controller is an ingress controller powered by Cilium.
- The Citrix ingress controller works with Citrix Application Delivery Controller.
- Contour is an Envoy based ingress controller.
- Emissary-Ingress API Gateway is an Envoy-based ingress controller.
- EnRoute is an Envoy based API gateway that can run as an ingress controller.
- Easegress IngressController is an Easegress based API gateway that can run as an ingress controller.
- F5 BIG-IP Container Ingress Services for Kubernetes lets you use an Ingress to configure F5 BIG-IP virtual servers.
- FortiADC Ingress Controller support the Kubernetes Ingress resources and allows you to manage FortiADC objects from Kubernetes
- Gloo is an open-source ingress controller based on Envoy, which offers API gateway functionality.
- HAProxy Ingress is an ingress controller for HAProxy.
- Higress is an Envoy based API gateway that can run as an ingress controller.
- The HAProxy Ingress Controller for Kubernetes is also an ingress controller for HAProxy.
- Istio Ingress is an Istio based ingress controller.
- The Kong Ingress Controller for Kubernetes is an ingress controller driving Kong Gateway.
- Kusk Gateway is an OpenAPI-driven ingress controller based on Envoy.
- The NGINX Ingress Controller for Kubernetes works with the NGINX webserver (as a proxy).
- The ngrok Kubernetes Ingress Controller is an open source controller for adding secure public access to your K8s services using the ngrok platform.
- The OCI Native Ingress Controller is an Ingress controller for Oracle Cloud Infrastructure which allows you to manage the OCI Load Balancer.
- The Pomerium Ingress Controller is based on Pomerium, which offers context-aware access policy.
- Skipper HTTP router and reverse proxy for service composition, including use cases like Kubernetes Ingress, designed as a library to build your custom proxy.
- The Traefik Kubernetes Ingress provider is an ingress controller for the Traefik proxy.
- Tyk Operator extends Ingress with Custom Resources to bring API Management capabilities to Ingress. Tyk Operator works with the Open Source Tyk Gateway & Tyk Cloud control plane.
- Voyager is an ingress controller for HAProxy.
- Wallarm Ingress Controller is an Ingress Controller that provides WAAP (WAF) and API Security capabilities.
Using multiple Ingress controllers
You may deploy any number of ingress controllers using ingress class
within a cluster. Note the .metadata.name
of your ingress class resource. When you create an ingress you would need that name to specify the ingressClassName
field on your Ingress object (refer to IngressSpec v1 reference). ingressClassName
is a replacement of the older annotation method.
If you do not specify an IngressClass for an Ingress, and your cluster has exactly one IngressClass marked as default, then Kubernetes applies the cluster's default IngressClass to the Ingress.
You mark an IngressClass as default by setting the ingressclass.kubernetes.io/is-default-class
annotation on that IngressClass, with the string value "true"
.
Ideally, all ingress controllers should fulfill this specification, but the various ingress controllers operate slightly differently.
What's next
- Learn more about Ingress.
- Set up Ingress on Minikube with the NGINX Controller.
5.4 - Gateway API
Make network services available by using an extensible, role-oriented, protocol-aware configuration mechanism. Gateway API is an add-on containing API kinds that provide dynamic infrastructure provisioning and advanced traffic routing.
Design principles
The following principles shaped the design and architecture of Gateway API:
- Role-oriented: Gateway API kinds are modeled after organizational roles that are
responsible for managing Kubernetes service networking:
- Infrastructure Provider: Manages infrastructure that allows multiple isolated clusters to serve multiple tenants, e.g. a cloud provider.
- Cluster Operator: Manages clusters and is typically concerned with policies, network access, application permissions, etc.
- Application Developer: Manages an application running in a cluster and is typically concerned with application-level configuration and Service composition.
- Portable: Gateway API specifications are defined as custom resources and are supported by many implementations.
- Expressive: Gateway API kinds support functionality for common traffic routing use cases such as header-based matching, traffic weighting, and others that were only possible in Ingress by using custom annotations.
- Extensible: Gateway allows for custom resources to be linked at various layers of the API. This makes granular customization possible at the appropriate places within the API structure.
Resource model
Gateway API has three stable API kinds:
-
GatewayClass: Defines a set of gateways with common configuration and managed by a controller that implements the class.
-
Gateway: Defines an instance of traffic handling infrastructure, such as cloud load balancer.
-
HTTPRoute: Defines HTTP-specific rules for mapping traffic from a Gateway listener to a representation of backend network endpoints. These endpoints are often represented as a Service.
Gateway API is organized into different API kinds that have interdependent relationships to support
the role-oriented nature of organizations. A Gateway object is associated with exactly one GatewayClass;
the GatewayClass describes the gateway controller responsible for managing Gateways of this class.
One or more route kinds such as HTTPRoute, are then associated to Gateways. A Gateway can filter the routes
that may be attached to its listeners
, forming a bidirectional trust model with routes.
The following figure illustrates the relationships of the three stable Gateway API kinds:
GatewayClass
Gateways can be implemented by different controllers, often with different configurations. A Gateway must reference a GatewayClass that contains the name of the controller that implements the class.
A minimal GatewayClass example:
apiVersion: gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: GatewayClass
metadata:
name: example-class
spec:
controllerName: example.com/gateway-controller
In this example, a controller that has implemented Gateway API is configured to manage GatewayClasses
with the controller name example.com/gateway-controller
. Gateways of this class will be managed by
the implementation's controller.
See the GatewayClass reference for a full definition of this API kind.
Gateway
A Gateway describes an instance of traffic handling infrastructure. It defines a network endpoint that can be used for processing traffic, i.e. filtering, balancing, splitting, etc. for backends such as a Service. For example, a Gateway may represent a cloud load balancer or an in-cluster proxy server that is configured to accept HTTP traffic.
A minimal Gateway resource example:
apiVersion: gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: Gateway
metadata:
name: example-gateway
spec:
gatewayClassName: example-class
listeners:
- name: http
protocol: HTTP
port: 80
In this example, an instance of traffic handling infrastructure is programmed to listen for HTTP
traffic on port 80. Since the addresses
field is unspecified, an address or hostname is assigned
to the Gateway by the implementation's controller. This address is used as a network endpoint for
processing traffic of backend network endpoints defined in routes.
See the Gateway reference for a full definition of this API kind.
HTTPRoute
The HTTPRoute kind specifies routing behavior of HTTP requests from a Gateway listener to backend network endpoints. For a Service backend, an implementation may represent the backend network endpoint as a Service IP or the backing Endpoints of the Service. An HTTPRoute represents configuration that is applied to the underlying Gateway implementation. For example, defining a new HTTPRoute may result in configuring additional traffic routes in a cloud load balancer or in-cluster proxy server.
A minimal HTTPRoute example:
apiVersion: gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: HTTPRoute
metadata:
name: example-httproute
spec:
parentRefs:
- name: example-gateway
hostnames:
- "www.example.com"
rules:
- matches:
- path:
type: PathPrefix
value: /login
backendRefs:
- name: example-svc
port: 8080
In this example, HTTP traffic from Gateway example-gateway
with the Host: header set to www.example.com
and the request path specified as /login
will be routed to Service example-svc
on port 8080
.
See the HTTPRoute reference for a full definition of this API kind.
Request flow
Here is a simple example of HTTP traffic being routed to a Service by using a Gateway and an HTTPRoute:
In this example, the request flow for a Gateway implemented as a reverse proxy is:
- The client starts to prepare an HTTP request for the URL
http://www.example.com
- The client's DNS resolver queries for the destination name and learns a mapping to one or more IP addresses associated with the Gateway.
- The client sends a request to the Gateway IP address; the reverse proxy receives the HTTP request and uses the Host: header to match a configuration that was derived from the Gateway and attached HTTPRoute.
- Optionally, the reverse proxy can perform request header and/or path matching based on match rules of the HTTPRoute.
- Optionally, the reverse proxy can modify the request; for example, to add or remove headers, based on filter rules of the HTTPRoute.
- Lastly, the reverse proxy forwards the request to one or more backends.
Conformance
Gateway API covers a broad set of features and is widely implemented. This combination requires clear conformance definitions and tests to ensure that the API provides a consistent experience wherever it is used.
See the conformance documentation to understand details such as release channels, support levels, and running conformance tests.
Migrating from Ingress
Gateway API is the successor to the Ingress API. However, it does not include the Ingress kind. As a result, a one-time conversion from your existing Ingress resources to Gateway API resources is necessary.
Refer to the ingress migration guide for details on migrating Ingress resources to Gateway API resources.
What's next
Instead of Gateway API resources being natively implemented by Kubernetes, the specifications are defined as Custom Resources supported by a wide range of implementations. Install the Gateway API CRDs or follow the installation instructions of your selected implementation. After installing an implementation, use the Getting Started guide to help you quickly start working with Gateway API.
Refer to the API specification for additional details of all Gateway API kinds.
5.5 - EndpointSlices
Kubernetes v1.21 [stable]
Kubernetes' EndpointSlice API provides a way to track network endpoints within a Kubernetes cluster. EndpointSlices offer a more scalable and extensible alternative to Endpoints.
EndpointSlice API
In Kubernetes, an EndpointSlice contains references to a set of network endpoints. The control plane automatically creates EndpointSlices for any Kubernetes Service that has a selector specified. These EndpointSlices include references to all the Pods that match the Service selector. EndpointSlices group network endpoints together by unique combinations of protocol, port number, and Service name. The name of a EndpointSlice object must be a valid DNS subdomain name.
As an example, here's a sample EndpointSlice object, that's owned by the example
Kubernetes Service.
apiVersion: discovery.k8s.io/v1
kind: EndpointSlice
metadata:
name: example-abc
labels:
kubernetes.io/service-name: example
addressType: IPv4
ports:
- name: http
protocol: TCP
port: 80
endpoints:
- addresses:
- "10.1.2.3"
conditions:
ready: true
hostname: pod-1
nodeName: node-1
zone: us-west2-a
By default, the control plane creates and manages EndpointSlices to have no
more than 100 endpoints each. You can configure this with the
--max-endpoints-per-slice
kube-controller-manager
flag, up to a maximum of 1000.
EndpointSlices can act as the source of truth for kube-proxy when it comes to how to route internal traffic.
Address types
EndpointSlices support three address types:
- IPv4
- IPv6
- FQDN (Fully Qualified Domain Name)
Each EndpointSlice
object represents a specific IP address type. If you have
a Service that is available via IPv4 and IPv6, there will be at least two
EndpointSlice
objects (one for IPv4, and one for IPv6).
Conditions
The EndpointSlice API stores conditions about endpoints that may be useful for consumers.
The three conditions are ready
, serving
, and terminating
.
Ready
ready
is a condition that maps to a Pod's Ready
condition. A running Pod with the Ready
condition set to True
should have this EndpointSlice condition also set to true
. For
compatibility reasons, ready
is NEVER true
when a Pod is terminating. Consumers should refer
to the serving
condition to inspect the readiness of terminating Pods. The only exception to
this rule is for Services with spec.publishNotReadyAddresses
set to true
. Endpoints for these
Services will always have the ready
condition set to true
.
Serving
Kubernetes v1.26 [stable]
The serving
condition is almost identical to the ready
condition. The difference is that
consumers of the EndpointSlice API should check the serving
condition if they care about pod readiness while
the pod is also terminating.
serving
is almost identical to ready
, it was added to prevent breaking the existing meaning
of ready
. It may be unexpected for existing clients if ready
could be true
for terminating
endpoints, since historically terminating endpoints were never included in the Endpoints or
EndpointSlice API to begin with. For this reason, ready
is always false
for terminating
endpoints, and a new condition serving
was added in v1.20 so that clients can track readiness
for terminating pods independent of the existing semantics for ready
.
Terminating
Kubernetes v1.22 [beta]
Terminating
is a condition that indicates whether an endpoint is terminating.
For pods, this is any pod that has a deletion timestamp set.
Topology information
Each endpoint within an EndpointSlice can contain relevant topology information. The topology information includes the location of the endpoint and information about the corresponding Node and zone. These are available in the following per endpoint fields on EndpointSlices:
nodeName
- The name of the Node this endpoint is on.zone
- The zone this endpoint is in.
In the v1 API, the per endpoint topology
was effectively removed in favor of
the dedicated fields nodeName
and zone
.
Setting arbitrary topology fields on the endpoint
field of an EndpointSlice
resource has been deprecated and is not supported in the v1 API.
Instead, the v1 API supports setting individual nodeName
and zone
fields.
These fields are automatically translated between API versions. For example, the
value of the "topology.kubernetes.io/zone"
key in the topology
field in
the v1beta1 API is accessible as the zone
field in the v1 API.
Management
Most often, the control plane (specifically, the endpoint slice controller) creates and manages EndpointSlice objects. There are a variety of other use cases for EndpointSlices, such as service mesh implementations, that could result in other entities or controllers managing additional sets of EndpointSlices.
To ensure that multiple entities can manage EndpointSlices without interfering
with each other, Kubernetes defines the
label
endpointslice.kubernetes.io/managed-by
, which indicates the entity managing
an EndpointSlice.
The endpoint slice controller sets endpointslice-controller.k8s.io
as the value
for this label on all EndpointSlices it manages. Other entities managing
EndpointSlices should also set a unique value for this label.
Ownership
In most use cases, EndpointSlices are owned by the Service that the endpoint
slice object tracks endpoints for. This ownership is indicated by an owner
reference on each EndpointSlice as well as a kubernetes.io/service-name
label that enables simple lookups of all EndpointSlices belonging to a Service.
EndpointSlice mirroring
In some cases, applications create custom Endpoints resources. To ensure that these applications do not need to concurrently write to both Endpoints and EndpointSlice resources, the cluster's control plane mirrors most Endpoints resources to corresponding EndpointSlices.
The control plane mirrors Endpoints resources unless:
- the Endpoints resource has a
endpointslice.kubernetes.io/skip-mirror
label set totrue
. - the Endpoints resource has a
control-plane.alpha.kubernetes.io/leader
annotation. - the corresponding Service resource does not exist.
- the corresponding Service resource has a non-nil selector.
Individual Endpoints resources may translate into multiple EndpointSlices. This will occur if an Endpoints resource has multiple subsets or includes endpoints with multiple IP families (IPv4 and IPv6). A maximum of 1000 addresses per subset will be mirrored to EndpointSlices.
Distribution of EndpointSlices
Each EndpointSlice has a set of ports that applies to all endpoints within the resource. When named ports are used for a Service, Pods may end up with different target port numbers for the same named port, requiring different EndpointSlices. This is similar to the logic behind how subsets are grouped with Endpoints.
The control plane tries to fill EndpointSlices as full as possible, but does not actively rebalance them. The logic is fairly straightforward:
- Iterate through existing EndpointSlices, remove endpoints that are no longer desired and update matching endpoints that have changed.
- Iterate through EndpointSlices that have been modified in the first step and fill them up with any new endpoints needed.
- If there's still new endpoints left to add, try to fit them into a previously unchanged slice and/or create new ones.
Importantly, the third step prioritizes limiting EndpointSlice updates over a perfectly full distribution of EndpointSlices. As an example, if there are 10 new endpoints to add and 2 EndpointSlices with room for 5 more endpoints each, this approach will create a new EndpointSlice instead of filling up the 2 existing EndpointSlices. In other words, a single EndpointSlice creation is preferable to multiple EndpointSlice updates.
With kube-proxy running on each Node and watching EndpointSlices, every change to an EndpointSlice becomes relatively expensive since it will be transmitted to every Node in the cluster. This approach is intended to limit the number of changes that need to be sent to every Node, even if it may result with multiple EndpointSlices that are not full.
In practice, this less than ideal distribution should be rare. Most changes processed by the EndpointSlice controller will be small enough to fit in an existing EndpointSlice, and if not, a new EndpointSlice is likely going to be necessary soon anyway. Rolling updates of Deployments also provide a natural repacking of EndpointSlices with all Pods and their corresponding endpoints getting replaced.
Duplicate endpoints
Due to the nature of EndpointSlice changes, endpoints may be represented in more than one EndpointSlice at the same time. This naturally occurs as changes to different EndpointSlice objects can arrive at the Kubernetes client watch / cache at different times.
Clients of the EndpointSlice API must iterate through all the existing EndpointSlices associated to a Service and build a complete list of unique network endpoints. It is important to mention that endpoints may be duplicated in different EndpointSlices.
You can find a reference implementation for how to perform this endpoint aggregation
and deduplication as part of the EndpointSliceCache
code within kube-proxy
.
Comparison with Endpoints
The original Endpoints API provided a simple and straightforward way of tracking network endpoints in Kubernetes. As Kubernetes clusters and Services grew to handle more traffic and to send more traffic to more backend Pods, the limitations of that original API became more visible. Most notably, those included challenges with scaling to larger numbers of network endpoints.
Since all network endpoints for a Service were stored in a single Endpoints object, those Endpoints objects could get quite large. For Services that stayed stable (the same set of endpoints over a long period of time) the impact was less noticeable; even then, some use cases of Kubernetes weren't well served.
When a Service had a lot of backend endpoints and the workload was either scaling frequently, or rolling out new changes frequently, each update to the single Endpoints object for that Service meant a lot of traffic between Kubernetes cluster components (within the control plane, and also between nodes and the API server). This extra traffic also had a cost in terms of CPU use.
With EndpointSlices, adding or removing a single Pod triggers the same number of updates to clients that are watching for changes, but the size of those update message is much smaller at large scale.
EndpointSlices also enabled innovation around new features such dual-stack networking and topology-aware routing.
What's next
- Follow the Connecting Applications with Services tutorial
- Read the API reference for the EndpointSlice API
- Read the API reference for the Endpoints API
5.6 - Network Policies
If you want to control traffic flow at the IP address or port level for TCP, UDP, and SCTP protocols, then you might consider using Kubernetes NetworkPolicies for particular applications in your cluster. NetworkPolicies are an application-centric construct which allow you to specify how a pod is allowed to communicate with various network "entities" (we use the word "entity" here to avoid overloading the more common terms such as "endpoints" and "services", which have specific Kubernetes connotations) over the network. NetworkPolicies apply to a connection with a pod on one or both ends, and are not relevant to other connections.
The entities that a Pod can communicate with are identified through a combination of the following three identifiers:
- Other pods that are allowed (exception: a pod cannot block access to itself)
- Namespaces that are allowed
- IP blocks (exception: traffic to and from the node where a Pod is running is always allowed, regardless of the IP address of the Pod or the node)
When defining a pod- or namespace-based NetworkPolicy, you use a selector to specify what traffic is allowed to and from the Pod(s) that match the selector.
Meanwhile, when IP-based NetworkPolicies are created, we define policies based on IP blocks (CIDR ranges).
Prerequisites
Network policies are implemented by the network plugin. To use network policies, you must be using a networking solution which supports NetworkPolicy. Creating a NetworkPolicy resource without a controller that implements it will have no effect.
The two sorts of pod isolation
There are two sorts of isolation for a pod: isolation for egress, and isolation for ingress. They concern what connections may be established. "Isolation" here is not absolute, rather it means "some restrictions apply". The alternative, "non-isolated for $direction", means that no restrictions apply in the stated direction. The two sorts of isolation (or not) are declared independently, and are both relevant for a connection from one pod to another.
By default, a pod is non-isolated for egress; all outbound connections are allowed.
A pod is isolated for egress if there is any NetworkPolicy that both selects the pod and has
"Egress" in its policyTypes
; we say that such a policy applies to the pod for egress.
When a pod is isolated for egress, the only allowed connections from the pod are those allowed by
the egress
list of some NetworkPolicy that applies to the pod for egress. Reply traffic for those
allowed connections will also be implicitly allowed.
The effects of those egress
lists combine additively.
By default, a pod is non-isolated for ingress; all inbound connections are allowed.
A pod is isolated for ingress if there is any NetworkPolicy that both selects the pod and
has "Ingress" in its policyTypes
; we say that such a policy applies to the pod for ingress.
When a pod is isolated for ingress, the only allowed connections into the pod are those from
the pod's node and those allowed by the ingress
list of some NetworkPolicy that applies to
the pod for ingress. Reply traffic for those allowed connections will also be implicitly allowed.
The effects of those ingress
lists combine additively.
Network policies do not conflict; they are additive. If any policy or policies apply to a given pod for a given direction, the connections allowed in that direction from that pod is the union of what the applicable policies allow. Thus, order of evaluation does not affect the policy result.
For a connection from a source pod to a destination pod to be allowed, both the egress policy on the source pod and the ingress policy on the destination pod need to allow the connection. If either side does not allow the connection, it will not happen.
The NetworkPolicy resource
See the NetworkPolicy reference for a full definition of the resource.
An example NetworkPolicy might look like this:
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: NetworkPolicy
metadata:
name: test-network-policy
namespace: default
spec:
podSelector:
matchLabels:
role: db
policyTypes:
- Ingress
- Egress
ingress:
- from:
- ipBlock:
cidr: 172.17.0.0/16
except:
- 172.17.1.0/24
- namespaceSelector:
matchLabels:
project: myproject
- podSelector:
matchLabels:
role: frontend
ports:
- protocol: TCP
port: 6379
egress:
- to:
- ipBlock:
cidr: 10.0.0.0/24
ports:
- protocol: TCP
port: 5978
Mandatory Fields: As with all other Kubernetes config, a NetworkPolicy needs apiVersion
,
kind
, and metadata
fields. For general information about working with config files, see
Configure a Pod to Use a ConfigMap,
and Object Management.
spec: NetworkPolicy spec has all the information needed to define a particular network policy in the given namespace.
podSelector: Each NetworkPolicy includes a podSelector
which selects the grouping of pods to
which the policy applies. The example policy selects pods with the label "role=db". An empty
podSelector
selects all pods in the namespace.
policyTypes: Each NetworkPolicy includes a policyTypes
list which may include either
Ingress
, Egress
, or both. The policyTypes
field indicates whether or not the given policy
applies to ingress traffic to selected pod, egress traffic from selected pods, or both. If no
policyTypes
are specified on a NetworkPolicy then by default Ingress
will always be set and
Egress
will be set if the NetworkPolicy has any egress rules.
ingress: Each NetworkPolicy may include a list of allowed ingress
rules. Each rule allows
traffic which matches both the from
and ports
sections. The example policy contains a single
rule, which matches traffic on a single port, from one of three sources, the first specified via
an ipBlock
, the second via a namespaceSelector
and the third via a podSelector
.
egress: Each NetworkPolicy may include a list of allowed egress
rules. Each rule allows
traffic which matches both the to
and ports
sections. The example policy contains a single
rule, which matches traffic on a single port to any destination in 10.0.0.0/24
.
So, the example NetworkPolicy:
-
isolates
role=db
pods in thedefault
namespace for both ingress and egress traffic (if they weren't already isolated) -
(Ingress rules) allows connections to all pods in the
default
namespace with the labelrole=db
on TCP port 6379 from:- any pod in the
default
namespace with the labelrole=frontend
- any pod in a namespace with the label
project=myproject
- IP addresses in the ranges
172.17.0.0
–172.17.0.255
and172.17.2.0
–172.17.255.255
(ie, all of172.17.0.0/16
except172.17.1.0/24
)
- any pod in the
-
(Egress rules) allows connections from any pod in the
default
namespace with the labelrole=db
to CIDR10.0.0.0/24
on TCP port 5978
See the Declare Network Policy walkthrough for further examples.
Behavior of to
and from
selectors
There are four kinds of selectors that can be specified in an ingress
from
section or egress
to
section:
podSelector: This selects particular Pods in the same namespace as the NetworkPolicy which should be allowed as ingress sources or egress destinations.
namespaceSelector: This selects particular namespaces for which all Pods should be allowed as ingress sources or egress destinations.
namespaceSelector and podSelector: A single to
/from
entry that specifies both
namespaceSelector
and podSelector
selects particular Pods within particular namespaces. Be
careful to use correct YAML syntax. For example:
...
ingress:
- from:
- namespaceSelector:
matchLabels:
user: alice
podSelector:
matchLabels:
role: client
...
This policy contains a single from
element allowing connections from Pods with the label
role=client
in namespaces with the label user=alice
. But the following policy is different:
...
ingress:
- from:
- namespaceSelector:
matchLabels:
user: alice
- podSelector:
matchLabels:
role: client
...
It contains two elements in the from
array, and allows connections from Pods in the local
Namespace with the label role=client
, or from any Pod in any namespace with the label
user=alice
.
When in doubt, use kubectl describe
to see how Kubernetes has interpreted the policy.
ipBlock: This selects particular IP CIDR ranges to allow as ingress sources or egress destinations. These should be cluster-external IPs, since Pod IPs are ephemeral and unpredictable.
Cluster ingress and egress mechanisms often require rewriting the source or destination IP
of packets. In cases where this happens, it is not defined whether this happens before or
after NetworkPolicy processing, and the behavior may be different for different
combinations of network plugin, cloud provider, Service
implementation, etc.
In the case of ingress, this means that in some cases you may be able to filter incoming
packets based on the actual original source IP, while in other cases, the "source IP" that
the NetworkPolicy acts on may be the IP of a LoadBalancer
or of the Pod's node, etc.
For egress, this means that connections from pods to Service
IPs that get rewritten to
cluster-external IPs may or may not be subject to ipBlock
-based policies.
Default policies
By default, if no policies exist in a namespace, then all ingress and egress traffic is allowed to and from pods in that namespace. The following examples let you change the default behavior in that namespace.
Default deny all ingress traffic
You can create a "default" ingress isolation policy for a namespace by creating a NetworkPolicy that selects all pods but does not allow any ingress traffic to those pods.
---
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: NetworkPolicy
metadata:
name: default-deny-ingress
spec:
podSelector: {}
policyTypes:
- Ingress
This ensures that even pods that aren't selected by any other NetworkPolicy will still be isolated for ingress. This policy does not affect isolation for egress from any pod.
Allow all ingress traffic
If you want to allow all incoming connections to all pods in a namespace, you can create a policy that explicitly allows that.
---
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: NetworkPolicy
metadata:
name: allow-all-ingress
spec:
podSelector: {}
ingress:
- {}
policyTypes:
- Ingress
With this policy in place, no additional policy or policies can cause any incoming connection to those pods to be denied. This policy has no effect on isolation for egress from any pod.
Default deny all egress traffic
You can create a "default" egress isolation policy for a namespace by creating a NetworkPolicy that selects all pods but does not allow any egress traffic from those pods.
---
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: NetworkPolicy
metadata:
name: default-deny-egress
spec:
podSelector: {}
policyTypes:
- Egress
This ensures that even pods that aren't selected by any other NetworkPolicy will not be allowed egress traffic. This policy does not change the ingress isolation behavior of any pod.
Allow all egress traffic
If you want to allow all connections from all pods in a namespace, you can create a policy that explicitly allows all outgoing connections from pods in that namespace.
---
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: NetworkPolicy
metadata:
name: allow-all-egress
spec:
podSelector: {}
egress:
- {}
policyTypes:
- Egress
With this policy in place, no additional policy or policies can cause any outgoing connection from those pods to be denied. This policy has no effect on isolation for ingress to any pod.
Default deny all ingress and all egress traffic
You can create a "default" policy for a namespace which prevents all ingress AND egress traffic by creating the following NetworkPolicy in that namespace.
---
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: NetworkPolicy
metadata:
name: default-deny-all
spec:
podSelector: {}
policyTypes:
- Ingress
- Egress
This ensures that even pods that aren't selected by any other NetworkPolicy will not be allowed ingress or egress traffic.
Network traffic filtering
NetworkPolicy is defined for layer 4 connections (TCP, UDP, and optionally SCTP). For all the other protocols, the behaviour may vary across network plugins.
When a deny all
network policy is defined, it is only guaranteed to deny TCP, UDP and SCTP
connections. For other protocols, such as ARP or ICMP, the behaviour is undefined.
The same applies to allow rules: when a specific pod is allowed as ingress source or egress destination,
it is undefined what happens with (for example) ICMP packets. Protocols such as ICMP may be allowed by some
network plugins and denied by others.
Targeting a range of ports
Kubernetes v1.25 [stable]
When writing a NetworkPolicy, you can target a range of ports instead of a single port.
This is achievable with the usage of the endPort
field, as the following example:
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: NetworkPolicy
metadata:
name: multi-port-egress
namespace: default
spec:
podSelector:
matchLabels:
role: db
policyTypes:
- Egress
egress:
- to:
- ipBlock:
cidr: 10.0.0.0/24
ports:
- protocol: TCP
port: 32000
endPort: 32768
The above rule allows any Pod with label role=db
on the namespace default
to communicate
with any IP within the range 10.0.0.0/24
over TCP, provided that the target
port is between the range 32000 and 32768.
The following restrictions apply when using this field:
- The
endPort
field must be equal to or greater than theport
field. endPort
can only be defined ifport
is also defined.- Both ports must be numeric.
endPort
field in NetworkPolicy specifications.
If your network plugin
does not support the endPort
field and you specify a NetworkPolicy with that,
the policy will be applied only for the single port
field.
Targeting multiple namespaces by label
In this scenario, your Egress
NetworkPolicy targets more than one namespace using their
label names. For this to work, you need to label the target namespaces. For example:
kubectl label namespace frontend namespace=frontend
kubectl label namespace backend namespace=backend
Add the labels under namespaceSelector
in your NetworkPolicy document. For example:
apiVersion: networking.k8s.io/v1
kind: NetworkPolicy
metadata:
name: egress-namespaces
spec:
podSelector:
matchLabels:
app: myapp
policyTypes:
- Egress
egress:
- to:
- namespaceSelector:
matchExpressions:
- key: namespace
operator: In
values: ["frontend", "backend"]
namespaceSelector
with matchLabels
or matchExpressions
to select the
namespaces based on their labels.
Targeting a Namespace by its name
The Kubernetes control plane sets an immutable label kubernetes.io/metadata.name
on all
namespaces, the value of the label is the namespace name.
While NetworkPolicy cannot target a namespace by its name with some object field, you can use the standardized label to target a specific namespace.
Pod lifecycle
When a new NetworkPolicy object is created, it may take some time for a network plugin to handle the new object. If a pod that is affected by a NetworkPolicy is created before the network plugin has completed NetworkPolicy handling, that pod may be started unprotected, and isolation rules will be applied when the NetworkPolicy handling is completed.
Once the NetworkPolicy is handled by a network plugin,
-
All newly created pods affected by a given NetworkPolicy will be isolated before they are started. Implementations of NetworkPolicy must ensure that filtering is effective throughout the Pod lifecycle, even from the very first instant that any container in that Pod is started. Because they are applied at Pod level, NetworkPolicies apply equally to init containers, sidecar containers, and regular containers.
-
Allow rules will be applied eventually after the isolation rules (or may be applied at the same time). In the worst case, a newly created pod may have no network connectivity at all when it is first started, if isolation rules were already applied, but no allow rules were applied yet.
Every created NetworkPolicy will be handled by a network plugin eventually, but there is no way to tell from the Kubernetes API when exactly that happens.
Therefore, pods must be resilient against being started up with different network connectivity than expected. If you need to make sure the pod can reach certain destinations before being started, you can use an init container to wait for those destinations to be reachable before kubelet starts the app containers.
Every NetworkPolicy will be applied to all selected pods eventually. Because the network plugin may implement NetworkPolicy in a distributed manner, it is possible that pods may see a slightly inconsistent view of network policies when the pod is first created, or when pods or policies change. For example, a newly-created pod that is supposed to be able to reach both Pod A on Node 1 and Pod B on Node 2 may find that it can reach Pod A immediately, but cannot reach Pod B until a few seconds later.
NetworkPolicy and hostNetwork
pods
NetworkPolicy behaviour for hostNetwork
pods is undefined, but it should be limited to 2 possibilities:
- The network plugin can distinguish
hostNetwork
pod traffic from all other traffic (including being able to distinguish traffic from differenthostNetwork
pods on the same node), and will apply NetworkPolicy tohostNetwork
pods just like it does to pod-network pods. - The network plugin cannot properly distinguish
hostNetwork
pod traffic, and so it ignoreshostNetwork
pods when matchingpodSelector
andnamespaceSelector
. Traffic to/fromhostNetwork
pods is treated the same as all other traffic to/from the node IP. (This is the most common implementation.)
This applies when
-
a
hostNetwork
pod is selected byspec.podSelector
.... spec: podSelector: matchLabels: role: client ...
-
a
hostNetwork
pod is selected by apodSelector
ornamespaceSelector
in aningress
oregress
rule.... ingress: - from: - podSelector: matchLabels: role: client ...
At the same time, since hostNetwork
pods have the same IP addresses as the nodes they reside on,
their connections will be treated as node connections. For example, you can allow traffic
from a hostNetwork
Pod using an ipBlock
rule.
What you can't do with network policies (at least, not yet)
As of Kubernetes 1.29, the following functionality does not exist in the NetworkPolicy API, but you might be able to implement workarounds using Operating System components (such as SELinux, OpenVSwitch, IPTables, and so on) or Layer 7 technologies (Ingress controllers, Service Mesh implementations) or admission controllers. In case you are new to network security in Kubernetes, its worth noting that the following User Stories cannot (yet) be implemented using the NetworkPolicy API.
- Forcing internal cluster traffic to go through a common gateway (this might be best served with a service mesh or other proxy).
- Anything TLS related (use a service mesh or ingress controller for this).
- Node specific policies (you can use CIDR notation for these, but you cannot target nodes by their Kubernetes identities specifically).
- Targeting of services by name (you can, however, target pods or namespaces by their labels, which is often a viable workaround).
- Creation or management of "Policy requests" that are fulfilled by a third party.
- Default policies which are applied to all namespaces or pods (there are some third party Kubernetes distributions and projects which can do this).
- Advanced policy querying and reachability tooling.
- The ability to log network security events (for example connections that are blocked or accepted).
- The ability to explicitly deny policies (currently the model for NetworkPolicies are deny by default, with only the ability to add allow rules).
- The ability to prevent loopback or incoming host traffic (Pods cannot currently block localhost access, nor do they have the ability to block access from their resident node).
NetworkPolicy's impact on existing connections
When the set of NetworkPolicies that applies to an existing connection changes - this could happen either due to a change in NetworkPolicies or if the relevant labels of the namespaces/pods selected by the policy (both subject and peers) are changed in the middle of an existing connection - it is implementation defined as to whether the change will take effect for that existing connection or not. Example: A policy is created that leads to denying a previously allowed connection, the underlying network plugin implementation is responsible for defining if that new policy will close the existing connections or not. It is recommended not to modify policies/pods/namespaces in ways that might affect existing connections.
What's next
- See the Declare Network Policy walkthrough for further examples.
- See more recipes for common scenarios enabled by the NetworkPolicy resource.
5.7 - DNS for Services and Pods
Kubernetes creates DNS records for Services and Pods. You can contact Services with consistent DNS names instead of IP addresses.
Kubernetes publishes information about Pods and Services which is used to program DNS. Kubelet configures Pods' DNS so that running containers can lookup Services by name rather than IP.
Services defined in the cluster are assigned DNS names. By default, a client Pod's DNS search list includes the Pod's own namespace and the cluster's default domain.
Namespaces of Services
A DNS query may return different results based on the namespace of the Pod making it. DNS queries that don't specify a namespace are limited to the Pod's namespace. Access Services in other namespaces by specifying it in the DNS query.
For example, consider a Pod in a test
namespace. A data
Service is in
the prod
namespace.
A query for data
returns no results, because it uses the Pod's test
namespace.
A query for data.prod
returns the intended result, because it specifies the
namespace.
DNS queries may be expanded using the Pod's /etc/resolv.conf
. Kubelet
configures this file for each Pod. For example, a query for just data
may be
expanded to data.test.svc.cluster.local
. The values of the search
option
are used to expand queries. To learn more about DNS queries, see
the resolv.conf
manual page.
nameserver 10.32.0.10
search <namespace>.svc.cluster.local svc.cluster.local cluster.local
options ndots:5
In summary, a Pod in the test namespace can successfully resolve either
data.prod
or data.prod.svc.cluster.local
.
DNS Records
What objects get DNS records?
- Services
- Pods
The following sections detail the supported DNS record types and layout that is supported. Any other layout or names or queries that happen to work are considered implementation details and are subject to change without warning. For more up-to-date specification, see Kubernetes DNS-Based Service Discovery.
Services
A/AAAA records
"Normal" (not headless) Services are assigned DNS A and/or AAAA records,
depending on the IP family or families of the Service, with a name of the form
my-svc.my-namespace.svc.cluster-domain.example
. This resolves to the cluster IP
of the Service.
Headless Services
(without a cluster IP) Services are also assigned DNS A and/or AAAA records,
with a name of the form my-svc.my-namespace.svc.cluster-domain.example
. Unlike normal
Services, this resolves to the set of IPs of all of the Pods selected by the Service.
Clients are expected to consume the set or else use standard round-robin
selection from the set.
SRV records
SRV Records are created for named ports that are part of normal or headless
services. For each named port, the SRV record has the form
_port-name._port-protocol.my-svc.my-namespace.svc.cluster-domain.example
.
For a regular Service, this resolves to the port number and the domain name:
my-svc.my-namespace.svc.cluster-domain.example
.
For a headless Service, this resolves to multiple answers, one for each Pod
that is backing the Service, and contains the port number and the domain name of the Pod
of the form hostname.my-svc.my-namespace.svc.cluster-domain.example
.
Pods
A/AAAA records
Kube-DNS versions, prior to the implementation of the DNS specification, had the following DNS resolution:
pod-ipv4-address.my-namespace.pod.cluster-domain.example
.
For example, if a Pod in the default
namespace has the IP address 172.17.0.3,
and the domain name for your cluster is cluster.local
, then the Pod has a DNS name:
172-17-0-3.default.pod.cluster.local
.
Any Pods exposed by a Service have the following DNS resolution available:
pod-ipv4-address.service-name.my-namespace.svc.cluster-domain.example
.
Pod's hostname and subdomain fields
Currently when a Pod is created, its hostname (as observed from within the Pod)
is the Pod's metadata.name
value.
The Pod spec has an optional hostname
field, which can be used to specify a
different hostname. When specified, it takes precedence over the Pod's name to be
the hostname of the Pod (again, as observed from within the Pod). For example,
given a Pod with spec.hostname
set to "my-host"
, the Pod will have its
hostname set to "my-host"
.
The Pod spec also has an optional subdomain
field which can be used to indicate
that the pod is part of sub-group of the namespace. For example, a Pod with spec.hostname
set to "foo"
, and spec.subdomain
set to "bar"
, in namespace "my-namespace"
, will
have its hostname set to "foo"
and its fully qualified domain name (FQDN) set to
"foo.bar.my-namespace.svc.cluster.local"
(once more, as observed from within
the Pod).
If there exists a headless Service in the same namespace as the Pod, with the same name as the subdomain, the cluster's DNS Server also returns A and/or AAAA records for the Pod's fully qualified hostname.
Example:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: busybox-subdomain
spec:
selector:
name: busybox
clusterIP: None
ports:
- name: foo # name is not required for single-port Services
port: 1234
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: busybox1
labels:
name: busybox
spec:
hostname: busybox-1
subdomain: busybox-subdomain
containers:
- image: busybox:1.28
command:
- sleep
- "3600"
name: busybox
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: busybox2
labels:
name: busybox
spec:
hostname: busybox-2
subdomain: busybox-subdomain
containers:
- image: busybox:1.28
command:
- sleep
- "3600"
name: busybox
Given the above Service "busybox-subdomain"
and the Pods which set spec.subdomain
to "busybox-subdomain"
, the first Pod will see its own FQDN as
"busybox-1.busybox-subdomain.my-namespace.svc.cluster-domain.example"
. DNS serves
A and/or AAAA records at that name, pointing to the Pod's IP. Both Pods "busybox1
" and
"busybox2
" will have their own address records.
An EndpointSlice can specify the DNS hostname for any endpoint addresses, along with its IP.
hostname
is required for the Pod's A or AAAA
record to be created. A Pod with no hostname
but with subdomain
will only create the
A or AAAA record for the headless Service (busybox-subdomain.my-namespace.svc.cluster-domain.example
),
pointing to the Pods' IP addresses. Also, the Pod needs to be ready in order to have a
record unless publishNotReadyAddresses=True
is set on the Service.
Pod's setHostnameAsFQDN field
Kubernetes v1.22 [stable]
When a Pod is configured to have fully qualified domain name (FQDN), its
hostname is the short hostname. For example, if you have a Pod with the fully
qualified domain name busybox-1.busybox-subdomain.my-namespace.svc.cluster-domain.example
,
then by default the hostname
command inside that Pod returns busybox-1
and the
hostname --fqdn
command returns the FQDN.
When you set setHostnameAsFQDN: true
in the Pod spec, the kubelet writes the Pod's FQDN into the hostname for that Pod's namespace. In this case, both hostname
and hostname --fqdn
return the Pod's FQDN.
In Linux, the hostname field of the kernel (the nodename
field of struct utsname
) is limited to 64 characters.
If a Pod enables this feature and its FQDN is longer than 64 character, it will fail to start. The Pod will remain in Pending
status (ContainerCreating
as seen by kubectl
) generating error events, such as Failed to construct FQDN from Pod hostname and cluster domain, FQDN long-FQDN
is too long (64 characters is the max, 70 characters requested). One way of improving user experience for this scenario is to create an admission webhook controller to control FQDN size when users create top level objects, for example, Deployment.
Pod's DNS Policy
DNS policies can be set on a per-Pod basis. Currently Kubernetes supports the
following Pod-specific DNS policies. These policies are specified in the
dnsPolicy
field of a Pod Spec.
- "
Default
": The Pod inherits the name resolution configuration from the node that the Pods run on. See related discussion for more details. - "
ClusterFirst
": Any DNS query that does not match the configured cluster domain suffix, such as "www.kubernetes.io
", is forwarded to an upstream nameserver by the DNS server. Cluster administrators may have extra stub-domain and upstream DNS servers configured. See related discussion for details on how DNS queries are handled in those cases. - "
ClusterFirstWithHostNet
": For Pods running with hostNetwork, you should explicitly set its DNS policy to "ClusterFirstWithHostNet
". Otherwise, Pods running with hostNetwork and"ClusterFirst"
will fallback to the behavior of the"Default"
policy.- Note: This is not supported on Windows. See below for details
- "
None
": It allows a Pod to ignore DNS settings from the Kubernetes environment. All DNS settings are supposed to be provided using thednsConfig
field in the Pod Spec. See Pod's DNS config subsection below.
dnsPolicy
is not
explicitly specified, then "ClusterFirst" is used.
The example below shows a Pod with its DNS policy set to
"ClusterFirstWithHostNet
" because it has hostNetwork
set to true
.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: busybox
namespace: default
spec:
containers:
- image: busybox:1.28
command:
- sleep
- "3600"
imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
name: busybox
restartPolicy: Always
hostNetwork: true
dnsPolicy: ClusterFirstWithHostNet
Pod's DNS Config
Kubernetes v1.14 [stable]
Pod's DNS Config allows users more control on the DNS settings for a Pod.
The dnsConfig
field is optional and it can work with any dnsPolicy
settings.
However, when a Pod's dnsPolicy
is set to "None
", the dnsConfig
field has
to be specified.
Below are the properties a user can specify in the dnsConfig
field:
nameservers
: a list of IP addresses that will be used as DNS servers for the Pod. There can be at most 3 IP addresses specified. When the Pod'sdnsPolicy
is set to "None
", the list must contain at least one IP address, otherwise this property is optional. The servers listed will be combined to the base nameservers generated from the specified DNS policy with duplicate addresses removed.searches
: a list of DNS search domains for hostname lookup in the Pod. This property is optional. When specified, the provided list will be merged into the base search domain names generated from the chosen DNS policy. Duplicate domain names are removed. Kubernetes allows up to 32 search domains.options
: an optional list of objects where each object may have aname
property (required) and avalue
property (optional). The contents in this property will be merged to the options generated from the specified DNS policy. Duplicate entries are removed.
The following is an example Pod with custom DNS settings:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
namespace: default
name: dns-example
spec:
containers:
- name: test
image: nginx
dnsPolicy: "None"
dnsConfig:
nameservers:
- 192.0.2.1 # this is an example
searches:
- ns1.svc.cluster-domain.example
- my.dns.search.suffix
options:
- name: ndots
value: "2"
- name: edns0
When the Pod above is created, the container test
gets the following contents
in its /etc/resolv.conf
file:
nameserver 192.0.2.1
search ns1.svc.cluster-domain.example my.dns.search.suffix
options ndots:2 edns0
For IPv6 setup, search path and name server should be set up like this:
kubectl exec -it dns-example -- cat /etc/resolv.conf
The output is similar to this:
nameserver 2001:db8:30::a
search default.svc.cluster-domain.example svc.cluster-domain.example cluster-domain.example
options ndots:5
DNS search domain list limits
Kubernetes 1.28 [stable]
Kubernetes itself does not limit the DNS Config until the length of the search domain list exceeds 32 or the total length of all search domains exceeds 2048. This limit applies to the node's resolver configuration file, the Pod's DNS Config, and the merged DNS Config respectively.
Some container runtimes of earlier versions may have their own restrictions on the number of DNS search domains. Depending on the container runtime environment, the pods with a large number of DNS search domains may get stuck in the pending state.
It is known that containerd v1.5.5 or earlier and CRI-O v1.21 or earlier have this problem.
DNS resolution on Windows nodes
- ClusterFirstWithHostNet is not supported for Pods that run on Windows nodes.
Windows treats all names with a
.
as a FQDN and skips FQDN resolution. - On Windows, there are multiple DNS resolvers that can be used. As these come with
slightly different behaviors, using the
Resolve-DNSName
powershell cmdlet for name query resolutions is recommended. - On Linux, you have a DNS suffix list, which is used after resolution of a name as fully
qualified has failed.
On Windows, you can only have 1 DNS suffix, which is the DNS suffix associated with that
Pod's namespace (example:
mydns.svc.cluster.local
). Windows can resolve FQDNs, Services, or network name which can be resolved with this single suffix. For example, a Pod spawned in thedefault
namespace, will have the DNS suffixdefault.svc.cluster.local
. Inside a Windows Pod, you can resolve bothkubernetes.default.svc.cluster.local
andkubernetes
, but not the partially qualified names (kubernetes.default
orkubernetes.default.svc
).
What's next
For guidance on administering DNS configurations, check Configure DNS Service
5.8 - IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack
Kubernetes v1.23 [stable]
IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack networking enables the allocation of both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses to Pods and Services.
IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack networking is enabled by default for your Kubernetes cluster starting in 1.21, allowing the simultaneous assignment of both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.
Supported Features
IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack on your Kubernetes cluster provides the following features:
- Dual-stack Pod networking (a single IPv4 and IPv6 address assignment per Pod)
- IPv4 and IPv6 enabled Services
- Pod off-cluster egress routing (eg. the Internet) via both IPv4 and IPv6 interfaces
Prerequisites
The following prerequisites are needed in order to utilize IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack Kubernetes clusters:
-
Kubernetes 1.20 or later
For information about using dual-stack services with earlier Kubernetes versions, refer to the documentation for that version of Kubernetes.
-
Provider support for dual-stack networking (Cloud provider or otherwise must be able to provide Kubernetes nodes with routable IPv4/IPv6 network interfaces)
-
A network plugin that supports dual-stack networking.
Configure IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack
To configure IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack, set dual-stack cluster network assignments:
- kube-apiserver:
--service-cluster-ip-range=<IPv4 CIDR>,<IPv6 CIDR>
- kube-controller-manager:
--cluster-cidr=<IPv4 CIDR>,<IPv6 CIDR>
--service-cluster-ip-range=<IPv4 CIDR>,<IPv6 CIDR>
--node-cidr-mask-size-ipv4|--node-cidr-mask-size-ipv6
defaults to /24 for IPv4 and /64 for IPv6
- kube-proxy:
--cluster-cidr=<IPv4 CIDR>,<IPv6 CIDR>
- kubelet:
--node-ip=<IPv4 IP>,<IPv6 IP>
- This option is required for bare metal dual-stack nodes (nodes that do not define a
cloud provider with the
--cloud-provider
flag). If you are using a cloud provider and choose to override the node IPs chosen by the cloud provider, set the--node-ip
option. - (The legacy built-in cloud providers do not support dual-stack
--node-ip
.)
- This option is required for bare metal dual-stack nodes (nodes that do not define a
cloud provider with the
An example of an IPv4 CIDR: 10.244.0.0/16
(though you would supply your own address range)
An example of an IPv6 CIDR: fdXY:IJKL:MNOP:15::/64
(this shows the format but is not a valid
address - see RFC 4193)
Services
You can create Services which can use IPv4, IPv6, or both.
The address family of a Service defaults to the address family of the first service cluster IP
range (configured via the --service-cluster-ip-range
flag to the kube-apiserver).
When you define a Service you can optionally configure it as dual stack. To specify the behavior you want, you
set the .spec.ipFamilyPolicy
field to one of the following values:
SingleStack
: Single-stack service. The control plane allocates a cluster IP for the Service, using the first configured service cluster IP range.PreferDualStack
:- Allocates IPv4 and IPv6 cluster IPs for the Service.
RequireDualStack
: Allocates Service.spec.ClusterIPs
from both IPv4 and IPv6 address ranges.- Selects the
.spec.ClusterIP
from the list of.spec.ClusterIPs
based on the address family of the first element in the.spec.ipFamilies
array.
- Selects the
If you would like to define which IP family to use for single stack or define the order of IP
families for dual-stack, you can choose the address families by setting an optional field,
.spec.ipFamilies
, on the Service.
.spec.ipFamilies
field is conditionally mutable: you can add or remove a secondary
IP address family, but you cannot change the primary IP address family of an existing Service.
You can set .spec.ipFamilies
to any of the following array values:
["IPv4"]
["IPv6"]
["IPv4","IPv6"]
(dual stack)["IPv6","IPv4"]
(dual stack)
The first family you list is used for the legacy .spec.ClusterIP
field.
Dual-stack Service configuration scenarios
These examples demonstrate the behavior of various dual-stack Service configuration scenarios.
Dual-stack options on new Services
-
This Service specification does not explicitly define
.spec.ipFamilyPolicy
. When you create this Service, Kubernetes assigns a cluster IP for the Service from the first configuredservice-cluster-ip-range
and sets the.spec.ipFamilyPolicy
toSingleStack
. (Services without selectors and headless Services with selectors will behave in this same way.)apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: name: my-service labels: app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp spec: selector: app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp ports: - protocol: TCP port: 80
-
This Service specification explicitly defines
PreferDualStack
in.spec.ipFamilyPolicy
. When you create this Service on a dual-stack cluster, Kubernetes assigns both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses for the service. The control plane updates the.spec
for the Service to record the IP address assignments. The field.spec.ClusterIPs
is the primary field, and contains both assigned IP addresses;.spec.ClusterIP
is a secondary field with its value calculated from.spec.ClusterIPs
.- For the
.spec.ClusterIP
field, the control plane records the IP address that is from the same address family as the first service cluster IP range. - On a single-stack cluster, the
.spec.ClusterIPs
and.spec.ClusterIP
fields both only list one address. - On a cluster with dual-stack enabled, specifying
RequireDualStack
in.spec.ipFamilyPolicy
behaves the same asPreferDualStack
.
apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: name: my-service labels: app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp spec: ipFamilyPolicy: PreferDualStack selector: app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp ports: - protocol: TCP port: 80
- For the
-
This Service specification explicitly defines
IPv6
andIPv4
in.spec.ipFamilies
as well as definingPreferDualStack
in.spec.ipFamilyPolicy
. When Kubernetes assigns an IPv6 and IPv4 address in.spec.ClusterIPs
,.spec.ClusterIP
is set to the IPv6 address because that is the first element in the.spec.ClusterIPs
array, overriding the default.apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: name: my-service labels: app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp spec: ipFamilyPolicy: PreferDualStack ipFamilies: - IPv6 - IPv4 selector: app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp ports: - protocol: TCP port: 80
Dual-stack defaults on existing Services
These examples demonstrate the default behavior when dual-stack is newly enabled on a cluster where Services already exist. (Upgrading an existing cluster to 1.21 or beyond will enable dual-stack.)
-
When dual-stack is enabled on a cluster, existing Services (whether
IPv4
orIPv6
) are configured by the control plane to set.spec.ipFamilyPolicy
toSingleStack
and set.spec.ipFamilies
to the address family of the existing Service. The existing Service cluster IP will be stored in.spec.ClusterIPs
.apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: name: my-service labels: app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp spec: selector: app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp ports: - protocol: TCP port: 80
You can validate this behavior by using kubectl to inspect an existing service.
kubectl get svc my-service -o yaml
apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: labels: app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp name: my-service spec: clusterIP: 10.0.197.123 clusterIPs: - 10.0.197.123 ipFamilies: - IPv4 ipFamilyPolicy: SingleStack ports: - port: 80 protocol: TCP targetPort: 80 selector: app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp type: ClusterIP status: loadBalancer: {}
-
When dual-stack is enabled on a cluster, existing headless Services with selectors are configured by the control plane to set
.spec.ipFamilyPolicy
toSingleStack
and set.spec.ipFamilies
to the address family of the first service cluster IP range (configured via the--service-cluster-ip-range
flag to the kube-apiserver) even though.spec.ClusterIP
is set toNone
.apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: name: my-service labels: app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp spec: selector: app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp ports: - protocol: TCP port: 80
You can validate this behavior by using kubectl to inspect an existing headless service with selectors.
kubectl get svc my-service -o yaml
apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: labels: app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp name: my-service spec: clusterIP: None clusterIPs: - None ipFamilies: - IPv4 ipFamilyPolicy: SingleStack ports: - port: 80 protocol: TCP targetPort: 80 selector: app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp
Switching Services between single-stack and dual-stack
Services can be changed from single-stack to dual-stack and from dual-stack to single-stack.
-
To change a Service from single-stack to dual-stack, change
.spec.ipFamilyPolicy
fromSingleStack
toPreferDualStack
orRequireDualStack
as desired. When you change this Service from single-stack to dual-stack, Kubernetes assigns the missing address family so that the Service now has IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.Edit the Service specification updating the
.spec.ipFamilyPolicy
fromSingleStack
toPreferDualStack
.Before:
spec: ipFamilyPolicy: SingleStack
After:
spec: ipFamilyPolicy: PreferDualStack
-
To change a Service from dual-stack to single-stack, change
.spec.ipFamilyPolicy
fromPreferDualStack
orRequireDualStack
toSingleStack
. When you change this Service from dual-stack to single-stack, Kubernetes retains only the first element in the.spec.ClusterIPs
array, and sets.spec.ClusterIP
to that IP address and sets.spec.ipFamilies
to the address family of.spec.ClusterIPs
.
Headless Services without selector
For Headless Services without selectors
and without .spec.ipFamilyPolicy
explicitly set, the .spec.ipFamilyPolicy
field defaults to
RequireDualStack
.
Service type LoadBalancer
To provision a dual-stack load balancer for your Service:
- Set the
.spec.type
field toLoadBalancer
- Set
.spec.ipFamilyPolicy
field toPreferDualStack
orRequireDualStack
LoadBalancer
type Service, your cloud provider must support IPv4 and IPv6
load balancers.
Egress traffic
If you want to enable egress traffic in order to reach off-cluster destinations (eg. the public Internet) from a Pod that uses non-publicly routable IPv6 addresses, you need to enable the Pod to use a publicly routed IPv6 address via a mechanism such as transparent proxying or IP masquerading. The ip-masq-agent project supports IP masquerading on dual-stack clusters.
Windows support
Kubernetes on Windows does not support single-stack "IPv6-only" networking. However, dual-stack IPv4/IPv6 networking for pods and nodes with single-family services is supported.
You can use IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack networking with l2bridge
networks.
You can read more about the different network modes for Windows within the Networking on Windows topic.
What's next
5.9 - Topology Aware Routing
Kubernetes v1.23 [beta]
Topology Aware Routing adjusts routing behavior to prefer keeping traffic in the zone it originated from. In some cases this can help reduce costs or improve network performance.
Motivation
Kubernetes clusters are increasingly deployed in multi-zone environments. Topology Aware Routing provides a mechanism to help keep traffic within the zone it originated from. When calculating the endpoints for a Service, the EndpointSlice controller considers the topology (region and zone) of each endpoint and populates the hints field to allocate it to a zone. Cluster components such as kube-proxy can then consume those hints, and use them to influence how the traffic is routed (favoring topologically closer endpoints).
Enabling Topology Aware Routing
service.kubernetes.io/topology-aware-hints
annotation.
You can enable Topology Aware Routing for a Service by setting the
service.kubernetes.io/topology-mode
annotation to Auto
. When there are
enough endpoints available in each zone, Topology Hints will be populated on
EndpointSlices to allocate individual endpoints to specific zones, resulting in
traffic being routed closer to where it originated from.
When it works best
This feature works best when:
1. Incoming traffic is evenly distributed
If a large proportion of traffic is originating from a single zone, that traffic could overload the subset of endpoints that have been allocated to that zone. This feature is not recommended when incoming traffic is expected to originate from a single zone.
2. The Service has 3 or more endpoints per zone
In a three zone cluster, this means 9 or more endpoints. If there are fewer than 3 endpoints per zone, there is a high (≈50%) probability that the EndpointSlice controller will not be able to allocate endpoints evenly and instead will fall back to the default cluster-wide routing approach.
How It Works
The "Auto" heuristic attempts to proportionally allocate a number of endpoints to each zone. Note that this heuristic works best for Services that have a significant number of endpoints.
EndpointSlice controller
The EndpointSlice controller is responsible for setting hints on EndpointSlices when this heuristic is enabled. The controller allocates a proportional amount of endpoints to each zone. This proportion is based on the allocatable CPU cores for nodes running in that zone. For example, if one zone had 2 CPU cores and another zone only had 1 CPU core, the controller would allocate twice as many endpoints to the zone with 2 CPU cores.
The following example shows what an EndpointSlice looks like when hints have been populated:
apiVersion: discovery.k8s.io/v1
kind: EndpointSlice
metadata:
name: example-hints
labels:
kubernetes.io/service-name: example-svc
addressType: IPv4
ports:
- name: http
protocol: TCP
port: 80
endpoints:
- addresses:
- "10.1.2.3"
conditions:
ready: true
hostname: pod-1
zone: zone-a
hints:
forZones:
- name: "zone-a"
kube-proxy
The kube-proxy component filters the endpoints it routes to based on the hints set by the EndpointSlice controller. In most cases, this means that the kube-proxy is able to route traffic to endpoints in the same zone. Sometimes the controller allocates endpoints from a different zone to ensure more even distribution of endpoints between zones. This would result in some traffic being routed to other zones.
Safeguards
The Kubernetes control plane and the kube-proxy on each node apply some safeguard rules before using Topology Aware Hints. If these don't check out, the kube-proxy selects endpoints from anywhere in your cluster, regardless of the zone.
-
Insufficient number of endpoints: If there are less endpoints than zones in a cluster, the controller will not assign any hints.
-
Impossible to achieve balanced allocation: In some cases, it will be impossible to achieve a balanced allocation of endpoints among zones. For example, if zone-a is twice as large as zone-b, but there are only 2 endpoints, an endpoint allocated to zone-a may receive twice as much traffic as zone-b. The controller does not assign hints if it can't get this "expected overload" value below an acceptable threshold for each zone. Importantly this is not based on real-time feedback. It is still possible for individual endpoints to become overloaded.
-
One or more Nodes has insufficient information: If any node does not have a
topology.kubernetes.io/zone
label or is not reporting a value for allocatable CPU, the control plane does not set any topology-aware endpoint hints and so kube-proxy does not filter endpoints by zone. -
One or more endpoints does not have a zone hint: When this happens, the kube-proxy assumes that a transition from or to Topology Aware Hints is underway. Filtering endpoints for a Service in this state would be dangerous so the kube-proxy falls back to using all endpoints.
-
A zone is not represented in hints: If the kube-proxy is unable to find at least one endpoint with a hint targeting the zone it is running in, it falls back to using endpoints from all zones. This is most likely to happen as you add a new zone into your existing cluster.
Constraints
-
Topology Aware Hints are not used when
internalTrafficPolicy
is set toLocal
on a Service. It is possible to use both features in the same cluster on different Services, just not on the same Service. -
This approach will not work well for Services that have a large proportion of traffic originating from a subset of zones. Instead this assumes that incoming traffic will be roughly proportional to the capacity of the Nodes in each zone.
-
The EndpointSlice controller ignores unready nodes as it calculates the proportions of each zone. This could have unintended consequences if a large portion of nodes are unready.
-
The EndpointSlice controller ignores nodes with the
node-role.kubernetes.io/control-plane
ornode-role.kubernetes.io/master
label set. This could be problematic if workloads are also running on those nodes. -
The EndpointSlice controller does not take into account tolerations when deploying or calculating the proportions of each zone. If the Pods backing a Service are limited to a subset of Nodes in the cluster, this will not be taken into account.
-
This may not work well with autoscaling. For example, if a lot of traffic is originating from a single zone, only the endpoints allocated to that zone will be handling that traffic. That could result in Horizontal Pod Autoscaler either not picking up on this event, or newly added pods starting in a different zone.
Custom heuristics
Kubernetes is deployed in many different ways, there is no single heuristic for allocating endpoints to zones will work for every use case. A key goal of this feature is to enable custom heuristics to be developed if the built in heuristic does not work for your use case. The first steps to enable custom heuristics were included in the 1.27 release. This is a limited implementation that may not yet cover some relevant and plausible situations.
What's next
- Follow the Connecting Applications with Services tutorial
5.10 - Networking on Windows
Kubernetes supports running nodes on either Linux or Windows. You can mix both kinds of node within a single cluster. This page provides an overview to networking specific to the Windows operating system.
Container networking on Windows
Networking for Windows containers is exposed through CNI plugins. Windows containers function similarly to virtual machines in regards to networking. Each container has a virtual network adapter (vNIC) which is connected to a Hyper-V virtual switch (vSwitch). The Host Networking Service (HNS) and the Host Compute Service (HCS) work together to create containers and attach container vNICs to networks. HCS is responsible for the management of containers whereas HNS is responsible for the management of networking resources such as:
- Virtual networks (including creation of vSwitches)
- Endpoints / vNICs
- Namespaces
- Policies including packet encapsulations, load-balancing rules, ACLs, and NAT rules.
The Windows HNS and vSwitch implement namespacing and can
create virtual NICs as needed for a pod or container. However, many configurations such
as DNS, routes, and metrics are stored in the Windows registry database rather than as
files inside /etc
, which is how Linux stores those configurations. The Windows registry for the container
is separate from that of the host, so concepts like mapping /etc/resolv.conf
from
the host into a container don't have the same effect they would on Linux. These must
be configured using Windows APIs run in the context of that container. Therefore
CNI implementations need to call the HNS instead of relying on file mappings to pass
network details into the pod or container.
Network modes
Windows supports five different networking drivers/modes: L2bridge, L2tunnel, Overlay (Beta), Transparent, and NAT. In a heterogeneous cluster with Windows and Linux worker nodes, you need to select a networking solution that is compatible on both Windows and Linux. The following table lists the out-of-tree plugins are supported on Windows, with recommendations on when to use each CNI:
Network Driver | Description | Container Packet Modifications | Network Plugins | Network Plugin Characteristics |
---|---|---|---|---|
L2bridge | Containers are attached to an external vSwitch. Containers are attached to the underlay network, although the physical network doesn't need to learn the container MACs because they are rewritten on ingress/egress. | MAC is rewritten to host MAC, IP may be rewritten to host IP using HNS OutboundNAT policy. | win-bridge, Azure-CNI, Flannel host-gateway uses win-bridge | win-bridge uses L2bridge network mode, connects containers to the underlay of hosts, offering best performance. Requires user-defined routes (UDR) for inter-node connectivity. |
L2Tunnel | This is a special case of l2bridge, but only used on Azure. All packets are sent to the virtualization host where SDN policy is applied. | MAC rewritten, IP visible on the underlay network | Azure-CNI | Azure-CNI allows integration of containers with Azure vNET, and allows them to leverage the set of capabilities that Azure Virtual Network provides. For example, securely connect to Azure services or use Azure NSGs. See azure-cni for some examples |
Overlay | Containers are given a vNIC connected to an external vSwitch. Each overlay network gets its own IP subnet, defined by a custom IP prefix.The overlay network driver uses VXLAN encapsulation. | Encapsulated with an outer header. | win-overlay, Flannel VXLAN (uses win-overlay) | win-overlay should be used when virtual container networks are desired to be isolated from underlay of hosts (e.g. for security reasons). Allows for IPs to be re-used for different overlay networks (which have different VNID tags) if you are restricted on IPs in your datacenter. This option requires KB4489899 on Windows Server 2019. |
Transparent (special use case for ovn-kubernetes) | Requires an external vSwitch. Containers are attached to an external vSwitch which enables intra-pod communication via logical networks (logical switches and routers). | Packet is encapsulated either via GENEVE or STT tunneling to reach pods which are not on the same host. Packets are forwarded or dropped via the tunnel metadata information supplied by the ovn network controller. NAT is done for north-south communication. |
ovn-kubernetes | Deploy via ansible. Distributed ACLs can be applied via Kubernetes policies. IPAM support. Load-balancing can be achieved without kube-proxy. NATing is done without using iptables/netsh. |
NAT (not used in Kubernetes) | Containers are given a vNIC connected to an internal vSwitch. DNS/DHCP is provided using an internal component called WinNAT | MAC and IP is rewritten to host MAC/IP. | nat | Included here for completeness |
As outlined above, the Flannel CNI plugin is also supported on Windows via the VXLAN network backend (Beta support ; delegates to win-overlay) and host-gateway network backend (stable support; delegates to win-bridge).
This plugin supports delegating to one of the reference CNI plugins (win-overlay,
win-bridge), to work in conjunction with Flannel daemon on Windows (Flanneld) for
automatic node subnet lease assignment and HNS network creation. This plugin reads
in its own configuration file (cni.conf), and aggregates it with the environment
variables from the FlannelD generated subnet.env file. It then delegates to one of
the reference CNI plugins for network plumbing, and sends the correct configuration
containing the node-assigned subnet to the IPAM plugin (for example: host-local
).
For Node, Pod, and Service objects, the following network flows are supported for TCP/UDP traffic:
- Pod → Pod (IP)
- Pod → Pod (Name)
- Pod → Service (Cluster IP)
- Pod → Service (PQDN, but only if there are no ".")
- Pod → Service (FQDN)
- Pod → external (IP)
- Pod → external (DNS)
- Node → Pod
- Pod → Node
IP address management (IPAM)
The following IPAM options are supported on Windows:
- host-local
- azure-vnet-ipam (for azure-cni only)
- Windows Server IPAM (fallback option if no IPAM is set)
Load balancing and Services
A Kubernetes Service is an abstraction that defines a logical set of Pods and a means to access them over a network. In a cluster that includes Windows nodes, you can use the following types of Service:
NodePort
ClusterIP
LoadBalancer
ExternalName
Windows container networking differs in some important ways from Linux networking. The Microsoft documentation for Windows Container Networking provides additional details and background.
On Windows, you can use the following settings to configure Services and load balancing behavior:
Feature | Description | Minimum Supported Windows OS build | How to enable |
---|---|---|---|
Session affinity | Ensures that connections from a particular client are passed to the same Pod each time. | Windows Server 2022 | Set service.spec.sessionAffinity to "ClientIP" |
Direct Server Return (DSR) | Load balancing mode where the IP address fixups and the LBNAT occurs at the container vSwitch port directly; service traffic arrives with the source IP set as the originating pod IP. | Windows Server 2019 | Set the following flags in kube-proxy: --feature-gates="WinDSR=true" --enable-dsr=true |
Preserve-Destination | Skips DNAT of service traffic, thereby preserving the virtual IP of the target service in packets reaching the backend Pod. Also disables node-node forwarding. | Windows Server, version 1903 | Set "preserve-destination": "true" in service annotations and enable DSR in kube-proxy. |
IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack networking | Native IPv4-to-IPv4 in parallel with IPv6-to-IPv6 communications to, from, and within a cluster | Windows Server 2019 | See IPv4/IPv6 dual-stack |
Client IP preservation | Ensures that source IP of incoming ingress traffic gets preserved. Also disables node-node forwarding. | Windows Server 2019 | Set service.spec.externalTrafficPolicy to "Local" and enable DSR in kube-proxy |
There are known issue with NodePort Services on overlay networking, if the destination node is running Windows Server 2022.
To avoid the issue entirely, you can configure the service with externalTrafficPolicy: Local
.
There are known issues with Pod to Pod connectivity on l2bridge network on Windows Server 2022 with KB5005619 or higher installed. To workaround the issue and restore Pod to Pod connectivity, you can disable the WinDSR feature in kube-proxy.
These issues require OS fixes. Please follow https://github.com/microsoft/Windows-Containers/issues/204 for updates.
Limitations
The following networking functionality is not supported on Windows nodes:
- Host networking mode
- Local NodePort access from the node itself (works for other nodes or external clients)
- More than 64 backend pods (or unique destination addresses) for a single Service
- IPv6 communication between Windows pods connected to overlay networks
- Local Traffic Policy in non-DSR mode
- Outbound communication using the ICMP protocol via the
win-overlay
,win-bridge
, or using the Azure-CNI plugin.
Specifically, the Windows data plane (VFP) doesn't support ICMP packet transpositions, and this means:- ICMP packets directed to destinations within the same network (such as pod to pod communication via ping) work as expected;
- TCP/UDP packets work as expected;
- ICMP packets directed to pass through a remote network (e.g. pod to external internet communication via ping) cannot be transposed and thus will not be routed back to their source;
- Since TCP/UDP packets can still be transposed, you can substitute
ping <destination>
withcurl <destination>
when debugging connectivity with the outside world.
Other limitations:
- Windows reference network plugins win-bridge and win-overlay do not implement
CNI spec v0.4.0,
due to a missing
CHECK
implementation. - The Flannel VXLAN CNI plugin has the following limitations on Windows:
- Node-pod connectivity is only possible for local pods with Flannel v0.12.0 (or higher).
- Flannel is restricted to using VNI 4096 and UDP port 4789. See the official Flannel VXLAN backend docs for more details on these parameters.
5.11 - Service ClusterIP allocation
In Kubernetes, Services are an abstract way to expose
an application running on a set of Pods. Services
can have a cluster-scoped virtual IP address (using a Service of type: ClusterIP
).
Clients can connect using that virtual IP address, and Kubernetes then load-balances traffic to that
Service across the different backing Pods.
How Service ClusterIPs are allocated?
When Kubernetes needs to assign a virtual IP address for a Service, that assignment happens one of two ways:
- dynamically
- the cluster's control plane automatically picks a free IP address from within the configured IP range for
type: ClusterIP
Services. - statically
- you specify an IP address of your choice, from within the configured IP range for Services.
Across your whole cluster, every Service ClusterIP
must be unique.
Trying to create a Service with a specific ClusterIP
that has already
been allocated will return an error.
Why do you need to reserve Service Cluster IPs?
Sometimes you may want to have Services running in well-known IP addresses, so other components and users in the cluster can use them.
The best example is the DNS Service for the cluster. As a soft convention, some Kubernetes installers assign the 10th IP address from the Service IP range to the DNS service. Assuming you configured your cluster with Service IP range 10.96.0.0/16 and you want your DNS Service IP to be 10.96.0.10, you'd have to create a Service like this:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
labels:
k8s-app: kube-dns
kubernetes.io/cluster-service: "true"
kubernetes.io/name: CoreDNS
name: kube-dns
namespace: kube-system
spec:
clusterIP: 10.96.0.10
ports:
- name: dns
port: 53
protocol: UDP
targetPort: 53
- name: dns-tcp
port: 53
protocol: TCP
targetPort: 53
selector:
k8s-app: kube-dns
type: ClusterIP
but as it was explained before, the IP address 10.96.0.10 has not been reserved; if other Services are created before or in parallel with dynamic allocation, there is a chance they can allocate this IP, hence, you will not be able to create the DNS Service because it will fail with a conflict error.
How can you avoid Service ClusterIP conflicts?
The allocation strategy implemented in Kubernetes to allocate ClusterIPs to Services reduces the risk of collision.
The ClusterIP
range is divided, based on the formula min(max(16, cidrSize / 16), 256)
,
described as never less than 16 or more than 256 with a graduated step between them.
Dynamic IP assignment uses the upper band by default, once this has been exhausted it will use the lower range. This will allow users to use static allocations on the lower band with a low risk of collision.
Examples
Example 1
This example uses the IP address range: 10.96.0.0/24 (CIDR notation) for the IP addresses of Services.
Range Size: 28 - 2 = 254
Band Offset: min(max(16, 256/16), 256)
= min(16, 256)
= 16
Static band start: 10.96.0.1
Static band end: 10.96.0.16
Range end: 10.96.0.254
Example 2
This example uses the IP address range: 10.96.0.0/20 (CIDR notation) for the IP addresses of Services.
Range Size: 212 - 2 = 4094
Band Offset: min(max(16, 4096/16), 256)
= min(256, 256)
= 256
Static band start: 10.96.0.1
Static band end: 10.96.1.0
Range end: 10.96.15.254
Example 3
This example uses the IP address range: 10.96.0.0/16 (CIDR notation) for the IP addresses of Services.
Range Size: 216 - 2 = 65534
Band Offset: min(max(16, 65536/16), 256)
= min(4096, 256)
= 256
Static band start: 10.96.0.1
Static band ends: 10.96.1.0
Range end: 10.96.255.254
What's next
- Read about Service External Traffic Policy
- Read about Connecting Applications with Services
- Read about Services
5.12 - Service Internal Traffic Policy
Kubernetes v1.26 [stable]
Service Internal Traffic Policy enables internal traffic restrictions to only route internal traffic to endpoints within the node the traffic originated from. The "internal" traffic here refers to traffic originated from Pods in the current cluster. This can help to reduce costs and improve performance.
Using Service Internal Traffic Policy
You can enable the internal-only traffic policy for a
Service, by setting its
.spec.internalTrafficPolicy
to Local
. This tells kube-proxy to only use node local
endpoints for cluster internal traffic.
The following example shows what a Service looks like when you set
.spec.internalTrafficPolicy
to Local
:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: my-service
spec:
selector:
app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp
ports:
- protocol: TCP
port: 80
targetPort: 9376
internalTrafficPolicy: Local
How it works
The kube-proxy filters the endpoints it routes to based on the
spec.internalTrafficPolicy
setting. When it's set to Local
, only node local
endpoints are considered. When it's Cluster
(the default), or is not set,
Kubernetes considers all endpoints.
What's next
- Read about Topology Aware Routing
- Read about Service External Traffic Policy
- Follow the Connecting Applications with Services tutorial
6 - Storage
6.1 - Volumes
On-disk files in a container are ephemeral, which presents some problems for
non-trivial applications when running in containers. One problem occurs when
a container crashes or is stopped. Container state is not saved so all of the
files that were created or modified during the lifetime of the container are lost.
During a crash, kubelet restarts the container with a clean state.
Another problem occurs when multiple containers are running in a Pod
and
need to share files. It can be challenging to setup
and access a shared filesystem across all of the containers.
The Kubernetes volume abstraction
solves both of these problems.
Familiarity with Pods is suggested.
Background
Kubernetes supports many types of volumes. A Pod can use any number of volume types simultaneously. Ephemeral volume types have a lifetime of a pod, but persistent volumes exist beyond the lifetime of a pod. When a pod ceases to exist, Kubernetes destroys ephemeral volumes; however, Kubernetes does not destroy persistent volumes. For any kind of volume in a given pod, data is preserved across container restarts.
At its core, a volume is a directory, possibly with some data in it, which is accessible to the containers in a pod. How that directory comes to be, the medium that backs it, and the contents of it are determined by the particular volume type used.
To use a volume, specify the volumes to provide for the Pod in .spec.volumes
and declare where to mount those volumes into containers in .spec.containers[*].volumeMounts
.
A process in a container sees a filesystem view composed from the initial contents of
the container image, plus volumes
(if defined) mounted inside the container.
The process sees a root filesystem that initially matches the contents of the container
image.
Any writes to within that filesystem hierarchy, if allowed, affect what that process views
when it performs a subsequent filesystem access.
Volumes mount at the specified paths within
the image.
For each container defined within a Pod, you must independently specify where
to mount each volume that the container uses.
Volumes cannot mount within other volumes (but see Using subPath for a related mechanism). Also, a volume cannot contain a hard link to anything in a different volume.
Types of volumes
Kubernetes supports several types of volumes.
awsElasticBlockStore (removed)
Kubernetes 1.29 does not include a awsElasticBlockStore
volume type.
The AWSElasticBlockStore in-tree storage driver was deprecated in the Kubernetes v1.19 release and then removed entirely in the v1.27 release.
The Kubernetes project suggests that you use the AWS EBS third party storage driver instead.
azureDisk (removed)
Kubernetes 1.29 does not include a azureDisk
volume type.
The AzureDisk in-tree storage driver was deprecated in the Kubernetes v1.19 release and then removed entirely in the v1.27 release.
The Kubernetes project suggests that you use the Azure Disk third party storage driver instead.
azureFile (deprecated)
Kubernetes v1.21 [deprecated]
The azureFile
volume type mounts a Microsoft Azure File volume (SMB 2.1 and 3.0)
into a pod.
For more details, see the azureFile
volume plugin.
azureFile CSI migration
Kubernetes v1.26 [stable]
The CSIMigration
feature for azureFile
, when enabled, redirects all plugin operations
from the existing in-tree plugin to the file.csi.azure.com
Container
Storage Interface (CSI) Driver. In order to use this feature, the Azure File CSI
Driver
must be installed on the cluster and the CSIMigrationAzureFile
feature gates must be enabled.
Azure File CSI driver does not support using same volume with different fsgroups. If
CSIMigrationAzureFile
is enabled, using same volume with different fsgroups won't be supported at all.
azureFile CSI migration complete
Kubernetes v1.21 [alpha]
To disable the azureFile
storage plugin from being loaded by the controller manager
and the kubelet, set the InTreePluginAzureFileUnregister
flag to true
.
cephfs
Kubernetes v1.28 [deprecated]
A cephfs
volume allows an existing CephFS volume to be
mounted into your Pod. Unlike emptyDir
, which is erased when a pod is
removed, the contents of a cephfs
volume are preserved and the volume is merely
unmounted. This means that a cephfs
volume can be pre-populated with data, and
that data can be shared between pods. The cephfs
volume can be mounted by multiple
writers simultaneously.
See the CephFS example for more details.
cinder (removed)
Kubernetes 1.29 does not include a cinder
volume type.
The OpenStack Cinder in-tree storage driver was deprecated in the Kubernetes v1.11 release and then removed entirely in the v1.26 release.
The Kubernetes project suggests that you use the OpenStack Cinder third party storage driver instead.
configMap
A ConfigMap
provides a way to inject configuration data into pods.
The data stored in a ConfigMap can be referenced in a volume of type
configMap
and then consumed by containerized applications running in a pod.
When referencing a ConfigMap, you provide the name of the ConfigMap in the
volume. You can customize the path to use for a specific
entry in the ConfigMap. The following configuration shows how to mount
the log-config
ConfigMap onto a Pod called configmap-pod
:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: configmap-pod
spec:
containers:
- name: test
image: busybox:1.28
command: ['sh', '-c', 'echo "The app is running!" && tail -f /dev/null']
volumeMounts:
- name: config-vol
mountPath: /etc/config
volumes:
- name: config-vol
configMap:
name: log-config
items:
- key: log_level
path: log_level
The log-config
ConfigMap is mounted as a volume, and all contents stored in
its log_level
entry are mounted into the Pod at path /etc/config/log_level
.
Note that this path is derived from the volume's mountPath
and the path
keyed with log_level
.
-
You must create a ConfigMap before you can use it.
-
A ConfigMap is always mounted as
readOnly
. -
A container using a ConfigMap as a
subPath
volume mount will not receive ConfigMap updates. -
Text data is exposed as files using the UTF-8 character encoding. For other character encodings, use
binaryData
.
downwardAPI
A downwardAPI
volume makes downward API
data available to applications. Within the volume, you can find the exposed
data as read-only files in plain text format.
subPath
volume mount does not
receive updates when field values change.
See Expose Pod Information to Containers Through Files to learn more.
emptyDir
For a Pod that defines an emptyDir
volume, the volume is created when the Pod is assigned to a node.
As the name says, the emptyDir
volume is initially empty. All containers in the Pod can read and write the same
files in the emptyDir
volume, though that volume can be mounted at the same
or different paths in each container. When a Pod is removed from a node for
any reason, the data in the emptyDir
is deleted permanently.
emptyDir
volume
is safe across container crashes.
Some uses for an emptyDir
are:
- scratch space, such as for a disk-based merge sort
- checkpointing a long computation for recovery from crashes
- holding files that a content-manager container fetches while a webserver container serves the data
The emptyDir.medium
field controls where emptyDir
volumes are stored. By
default emptyDir
volumes are stored on whatever medium that backs the node
such as disk, SSD, or network storage, depending on your environment. If you set
the emptyDir.medium
field to "Memory"
, Kubernetes mounts a tmpfs (RAM-backed
filesystem) for you instead. While tmpfs is very fast be aware that, unlike
disks, files you write count against the memory limit of the container that wrote them.
A size limit can be specified for the default medium, which limits the capacity
of the emptyDir
volume. The storage is allocated from node ephemeral
storage.
If that is filled up from another source (for example, log files or image
overlays), the emptyDir
may run out of capacity before this limit.
SizeMemoryBackedVolumes
feature gate is enabled,
you can specify a size for memory backed volumes. If no size is specified, memory
backed volumes are sized to node allocatable memory.
emptyDir configuration example
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: test-pd
spec:
containers:
- image: registry.k8s.io/test-webserver
name: test-container
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /cache
name: cache-volume
volumes:
- name: cache-volume
emptyDir:
sizeLimit: 500Mi
fc (fibre channel)
An fc
volume type allows an existing fibre channel block storage volume
to mount in a Pod. You can specify single or multiple target world wide names (WWNs)
using the parameter targetWWNs
in your Volume configuration. If multiple WWNs are specified,
targetWWNs expect that those WWNs are from multi-path connections.
See the fibre channel example for more details.
gcePersistentDisk (removed)
Kubernetes 1.29 does not include a gcePersistentDisk
volume type.
The gcePersistentDisk
in-tree storage driver was deprecated in the Kubernetes v1.17 release
and then removed entirely in the v1.28 release.
The Kubernetes project suggests that you use the Google Compute Engine Persistent Disk CSI third party storage driver instead.
gitRepo (deprecated)
gitRepo
volume type is deprecated. To provision a container with a git repo, mount an
EmptyDir into an InitContainer that clones the repo using git, then mount the
EmptyDir into the Pod's container.
A gitRepo
volume is an example of a volume plugin. This plugin
mounts an empty directory and clones a git repository into this directory
for your Pod to use.
Here is an example of a gitRepo
volume:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: server
spec:
containers:
- image: nginx
name: nginx
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /mypath
name: git-volume
volumes:
- name: git-volume
gitRepo:
repository: "git@somewhere:me/my-git-repository.git"
revision: "22f1d8406d464b0c0874075539c1f2e96c253775"
glusterfs (removed)
Kubernetes 1.29 does not include a glusterfs
volume type.
The GlusterFS in-tree storage driver was deprecated in the Kubernetes v1.25 release and then removed entirely in the v1.26 release.
hostPath
A hostPath
volume mounts a file or directory from the host node's filesystem
into your Pod. This is not something that most Pods will need, but it offers a
powerful escape hatch for some applications.
Using the hostPath
volume type presents many security risks.
If you can avoid using a hostPath
volume, you should. For example,
define a local
PersistentVolume, and use that instead.
If you are restricting access to specific directories on the node using
admission-time validation, that restriction is only effective when you
additionally require that any mounts of that hostPath
volume are
read only. If you allow a read-write mount of any host path by an
untrusted Pod, the containers in that Pod may be able to subvert the
read-write host mount.
Take care when using hostPath
volumes, whether these are mounted as read-only
or as read-write, because:
- Access to the host filesystem can expose privileged system credentials (such as for the kubelet) or privileged APIs (such as the container runtime socket), that can be used for container escape or to attack other parts of the cluster.
- Pods with identical configuration (such as created from a PodTemplate) may behave differently on different nodes due to different files on the nodes.
Some uses for a hostPath
are:
- running a container that needs access to node-level system components
(such as a container that transfers system logs to a central location,
accessing those logs using a read-only mount of
/var/log
) - making a configuration file stored on the host system available read-only to a static pod; unlike normal Pods, static Pods cannot access ConfigMaps
hostPath
volume types
In addition to the required path
property, you can optionally specify a
type
for a hostPath
volume.
The available values for type
are:
Value | Behavior |
---|---|
"" |
Empty string (default) is for backward compatibility, which means that no checks will be performed before mounting the hostPath volume. |
DirectoryOrCreate |
If nothing exists at the given path, an empty directory will be created there as needed with permission set to 0755, having the same group and ownership with Kubelet. |
Directory |
A directory must exist at the given path |
FileOrCreate |
If nothing exists at the given path, an empty file will be created there as needed with permission set to 0644, having the same group and ownership with Kubelet. |
File |
A file must exist at the given path |
Socket |
A UNIX socket must exist at the given path |
CharDevice |
(Linux nodes only) A character device must exist at the given path |
BlockDevice |
(Linux nodes only) A block device must exist at the given path |
FileOrCreate
mode does not create the parent directory of the file. If the parent directory
of the mounted file does not exist, the pod fails to start. To ensure that this mode works,
you can try to mount directories and files separately, as shown in the
FileOrCreate
example for hostPath
.
Some files or directories created on the underlying hosts might only be
accessible by root. You then either need to run your process as root in a
privileged container
or modify the file permissions on the host to be able to read from
(or write to) a hostPath
volume.
hostPath configuration example
---
# This manifest mounts /data/foo on the host as /foo inside the
# single container that runs within the hostpath-example-linux Pod.
#
# The mount into the container is read-only.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: hostpath-example-linux
spec:
os: { name: linux }
nodeSelector:
kubernetes.io/os: linux
containers:
- name: example-container
image: registry.k8s.io/test-webserver
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /foo
name: example-volume
readOnly: true
volumes:
- name: example-volume
# mount /data/foo, but only if that directory already exists
hostPath:
path: /data/foo # directory location on host
type: Directory # this field is optional
---
# This manifest mounts C:\Data\foo on the host as C:\foo, inside the
# single container that runs within the hostpath-example-windows Pod.
#
# The mount into the container is read-only.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: hostpath-example-windows
spec:
os: { name: windows }
nodeSelector:
kubernetes.io/os: windows
containers:
- name: example-container
image: microsoft/windowsservercore:1709
volumeMounts:
- name: example-volume
mountPath: "C:\\foo"
readOnly: true
volumes:
# mount C:\Data\foo from the host, but only if that directory already exists
- name: example-volume
hostPath:
path: "C:\\Data\\foo" # directory location on host
type: Directory # this field is optional
hostPath FileOrCreate configuration example
The following manifest defines a Pod that mounts /var/local/aaa
inside the single container in the Pod. If the node does not
already have a path /var/local/aaa
, the kubelet creates
it as a directory and then mounts it into the Pod.
If /var/local/aaa
already exists but is not a directory,
the Pod fails. Additionally, the kubelet attempts to make
a file named /var/local/aaa/1.txt
inside that directory
(as seen from the host); if something already exists at
that path and isn't a regular file, the Pod fails.
Here's the example manifest:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: test-webserver
spec:
os: { name: linux }
nodeSelector:
kubernetes.io/os: linux
containers:
- name: test-webserver
image: registry.k8s.io/test-webserver:latest
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /var/local/aaa
name: mydir
- mountPath: /var/local/aaa/1.txt
name: myfile
volumes:
- name: mydir
hostPath:
# Ensure the file directory is created.
path: /var/local/aaa
type: DirectoryOrCreate
- name: myfile
hostPath:
path: /var/local/aaa/1.txt
type: FileOrCreate
iscsi
An iscsi
volume allows an existing iSCSI (SCSI over IP) volume to be mounted
into your Pod. Unlike emptyDir
, which is erased when a Pod is removed, the
contents of an iscsi
volume are preserved and the volume is merely
unmounted. This means that an iscsi volume can be pre-populated with data, and
that data can be shared between pods.
A feature of iSCSI is that it can be mounted as read-only by multiple consumers simultaneously. This means that you can pre-populate a volume with your dataset and then serve it in parallel from as many Pods as you need. Unfortunately, iSCSI volumes can only be mounted by a single consumer in read-write mode. Simultaneous writers are not allowed.
See the iSCSI example for more details.
local
A local
volume represents a mounted local storage device such as a disk,
partition or directory.
Local volumes can only be used as a statically created PersistentVolume. Dynamic provisioning is not supported.
Compared to hostPath
volumes, local
volumes are used in a durable and
portable manner without manually scheduling pods to nodes. The system is aware
of the volume's node constraints by looking at the node affinity on the PersistentVolume.
However, local
volumes are subject to the availability of the underlying
node and are not suitable for all applications. If a node becomes unhealthy,
then the local
volume becomes inaccessible by the pod. The pod using this volume
is unable to run. Applications using local
volumes must be able to tolerate this
reduced availability, as well as potential data loss, depending on the
durability characteristics of the underlying disk.
The following example shows a PersistentVolume using a local
volume and
nodeAffinity
:
apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolume
metadata:
name: example-pv
spec:
capacity:
storage: 100Gi
volumeMode: Filesystem
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
persistentVolumeReclaimPolicy: Delete
storageClassName: local-storage
local:
path: /mnt/disks/ssd1
nodeAffinity:
required:
nodeSelectorTerms:
- matchExpressions:
- key: kubernetes.io/hostname
operator: In
values:
- example-node
You must set a PersistentVolume nodeAffinity
when using local
volumes.
The Kubernetes scheduler uses the PersistentVolume nodeAffinity
to schedule
these Pods to the correct node.
PersistentVolume volumeMode
can be set to "Block" (instead of the default
value "Filesystem") to expose the local volume as a raw block device.
When using local volumes, it is recommended to create a StorageClass with
volumeBindingMode
set to WaitForFirstConsumer
. For more details, see the
local StorageClass example.
Delaying volume binding ensures that the PersistentVolumeClaim binding decision
will also be evaluated with any other node constraints the Pod may have,
such as node resource requirements, node selectors, Pod affinity, and Pod anti-affinity.
An external static provisioner can be run separately for improved management of the local volume lifecycle. Note that this provisioner does not support dynamic provisioning yet. For an example on how to run an external local provisioner, see the local volume provisioner user guide.
nfs
An nfs
volume allows an existing NFS (Network File System) share to be
mounted into a Pod. Unlike emptyDir
, which is erased when a Pod is
removed, the contents of an nfs
volume are preserved and the volume is merely
unmounted. This means that an NFS volume can be pre-populated with data, and
that data can be shared between pods. NFS can be mounted by multiple
writers simultaneously.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: test-pd
spec:
containers:
- image: registry.k8s.io/test-webserver
name: test-container
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /my-nfs-data
name: test-volume
volumes:
- name: test-volume
nfs:
server: my-nfs-server.example.com
path: /my-nfs-volume
readOnly: true
You must have your own NFS server running with the share exported before you can use it.
Also note that you can't specify NFS mount options in a Pod spec. You can either set mount options server-side or use /etc/nfsmount.conf. You can also mount NFS volumes via PersistentVolumes which do allow you to set mount options.
See the NFS example for an example of mounting NFS volumes with PersistentVolumes.
persistentVolumeClaim
A persistentVolumeClaim
volume is used to mount a
PersistentVolume into a Pod. PersistentVolumeClaims
are a way for users to "claim" durable storage (such as an iSCSI volume)
without knowing the details of the particular cloud environment.
See the information about PersistentVolumes for more details.
portworxVolume (deprecated)
Kubernetes v1.25 [deprecated]
A portworxVolume
is an elastic block storage layer that runs hyperconverged with
Kubernetes. Portworx fingerprints storage
in a server, tiers based on capabilities, and aggregates capacity across multiple servers.
Portworx runs in-guest in virtual machines or on bare metal Linux nodes.
A portworxVolume
can be dynamically created through Kubernetes or it can also
be pre-provisioned and referenced inside a Pod.
Here is an example Pod referencing a pre-provisioned Portworx volume:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: test-portworx-volume-pod
spec:
containers:
- image: registry.k8s.io/test-webserver
name: test-container
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /mnt
name: pxvol
volumes:
- name: pxvol
# This Portworx volume must already exist.
portworxVolume:
volumeID: "pxvol"
fsType: "<fs-type>"
pxvol
before using it in the Pod.
For more details, see the Portworx volume examples.
Portworx CSI migration
Kubernetes v1.25 [beta]
The CSIMigration
feature for Portworx has been added but disabled by default in Kubernetes 1.23 since it's in alpha state.
It has been beta now since v1.25 but it is still turned off by default.
It redirects all plugin operations from the existing in-tree plugin to the
pxd.portworx.com
Container Storage Interface (CSI) Driver.
Portworx CSI Driver
must be installed on the cluster.
To enable the feature, set CSIMigrationPortworx=true
in kube-controller-manager and kubelet.
projected
A projected volume maps several existing volume sources into the same directory. For more details, see projected volumes.
rbd
Kubernetes v1.28 [deprecated]
An rbd
volume allows a
Rados Block Device (RBD) volume to mount
into your Pod. Unlike emptyDir
, which is erased when a pod is removed, the
contents of an rbd
volume are preserved and the volume is unmounted. This
means that a RBD volume can be pre-populated with data, and that data can be
shared between pods.
A feature of RBD is that it can be mounted as read-only by multiple consumers simultaneously. This means that you can pre-populate a volume with your dataset and then serve it in parallel from as many pods as you need. Unfortunately, RBD volumes can only be mounted by a single consumer in read-write mode. Simultaneous writers are not allowed.
See the RBD example for more details.
RBD CSI migration
Kubernetes v1.28 [deprecated]
The CSIMigration
feature for RBD
, when enabled, redirects all plugin
operations from the existing in-tree plugin to the rbd.csi.ceph.com
CSI driver. In order to use this
feature, the
Ceph CSI driver
must be installed on the cluster and the CSIMigrationRBD
feature gate
must be enabled. (Note that the csiMigrationRBD
flag has been removed and
replaced with CSIMigrationRBD
in release v1.24)
As a Kubernetes cluster operator that administers storage, here are the prerequisites that you must complete before you attempt migration to the RBD CSI driver:
- You must install the Ceph CSI driver (
rbd.csi.ceph.com
), v3.5.0 or above, into your Kubernetes cluster. - considering the
clusterID
field is a required parameter for CSI driver for its operations, but in-tree StorageClass hasmonitors
field as a required parameter, a Kubernetes storage admin has to create a clusterID based on the monitors hash ( ex:#echo -n '<monitors_string>' | md5sum
) in the CSI config map and keep the monitors under this clusterID configuration. - Also, if the value of
adminId
in the in-tree Storageclass is different fromadmin
, theadminSecretName
mentioned in the in-tree Storageclass has to be patched with the base64 value of theadminId
parameter value, otherwise this step can be skipped.
secret
A secret
volume is used to pass sensitive information, such as passwords, to
Pods. You can store secrets in the Kubernetes API and mount them as files for
use by pods without coupling to Kubernetes directly. secret
volumes are
backed by tmpfs (a RAM-backed filesystem) so they are never written to
non-volatile storage.
-
You must create a Secret in the Kubernetes API before you can use it.
-
A Secret is always mounted as
readOnly
. -
A container using a Secret as a
subPath
volume mount will not receive Secret updates.
For more details, see Configuring Secrets.
vsphereVolume (deprecated)
A vsphereVolume
is used to mount a vSphere VMDK volume into your Pod. The contents
of a volume are preserved when it is unmounted. It supports both VMFS and VSAN datastore.
For more information, see the vSphere volume examples.
vSphere CSI migration
Kubernetes v1.26 [stable]
In Kubernetes 1.29, all operations for the in-tree vsphereVolume
type
are redirected to the csi.vsphere.vmware.com
CSI driver.
vSphere CSI driver
must be installed on the cluster. You can find additional advice on how to migrate in-tree vsphereVolume
in VMware's documentation page
Migrating In-Tree vSphere Volumes to vSphere Container Storage lug-in.
If vSphere CSI Driver is not installed volume operations can not be performed on the PV created with the in-tree vsphereVolume
type.
You must run vSphere 7.0u2 or later in order to migrate to the vSphere CSI driver.
If you are running a version of Kubernetes other than v1.29, consult the documentation for that version of Kubernetes.
The following StorageClass parameters from the built-in vsphereVolume
plugin are not supported by the vSphere CSI driver:
diskformat
hostfailurestotolerate
forceprovisioning
cachereservation
diskstripes
objectspacereservation
iopslimit
Existing volumes created using these parameters will be migrated to the vSphere CSI driver, but new volumes created by the vSphere CSI driver will not be honoring these parameters.
vSphere CSI migration complete
Kubernetes v1.19 [beta]
To turn off the vsphereVolume
plugin from being loaded by the controller manager and the kubelet, you need to set InTreePluginvSphereUnregister
feature flag to true
. You must install a csi.vsphere.vmware.com
CSI driver on all worker nodes.
Using subPath
Sometimes, it is useful to share one volume for multiple uses in a single pod.
The volumeMounts[*].subPath
property specifies a sub-path inside the referenced volume
instead of its root.
The following example shows how to configure a Pod with a LAMP stack (Linux Apache MySQL PHP)
using a single, shared volume. This sample subPath
configuration is not recommended
for production use.
The PHP application's code and assets map to the volume's html
folder and
the MySQL database is stored in the volume's mysql
folder. For example:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: my-lamp-site
spec:
containers:
- name: mysql
image: mysql
env:
- name: MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD
value: "rootpasswd"
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /var/lib/mysql
name: site-data
subPath: mysql
- name: php
image: php:7.0-apache
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /var/www/html
name: site-data
subPath: html
volumes:
- name: site-data
persistentVolumeClaim:
claimName: my-lamp-site-data
Using subPath with expanded environment variables
Kubernetes v1.17 [stable]
Use the subPathExpr
field to construct subPath
directory names from
downward API environment variables.
The subPath
and subPathExpr
properties are mutually exclusive.
In this example, a Pod
uses subPathExpr
to create a directory pod1
within
the hostPath
volume /var/log/pods
.
The hostPath
volume takes the Pod
name from the downwardAPI
.
The host directory /var/log/pods/pod1
is mounted at /logs
in the container.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: pod1
spec:
containers:
- name: container1
env:
- name: POD_NAME
valueFrom:
fieldRef:
apiVersion: v1
fieldPath: metadata.name
image: busybox:1.28
command: [ "sh", "-c", "while [ true ]; do echo 'Hello'; sleep 10; done | tee -a /logs/hello.txt" ]
volumeMounts:
- name: workdir1
mountPath: /logs
# The variable expansion uses round brackets (not curly brackets).
subPathExpr: $(POD_NAME)
restartPolicy: Never
volumes:
- name: workdir1
hostPath:
path: /var/log/pods
Resources
The storage media (such as Disk or SSD) of an emptyDir
volume is determined by the
medium of the filesystem holding the kubelet root dir (typically
/var/lib/kubelet
). There is no limit on how much space an emptyDir
or
hostPath
volume can consume, and no isolation between containers or between
pods.
To learn about requesting space using a resource specification, see how to manage resources.
Out-of-tree volume plugins
The out-of-tree volume plugins include Container Storage Interface (CSI), and also FlexVolume (which is deprecated). These plugins enable storage vendors to create custom storage plugins without adding their plugin source code to the Kubernetes repository.
Previously, all volume plugins were "in-tree". The "in-tree" plugins were built, linked, compiled, and shipped with the core Kubernetes binaries. This meant that adding a new storage system to Kubernetes (a volume plugin) required checking code into the core Kubernetes code repository.
Both CSI and FlexVolume allow volume plugins to be developed independent of the Kubernetes code base, and deployed (installed) on Kubernetes clusters as extensions.
For storage vendors looking to create an out-of-tree volume plugin, please refer to the volume plugin FAQ.
csi
Container Storage Interface (CSI) defines a standard interface for container orchestration systems (like Kubernetes) to expose arbitrary storage systems to their container workloads.
Please read the CSI design proposal for more information.
Once a CSI compatible volume driver is deployed on a Kubernetes cluster, users
may use the csi
volume type to attach or mount the volumes exposed by the
CSI driver.
A csi
volume can be used in a Pod in three different ways:
- through a reference to a PersistentVolumeClaim
- with a generic ephemeral volume
- with a CSI ephemeral volume if the driver supports that
The following fields are available to storage administrators to configure a CSI persistent volume:
driver
: A string value that specifies the name of the volume driver to use. This value must correspond to the value returned in theGetPluginInfoResponse
by the CSI driver as defined in the CSI spec. It is used by Kubernetes to identify which CSI driver to call out to, and by CSI driver components to identify which PV objects belong to the CSI driver.volumeHandle
: A string value that uniquely identifies the volume. This value must correspond to the value returned in thevolume.id
field of theCreateVolumeResponse
by the CSI driver as defined in the CSI spec. The value is passed asvolume_id
on all calls to the CSI volume driver when referencing the volume.readOnly
: An optional boolean value indicating whether the volume is to be "ControllerPublished" (attached) as read only. Default is false. This value is passed to the CSI driver via thereadonly
field in theControllerPublishVolumeRequest
.fsType
: If the PV'sVolumeMode
isFilesystem
then this field may be used to specify the filesystem that should be used to mount the volume. If the volume has not been formatted and formatting is supported, this value will be used to format the volume. This value is passed to the CSI driver via theVolumeCapability
field ofControllerPublishVolumeRequest
,NodeStageVolumeRequest
, andNodePublishVolumeRequest
.volumeAttributes
: A map of string to string that specifies static properties of a volume. This map must correspond to the map returned in thevolume.attributes
field of theCreateVolumeResponse
by the CSI driver as defined in the CSI spec. The map is passed to the CSI driver via thevolume_context
field in theControllerPublishVolumeRequest
,NodeStageVolumeRequest
, andNodePublishVolumeRequest
.controllerPublishSecretRef
: A reference to the secret object containing sensitive information to pass to the CSI driver to complete the CSIControllerPublishVolume
andControllerUnpublishVolume
calls. This field is optional, and may be empty if no secret is required. If the Secret contains more than one secret, all secrets are passed.nodeExpandSecretRef
: A reference to the secret containing sensitive information to pass to the CSI driver to complete the CSINodeExpandVolume
call. This field is optional, and may be empty if no secret is required. If the object contains more than one secret, all secrets are passed. When you have configured secret data for node-initiated volume expansion, the kubelet passes that data via theNodeExpandVolume()
call to the CSI driver. In order to use thenodeExpandSecretRef
field, your cluster should be running Kubernetes version 1.25 or later.- If you are running Kubernetes Version 1.25 or 1.26, you must enable
the feature gate
named
CSINodeExpandSecret
for each kube-apiserver and for the kubelet on every node. In Kubernetes version 1.27 this feature has been enabled by default and no explicit enablement of the feature gate is required. You must also be using a CSI driver that supports or requires secret data during node-initiated storage resize operations. nodePublishSecretRef
: A reference to the secret object containing sensitive information to pass to the CSI driver to complete the CSINodePublishVolume
call. This field is optional, and may be empty if no secret is required. If the secret object contains more than one secret, all secrets are passed.nodeStageSecretRef
: A reference to the secret object containing sensitive information to pass to the CSI driver to complete the CSINodeStageVolume
call. This field is optional, and may be empty if no secret is required. If the Secret contains more than one secret, all secrets are passed.
CSI raw block volume support
Kubernetes v1.18 [stable]
Vendors with external CSI drivers can implement raw block volume support in Kubernetes workloads.
You can set up your PersistentVolume/PersistentVolumeClaim with raw block volume support as usual, without any CSI specific changes.
CSI ephemeral volumes
Kubernetes v1.25 [stable]
You can directly configure CSI volumes within the Pod specification. Volumes specified in this way are ephemeral and do not persist across pod restarts. See Ephemeral Volumes for more information.
For more information on how to develop a CSI driver, refer to the kubernetes-csi documentation
Windows CSI proxy
Kubernetes v1.22 [stable]
CSI node plugins need to perform various privileged operations like scanning of disk devices and mounting of file systems. These operations differ for each host operating system. For Linux worker nodes, containerized CSI node plugins are typically deployed as privileged containers. For Windows worker nodes, privileged operations for containerized CSI node plugins is supported using csi-proxy, a community-managed, stand-alone binary that needs to be pre-installed on each Windows node.
For more details, refer to the deployment guide of the CSI plugin you wish to deploy.
Migrating to CSI drivers from in-tree plugins
Kubernetes v1.25 [stable]
The CSIMigration
feature directs operations against existing in-tree
plugins to corresponding CSI plugins (which are expected to be installed and configured).
As a result, operators do not have to make any
configuration changes to existing Storage Classes, PersistentVolumes or PersistentVolumeClaims
(referring to in-tree plugins) when transitioning to a CSI driver that supersedes an in-tree plugin.
Existing PVs created by a in-tree volume plugin can still be used in the future without any configuration changes, even after the migration to CSI is completed for that volume type, and even after you upgrade to a version of Kubernetes that doesn't have compiled-in support for that kind of storage.
As part of that migration, you - or another cluster administrator - must have installed and configured the appropriate CSI driver for that storage. The core of Kubernetes does not install that software for you.
After that migration, you can also define new PVCs and PVs that refer to the legacy, built-in storage integrations. Provided you have the appropriate CSI driver installed and configured, the PV creation continues to work, even for brand new volumes. The actual storage management now happens through the CSI driver.
The operations and features that are supported include: provisioning/delete, attach/detach, mount/unmount and resizing of volumes.
In-tree plugins that support CSIMigration
and have a corresponding CSI driver implemented
are listed in Types of Volumes.
The following in-tree plugins support persistent storage on Windows nodes:
flexVolume (deprecated)
Kubernetes v1.23 [deprecated]
FlexVolume is an out-of-tree plugin interface that uses an exec-based model to interface with storage drivers. The FlexVolume driver binaries must be installed in a pre-defined volume plugin path on each node and in some cases the control plane nodes as well.
Pods interact with FlexVolume drivers through the flexVolume
in-tree volume plugin.
For more details, see the FlexVolume README document.
The following FlexVolume plugins, deployed as PowerShell scripts on the host, support Windows nodes:
FlexVolume is deprecated. Using an out-of-tree CSI driver is the recommended way to integrate external storage with Kubernetes.
Maintainers of FlexVolume driver should implement a CSI Driver and help to migrate users of FlexVolume drivers to CSI. Users of FlexVolume should move their workloads to use the equivalent CSI Driver.
Mount propagation
Mount propagation allows for sharing volumes mounted by a container to other containers in the same pod, or even to other pods on the same node.
Mount propagation of a volume is controlled by the mountPropagation
field
in containers[*].volumeMounts
. Its values are:
-
None
- This volume mount will not receive any subsequent mounts that are mounted to this volume or any of its subdirectories by the host. In similar fashion, no mounts created by the container will be visible on the host. This is the default mode.This mode is equal to
rprivate
mount propagation as described inmount(8)
However, the CRI runtime may choose
rslave
mount propagation (i.e.,HostToContainer
) instead, whenrprivate
propagation is not applicable. cri-dockerd (Docker) is known to chooserslave
mount propagation when the mount source contains the Docker daemon's root directory (/var/lib/docker
). -
HostToContainer
- This volume mount will receive all subsequent mounts that are mounted to this volume or any of its subdirectories.In other words, if the host mounts anything inside the volume mount, the container will see it mounted there.
Similarly, if any Pod with
Bidirectional
mount propagation to the same volume mounts anything there, the container withHostToContainer
mount propagation will see it.This mode is equal to
rslave
mount propagation as described in themount(8)
-
Bidirectional
- This volume mount behaves the same theHostToContainer
mount. In addition, all volume mounts created by the container will be propagated back to the host and to all containers of all pods that use the same volume.A typical use case for this mode is a Pod with a FlexVolume or CSI driver or a Pod that needs to mount something on the host using a
hostPath
volume.This mode is equal to
rshared
mount propagation as described in themount(8)
Warning:Bidirectional
mount propagation can be dangerous. It can damage the host operating system and therefore it is allowed only in privileged containers. Familiarity with Linux kernel behavior is strongly recommended. In addition, any volume mounts created by containers in pods must be destroyed (unmounted) by the containers on termination.
What's next
Follow an example of deploying WordPress and MySQL with Persistent Volumes.
6.2 - Persistent Volumes
This document describes persistent volumes in Kubernetes. Familiarity with volumes, StorageClasses and VolumeAttributesClasses is suggested.
Introduction
Managing storage is a distinct problem from managing compute instances. The PersistentVolume subsystem provides an API for users and administrators that abstracts details of how storage is provided from how it is consumed. To do this, we introduce two new API resources: PersistentVolume and PersistentVolumeClaim.
A PersistentVolume (PV) is a piece of storage in the cluster that has been provisioned by an administrator or dynamically provisioned using Storage Classes. It is a resource in the cluster just like a node is a cluster resource. PVs are volume plugins like Volumes, but have a lifecycle independent of any individual Pod that uses the PV. This API object captures the details of the implementation of the storage, be that NFS, iSCSI, or a cloud-provider-specific storage system.
A PersistentVolumeClaim (PVC) is a request for storage by a user. It is similar to a Pod. Pods consume node resources and PVCs consume PV resources. Pods can request specific levels of resources (CPU and Memory). Claims can request specific size and access modes (e.g., they can be mounted ReadWriteOnce, ReadOnlyMany, ReadWriteMany, or ReadWriteOncePod, see AccessModes).
While PersistentVolumeClaims allow a user to consume abstract storage resources, it is common that users need PersistentVolumes with varying properties, such as performance, for different problems. Cluster administrators need to be able to offer a variety of PersistentVolumes that differ in more ways than size and access modes, without exposing users to the details of how those volumes are implemented. For these needs, there is the StorageClass resource.
See the detailed walkthrough with working examples.
Lifecycle of a volume and claim
PVs are resources in the cluster. PVCs are requests for those resources and also act as claim checks to the resource. The interaction between PVs and PVCs follows this lifecycle:
Provisioning
There are two ways PVs may be provisioned: statically or dynamically.
Static
A cluster administrator creates a number of PVs. They carry the details of the real storage, which is available for use by cluster users. They exist in the Kubernetes API and are available for consumption.
Dynamic
When none of the static PVs the administrator created match a user's PersistentVolumeClaim,
the cluster may try to dynamically provision a volume specially for the PVC.
This provisioning is based on StorageClasses: the PVC must request a
storage class and
the administrator must have created and configured that class for dynamic
provisioning to occur. Claims that request the class ""
effectively disable
dynamic provisioning for themselves.
To enable dynamic storage provisioning based on storage class, the cluster administrator
needs to enable the DefaultStorageClass
admission controller
on the API server. This can be done, for example, by ensuring that DefaultStorageClass
is
among the comma-delimited, ordered list of values for the --enable-admission-plugins
flag of
the API server component. For more information on API server command-line flags,
check kube-apiserver documentation.
Binding
A user creates, or in the case of dynamic provisioning, has already created, a PersistentVolumeClaim with a specific amount of storage requested and with certain access modes. A control loop in the control plane watches for new PVCs, finds a matching PV (if possible), and binds them together. If a PV was dynamically provisioned for a new PVC, the loop will always bind that PV to the PVC. Otherwise, the user will always get at least what they asked for, but the volume may be in excess of what was requested. Once bound, PersistentVolumeClaim binds are exclusive, regardless of how they were bound. A PVC to PV binding is a one-to-one mapping, using a ClaimRef which is a bi-directional binding between the PersistentVolume and the PersistentVolumeClaim.
Claims will remain unbound indefinitely if a matching volume does not exist. Claims will be bound as matching volumes become available. For example, a cluster provisioned with many 50Gi PVs would not match a PVC requesting 100Gi. The PVC can be bound when a 100Gi PV is added to the cluster.
Using
Pods use claims as volumes. The cluster inspects the claim to find the bound volume and mounts that volume for a Pod. For volumes that support multiple access modes, the user specifies which mode is desired when using their claim as a volume in a Pod.
Once a user has a claim and that claim is bound, the bound PV belongs to the
user for as long as they need it. Users schedule Pods and access their claimed
PVs by including a persistentVolumeClaim
section in a Pod's volumes
block.
See Claims As Volumes for more details on this.
Storage Object in Use Protection
The purpose of the Storage Object in Use Protection feature is to ensure that PersistentVolumeClaims (PVCs) in active use by a Pod and PersistentVolume (PVs) that are bound to PVCs are not removed from the system, as this may result in data loss.
If a user deletes a PVC in active use by a Pod, the PVC is not removed immediately. PVC removal is postponed until the PVC is no longer actively used by any Pods. Also, if an admin deletes a PV that is bound to a PVC, the PV is not removed immediately. PV removal is postponed until the PV is no longer bound to a PVC.
You can see that a PVC is protected when the PVC's status is Terminating
and the
Finalizers
list includes kubernetes.io/pvc-protection
:
kubectl describe pvc hostpath
Name: hostpath
Namespace: default
StorageClass: example-hostpath
Status: Terminating
Volume:
Labels: <none>
Annotations: volume.beta.kubernetes.io/storage-class=example-hostpath
volume.beta.kubernetes.io/storage-provisioner=example.com/hostpath
Finalizers: [kubernetes.io/pvc-protection]
...
You can see that a PV is protected when the PV's status is Terminating
and
the Finalizers
list includes kubernetes.io/pv-protection
too:
kubectl describe pv task-pv-volume
Name: task-pv-volume
Labels: type=local
Annotations: <none>
Finalizers: [kubernetes.io/pv-protection]
StorageClass: standard
Status: Terminating
Claim:
Reclaim Policy: Delete
Access Modes: RWO
Capacity: 1Gi
Message:
Source:
Type: HostPath (bare host directory volume)
Path: /tmp/data
HostPathType:
Events: <none>
Reclaiming
When a user is done with their volume, they can delete the PVC objects from the API that allows reclamation of the resource. The reclaim policy for a PersistentVolume tells the cluster what to do with the volume after it has been released of its claim. Currently, volumes can either be Retained, Recycled, or Deleted.
Retain
The Retain
reclaim policy allows for manual reclamation of the resource.
When the PersistentVolumeClaim is deleted, the PersistentVolume still exists
and the volume is considered "released". But it is not yet available for
another claim because the previous claimant's data remains on the volume.
An administrator can manually reclaim the volume with the following steps.
- Delete the PersistentVolume. The associated storage asset in external infrastructure still exists after the PV is deleted.
- Manually clean up the data on the associated storage asset accordingly.
- Manually delete the associated storage asset.
If you want to reuse the same storage asset, create a new PersistentVolume with the same storage asset definition.
Delete
For volume plugins that support the Delete
reclaim policy, deletion removes
both the PersistentVolume object from Kubernetes, as well as the associated
storage asset in the external infrastructure. Volumes that were dynamically provisioned
inherit the reclaim policy of their StorageClass, which
defaults to Delete
. The administrator should configure the StorageClass
according to users' expectations; otherwise, the PV must be edited or
patched after it is created. See
Change the Reclaim Policy of a PersistentVolume.
Recycle
Recycle
reclaim policy is deprecated. Instead, the recommended approach
is to use dynamic provisioning.
If supported by the underlying volume plugin, the Recycle
reclaim policy performs
a basic scrub (rm -rf /thevolume/*
) on the volume and makes it available again for a new claim.
However, an administrator can configure a custom recycler Pod template using
the Kubernetes controller manager command line arguments as described in the
reference.
The custom recycler Pod template must contain a volumes
specification, as
shown in the example below:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: pv-recycler
namespace: default
spec:
restartPolicy: Never
volumes:
- name: vol
hostPath:
path: /any/path/it/will/be/replaced
containers:
- name: pv-recycler
image: "registry.k8s.io/busybox"
command: ["/bin/sh", "-c", "test -e /scrub && rm -rf /scrub/..?* /scrub/.[!.]* /scrub/* && test -z \"$(ls -A /scrub)\" || exit 1"]
volumeMounts:
- name: vol
mountPath: /scrub
However, the particular path specified in the custom recycler Pod template in the
volumes
part is replaced with the particular path of the volume that is being recycled.
PersistentVolume deletion protection finalizer
Kubernetes v1.23 [alpha]
Finalizers can be added on a PersistentVolume to ensure that PersistentVolumes
having Delete
reclaim policy are deleted only after the backing storage are deleted.
The newly introduced finalizers kubernetes.io/pv-controller
and
external-provisioner.volume.kubernetes.io/finalizer
are only added to dynamically provisioned volumes.
The finalizer kubernetes.io/pv-controller
is added to in-tree plugin volumes.
The following is an example
kubectl describe pv pvc-74a498d6-3929-47e8-8c02-078c1ece4d78
Name: pvc-74a498d6-3929-47e8-8c02-078c1ece4d78
Labels: <none>
Annotations: kubernetes.io/createdby: vsphere-volume-dynamic-provisioner
pv.kubernetes.io/bound-by-controller: yes
pv.kubernetes.io/provisioned-by: kubernetes.io/vsphere-volume
Finalizers: [kubernetes.io/pv-protection kubernetes.io/pv-controller]
StorageClass: vcp-sc
Status: Bound
Claim: default/vcp-pvc-1
Reclaim Policy: Delete
Access Modes: RWO
VolumeMode: Filesystem
Capacity: 1Gi
Node Affinity: <none>
Message:
Source:
Type: vSphereVolume (a Persistent Disk resource in vSphere)
VolumePath: [vsanDatastore] d49c4a62-166f-ce12-c464-020077ba5d46/kubernetes-dynamic-pvc-74a498d6-3929-47e8-8c02-078c1ece4d78.vmdk
FSType: ext4
StoragePolicyName: vSAN Default Storage Policy
Events: <none>
The finalizer external-provisioner.volume.kubernetes.io/finalizer
is added for CSI volumes.
The following is an example:
Name: pvc-2f0bab97-85a8-4552-8044-eb8be45cf48d
Labels: <none>
Annotations: pv.kubernetes.io/provisioned-by: csi.vsphere.vmware.com
Finalizers: [kubernetes.io/pv-protection external-provisioner.volume.kubernetes.io/finalizer]
StorageClass: fast
Status: Bound
Claim: demo-app/nginx-logs
Reclaim Policy: Delete
Access Modes: RWO
VolumeMode: Filesystem
Capacity: 200Mi
Node Affinity: <none>
Message:
Source:
Type: CSI (a Container Storage Interface (CSI) volume source)
Driver: csi.vsphere.vmware.com
FSType: ext4
VolumeHandle: 44830fa8-79b4-406b-8b58-621ba25353fd
ReadOnly: false
VolumeAttributes: storage.kubernetes.io/csiProvisionerIdentity=1648442357185-8081-csi.vsphere.vmware.com
type=vSphere CNS Block Volume
Events: <none>
When the CSIMigration{provider}
feature flag is enabled for a specific in-tree volume plugin,
the kubernetes.io/pv-controller
finalizer is replaced by the
external-provisioner.volume.kubernetes.io/finalizer
finalizer.
Reserving a PersistentVolume
The control plane can bind PersistentVolumeClaims to matching PersistentVolumes in the cluster. However, if you want a PVC to bind to a specific PV, you need to pre-bind them.
By specifying a PersistentVolume in a PersistentVolumeClaim, you declare a binding
between that specific PV and PVC. If the PersistentVolume exists and has not reserved
PersistentVolumeClaims through its claimRef
field, then the PersistentVolume and
PersistentVolumeClaim will be bound.
The binding happens regardless of some volume matching criteria, including node affinity. The control plane still checks that storage class, access modes, and requested storage size are valid.
apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
metadata:
name: foo-pvc
namespace: foo
spec:
storageClassName: "" # Empty string must be explicitly set otherwise default StorageClass will be set
volumeName: foo-pv
...
This method does not guarantee any binding privileges to the PersistentVolume.
If other PersistentVolumeClaims could use the PV that you specify, you first
need to reserve that storage volume. Specify the relevant PersistentVolumeClaim
in the claimRef
field of the PV so that other PVCs can not bind to it.
apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolume
metadata:
name: foo-pv
spec:
storageClassName: ""
claimRef:
name: foo-pvc
namespace: foo
...
This is useful if you want to consume PersistentVolumes that have their persistentVolumeReclaimPolicy
set
to Retain
, including cases where you are reusing an existing PV.
Expanding Persistent Volumes Claims
Kubernetes v1.24 [stable]
Support for expanding PersistentVolumeClaims (PVCs) is enabled by default. You can expand the following types of volumes:
- azureFile (deprecated)
- csi
- flexVolume (deprecated)
- rbd (deprecated)
- portworxVolume (deprecated)
You can only expand a PVC if its storage class's allowVolumeExpansion
field is set to true.
apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: StorageClass
metadata:
name: example-vol-default
provisioner: vendor-name.example/magicstorage
parameters:
resturl: "http://192.168.10.100:8080"
restuser: ""
secretNamespace: ""
secretName: ""
allowVolumeExpansion: true
To request a larger volume for a PVC, edit the PVC object and specify a larger size. This triggers expansion of the volume that backs the underlying PersistentVolume. A new PersistentVolume is never created to satisfy the claim. Instead, an existing volume is resized.
.spec
of a matching
PersistentVolumeClaim to make the size of the PersistentVolumeClaim match the PersistentVolume,
then no storage resize happens.
The Kubernetes control plane will see that the desired state of both resources matches,
conclude that the backing volume size has been manually
increased and that no resize is necessary.
CSI Volume expansion
Kubernetes v1.24 [stable]
Support for expanding CSI volumes is enabled by default but it also requires a specific CSI driver to support volume expansion. Refer to documentation of the specific CSI driver for more information.
Resizing a volume containing a file system
You can only resize volumes containing a file system if the file system is XFS, Ext3, or Ext4.
When a volume contains a file system, the file system is only resized when a new Pod is using
the PersistentVolumeClaim in ReadWrite
mode. File system expansion is either done when a Pod is starting up
or when a Pod is running and the underlying file system supports online expansion.
FlexVolumes (deprecated since Kubernetes v1.23) allow resize if the driver is configured with the
RequiresFSResize
capability to true
. The FlexVolume can be resized on Pod restart.
Resizing an in-use PersistentVolumeClaim
Kubernetes v1.24 [stable]
In this case, you don't need to delete and recreate a Pod or deployment that is using an existing PVC. Any in-use PVC automatically becomes available to its Pod as soon as its file system has been expanded. This feature has no effect on PVCs that are not in use by a Pod or deployment. You must create a Pod that uses the PVC before the expansion can complete.
Similar to other volume types - FlexVolume volumes can also be expanded when in-use by a Pod.
Recovering from Failure when Expanding Volumes
If a user specifies a new size that is too big to be satisfied by underlying storage system, expansion of PVC will be continuously retried until user or cluster administrator takes some action. This can be undesirable and hence Kubernetes provides following methods of recovering from such failures.
If expanding underlying storage fails, the cluster administrator can manually recover the Persistent Volume Claim (PVC) state and cancel the resize requests. Otherwise, the resize requests are continuously retried by the controller without administrator intervention.
- Mark the PersistentVolume(PV) that is bound to the PersistentVolumeClaim(PVC)
with
Retain
reclaim policy. - Delete the PVC. Since PV has
Retain
reclaim policy - we will not lose any data when we recreate the PVC. - Delete the
claimRef
entry from PV specs, so as new PVC can bind to it. This should make the PVAvailable
. - Re-create the PVC with smaller size than PV and set
volumeName
field of the PVC to the name of the PV. This should bind new PVC to existing PV. - Don't forget to restore the reclaim policy of the PV.
Kubernetes v1.23 [alpha]
RecoverVolumeExpansionFailure
feature must be
enabled for this feature to work. Refer to the
feature gate
documentation for more information.
If the feature gates RecoverVolumeExpansionFailure
is
enabled in your cluster, and expansion has failed for a PVC, you can retry expansion with a
smaller size than the previously requested value. To request a new expansion attempt with a
smaller proposed size, edit .spec.resources
for that PVC and choose a value that is less than the
value you previously tried.
This is useful if expansion to a higher value did not succeed because of capacity constraint.
If that has happened, or you suspect that it might have, you can retry expansion by specifying a
size that is within the capacity limits of underlying storage provider. You can monitor status of
resize operation by watching .status.allocatedResourceStatuses
and events on the PVC.
Note that,
although you can specify a lower amount of storage than what was requested previously,
the new value must still be higher than .status.capacity
.
Kubernetes does not support shrinking a PVC to less than its current size.
Types of Persistent Volumes
PersistentVolume types are implemented as plugins. Kubernetes currently supports the following plugins:
csi
- Container Storage Interface (CSI)fc
- Fibre Channel (FC) storagehostPath
- HostPath volume (for single node testing only; WILL NOT WORK in a multi-node cluster; consider usinglocal
volume instead)iscsi
- iSCSI (SCSI over IP) storagelocal
- local storage devices mounted on nodes.nfs
- Network File System (NFS) storage
The following types of PersistentVolume are deprecated. This means that support is still available but will be removed in a future Kubernetes release.
azureFile
- Azure File (deprecated in v1.21)flexVolume
- FlexVolume (deprecated in v1.23)portworxVolume
- Portworx volume (deprecated in v1.25)vsphereVolume
- vSphere VMDK volume (deprecated in v1.19)cephfs
- CephFS volume (deprecated in v1.28)rbd
- Rados Block Device (RBD) volume (deprecated in v1.28)
Older versions of Kubernetes also supported the following in-tree PersistentVolume types:
awsElasticBlockStore
- AWS Elastic Block Store (EBS) (not available in v1.27)azureDisk
- Azure Disk (not available in v1.27)cinder
- Cinder (OpenStack block storage) (not available in v1.26)photonPersistentDisk
- Photon controller persistent disk. (not available starting v1.15)scaleIO
- ScaleIO volume. (not available starting v1.21)flocker
- Flocker storage. (not available starting v1.25)quobyte
- Quobyte volume. (not available starting v1.25)storageos
- StorageOS volume. (not available starting v1.25)
Persistent Volumes
Each PV contains a spec and status, which is the specification and status of the volume. The name of a PersistentVolume object must be a valid DNS subdomain name.
apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolume
metadata:
name: pv0003
spec:
capacity:
storage: 5Gi
volumeMode: Filesystem
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
persistentVolumeReclaimPolicy: Recycle
storageClassName: slow
mountOptions:
- hard
- nfsvers=4.1
nfs:
path: /tmp
server: 172.17.0.2
Capacity
Generally, a PV will have a specific storage capacity. This is set using the PV's
capacity
attribute which is a Quantity value.
Currently, storage size is the only resource that can be set or requested. Future attributes may include IOPS, throughput, etc.
Volume Mode
Kubernetes v1.18 [stable]
Kubernetes supports two volumeModes
of PersistentVolumes: Filesystem
and Block
.
volumeMode
is an optional API parameter.
Filesystem
is the default mode used when volumeMode
parameter is omitted.
A volume with volumeMode: Filesystem
is mounted into Pods into a directory. If the volume
is backed by a block device and the device is empty, Kubernetes creates a filesystem
on the device before mounting it for the first time.
You can set the value of volumeMode
to Block
to use a volume as a raw block device.
Such volume is presented into a Pod as a block device, without any filesystem on it.
This mode is useful to provide a Pod the fastest possible way to access a volume, without
any filesystem layer between the Pod and the volume. On the other hand, the application
running in the Pod must know how to handle a raw block device.
See Raw Block Volume Support
for an example on how to use a volume with volumeMode: Block
in a Pod.
Access Modes
A PersistentVolume can be mounted on a host in any way supported by the resource provider. As shown in the table below, providers will have different capabilities and each PV's access modes are set to the specific modes supported by that particular volume. For example, NFS can support multiple read/write clients, but a specific NFS PV might be exported on the server as read-only. Each PV gets its own set of access modes describing that specific PV's capabilities.
The access modes are:
ReadWriteOnce
- the volume can be mounted as read-write by a single node. ReadWriteOnce access mode still can allow multiple pods to access the volume when the pods are running on the same node. For single pod access, please see ReadWriteOncePod.
ReadOnlyMany
- the volume can be mounted as read-only by many nodes.
ReadWriteMany
- the volume can be mounted as read-write by many nodes.
ReadWriteOncePod
-
FEATURE STATE:the volume can be mounted as read-write by a single Pod. Use ReadWriteOncePod access mode if you want to ensure that only one pod across the whole cluster can read that PVC or write to it.
Kubernetes v1.29 [stable]
The ReadWriteOncePod
access mode is only supported for
CSI volumes and Kubernetes version
1.22+. To use this feature you will need to update the following
CSI sidecars
to these versions or greater:
In the CLI, the access modes are abbreviated to:
- RWO - ReadWriteOnce
- ROX - ReadOnlyMany
- RWX - ReadWriteMany
- RWOP - ReadWriteOncePod
Important! A volume can only be mounted using one access mode at a time, even if it supports many.
Volume Plugin | ReadWriteOnce | ReadOnlyMany | ReadWriteMany | ReadWriteOncePod |
---|---|---|---|---|
AzureFile | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | - |
CephFS | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | - |
CSI | depends on the driver | depends on the driver | depends on the driver | depends on the driver |
FC | ✓ | ✓ | - | - |
FlexVolume | ✓ | ✓ | depends on the driver | - |
HostPath | ✓ | - | - | - |
iSCSI | ✓ | ✓ | - | - |
NFS | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | - |
RBD | ✓ | ✓ | - | - |
VsphereVolume | ✓ | - | - (works when Pods are collocated) | - |
PortworxVolume | ✓ | - | ✓ | - |
Class
A PV can have a class, which is specified by setting the
storageClassName
attribute to the name of a
StorageClass.
A PV of a particular class can only be bound to PVCs requesting
that class. A PV with no storageClassName
has no class and can only be bound
to PVCs that request no particular class.
In the past, the annotation volume.beta.kubernetes.io/storage-class
was used instead
of the storageClassName
attribute. This annotation is still working; however,
it will become fully deprecated in a future Kubernetes release.
Reclaim Policy
Current reclaim policies are:
- Retain -- manual reclamation
- Recycle -- basic scrub (
rm -rf /thevolume/*
) - Delete -- delete the volume
For Kubernetes 1.29, only nfs
and hostPath
volume types support recycling.
Mount Options
A Kubernetes administrator can specify additional mount options for when a Persistent Volume is mounted on a node.
The following volume types support mount options:
azureFile
cephfs
(deprecated in v1.28)cinder
(deprecated in v1.18)iscsi
nfs
rbd
(deprecated in v1.28)vsphereVolume
Mount options are not validated. If a mount option is invalid, the mount fails.
In the past, the annotation volume.beta.kubernetes.io/mount-options
was used instead
of the mountOptions
attribute. This annotation is still working; however,
it will become fully deprecated in a future Kubernetes release.
Node Affinity
A PV can specify node affinity to define constraints that limit what nodes this
volume can be accessed from. Pods that use a PV will only be scheduled to nodes
that are selected by the node affinity. To specify node affinity, set
nodeAffinity
in the .spec
of a PV. The
PersistentVolume
API reference has more details on this field.
Phase
A PersistentVolume will be in one of the following phases:
Available
- a free resource that is not yet bound to a claim
Bound
- the volume is bound to a claim
Released
- the claim has been deleted, but the associated storage resource is not yet reclaimed by the cluster
Failed
- the volume has failed its (automated) reclamation
You can see the name of the PVC bound to the PV using kubectl describe persistentvolume <name>
.
Phase transition timestamp
Kubernetes v1.29 [beta]
The .status
field for a PersistentVolume can include an alpha lastPhaseTransitionTime
field. This field records
the timestamp of when the volume last transitioned its phase. For newly created
volumes the phase is set to Pending
and lastPhaseTransitionTime
is set to
the current time.
PersistentVolumeLastPhaseTransitionTime
feature gate
to use or see the lastPhaseTransitionTime
field.
PersistentVolumeClaims
Each PVC contains a spec and status, which is the specification and status of the claim. The name of a PersistentVolumeClaim object must be a valid DNS subdomain name.
apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
metadata:
name: myclaim
spec:
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
volumeMode: Filesystem
resources:
requests:
storage: 8Gi
storageClassName: slow
selector:
matchLabels:
release: "stable"
matchExpressions:
- {key: environment, operator: In, values: [dev]}
Access Modes
Claims use the same conventions as volumes when requesting storage with specific access modes.
Volume Modes
Claims use the same convention as volumes to indicate the consumption of the volume as either a filesystem or block device.
Resources
Claims, like Pods, can request specific quantities of a resource. In this case, the request is for storage. The same resource model applies to both volumes and claims.
Selector
Claims can specify a label selector to further filter the set of volumes. Only the volumes whose labels match the selector can be bound to the claim. The selector can consist of two fields:
matchLabels
- the volume must have a label with this valuematchExpressions
- a list of requirements made by specifying key, list of values, and operator that relates the key and values. Valid operators include In, NotIn, Exists, and DoesNotExist.
All of the requirements, from both matchLabels
and matchExpressions
, are
ANDed together – they must all be satisfied in order to match.
Class
A claim can request a particular class by specifying the name of a
StorageClass
using the attribute storageClassName
.
Only PVs of the requested class, ones with the same storageClassName
as the PVC, can
be bound to the PVC.
PVCs don't necessarily have to request a class. A PVC with its storageClassName
set
equal to ""
is always interpreted to be requesting a PV with no class, so it
can only be bound to PVs with no class (no annotation or one set equal to
""
). A PVC with no storageClassName
is not quite the same and is treated differently
by the cluster, depending on whether the
DefaultStorageClass
admission plugin
is turned on.
- If the admission plugin is turned on, the administrator may specify a
default StorageClass. All PVCs that have no
storageClassName
can be bound only to PVs of that default. Specifying a default StorageClass is done by setting the annotationstorageclass.kubernetes.io/is-default-class
equal totrue
in a StorageClass object. If the administrator does not specify a default, the cluster responds to PVC creation as if the admission plugin were turned off. If more than one default StorageClass is specified, the newest default is used when the PVC is dynamically provisioned. - If the admission plugin is turned off, there is no notion of a default
StorageClass. All PVCs that have
storageClassName
set to""
can be bound only to PVs that havestorageClassName
also set to""
. However, PVCs with missingstorageClassName
can be updated later once default StorageClass becomes available. If the PVC gets updated it will no longer bind to PVs that havestorageClassName
also set to""
.
See retroactive default StorageClass assignment for more details.
Depending on installation method, a default StorageClass may be deployed to a Kubernetes cluster by addon manager during installation.
When a PVC specifies a selector
in addition to requesting a StorageClass,
the requirements are ANDed together: only a PV of the requested class and with
the requested labels may be bound to the PVC.
selector
can't have a PV dynamically provisioned for it.
In the past, the annotation volume.beta.kubernetes.io/storage-class
was used instead
of storageClassName
attribute. This annotation is still working; however,
it won't be supported in a future Kubernetes release.
Retroactive default StorageClass assignment
Kubernetes v1.28 [stable]
You can create a PersistentVolumeClaim without specifying a storageClassName
for the new PVC, and you can do so even when no default StorageClass exists
in your cluster. In this case, the new PVC creates as you defined it, and the
storageClassName
of that PVC remains unset until default becomes available.
When a default StorageClass becomes available, the control plane identifies any
existing PVCs without storageClassName
. For the PVCs that either have an empty
value for storageClassName
or do not have this key, the control plane then
updates those PVCs to set storageClassName
to match the new default StorageClass.
If you have an existing PVC where the storageClassName
is ""
, and you configure
a default StorageClass, then this PVC will not get updated.
In order to keep binding to PVs with storageClassName
set to ""
(while a default StorageClass is present), you need to set the storageClassName
of the associated PVC to ""
.
This behavior helps administrators change default StorageClass by removing the
old one first and then creating or setting another one. This brief window while
there is no default causes PVCs without storageClassName
created at that time
to not have any default, but due to the retroactive default StorageClass
assignment this way of changing defaults is safe.
Claims As Volumes
Pods access storage by using the claim as a volume. Claims must exist in the same namespace as the Pod using the claim. The cluster finds the claim in the Pod's namespace and uses it to get the PersistentVolume backing the claim. The volume is then mounted to the host and into the Pod.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: mypod
spec:
containers:
- name: myfrontend
image: nginx
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: "/var/www/html"
name: mypd
volumes:
- name: mypd
persistentVolumeClaim:
claimName: myclaim
A Note on Namespaces
PersistentVolumes binds are exclusive, and since PersistentVolumeClaims are
namespaced objects, mounting claims with "Many" modes (ROX
, RWX
) is only
possible within one namespace.
PersistentVolumes typed hostPath
A hostPath
PersistentVolume uses a file or directory on the Node to emulate
network-attached storage. See
an example of hostPath
typed volume.
Raw Block Volume Support
Kubernetes v1.18 [stable]
The following volume plugins support raw block volumes, including dynamic provisioning where applicable:
- CSI
- FC (Fibre Channel)
- iSCSI
- Local volume
- OpenStack Cinder
- RBD (deprecated)
- RBD (Ceph Block Device; deprecated)
- VsphereVolume
PersistentVolume using a Raw Block Volume
apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolume
metadata:
name: block-pv
spec:
capacity:
storage: 10Gi
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
volumeMode: Block
persistentVolumeReclaimPolicy: Retain
fc:
targetWWNs: ["50060e801049cfd1"]
lun: 0
readOnly: false
PersistentVolumeClaim requesting a Raw Block Volume
apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
metadata:
name: block-pvc
spec:
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
volumeMode: Block
resources:
requests:
storage: 10Gi
Pod specification adding Raw Block Device path in container
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: pod-with-block-volume
spec:
containers:
- name: fc-container
image: fedora:26
command: ["/bin/sh", "-c"]
args: [ "tail -f /dev/null" ]
volumeDevices:
- name: data
devicePath: /dev/xvda
volumes:
- name: data
persistentVolumeClaim:
claimName: block-pvc
Binding Block Volumes
If a user requests a raw block volume by indicating this using the volumeMode
field in the PersistentVolumeClaim spec, the binding rules differ slightly from
previous releases that didn't consider this mode as part of the spec.
Listed is a table of possible combinations the user and admin might specify for
requesting a raw block device. The table indicates if the volume will be bound or
not given the combinations: Volume binding matrix for statically provisioned volumes:
PV volumeMode | PVC volumeMode | Result |
---|---|---|
unspecified | unspecified | BIND |
unspecified | Block | NO BIND |
unspecified | Filesystem | BIND |
Block | unspecified | NO BIND |
Block | Block | BIND |
Block | Filesystem | NO BIND |
Filesystem | Filesystem | BIND |
Filesystem | Block | NO BIND |
Filesystem | unspecified | BIND |
Volume Snapshot and Restore Volume from Snapshot Support
Kubernetes v1.20 [stable]
Volume snapshots only support the out-of-tree CSI volume plugins. For details, see Volume Snapshots. In-tree volume plugins are deprecated. You can read about the deprecated volume plugins in the Volume Plugin FAQ.
Create a PersistentVolumeClaim from a Volume Snapshot
apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
metadata:
name: restore-pvc
spec:
storageClassName: csi-hostpath-sc
dataSource:
name: new-snapshot-test
kind: VolumeSnapshot
apiGroup: snapshot.storage.k8s.io
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
resources:
requests:
storage: 10Gi
Volume Cloning
Volume Cloning only available for CSI volume plugins.
Create PersistentVolumeClaim from an existing PVC
apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
metadata:
name: cloned-pvc
spec:
storageClassName: my-csi-plugin
dataSource:
name: existing-src-pvc-name
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
resources:
requests:
storage: 10Gi
Volume populators and data sources
Kubernetes v1.24 [beta]
Kubernetes supports custom volume populators.
To use custom volume populators, you must enable the AnyVolumeDataSource
feature gate for
the kube-apiserver and kube-controller-manager.
Volume populators take advantage of a PVC spec field called dataSourceRef
. Unlike the
dataSource
field, which can only contain either a reference to another PersistentVolumeClaim
or to a VolumeSnapshot, the dataSourceRef
field can contain a reference to any object in the
same namespace, except for core objects other than PVCs. For clusters that have the feature
gate enabled, use of the dataSourceRef
is preferred over dataSource
.
Cross namespace data sources
Kubernetes v1.26 [alpha]
Kubernetes supports cross namespace volume data sources.
To use cross namespace volume data sources, you must enable the AnyVolumeDataSource
and CrossNamespaceVolumeDataSource
feature gates for
the kube-apiserver and kube-controller-manager.
Also, you must enable the CrossNamespaceVolumeDataSource
feature gate for the csi-provisioner.
Enabling the CrossNamespaceVolumeDataSource
feature gate allows you to specify
a namespace in the dataSourceRef field.
gateway.networking.k8s.io
extension APIs.
See ReferenceGrant
in the Gateway API documentation for details.
This means that you must extend your Kubernetes cluster with at least ReferenceGrant from the
Gateway API before you can use this mechanism.
Data source references
The dataSourceRef
field behaves almost the same as the dataSource
field. If one is
specified while the other is not, the API server will give both fields the same value. Neither
field can be changed after creation, and attempting to specify different values for the two
fields will result in a validation error. Therefore the two fields will always have the same
contents.
There are two differences between the dataSourceRef
field and the dataSource
field that
users should be aware of:
- The
dataSource
field ignores invalid values (as if the field was blank) while thedataSourceRef
field never ignores values and will cause an error if an invalid value is used. Invalid values are any core object (objects with no apiGroup) except for PVCs. - The
dataSourceRef
field may contain different types of objects, while thedataSource
field only allows PVCs and VolumeSnapshots.
When the CrossNamespaceVolumeDataSource
feature is enabled, there are additional differences:
- The
dataSource
field only allows local objects, while thedataSourceRef
field allows objects in any namespaces. - When namespace is specified,
dataSource
anddataSourceRef
are not synced.
Users should always use dataSourceRef
on clusters that have the feature gate enabled, and
fall back to dataSource
on clusters that do not. It is not necessary to look at both fields
under any circumstance. The duplicated values with slightly different semantics exist only for
backwards compatibility. In particular, a mixture of older and newer controllers are able to
interoperate because the fields are the same.
Using volume populators
Volume populators are controllers that can
create non-empty volumes, where the contents of the volume are determined by a Custom Resource.
Users create a populated volume by referring to a Custom Resource using the dataSourceRef
field:
apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
metadata:
name: populated-pvc
spec:
dataSourceRef:
name: example-name
kind: ExampleDataSource
apiGroup: example.storage.k8s.io
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
resources:
requests:
storage: 10Gi
Because volume populators are external components, attempts to create a PVC that uses one can fail if not all the correct components are installed. External controllers should generate events on the PVC to provide feedback on the status of the creation, including warnings if the PVC cannot be created due to some missing component.
You can install the alpha volume data source validator controller into your cluster. That controller generates warning Events on a PVC in the case that no populator is registered to handle that kind of data source. When a suitable populator is installed for a PVC, it's the responsibility of that populator controller to report Events that relate to volume creation and issues during the process.
Using a cross-namespace volume data source
Kubernetes v1.26 [alpha]
Create a ReferenceGrant to allow the namespace owner to accept the reference.
You define a populated volume by specifying a cross namespace volume data source
using the dataSourceRef
field. You must already have a valid ReferenceGrant
in the source namespace:
apiVersion: gateway.networking.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: ReferenceGrant
metadata:
name: allow-ns1-pvc
namespace: default
spec:
from:
- group: ""
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
namespace: ns1
to:
- group: snapshot.storage.k8s.io
kind: VolumeSnapshot
name: new-snapshot-demo
apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
metadata:
name: foo-pvc
namespace: ns1
spec:
storageClassName: example
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
resources:
requests:
storage: 1Gi
dataSourceRef:
apiGroup: snapshot.storage.k8s.io
kind: VolumeSnapshot
name: new-snapshot-demo
namespace: default
volumeMode: Filesystem
Writing Portable Configuration
If you're writing configuration templates or examples that run on a wide range of clusters and need persistent storage, it is recommended that you use the following pattern:
- Include PersistentVolumeClaim objects in your bundle of config (alongside Deployments, ConfigMaps, etc).
- Do not include PersistentVolume objects in the config, since the user instantiating the config may not have permission to create PersistentVolumes.
- Give the user the option of providing a storage class name when instantiating
the template.
- If the user provides a storage class name, put that value into the
persistentVolumeClaim.storageClassName
field. This will cause the PVC to match the right storage class if the cluster has StorageClasses enabled by the admin. - If the user does not provide a storage class name, leave the
persistentVolumeClaim.storageClassName
field as nil. This will cause a PV to be automatically provisioned for the user with the default StorageClass in the cluster. Many cluster environments have a default StorageClass installed, or administrators can create their own default StorageClass.
- If the user provides a storage class name, put that value into the
- In your tooling, watch for PVCs that are not getting bound after some time and surface this to the user, as this may indicate that the cluster has no dynamic storage support (in which case the user should create a matching PV) or the cluster has no storage system (in which case the user cannot deploy config requiring PVCs).
What's next
- Learn more about Creating a PersistentVolume.
- Learn more about Creating a PersistentVolumeClaim.
- Read the Persistent Storage design document.
API references
Read about the APIs described in this page:
6.3 - Projected Volumes
This document describes projected volumes in Kubernetes. Familiarity with volumes is suggested.
Introduction
A projected
volume maps several existing volume sources into the same directory.
Currently, the following types of volume sources can be projected:
All sources are required to be in the same namespace as the Pod. For more details, see the all-in-one volume design document.
Example configuration with a secret, a downwardAPI, and a configMap
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: volume-test
spec:
containers:
- name: container-test
image: busybox:1.28
command: ["sleep", "3600"]
volumeMounts:
- name: all-in-one
mountPath: "/projected-volume"
readOnly: true
volumes:
- name: all-in-one
projected:
sources:
- secret:
name: mysecret
items:
- key: username
path: my-group/my-username
- downwardAPI:
items:
- path: "labels"
fieldRef:
fieldPath: metadata.labels
- path: "cpu_limit"
resourceFieldRef:
containerName: container-test
resource: limits.cpu
- configMap:
name: myconfigmap
items:
- key: config
path: my-group/my-config
Example configuration: secrets with a non-default permission mode set
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: volume-test
spec:
containers:
- name: container-test
image: busybox:1.28
command: ["sleep", "3600"]
volumeMounts:
- name: all-in-one
mountPath: "/projected-volume"
readOnly: true
volumes:
- name: all-in-one
projected:
sources:
- secret:
name: mysecret
items:
- key: username
path: my-group/my-username
- secret:
name: mysecret2
items:
- key: password
path: my-group/my-password
mode: 511
Each projected volume source is listed in the spec under sources
. The
parameters are nearly the same with two exceptions:
- For secrets, the
secretName
field has been changed toname
to be consistent with ConfigMap naming. - The
defaultMode
can only be specified at the projected level and not for each volume source. However, as illustrated above, you can explicitly set themode
for each individual projection.
serviceAccountToken projected volumes
You can inject the token for the current service account into a Pod at a specified path. For example:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: sa-token-test
spec:
containers:
- name: container-test
image: busybox:1.28
command: ["sleep", "3600"]
volumeMounts:
- name: token-vol
mountPath: "/service-account"
readOnly: true
serviceAccountName: default
volumes:
- name: token-vol
projected:
sources:
- serviceAccountToken:
audience: api
expirationSeconds: 3600
path: token
The example Pod has a projected volume containing the injected service account
token. Containers in this Pod can use that token to access the Kubernetes API
server, authenticating with the identity of the pod's ServiceAccount.
The audience
field contains the intended audience of the
token. A recipient of the token must identify itself with an identifier specified
in the audience of the token, and otherwise should reject the token. This field
is optional and it defaults to the identifier of the API server.
The expirationSeconds
is the expected duration of validity of the service account
token. It defaults to 1 hour and must be at least 10 minutes (600 seconds). An administrator
can also limit its maximum value by specifying the --service-account-max-token-expiration
option for the API server. The path
field specifies a relative path to the mount point
of the projected volume.
subPath
volume mount will not receive updates for those volume sources.
clusterTrustBundle projected volumes
Kubernetes v1.29 [alpha]
ClusterTrustBundle
feature gate and --runtime-config=certificates.k8s.io/v1alpha1/clustertrustbundles=true
kube-apiserver flag, then enable the ClusterTrustBundleProjection
feature gate.
The clusterTrustBundle
projected volume source injects the contents of one or more ClusterTrustBundle objects as an automatically-updating file in the container filesystem.
ClusterTrustBundles can be selected either by name or by signer name.
To select by name, use the name
field to designate a single ClusterTrustBundle object.
To select by signer name, use the signerName
field (and optionally the
labelSelector
field) to designate a set of ClusterTrustBundle objects that use
the given signer name. If labelSelector
is not present, then all
ClusterTrustBundles for that signer are selected.
The kubelet deduplicates the certificates in the selected ClusterTrustBundle objects, normalizes the PEM representations (discarding comments and headers), reorders the certificates, and writes them into the file named by path
. As the set of selected ClusterTrustBundles or their content changes, kubelet keeps the file up-to-date.
By default, the kubelet will prevent the pod from starting if the named ClusterTrustBundle is not found, or if signerName
/ labelSelector
do not match any ClusterTrustBundles. If this behavior is not what you want, then set the optional
field to true
, and the pod will start up with an empty file at path
.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: sa-ctb-name-test
spec:
containers:
- name: container-test
image: busybox
command: ["sleep", "3600"]
volumeMounts:
- name: token-vol
mountPath: "/root-certificates"
readOnly: true
serviceAccountName: default
volumes:
- name: token-vol
projected:
sources:
- clusterTrustBundle:
name: example
path: example-roots.pem
- clusterTrustBundle:
signerName: "example.com/mysigner"
labelSelector:
matchLabels:
version: live
path: mysigner-roots.pem
optional: true
SecurityContext interactions
The proposal for file permission handling in projected service account volume enhancement introduced the projected files having the correct owner permissions set.
Linux
In Linux pods that have a projected volume and RunAsUser
set in the Pod
SecurityContext
,
the projected files have the correct ownership set including container user
ownership.
When all containers in a pod have the same runAsUser
set in their
PodSecurityContext
or container
SecurityContext
,
then the kubelet ensures that the contents of the serviceAccountToken
volume are owned by that user,
and the token file has its permission mode set to 0600
.
Ephemeral containers added to a Pod after it is created do not change volume permissions that were set when the pod was created.
If a Pod's serviceAccountToken
volume permissions were set to 0600
because
all other containers in the Pod have the same runAsUser
, ephemeral
containers must use the same runAsUser
to be able to read the token.
Windows
In Windows pods that have a projected volume and RunAsUsername
set in the
Pod SecurityContext
, the ownership is not enforced due to the way user
accounts are managed in Windows. Windows stores and manages local user and group
accounts in a database file called Security Account Manager (SAM). Each
container maintains its own instance of the SAM database, to which the host has
no visibility into while the container is running. Windows containers are
designed to run the user mode portion of the OS in isolation from the host,
hence the maintenance of a virtual SAM database. As a result, the kubelet running
on the host does not have the ability to dynamically configure host file
ownership for virtualized container accounts. It is recommended that if files on
the host machine are to be shared with the container then they should be placed
into their own volume mount outside of C:\
.
By default, the projected files will have the following ownership as shown for an example projected volume file:
PS C:\> Get-Acl C:\var\run\secrets\kubernetes.io\serviceaccount\..2021_08_31_22_22_18.318230061\ca.crt | Format-List
Path : Microsoft.PowerShell.Core\FileSystem::C:\var\run\secrets\kubernetes.io\serviceaccount\..2021_08_31_22_22_18.318230061\ca.crt
Owner : BUILTIN\Administrators
Group : NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM
Access : NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM Allow FullControl
BUILTIN\Administrators Allow FullControl
BUILTIN\Users Allow ReadAndExecute, Synchronize
Audit :
Sddl : O:BAG:SYD:AI(A;ID;FA;;;SY)(A;ID;FA;;;BA)(A;ID;0x1200a9;;;BU)
This implies all administrator users like ContainerAdministrator
will have
read, write and execute access while, non-administrator users will have read and
execute access.
In general, granting the container access to the host is discouraged as it can open the door for potential security exploits.
Creating a Windows Pod with RunAsUser
in it's SecurityContext
will result in
the Pod being stuck at ContainerCreating
forever. So it is advised to not use
the Linux only RunAsUser
option with Windows Pods.
6.4 - Ephemeral Volumes
This document describes ephemeral volumes in Kubernetes. Familiarity with volumes is suggested, in particular PersistentVolumeClaim and PersistentVolume.
Some applications need additional storage but don't care whether that data is stored persistently across restarts. For example, caching services are often limited by memory size and can move infrequently used data into storage that is slower than memory with little impact on overall performance.
Other applications expect some read-only input data to be present in files, like configuration data or secret keys.
Ephemeral volumes are designed for these use cases. Because volumes follow the Pod's lifetime and get created and deleted along with the Pod, Pods can be stopped and restarted without being limited to where some persistent volume is available.
Ephemeral volumes are specified inline in the Pod spec, which simplifies application deployment and management.
Types of ephemeral volumes
Kubernetes supports several different kinds of ephemeral volumes for different purposes:
- emptyDir: empty at Pod startup, with storage coming locally from the kubelet base directory (usually the root disk) or RAM
- configMap, downwardAPI, secret: inject different kinds of Kubernetes data into a Pod
- CSI ephemeral volumes: similar to the previous volume kinds, but provided by special CSI drivers which specifically support this feature
- generic ephemeral volumes, which can be provided by all storage drivers that also support persistent volumes
emptyDir
, configMap
, downwardAPI
, secret
are provided as
local ephemeral
storage.
They are managed by kubelet on each node.
CSI ephemeral volumes must be provided by third-party CSI storage drivers.
Generic ephemeral volumes can be provided by third-party CSI storage drivers, but also by any other storage driver that supports dynamic provisioning. Some CSI drivers are written specifically for CSI ephemeral volumes and do not support dynamic provisioning: those then cannot be used for generic ephemeral volumes.
The advantage of using third-party drivers is that they can offer functionality that Kubernetes itself does not support, for example storage with different performance characteristics than the disk that is managed by kubelet, or injecting different data.
CSI ephemeral volumes
Kubernetes v1.25 [stable]
Conceptually, CSI ephemeral volumes are similar to configMap
,
downwardAPI
and secret
volume types: the storage is managed locally on each
node and is created together with other local resources after a Pod has been
scheduled onto a node. Kubernetes has no concept of rescheduling Pods
anymore at this stage. Volume creation has to be unlikely to fail,
otherwise Pod startup gets stuck. In particular, storage capacity
aware Pod scheduling is not
supported for these volumes. They are currently also not covered by
the storage resource usage limits of a Pod, because that is something
that kubelet can only enforce for storage that it manages itself.
Here's an example manifest for a Pod that uses CSI ephemeral storage:
kind: Pod
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
name: my-csi-app
spec:
containers:
- name: my-frontend
image: busybox:1.28
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: "/data"
name: my-csi-inline-vol
command: [ "sleep", "1000000" ]
volumes:
- name: my-csi-inline-vol
csi:
driver: inline.storage.kubernetes.io
volumeAttributes:
foo: bar
The volumeAttributes
determine what volume is prepared by the
driver. These attributes are specific to each driver and not
standardized. See the documentation of each CSI driver for further
instructions.
CSI driver restrictions
CSI ephemeral volumes allow users to provide volumeAttributes
directly to the CSI driver as part of the Pod spec. A CSI driver
allowing volumeAttributes
that are typically restricted to
administrators is NOT suitable for use in an inline ephemeral volume.
For example, parameters that are normally defined in the StorageClass
should not be exposed to users through the use of inline ephemeral volumes.
Cluster administrators who need to restrict the CSI drivers that are allowed to be used as inline volumes within a Pod spec may do so by:
- Removing
Ephemeral
fromvolumeLifecycleModes
in the CSIDriver spec, which prevents the driver from being used as an inline ephemeral volume. - Using an admission webhook to restrict how this driver is used.
Generic ephemeral volumes
Kubernetes v1.23 [stable]
Generic ephemeral volumes are similar to emptyDir
volumes in the
sense that they provide a per-pod directory for scratch data that is
usually empty after provisioning. But they may also have additional
features:
- Storage can be local or network-attached.
- Volumes can have a fixed size that Pods are not able to exceed.
- Volumes may have some initial data, depending on the driver and parameters.
- Typical operations on volumes are supported assuming that the driver supports them, including snapshotting, cloning, resizing, and storage capacity tracking.
Example:
kind: Pod
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
name: my-app
spec:
containers:
- name: my-frontend
image: busybox:1.28
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: "/scratch"
name: scratch-volume
command: [ "sleep", "1000000" ]
volumes:
- name: scratch-volume
ephemeral:
volumeClaimTemplate:
metadata:
labels:
type: my-frontend-volume
spec:
accessModes: [ "ReadWriteOnce" ]
storageClassName: "scratch-storage-class"
resources:
requests:
storage: 1Gi
Lifecycle and PersistentVolumeClaim
The key design idea is that the parameters for a volume claim are allowed inside a volume source of the Pod. Labels, annotations and the whole set of fields for a PersistentVolumeClaim are supported. When such a Pod gets created, the ephemeral volume controller then creates an actual PersistentVolumeClaim object in the same namespace as the Pod and ensures that the PersistentVolumeClaim gets deleted when the Pod gets deleted.
That triggers volume binding and/or provisioning, either immediately if
the StorageClass uses immediate volume binding or when the Pod is
tentatively scheduled onto a node (WaitForFirstConsumer
volume
binding mode). The latter is recommended for generic ephemeral volumes
because then the scheduler is free to choose a suitable node for
the Pod. With immediate binding, the scheduler is forced to select a node that has
access to the volume once it is available.
In terms of resource ownership,
a Pod that has generic ephemeral storage is the owner of the PersistentVolumeClaim(s)
that provide that ephemeral storage. When the Pod is deleted,
the Kubernetes garbage collector deletes the PVC, which then usually
triggers deletion of the volume because the default reclaim policy of
storage classes is to delete volumes. You can create quasi-ephemeral local storage
using a StorageClass with a reclaim policy of retain
: the storage outlives the Pod,
and in this case you need to ensure that volume clean up happens separately.
While these PVCs exist, they can be used like any other PVC. In particular, they can be referenced as data source in volume cloning or snapshotting. The PVC object also holds the current status of the volume.
PersistentVolumeClaim naming
Naming of the automatically created PVCs is deterministic: the name is
a combination of the Pod name and volume name, with a hyphen (-
) in the
middle. In the example above, the PVC name will be
my-app-scratch-volume
. This deterministic naming makes it easier to
interact with the PVC because one does not have to search for it once
the Pod name and volume name are known.
The deterministic naming also introduces a potential conflict between different Pods (a Pod "pod-a" with volume "scratch" and another Pod with name "pod" and volume "a-scratch" both end up with the same PVC name "pod-a-scratch") and between Pods and manually created PVCs.
Such conflicts are detected: a PVC is only used for an ephemeral volume if it was created for the Pod. This check is based on the ownership relationship. An existing PVC is not overwritten or modified. But this does not resolve the conflict because without the right PVC, the Pod cannot start.
Security
Using generic ephemeral volumes allows users to create PVCs indirectly if they can create Pods, even if they do not have permission to create PVCs directly. Cluster administrators must be aware of this. If this does not fit their security model, they should use an admission webhook that rejects objects like Pods that have a generic ephemeral volume.
The normal namespace quota for PVCs still applies, so even if users are allowed to use this new mechanism, they cannot use it to circumvent other policies.
What's next
Ephemeral volumes managed by kubelet
CSI ephemeral volumes
- For more information on the design, see the Ephemeral Inline CSI volumes KEP.
- For more information on further development of this feature, see the enhancement tracking issue #596.
Generic ephemeral volumes
- For more information on the design, see the Generic ephemeral inline volumes KEP.
6.5 - Storage Classes
This document describes the concept of a StorageClass in Kubernetes. Familiarity with volumes and persistent volumes is suggested.
A StorageClass provides a way for administrators to describe the classes of storage they offer. Different classes might map to quality-of-service levels, or to backup policies, or to arbitrary policies determined by the cluster administrators. Kubernetes itself is unopinionated about what classes represent.
The Kubernetes concept of a storage class is similar to “profiles” in some other storage system designs.
StorageClass objects
Each StorageClass contains the fields provisioner
, parameters
, and
reclaimPolicy
, which are used when a PersistentVolume belonging to the
class needs to be dynamically provisioned to satisfy a PersistentVolumeClaim (PVC).
The name of a StorageClass object is significant, and is how users can request a particular class. Administrators set the name and other parameters of a class when first creating StorageClass objects.
As an administrator, you can specify a default StorageClass that applies to any PVCs that don't request a specific class. For more details, see the PersistentVolumeClaim concept.
Here's an example of a StorageClass:
apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: StorageClass
metadata:
name: low-latency
annotations:
storageclass.kubernetes.io/is-default-class: "false"
provisioner: csi-driver.example-vendor.example
reclaimPolicy: Retain # default value is Delete
allowVolumeExpansion: true
mountOptions:
- discard # this might enable UNMAP / TRIM at the block storage layer
volumeBindingMode: WaitForFirstConsumer
parameters:
guaranteedReadWriteLatency: "true" # provider-specific
Default StorageClass
You can mark a StorageClass as the default for your cluster. For instructions on setting the default StorageClass, see Change the default StorageClass.
When a PVC does not specify a storageClassName
, the default StorageClass is
used.
If you set the
storageclass.kubernetes.io/is-default-class
annotation to true on more than one StorageClass in your cluster, and you then
create a PersistentVolumeClaim with no storageClassName
set, Kubernetes
uses the most recently created default StorageClass.
You can create a PersistentVolumeClaim without specifying a storageClassName
for the new PVC, and you can do so even when no default StorageClass exists
in your cluster. In this case, the new PVC creates as you defined it, and the
storageClassName
of that PVC remains unset until a default becomes available.
You can have a cluster without any default StorageClass. If you don't mark any StorageClass as default (and one hasn't been set for you by, for example, a cloud provider), then Kubernetes cannot apply that defaulting for PersistentVolumeClaims that need it.
If or when a default StorageClass becomes available, the control plane identifies any
existing PVCs without storageClassName
. For the PVCs that either have an empty
value for storageClassName
or do not have this key, the control plane then
updates those PVCs to set storageClassName
to match the new default StorageClass.
If you have an existing PVC where the storageClassName
is ""
, and you configure
a default StorageClass, then this PVC will not get updated.
In order to keep binding to PVs with storageClassName
set to ""
(while a default StorageClass is present), you need to set the storageClassName
of the associated PVC to ""
.
Provisioner
Each StorageClass has a provisioner that determines what volume plugin is used for provisioning PVs. This field must be specified.
Volume Plugin | Internal Provisioner | Config Example |
---|---|---|
AzureFile | ✓ | Azure File |
CephFS | - | - |
FC | - | - |
FlexVolume | - | - |
iSCSI | - | - |
Local | - | Local |
NFS | - | NFS |
PortworxVolume | ✓ | Portworx Volume |
RBD | - | Ceph RBD |
VsphereVolume | ✓ | vSphere |
You are not restricted to specifying the "internal" provisioners listed here (whose names are prefixed with "kubernetes.io" and shipped alongside Kubernetes). You can also run and specify external provisioners, which are independent programs that follow a specification defined by Kubernetes. Authors of external provisioners have full discretion over where their code lives, how the provisioner is shipped, how it needs to be run, what volume plugin it uses (including Flex), etc. The repository kubernetes-sigs/sig-storage-lib-external-provisioner houses a library for writing external provisioners that implements the bulk of the specification. Some external provisioners are listed under the repository kubernetes-sigs/sig-storage-lib-external-provisioner.
For example, NFS doesn't provide an internal provisioner, but an external provisioner can be used. There are also cases when 3rd party storage vendors provide their own external provisioner.
Reclaim policy
PersistentVolumes that are dynamically created by a StorageClass will have the
reclaim policy
specified in the reclaimPolicy
field of the class, which can be
either Delete
or Retain
. If no reclaimPolicy
is specified when a
StorageClass object is created, it will default to Delete
.
PersistentVolumes that are created manually and managed via a StorageClass will have whatever reclaim policy they were assigned at creation.
Volume expansion
PersistentVolumes can be configured to be expandable. This allows you to resize the volume by editing the corresponding PVC object, requesting a new larger amount of storage.
The following types of volumes support volume expansion, when the underlying
StorageClass has the field allowVolumeExpansion
set to true.
Volume type | Required Kubernetes version for volume expansion |
---|---|
Azure File | 1.11 |
CSI | 1.24 |
FlexVolume | 1.13 |
Portworx | 1.11 |
rbd | 1.11 |
Mount options
PersistentVolumes that are dynamically created by a StorageClass will have the
mount options specified in the mountOptions
field of the class.
If the volume plugin does not support mount options but mount options are specified, provisioning will fail. Mount options are not validated on either the class or PV. If a mount option is invalid, the PV mount fails.
Volume binding mode
The volumeBindingMode
field controls when
volume binding and dynamic provisioning
should occur. When unset, Immediate
mode is used by default.
The Immediate
mode indicates that volume binding and dynamic
provisioning occurs once the PersistentVolumeClaim is created. For storage
backends that are topology-constrained and not globally accessible from all Nodes
in the cluster, PersistentVolumes will be bound or provisioned without knowledge of the Pod's scheduling
requirements. This may result in unschedulable Pods.
A cluster administrator can address this issue by specifying the WaitForFirstConsumer
mode which
will delay the binding and provisioning of a PersistentVolume until a Pod using the PersistentVolumeClaim is created.
PersistentVolumes will be selected or provisioned conforming to the topology that is
specified by the Pod's scheduling constraints. These include, but are not limited to, resource
requirements,
node selectors,
pod affinity and
anti-affinity,
and taints and tolerations.
The following plugins support WaitForFirstConsumer
with dynamic provisioning:
- CSI volumes, provided that the specific CSI driver supports this
The following plugins support WaitForFirstConsumer
with pre-created PersistentVolume binding:
- CSI volumes, provided that the specific CSI driver supports this
local
If you choose to use WaitForFirstConsumer
, do not use nodeName
in the Pod spec
to specify node affinity.
If nodeName
is used in this case, the scheduler will be bypassed and PVC will remain in pending
state.
Instead, you can use node selector for kubernetes.io/hostname
:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: task-pv-pod
spec:
nodeSelector:
kubernetes.io/hostname: kube-01
volumes:
- name: task-pv-storage
persistentVolumeClaim:
claimName: task-pv-claim
containers:
- name: task-pv-container
image: nginx
ports:
- containerPort: 80
name: "http-server"
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: "/usr/share/nginx/html"
name: task-pv-storage
Allowed topologies
When a cluster operator specifies the WaitForFirstConsumer
volume binding mode, it is no longer necessary
to restrict provisioning to specific topologies in most situations. However,
if still required, allowedTopologies
can be specified.
This example demonstrates how to restrict the topology of provisioned volumes to specific
zones and should be used as a replacement for the zone
and zones
parameters for the
supported plugins.
apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: StorageClass
metadata:
name: standard
provisioner: kubernetes.io/example
parameters:
type: pd-standard
volumeBindingMode: WaitForFirstConsumer
allowedTopologies:
- matchLabelExpressions:
- key: topology.kubernetes.io/zone
values:
- us-central-1a
- us-central-1b
Parameters
StorageClasses have parameters that describe volumes belonging to the storage
class. Different parameters may be accepted depending on the provisioner
.
When a parameter is omitted, some default is used.
There can be at most 512 parameters defined for a StorageClass. The total length of the parameters object including its keys and values cannot exceed 256 KiB.
AWS EBS
Kubernetes 1.29 does not include a awsElasticBlockStore
volume type.
The AWSElasticBlockStore in-tree storage driver was deprecated in the Kubernetes v1.19 release and then removed entirely in the v1.27 release.
The Kubernetes project suggests that you use the AWS EBS out-of-tree storage driver instead.
Here is an example StorageClass for the AWS EBS CSI driver:
apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: StorageClass
metadata:
name: ebs-sc
provisioner: ebs.csi.aws.com
volumeBindingMode: WaitForFirstConsumer
parameters:
csi.storage.k8s.io/fstype: xfs
type: io1
iopsPerGB: "50"
encrypted: "true"
allowedTopologies:
- matchLabelExpressions:
- key: topology.ebs.csi.aws.com/zone
values:
- us-east-2c
NFS
To configure NFS storage, you can use the in-tree driver or the NFS CSI driver for Kubernetes (recommended).
apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: StorageClass
metadata:
name: example-nfs
provisioner: example.com/external-nfs
parameters:
server: nfs-server.example.com
path: /share
readOnly: "false"
server
: Server is the hostname or IP address of the NFS server.path
: Path that is exported by the NFS server.readOnly
: A flag indicating whether the storage will be mounted as read only (default false).
Kubernetes doesn't include an internal NFS provisioner. You need to use an external provisioner to create a StorageClass for NFS. Here are some examples:
vSphere
There are two types of provisioners for vSphere storage classes:
- CSI provisioner:
csi.vsphere.vmware.com
- vCP provisioner:
kubernetes.io/vsphere-volume
In-tree provisioners are deprecated. For more information on the CSI provisioner, see Kubernetes vSphere CSI Driver and vSphereVolume CSI migration.
CSI Provisioner
The vSphere CSI StorageClass provisioner works with Tanzu Kubernetes clusters. For an example, refer to the vSphere CSI repository.
vCP Provisioner
The following examples use the VMware Cloud Provider (vCP) StorageClass provisioner.
-
Create a StorageClass with a user specified disk format.
apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1 kind: StorageClass metadata: name: fast provisioner: kubernetes.io/vsphere-volume parameters: diskformat: zeroedthick
diskformat
:thin
,zeroedthick
andeagerzeroedthick
. Default:"thin"
. -
Create a StorageClass with a disk format on a user specified datastore.
apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1 kind: StorageClass metadata: name: fast provisioner: kubernetes.io/vsphere-volume parameters: diskformat: zeroedthick datastore: VSANDatastore
datastore
: The user can also specify the datastore in the StorageClass. The volume will be created on the datastore specified in the StorageClass, which in this case isVSANDatastore
. This field is optional. If the datastore is not specified, then the volume will be created on the datastore specified in the vSphere config file used to initialize the vSphere Cloud Provider. -
Storage Policy Management inside kubernetes
-
Using existing vCenter SPBM policy
One of the most important features of vSphere for Storage Management is policy based Management. Storage Policy Based Management (SPBM) is a storage policy framework that provides a single unified control plane across a broad range of data services and storage solutions. SPBM enables vSphere administrators to overcome upfront storage provisioning challenges, such as capacity planning, differentiated service levels and managing capacity headroom.
The SPBM policies can be specified in the StorageClass using the
storagePolicyName
parameter. -
Virtual SAN policy support inside Kubernetes
Vsphere Infrastructure (VI) Admins will have the ability to specify custom Virtual SAN Storage Capabilities during dynamic volume provisioning. You can now define storage requirements, such as performance and availability, in the form of storage capabilities during dynamic volume provisioning. The storage capability requirements are converted into a Virtual SAN policy which are then pushed down to the Virtual SAN layer when a persistent volume (virtual disk) is being created. The virtual disk is distributed across the Virtual SAN datastore to meet the requirements.
You can see Storage Policy Based Management for dynamic provisioning of volumes for more details on how to use storage policies for persistent volumes management.
-
There are few vSphere examples which you try out for persistent volume management inside Kubernetes for vSphere.
Ceph RBD (deprecated)
Kubernetes v1.28 [deprecated]
This internal provisioner of Ceph RBD is deprecated. Please use CephFS RBD CSI driver.
apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: StorageClass
metadata:
name: fast
provisioner: kubernetes.io/rbd
parameters:
monitors: 10.16.153.105:6789
adminId: kube
adminSecretName: ceph-secret
adminSecretNamespace: kube-system
pool: kube
userId: kube
userSecretName: ceph-secret-user
userSecretNamespace: default
fsType: ext4
imageFormat: "2"
imageFeatures: "layering"
-
monitors
: Ceph monitors, comma delimited. This parameter is required. -
adminId
: Ceph client ID that is capable of creating images in the pool. Default is "admin". -
adminSecretName
: Secret Name foradminId
. This parameter is required. The provided secret must have type "kubernetes.io/rbd". -
adminSecretNamespace
: The namespace foradminSecretName
. Default is "default". -
pool
: Ceph RBD pool. Default is "rbd". -
userId
: Ceph client ID that is used to map the RBD image. Default is the same asadminId
. -
userSecretName
: The name of Ceph Secret foruserId
to map RBD image. It must exist in the same namespace as PVCs. This parameter is required. The provided secret must have type "kubernetes.io/rbd", for example created in this way:kubectl create secret generic ceph-secret --type="kubernetes.io/rbd" \ --from-literal=key='QVFEQ1pMdFhPUnQrSmhBQUFYaERWNHJsZ3BsMmNjcDR6RFZST0E9PQ==' \ --namespace=kube-system
-
userSecretNamespace
: The namespace foruserSecretName
. -
fsType
: fsType that is supported by kubernetes. Default:"ext4"
. -
imageFormat
: Ceph RBD image format, "1" or "2". Default is "2". -
imageFeatures
: This parameter is optional and should only be used if you setimageFormat
to "2". Currently supported features arelayering
only. Default is "", and no features are turned on.
Azure Disk
Kubernetes 1.29 does not include a azureDisk
volume type.
The azureDisk
in-tree storage driver was deprecated in the Kubernetes v1.19 release
and then removed entirely in the v1.27 release.
The Kubernetes project suggests that you use the Azure Disk third party storage driver instead.
Azure File (deprecated)
apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: StorageClass
metadata:
name: azurefile
provisioner: kubernetes.io/azure-file
parameters:
skuName: Standard_LRS
location: eastus
storageAccount: azure_storage_account_name
skuName
: Azure storage account SKU tier. Default is empty.location
: Azure storage account location. Default is empty.storageAccount
: Azure storage account name. Default is empty. If a storage account is not provided, all storage accounts associated with the resource group are searched to find one that matchesskuName
andlocation
. If a storage account is provided, it must reside in the same resource group as the cluster, andskuName
andlocation
are ignored.secretNamespace
: the namespace of the secret that contains the Azure Storage Account Name and Key. Default is the same as the Pod.secretName
: the name of the secret that contains the Azure Storage Account Name and Key. Default isazure-storage-account-<accountName>-secret
readOnly
: a flag indicating whether the storage will be mounted as read only. Defaults to false which means a read/write mount. This setting will impact theReadOnly
setting in VolumeMounts as well.
During storage provisioning, a secret named by secretName
is created for the
mounting credentials. If the cluster has enabled both
RBAC and
Controller Roles,
add the create
permission of resource secret
for clusterrole
system:controller:persistent-volume-binder
.
In a multi-tenancy context, it is strongly recommended to set the value for
secretNamespace
explicitly, otherwise the storage account credentials may
be read by other users.
Portworx volume (deprecated)
apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: StorageClass
metadata:
name: portworx-io-priority-high
provisioner: kubernetes.io/portworx-volume
parameters:
repl: "1"
snap_interval: "70"
priority_io: "high"
fs
: filesystem to be laid out:none/xfs/ext4
(default:ext4
).block_size
: block size in Kbytes (default:32
).repl
: number of synchronous replicas to be provided in the form of replication factor1..3
(default:1
) A string is expected here i.e."1"
and not1
.priority_io
: determines whether the volume will be created from higher performance or a lower priority storagehigh/medium/low
(default:low
).snap_interval
: clock/time interval in minutes for when to trigger snapshots. Snapshots are incremental based on difference with the prior snapshot, 0 disables snaps (default:0
). A string is expected here i.e."70"
and not70
.aggregation_level
: specifies the number of chunks the volume would be distributed into, 0 indicates a non-aggregated volume (default:0
). A string is expected here i.e."0"
and not0
ephemeral
: specifies whether the volume should be cleaned-up after unmount or should be persistent.emptyDir
use case can set this value to true andpersistent volumes
use case such as for databases like Cassandra should set to false,true/false
(defaultfalse
). A string is expected here i.e."true"
and nottrue
.
Local
apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: StorageClass
metadata:
name: local-storage
provisioner: kubernetes.io/no-provisioner
volumeBindingMode: WaitForFirstConsumer
Local volumes do not support dynamic provisioning in Kubernetes 1.29;
however a StorageClass should still be created to delay volume binding until a Pod is actually
scheduled to the appropriate node. This is specified by the WaitForFirstConsumer
volume
binding mode.
Delaying volume binding allows the scheduler to consider all of a Pod's scheduling constraints when choosing an appropriate PersistentVolume for a PersistentVolumeClaim.
6.6 - Volume Attributes Classes
Kubernetes v1.29 [alpha]
This page assumes that you are familiar with StorageClasses, volumes and PersistentVolumes in Kubernetes.
A VolumeAttributesClass provides a way for administrators to describe the mutable "classes" of storage they offer. Different classes might map to different quality-of-service levels. Kubernetes itself is unopinionated about what these classes represent.
This is an alpha feature and disabled by default.
If you want to test the feature whilst it's alpha, you need to enable the VolumeAttributesClass
feature gate for the kube-controller-manager and the kube-apiserver. You use the --feature-gates
command line argument:
--feature-gates="...,VolumeAttributesClass=true"
You can also only use VolumeAttributesClasses with storage backed by
Container Storage Interface, and only where the
relevant CSI driver implements the ModifyVolume
API.
The VolumeAttributesClass API
Each VolumeAttributesClass contains the driverName
and parameters
, which are
used when a PersistentVolume (PV) belonging to the class needs to be dynamically provisioned
or modified.
The name of a VolumeAttributesClass object is significant and is how users can request a particular class.
Administrators set the name and other parameters of a class when first creating VolumeAttributesClass objects.
While the name of a VolumeAttributesClass object in a PersistentVolumeClaim
is mutable, the parameters in an existing class are immutable.
apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1alpha1
kind: VolumeAttributesClass
metadata:
name: silver
driverName: pd.csi.storage.gke.io
parameters:
provisioned-iops: "3000"
provisioned-throughput: "50"
Provisioner
Each VolumeAttributesClass has a provisioner that determines what volume plugin is used for provisioning PVs. The field driverName
must be specified.
The feature support for VolumeAttributesClass is implemented in kubernetes-csi/external-provisioner.
You are not restricted to specifying the kubernetes-csi/external-provisioner. You can also run and specify external provisioners, which are independent programs that follow a specification defined by Kubernetes. Authors of external provisioners have full discretion over where their code lives, how the provisioner is shipped, how it needs to be run, what volume plugin it uses, etc.
Resizer
Each VolumeAttributesClass has a resizer that determines what volume plugin is used for modifying PVs. The field driverName
must be specified.
The modifying volume feature support for VolumeAttributesClass is implemented in kubernetes-csi/external-resizer.
For example, a existing PersistentVolumeClaim is using a VolumeAttributesClass named silver:
apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
metadata:
name: test-pv-claim
spec:
…
volumeAttributesClassName: silver
…
A new VolumeAttributesClass gold is available in the cluster:
apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1alpha1
kind: VolumeAttributesClass
metadata:
name: gold
driverName: pd.csi.storage.gke.io
parameters:
iops: "4000"
throughput: "60"
The end user can update the PVC with the new VolumeAttributesClass gold and apply:
apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
metadata:
name: test-pv-claim
spec:
…
volumeAttributesClassName: gold
…
Parameters
VolumeAttributeClasses have parameters that describe volumes belonging to them. Different parameters may be accepted
depending on the provisioner or the resizer. For example, the value 4000
, for the parameter iops
,
and the parameter throughput
are specific to GCE PD.
When a parameter is omitted, the default is used at volume provisioning.
If a user apply the PVC with a different VolumeAttributesClass with omitted parameters, the default value of
the parameters may be used depends on the CSI driver implementation.
Please refer to the related CSI driver documentation for more details.
There can be at most 512 parameters defined for a VolumeAttributesClass. The total length of the parameters object including its keys and values cannot exceed 256 KiB.
6.7 - Dynamic Volume Provisioning
Dynamic volume provisioning allows storage volumes to be created on-demand.
Without dynamic provisioning, cluster administrators have to manually make
calls to their cloud or storage provider to create new storage volumes, and
then create PersistentVolume
objects
to represent them in Kubernetes. The dynamic provisioning feature eliminates
the need for cluster administrators to pre-provision storage. Instead, it
automatically provisions storage when it is requested by users.
Background
The implementation of dynamic volume provisioning is based on the API object StorageClass
from the API group storage.k8s.io
. A cluster administrator can define as many
StorageClass
objects as needed, each specifying a volume plugin (aka
provisioner) that provisions a volume and the set of parameters to pass to
that provisioner when provisioning.
A cluster administrator can define and expose multiple flavors of storage (from
the same or different storage systems) within a cluster, each with a custom set
of parameters. This design also ensures that end users don't have to worry
about the complexity and nuances of how storage is provisioned, but still
have the ability to select from multiple storage options.
More information on storage classes can be found here.
Enabling Dynamic Provisioning
To enable dynamic provisioning, a cluster administrator needs to pre-create one or more StorageClass objects for users. StorageClass objects define which provisioner should be used and what parameters should be passed to that provisioner when dynamic provisioning is invoked. The name of a StorageClass object must be a valid DNS subdomain name.
The following manifest creates a storage class "slow" which provisions standard disk-like persistent disks.
apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: StorageClass
metadata:
name: slow
provisioner: kubernetes.io/gce-pd
parameters:
type: pd-standard
The following manifest creates a storage class "fast" which provisions SSD-like persistent disks.
apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: StorageClass
metadata:
name: fast
provisioner: kubernetes.io/gce-pd
parameters:
type: pd-ssd
Using Dynamic Provisioning
Users request dynamically provisioned storage by including a storage class in
their PersistentVolumeClaim
. Before Kubernetes v1.6, this was done via the
volume.beta.kubernetes.io/storage-class
annotation. However, this annotation
is deprecated since v1.9. Users now can and should instead use the
storageClassName
field of the PersistentVolumeClaim
object. The value of
this field must match the name of a StorageClass
configured by the
administrator (see below).
To select the "fast" storage class, for example, a user would create the following PersistentVolumeClaim:
apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
metadata:
name: claim1
spec:
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
storageClassName: fast
resources:
requests:
storage: 30Gi
This claim results in an SSD-like Persistent Disk being automatically provisioned. When the claim is deleted, the volume is destroyed.
Defaulting Behavior
Dynamic provisioning can be enabled on a cluster such that all claims are dynamically provisioned if no storage class is specified. A cluster administrator can enable this behavior by:
- Marking one
StorageClass
object as default; - Making sure that the
DefaultStorageClass
admission controller is enabled on the API server.
An administrator can mark a specific StorageClass
as default by adding the
storageclass.kubernetes.io/is-default-class
annotation to it.
When a default StorageClass
exists in a cluster and a user creates a
PersistentVolumeClaim
with storageClassName
unspecified, the
DefaultStorageClass
admission controller automatically adds the
storageClassName
field pointing to the default storage class.
Note that if you set the storageclass.kubernetes.io/is-default-class
annotation to true on more than one StorageClass in your cluster, and you then
create a PersistentVolumeClaim
with no storageClassName
set, Kubernetes
uses the most recently created default StorageClass.
Topology Awareness
In Multi-Zone clusters, Pods can be spread across Zones in a Region. Single-Zone storage backends should be provisioned in the Zones where Pods are scheduled. This can be accomplished by setting the Volume Binding Mode.
6.8 - Volume Snapshots
In Kubernetes, a VolumeSnapshot represents a snapshot of a volume on a storage system. This document assumes that you are already familiar with Kubernetes persistent volumes.
Introduction
Similar to how API resources PersistentVolume
and PersistentVolumeClaim
are
used to provision volumes for users and administrators, VolumeSnapshotContent
and VolumeSnapshot
API resources are provided to create volume snapshots for
users and administrators.
A VolumeSnapshotContent
is a snapshot taken from a volume in the cluster that
has been provisioned by an administrator. It is a resource in the cluster just
like a PersistentVolume is a cluster resource.
A VolumeSnapshot
is a request for snapshot of a volume by a user. It is similar
to a PersistentVolumeClaim.
VolumeSnapshotClass
allows you to specify different attributes belonging to a
VolumeSnapshot
. These attributes may differ among snapshots taken from the same
volume on the storage system and therefore cannot be expressed by using the same
StorageClass
of a PersistentVolumeClaim
.
Volume snapshots provide Kubernetes users with a standardized way to copy a volume's contents at a particular point in time without creating an entirely new volume. This functionality enables, for example, database administrators to backup databases before performing edit or delete modifications.
Users need to be aware of the following when using this feature:
- API Objects
VolumeSnapshot
,VolumeSnapshotContent
, andVolumeSnapshotClass
are CRDs, not part of the core API. VolumeSnapshot
support is only available for CSI drivers.- As part of the deployment process of
VolumeSnapshot
, the Kubernetes team provides a snapshot controller to be deployed into the control plane, and a sidecar helper container called csi-snapshotter to be deployed together with the CSI driver. The snapshot controller watchesVolumeSnapshot
andVolumeSnapshotContent
objects and is responsible for the creation and deletion ofVolumeSnapshotContent
object. The sidecar csi-snapshotter watchesVolumeSnapshotContent
objects and triggersCreateSnapshot
andDeleteSnapshot
operations against a CSI endpoint. - There is also a validating webhook server which provides tightened validation on snapshot objects. This should be installed by the Kubernetes distros along with the snapshot controller and CRDs, not CSI drivers. It should be installed in all Kubernetes clusters that has the snapshot feature enabled.
- CSI drivers may or may not have implemented the volume snapshot functionality. The CSI drivers that have provided support for volume snapshot will likely use the csi-snapshotter. See CSI Driver documentation for details.
- The CRDs and snapshot controller installations are the responsibility of the Kubernetes distribution.
Lifecycle of a volume snapshot and volume snapshot content
VolumeSnapshotContents
are resources in the cluster. VolumeSnapshots
are requests
for those resources. The interaction between VolumeSnapshotContents
and VolumeSnapshots
follow this lifecycle:
Provisioning Volume Snapshot
There are two ways snapshots may be provisioned: pre-provisioned or dynamically provisioned.
Pre-provisioned
A cluster administrator creates a number of VolumeSnapshotContents
. They carry the details
of the real volume snapshot on the storage system which is available for use by cluster users.
They exist in the Kubernetes API and are available for consumption.
Dynamic
Instead of using a pre-existing snapshot, you can request that a snapshot to be dynamically taken from a PersistentVolumeClaim. The VolumeSnapshotClass specifies storage provider-specific parameters to use when taking a snapshot.
Binding
The snapshot controller handles the binding of a VolumeSnapshot
object with an appropriate
VolumeSnapshotContent
object, in both pre-provisioned and dynamically provisioned scenarios.
The binding is a one-to-one mapping.
In the case of pre-provisioned binding, the VolumeSnapshot will remain unbound until the requested VolumeSnapshotContent object is created.
Persistent Volume Claim as Snapshot Source Protection
The purpose of this protection is to ensure that in-use PersistentVolumeClaim API objects are not removed from the system while a snapshot is being taken from it (as this may result in data loss).
While a snapshot is being taken of a PersistentVolumeClaim, that PersistentVolumeClaim is in-use. If you delete a PersistentVolumeClaim API object in active use as a snapshot source, the PersistentVolumeClaim object is not removed immediately. Instead, removal of the PersistentVolumeClaim object is postponed until the snapshot is readyToUse or aborted.
Delete
Deletion is triggered by deleting the VolumeSnapshot
object, and the DeletionPolicy
will be followed. If the DeletionPolicy
is Delete
, then the underlying storage snapshot
will be deleted along with the VolumeSnapshotContent
object. If the DeletionPolicy
is
Retain
, then both the underlying snapshot and VolumeSnapshotContent
remain.
VolumeSnapshots
Each VolumeSnapshot contains a spec and a status.
apiVersion: snapshot.storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: VolumeSnapshot
metadata:
name: new-snapshot-test
spec:
volumeSnapshotClassName: csi-hostpath-snapclass
source:
persistentVolumeClaimName: pvc-test
persistentVolumeClaimName
is the name of the PersistentVolumeClaim data source
for the snapshot. This field is required for dynamically provisioning a snapshot.
A volume snapshot can request a particular class by specifying the name of a
VolumeSnapshotClass
using the attribute volumeSnapshotClassName
. If nothing is set, then the
default class is used if available.
For pre-provisioned snapshots, you need to specify a volumeSnapshotContentName
as the source for the snapshot as shown in the following example. The
volumeSnapshotContentName
source field is required for pre-provisioned snapshots.
apiVersion: snapshot.storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: VolumeSnapshot
metadata:
name: test-snapshot
spec:
source:
volumeSnapshotContentName: test-content
Volume Snapshot Contents
Each VolumeSnapshotContent contains a spec and status. In dynamic provisioning,
the snapshot common controller creates VolumeSnapshotContent
objects. Here is an example:
apiVersion: snapshot.storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: VolumeSnapshotContent
metadata:
name: snapcontent-72d9a349-aacd-42d2-a240-d775650d2455
spec:
deletionPolicy: Delete
driver: hostpath.csi.k8s.io
source:
volumeHandle: ee0cfb94-f8d4-11e9-b2d8-0242ac110002
sourceVolumeMode: Filesystem
volumeSnapshotClassName: csi-hostpath-snapclass
volumeSnapshotRef:
name: new-snapshot-test
namespace: default
uid: 72d9a349-aacd-42d2-a240-d775650d2455
volumeHandle
is the unique identifier of the volume created on the storage
backend and returned by the CSI driver during the volume creation. This field
is required for dynamically provisioning a snapshot.
It specifies the volume source of the snapshot.
For pre-provisioned snapshots, you (as cluster administrator) are responsible
for creating the VolumeSnapshotContent
object as follows.
apiVersion: snapshot.storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: VolumeSnapshotContent
metadata:
name: new-snapshot-content-test
spec:
deletionPolicy: Delete
driver: hostpath.csi.k8s.io
source:
snapshotHandle: 7bdd0de3-aaeb-11e8-9aae-0242ac110002
sourceVolumeMode: Filesystem
volumeSnapshotRef:
name: new-snapshot-test
namespace: default
snapshotHandle
is the unique identifier of the volume snapshot created on
the storage backend. This field is required for the pre-provisioned snapshots.
It specifies the CSI snapshot id on the storage system that this
VolumeSnapshotContent
represents.
sourceVolumeMode
is the mode of the volume whose snapshot is taken. The value
of the sourceVolumeMode
field can be either Filesystem
or Block
. If the
source volume mode is not specified, Kubernetes treats the snapshot as if the
source volume's mode is unknown.
volumeSnapshotRef
is the reference of the corresponding VolumeSnapshot
. Note that
when the VolumeSnapshotContent
is being created as a pre-provisioned snapshot, the
VolumeSnapshot
referenced in volumeSnapshotRef
might not exist yet.
Converting the volume mode of a Snapshot
If the VolumeSnapshots
API installed on your cluster supports the sourceVolumeMode
field, then the API has the capability to prevent unauthorized users from converting
the mode of a volume.
To check if your cluster has capability for this feature, run the following command:
$ kubectl get crd volumesnapshotcontent -o yaml
If you want to allow users to create a PersistentVolumeClaim
from an existing
VolumeSnapshot
, but with a different volume mode than the source, the annotation
snapshot.storage.kubernetes.io/allow-volume-mode-change: "true"
needs to be added to
the VolumeSnapshotContent
that corresponds to the VolumeSnapshot
.
For pre-provisioned snapshots, spec.sourceVolumeMode
needs to be populated
by the cluster administrator.
An example VolumeSnapshotContent
resource with this feature enabled would look like:
apiVersion: snapshot.storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: VolumeSnapshotContent
metadata:
name: new-snapshot-content-test
annotations:
- snapshot.storage.kubernetes.io/allow-volume-mode-change: "true"
spec:
deletionPolicy: Delete
driver: hostpath.csi.k8s.io
source:
snapshotHandle: 7bdd0de3-aaeb-11e8-9aae-0242ac110002
sourceVolumeMode: Filesystem
volumeSnapshotRef:
name: new-snapshot-test
namespace: default
Provisioning Volumes from Snapshots
You can provision a new volume, pre-populated with data from a snapshot, by using
the dataSource field in the PersistentVolumeClaim
object.
For more details, see Volume Snapshot and Restore Volume from Snapshot.
6.9 - Volume Snapshot Classes
This document describes the concept of VolumeSnapshotClass in Kubernetes. Familiarity with volume snapshots and storage classes is suggested.
Introduction
Just like StorageClass provides a way for administrators to describe the "classes" of storage they offer when provisioning a volume, VolumeSnapshotClass provides a way to describe the "classes" of storage when provisioning a volume snapshot.
The VolumeSnapshotClass Resource
Each VolumeSnapshotClass contains the fields driver
, deletionPolicy
, and parameters
,
which are used when a VolumeSnapshot belonging to the class needs to be
dynamically provisioned.
The name of a VolumeSnapshotClass object is significant, and is how users can request a particular class. Administrators set the name and other parameters of a class when first creating VolumeSnapshotClass objects, and the objects cannot be updated once they are created.
apiVersion: snapshot.storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: VolumeSnapshotClass
metadata:
name: csi-hostpath-snapclass
driver: hostpath.csi.k8s.io
deletionPolicy: Delete
parameters:
Administrators can specify a default VolumeSnapshotClass for VolumeSnapshots
that don't request any particular class to bind to by adding the
snapshot.storage.kubernetes.io/is-default-class: "true"
annotation:
apiVersion: snapshot.storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: VolumeSnapshotClass
metadata:
name: csi-hostpath-snapclass
annotations:
snapshot.storage.kubernetes.io/is-default-class: "true"
driver: hostpath.csi.k8s.io
deletionPolicy: Delete
parameters:
Driver
Volume snapshot classes have a driver that determines what CSI volume plugin is used for provisioning VolumeSnapshots. This field must be specified.
DeletionPolicy
Volume snapshot classes have a deletionPolicy.
It enables you to configure what happens to a VolumeSnapshotContent when the VolumeSnapshot
object it is bound to is to be deleted. The deletionPolicy of a volume snapshot class can
either be Retain
or Delete
. This field must be specified.
If the deletionPolicy is Delete
, then the underlying storage snapshot will be
deleted along with the VolumeSnapshotContent object. If the deletionPolicy is Retain
,
then both the underlying snapshot and VolumeSnapshotContent remain.
Parameters
Volume snapshot classes have parameters that describe volume snapshots belonging to
the volume snapshot class. Different parameters may be accepted depending on the
driver
.
6.10 - CSI Volume Cloning
This document describes the concept of cloning existing CSI Volumes in Kubernetes. Familiarity with Volumes is suggested.
Introduction
The CSI Volume Cloning feature adds
support for specifying existing PVCs
in the dataSource
field to indicate a user would like to clone a Volume.
A Clone is defined as a duplicate of an existing Kubernetes Volume that can be consumed as any standard Volume would be. The only difference is that upon provisioning, rather than creating a "new" empty Volume, the back end device creates an exact duplicate of the specified Volume.
The implementation of cloning, from the perspective of the Kubernetes API, adds the ability to specify an existing PVC as a dataSource during new PVC creation. The source PVC must be bound and available (not in use).
Users need to be aware of the following when using this feature:
- Cloning support (
VolumePVCDataSource
) is only available for CSI drivers. - Cloning support is only available for dynamic provisioners.
- CSI drivers may or may not have implemented the volume cloning functionality.
- You can only clone a PVC when it exists in the same namespace as the destination PVC (source and destination must be in the same namespace).
- Cloning is supported with a different Storage Class.
- Destination volume can be the same or a different storage class as the source.
- Default storage class can be used and storageClassName omitted in the spec.
- Cloning can only be performed between two volumes that use the same VolumeMode setting (if you request a block mode volume, the source MUST also be block mode)
Provisioning
Clones are provisioned like any other PVC with the exception of adding a dataSource that references an existing PVC in the same namespace.
apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
metadata:
name: clone-of-pvc-1
namespace: myns
spec:
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
storageClassName: cloning
resources:
requests:
storage: 5Gi
dataSource:
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
name: pvc-1
spec.resources.requests.storage
, and the
value you specify must be the same or larger than the capacity of the source volume.
The result is a new PVC with the name clone-of-pvc-1
that has the exact same
content as the specified source pvc-1
.
Usage
Upon availability of the new PVC, the cloned PVC is consumed the same as other PVC. It's also expected at this point that the newly created PVC is an independent object. It can be consumed, cloned, snapshotted, or deleted independently and without consideration for it's original dataSource PVC. This also implies that the source is not linked in any way to the newly created clone, it may also be modified or deleted without affecting the newly created clone.
6.11 - Storage Capacity
Storage capacity is limited and may vary depending on the node on which a pod runs: network-attached storage might not be accessible by all nodes, or storage is local to a node to begin with.
Kubernetes v1.24 [stable]
This page describes how Kubernetes keeps track of storage capacity and how the scheduler uses that information to schedule Pods onto nodes that have access to enough storage capacity for the remaining missing volumes. Without storage capacity tracking, the scheduler may choose a node that doesn't have enough capacity to provision a volume and multiple scheduling retries will be needed.
Before you begin
Kubernetes v1.29 includes cluster-level API support for storage capacity tracking. To use this you must also be using a CSI driver that supports capacity tracking. Consult the documentation for the CSI drivers that you use to find out whether this support is available and, if so, how to use it. If you are not running Kubernetes v1.29, check the documentation for that version of Kubernetes.
API
There are two API extensions for this feature:
- CSIStorageCapacity objects: these get produced by a CSI driver in the namespace where the driver is installed. Each object contains capacity information for one storage class and defines which nodes have access to that storage.
- The
CSIDriverSpec.StorageCapacity
field: when set totrue
, the Kubernetes scheduler will consider storage capacity for volumes that use the CSI driver.
Scheduling
Storage capacity information is used by the Kubernetes scheduler if:
- a Pod uses a volume that has not been created yet,
- that volume uses a StorageClass which references a CSI driver and
uses
WaitForFirstConsumer
volume binding mode, and - the
CSIDriver
object for the driver hasStorageCapacity
set to true.
In that case, the scheduler only considers nodes for the Pod which
have enough storage available to them. This check is very
simplistic and only compares the size of the volume against the
capacity listed in CSIStorageCapacity
objects with a topology that
includes the node.
For volumes with Immediate
volume binding mode, the storage driver
decides where to create the volume, independently of Pods that will
use the volume. The scheduler then schedules Pods onto nodes where the
volume is available after the volume has been created.
For CSI ephemeral volumes, scheduling always happens without considering storage capacity. This is based on the assumption that this volume type is only used by special CSI drivers which are local to a node and do not need significant resources there.
Rescheduling
When a node has been selected for a Pod with WaitForFirstConsumer
volumes, that decision is still tentative. The next step is that the
CSI storage driver gets asked to create the volume with a hint that the
volume is supposed to be available on the selected node.
Because Kubernetes might have chosen a node based on out-dated capacity information, it is possible that the volume cannot really be created. The node selection is then reset and the Kubernetes scheduler tries again to find a node for the Pod.
Limitations
Storage capacity tracking increases the chance that scheduling works on the first try, but cannot guarantee this because the scheduler has to decide based on potentially out-dated information. Usually, the same retry mechanism as for scheduling without any storage capacity information handles scheduling failures.
One situation where scheduling can fail permanently is when a Pod uses multiple volumes: one volume might have been created already in a topology segment which then does not have enough capacity left for another volume. Manual intervention is necessary to recover from this, for example by increasing capacity or deleting the volume that was already created.
What's next
- For more information on the design, see the Storage Capacity Constraints for Pod Scheduling KEP.
6.12 - Node-specific Volume Limits
This page describes the maximum number of volumes that can be attached to a Node for various cloud providers.
Cloud providers like Google, Amazon, and Microsoft typically have a limit on how many volumes can be attached to a Node. It is important for Kubernetes to respect those limits. Otherwise, Pods scheduled on a Node could get stuck waiting for volumes to attach.
Kubernetes default limits
The Kubernetes scheduler has default limits on the number of volumes that can be attached to a Node:
Cloud service | Maximum volumes per Node |
---|---|
Amazon Elastic Block Store (EBS) | 39 |
Google Persistent Disk | 16 |
Microsoft Azure Disk Storage | 16 |
Custom limits
You can change these limits by setting the value of the
KUBE_MAX_PD_VOLS
environment variable, and then starting the scheduler.
CSI drivers might have a different procedure, see their documentation
on how to customize their limits.
Use caution if you set a limit that is higher than the default limit. Consult the cloud provider's documentation to make sure that Nodes can actually support the limit you set.
The limit applies to the entire cluster, so it affects all Nodes.
Dynamic volume limits
Kubernetes v1.17 [stable]
Dynamic volume limits are supported for following volume types.
- Amazon EBS
- Google Persistent Disk
- Azure Disk
- CSI
For volumes managed by in-tree volume plugins, Kubernetes automatically determines the Node type and enforces the appropriate maximum number of volumes for the node. For example:
-
On Google Compute Engine, up to 127 volumes can be attached to a node, depending on the node type.
-
For Amazon EBS disks on M5,C5,R5,T3 and Z1D instance types, Kubernetes allows only 25 volumes to be attached to a Node. For other instance types on Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2), Kubernetes allows 39 volumes to be attached to a Node.
-
On Azure, up to 64 disks can be attached to a node, depending on the node type. For more details, refer to Sizes for virtual machines in Azure.
-
If a CSI storage driver advertises a maximum number of volumes for a Node (using
NodeGetInfo
), the kube-scheduler honors that limit. Refer to the CSI specifications for details. -
For volumes managed by in-tree plugins that have been migrated to a CSI driver, the maximum number of volumes will be the one reported by the CSI driver.
6.13 - Volume Health Monitoring
Kubernetes v1.21 [alpha]
CSI volume health monitoring allows CSI Drivers to detect abnormal volume conditions from the underlying storage systems and report them as events on PVCs or Pods.
Volume health monitoring
Kubernetes volume health monitoring is part of how Kubernetes implements the Container Storage Interface (CSI). Volume health monitoring feature is implemented in two components: an External Health Monitor controller, and the kubelet.
If a CSI Driver supports Volume Health Monitoring feature from the controller side, an event will be reported on the related PersistentVolumeClaim (PVC) when an abnormal volume condition is detected on a CSI volume.
The External Health Monitor controller
also watches for node failure events. You can enable node failure monitoring by setting
the enable-node-watcher
flag to true. When the external health monitor detects a node
failure event, the controller reports an Event will be reported on the PVC to indicate
that pods using this PVC are on a failed node.
If a CSI Driver supports Volume Health Monitoring feature from the node side,
an Event will be reported on every Pod using the PVC when an abnormal volume
condition is detected on a CSI volume. In addition, Volume Health information
is exposed as Kubelet VolumeStats metrics. A new metric kubelet_volume_stats_health_status_abnormal
is added. This metric includes two labels: namespace
and persistentvolumeclaim
.
The count is either 1 or 0. 1 indicates the volume is unhealthy, 0 indicates volume
is healthy. For more information, please check
KEP.
CSIVolumeHealth
feature gate
to use this feature from the node side.
What's next
See the CSI driver documentation to find out which CSI drivers have implemented this feature.
6.14 - Windows Storage
This page provides an storage overview specific to the Windows operating system.
Persistent storage
Windows has a layered filesystem driver to mount container layers and create a copy filesystem based on NTFS. All file paths in the container are resolved only within the context of that container.
- With Docker, volume mounts can only target a directory in the container, and not an individual file. This limitation does not apply to containerd.
- Volume mounts cannot project files or directories back to the host filesystem.
- Read-only filesystems are not supported because write access is always required for the Windows registry and SAM database. However, read-only volumes are supported.
- Volume user-masks and permissions are not available. Because the SAM is not shared between the host & container, there's no mapping between them. All permissions are resolved within the context of the container.
As a result, the following storage functionality is not supported on Windows nodes:
- Volume subpath mounts: only the entire volume can be mounted in a Windows container
- Subpath volume mounting for Secrets
- Host mount projection
- Read-only root filesystem (mapped volumes still support
readOnly
) - Block device mapping
- Memory as the storage medium (for example,
emptyDir.medium
set toMemory
) - File system features like uid/gid; per-user Linux filesystem permissions
- Setting secret permissions with DefaultMode (due to UID/GID dependency)
- NFS based storage/volume support
- Expanding the mounted volume (resizefs)
Kubernetes volumes enable complex applications, with data persistence and Pod volume sharing requirements, to be deployed on Kubernetes. Management of persistent volumes associated with a specific storage back-end or protocol includes actions such as provisioning/de-provisioning/resizing of volumes, attaching/detaching a volume to/from a Kubernetes node and mounting/dismounting a volume to/from individual containers in a pod that needs to persist data.
Volume management components are shipped as Kubernetes volume plugin. The following broad classes of Kubernetes volume plugins are supported on Windows:
FlexVolume plugins
- Please note that FlexVolumes have been deprecated as of 1.23
CSI Plugins
In-tree volume plugins
The following in-tree plugins support persistent storage on Windows nodes:
7 - Configuration
7.1 - Configuration Best Practices
This document highlights and consolidates configuration best practices that are introduced throughout the user guide, Getting Started documentation, and examples.
This is a living document. If you think of something that is not on this list but might be useful to others, please don't hesitate to file an issue or submit a PR.
General Configuration Tips
-
When defining configurations, specify the latest stable API version.
-
Configuration files should be stored in version control before being pushed to the cluster. This allows you to quickly roll back a configuration change if necessary. It also aids cluster re-creation and restoration.
-
Write your configuration files using YAML rather than JSON. Though these formats can be used interchangeably in almost all scenarios, YAML tends to be more user-friendly.
-
Group related objects into a single file whenever it makes sense. One file is often easier to manage than several. See the guestbook-all-in-one.yaml file as an example of this syntax.
-
Note also that many
kubectl
commands can be called on a directory. For example, you can callkubectl apply
on a directory of config files. -
Don't specify default values unnecessarily: simple, minimal configuration will make errors less likely.
-
Put object descriptions in annotations, to allow better introspection.
There is a breaking change introduced in the YAML 1.2 boolean values specification with respect to YAML 1.1. This is a known issue in Kubernetes. YAML 1.2 only recognizes true and false as valid booleans, while YAML 1.1 also accepts yes, no, on, and off as booleans. However, Kubernetes uses YAML parsers that are mostly compatible with YAML 1.1, which means that using yes or no instead of true or false in a YAML manifest may cause unexpected errors or behaviors. To avoid this issue, it is recommended to always use true or false for boolean values in YAML manifests, and to quote any strings that may be confused with booleans, such as "yes" or "no".
Besides booleans, there are additional specifications changes between YAML versions. Please refer to the YAML Specification Changes documentation for a comprehensive list.
"Naked" Pods versus ReplicaSets, Deployments, and Jobs
-
Don't use naked Pods (that is, Pods not bound to a ReplicaSet or Deployment) if you can avoid it. Naked Pods will not be rescheduled in the event of a node failure.
A Deployment, which both creates a ReplicaSet to ensure that the desired number of Pods is always available, and specifies a strategy to replace Pods (such as RollingUpdate), is almost always preferable to creating Pods directly, except for some explicit
restartPolicy: Never
scenarios. A Job may also be appropriate.
Services
-
Create a Service before its corresponding backend workloads (Deployments or ReplicaSets), and before any workloads that need to access it. When Kubernetes starts a container, it provides environment variables pointing to all the Services which were running when the container was started. For example, if a Service named
foo
exists, all containers will get the following variables in their initial environment:FOO_SERVICE_HOST=<the host the Service is running on> FOO_SERVICE_PORT=<the port the Service is running on>
This does imply an ordering requirement - any
Service
that aPod
wants to access must be created before thePod
itself, or else the environment variables will not be populated. DNS does not have this restriction. -
An optional (though strongly recommended) cluster add-on is a DNS server. The DNS server watches the Kubernetes API for new
Services
and creates a set of DNS records for each. If DNS has been enabled throughout the cluster then allPods
should be able to do name resolution ofServices
automatically. -
Don't specify a
hostPort
for a Pod unless it is absolutely necessary. When you bind a Pod to ahostPort
, it limits the number of places the Pod can be scheduled, because each <hostIP
,hostPort
,protocol
> combination must be unique. If you don't specify thehostIP
andprotocol
explicitly, Kubernetes will use0.0.0.0
as the defaulthostIP
andTCP
as the defaultprotocol
.If you only need access to the port for debugging purposes, you can use the apiserver proxy or
kubectl port-forward
.If you explicitly need to expose a Pod's port on the node, consider using a NodePort Service before resorting to
hostPort
. -
Avoid using
hostNetwork
, for the same reasons ashostPort
. -
Use headless Services (which have a
ClusterIP
ofNone
) for service discovery when you don't needkube-proxy
load balancing.
Using Labels
-
Define and use labels that identify semantic attributes of your application or Deployment, such as
{ app.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp, tier: frontend, phase: test, deployment: v3 }
. You can use these labels to select the appropriate Pods for other resources; for example, a Service that selects alltier: frontend
Pods, or allphase: test
components ofapp.kubernetes.io/name: MyApp
. See the guestbook app for examples of this approach.A Service can be made to span multiple Deployments by omitting release-specific labels from its selector. When you need to update a running service without downtime, use a Deployment.
A desired state of an object is described by a Deployment, and if changes to that spec are applied, the deployment controller changes the actual state to the desired state at a controlled rate.
-
Use the Kubernetes common labels for common use cases. These standardized labels enrich the metadata in a way that allows tools, including
kubectl
and dashboard, to work in an interoperable way. -
You can manipulate labels for debugging. Because Kubernetes controllers (such as ReplicaSet) and Services match to Pods using selector labels, removing the relevant labels from a Pod will stop it from being considered by a controller or from being served traffic by a Service. If you remove the labels of an existing Pod, its controller will create a new Pod to take its place. This is a useful way to debug a previously "live" Pod in a "quarantine" environment. To interactively remove or add labels, use
kubectl label
.
Using kubectl
-
Use
kubectl apply -f <directory>
. This looks for Kubernetes configuration in all.yaml
,.yml
, and.json
files in<directory>
and passes it toapply
. -
Use label selectors for
get
anddelete
operations instead of specific object names. See the sections on label selectors and using labels effectively. -
Use
kubectl create deployment
andkubectl expose
to quickly create single-container Deployments and Services. See Use a Service to Access an Application in a Cluster for an example.
7.2 - ConfigMaps
A ConfigMap is an API object used to store non-confidential data in key-value pairs. Pods can consume ConfigMaps as environment variables, command-line arguments, or as configuration files in a volume.
A ConfigMap allows you to decouple environment-specific configuration from your container images, so that your applications are easily portable.
Motivation
Use a ConfigMap for setting configuration data separately from application code.
For example, imagine that you are developing an application that you can run on your
own computer (for development) and in the cloud (to handle real traffic).
You write the code to look in an environment variable named DATABASE_HOST
.
Locally, you set that variable to localhost
. In the cloud, you set it to
refer to a Kubernetes Service
that exposes the database component to your cluster.
This lets you fetch a container image running in the cloud and
debug the exact same code locally if needed.
ConfigMap object
A ConfigMap is an API object
that lets you store configuration for other objects to use. Unlike most
Kubernetes objects that have a spec
, a ConfigMap has data
and binaryData
fields. These fields accept key-value pairs as their values. Both the data
field and the binaryData
are optional. The data
field is designed to
contain UTF-8 strings while the binaryData
field is designed to
contain binary data as base64-encoded strings.
The name of a ConfigMap must be a valid DNS subdomain name.
Each key under the data
or the binaryData
field must consist of
alphanumeric characters, -
, _
or .
. The keys stored in data
must not
overlap with the keys in the binaryData
field.
Starting from v1.19, you can add an immutable
field to a ConfigMap
definition to create an immutable ConfigMap.
ConfigMaps and Pods
You can write a Pod spec
that refers to a ConfigMap and configures the container(s)
in that Pod based on the data in the ConfigMap. The Pod and the ConfigMap must be in
the same namespace.
spec
of a static Pod cannot refer to a ConfigMap
or any other API objects.
Here's an example ConfigMap that has some keys with single values, and other keys where the value looks like a fragment of a configuration format.
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: game-demo
data:
# property-like keys; each key maps to a simple value
player_initial_lives: "3"
ui_properties_file_name: "user-interface.properties"
# file-like keys
game.properties: |
enemy.types=aliens,monsters
player.maximum-lives=5
user-interface.properties: |
color.good=purple
color.bad=yellow
allow.textmode=true
There are four different ways that you can use a ConfigMap to configure a container inside a Pod:
- Inside a container command and args
- Environment variables for a container
- Add a file in read-only volume, for the application to read
- Write code to run inside the Pod that uses the Kubernetes API to read a ConfigMap
These different methods lend themselves to different ways of modeling the data being consumed. For the first three methods, the kubelet uses the data from the ConfigMap when it launches container(s) for a Pod.
The fourth method means you have to write code to read the ConfigMap and its data. However, because you're using the Kubernetes API directly, your application can subscribe to get updates whenever the ConfigMap changes, and react when that happens. By accessing the Kubernetes API directly, this technique also lets you access a ConfigMap in a different namespace.
Here's an example Pod that uses values from game-demo
to configure a Pod:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: configmap-demo-pod
spec:
containers:
- name: demo
image: alpine
command: ["sleep", "3600"]
env:
# Define the environment variable
- name: PLAYER_INITIAL_LIVES # Notice that the case is different here
# from the key name in the ConfigMap.
valueFrom:
configMapKeyRef:
name: game-demo # The ConfigMap this value comes from.
key: player_initial_lives # The key to fetch.
- name: UI_PROPERTIES_FILE_NAME
valueFrom:
configMapKeyRef:
name: game-demo
key: ui_properties_file_name
volumeMounts:
- name: config
mountPath: "/config"
readOnly: true
volumes:
# You set volumes at the Pod level, then mount them into containers inside that Pod
- name: config
configMap:
# Provide the name of the ConfigMap you want to mount.
name: game-demo
# An array of keys from the ConfigMap to create as files
items:
- key: "game.properties"
path: "game.properties"
- key: "user-interface.properties"
path: "user-interface.properties"
A ConfigMap doesn't differentiate between single line property values and multi-line file-like values. What matters is how Pods and other objects consume those values.
For this example, defining a volume and mounting it inside the demo
container as /config
creates two files,
/config/game.properties
and /config/user-interface.properties
,
even though there are four keys in the ConfigMap. This is because the Pod
definition specifies an items
array in the volumes
section.
If you omit the items
array entirely, every key in the ConfigMap becomes
a file with the same name as the key, and you get 4 files.
Using ConfigMaps
ConfigMaps can be mounted as data volumes. ConfigMaps can also be used by other parts of the system, without being directly exposed to the Pod. For example, ConfigMaps can hold data that other parts of the system should use for configuration.
The most common way to use ConfigMaps is to configure settings for containers running in a Pod in the same namespace. You can also use a ConfigMap separately.
For example, you might encounter addons or operators that adjust their behavior based on a ConfigMap.
Using ConfigMaps as files from a Pod
To consume a ConfigMap in a volume in a Pod:
- Create a ConfigMap or use an existing one. Multiple Pods can reference the same ConfigMap.
- Modify your Pod definition to add a volume under
.spec.volumes[]
. Name the volume anything, and have a.spec.volumes[].configMap.name
field set to reference your ConfigMap object. - Add a
.spec.containers[].volumeMounts[]
to each container that needs the ConfigMap. Specify.spec.containers[].volumeMounts[].readOnly = true
and.spec.containers[].volumeMounts[].mountPath
to an unused directory name where you would like the ConfigMap to appear. - Modify your image or command line so that the program looks for files in
that directory. Each key in the ConfigMap
data
map becomes the filename undermountPath
.
This is an example of a Pod that mounts a ConfigMap in a volume:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: mypod
spec:
containers:
- name: mypod
image: redis
volumeMounts:
- name: foo
mountPath: "/etc/foo"
readOnly: true
volumes:
- name: foo
configMap:
name: myconfigmap
Each ConfigMap you want to use needs to be referred to in .spec.volumes
.
If there are multiple containers in the Pod, then each container needs its
own volumeMounts
block, but only one .spec.volumes
is needed per ConfigMap.
Mounted ConfigMaps are updated automatically
When a ConfigMap currently consumed in a volume is updated, projected keys are eventually updated as well.
The kubelet checks whether the mounted ConfigMap is fresh on every periodic sync.
However, the kubelet uses its local cache for getting the current value of the ConfigMap.
The type of the cache is configurable using the configMapAndSecretChangeDetectionStrategy
field in
the KubeletConfiguration struct.
A ConfigMap can be either propagated by watch (default), ttl-based, or by redirecting
all requests directly to the API server.
As a result, the total delay from the moment when the ConfigMap is updated to the moment
when new keys are projected to the Pod can be as long as the kubelet sync period + cache
propagation delay, where the cache propagation delay depends on the chosen cache type
(it equals to watch propagation delay, ttl of cache, or zero correspondingly).
ConfigMaps consumed as environment variables are not updated automatically and require a pod restart.
Immutable ConfigMaps
Kubernetes v1.21 [stable]
The Kubernetes feature Immutable Secrets and ConfigMaps provides an option to set individual Secrets and ConfigMaps as immutable. For clusters that extensively use ConfigMaps (at least tens of thousands of unique ConfigMap to Pod mounts), preventing changes to their data has the following advantages:
- protects you from accidental (or unwanted) updates that could cause applications outages
- improves performance of your cluster by significantly reducing load on kube-apiserver, by closing watches for ConfigMaps marked as immutable.
You can create an immutable ConfigMap by setting the immutable
field to true
.
For example:
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
...
data:
...
immutable: true
Once a ConfigMap is marked as immutable, it is not possible to revert this change
nor to mutate the contents of the data
or the binaryData
field. You can
only delete and recreate the ConfigMap. Because existing Pods maintain a mount point
to the deleted ConfigMap, it is recommended to recreate these pods.
What's next
- Read about Secrets.
- Read Configure a Pod to Use a ConfigMap.
- Read about changing a ConfigMap (or any other Kubernetes object)
- Read The Twelve-Factor App to understand the motivation for separating code from configuration.
7.3 - Secrets
A Secret is an object that contains a small amount of sensitive data such as a password, a token, or a key. Such information might otherwise be put in a Pod specification or in a container image. Using a Secret means that you don't need to include confidential data in your application code.
Because Secrets can be created independently of the Pods that use them, there is less risk of the Secret (and its data) being exposed during the workflow of creating, viewing, and editing Pods. Kubernetes, and applications that run in your cluster, can also take additional precautions with Secrets, such as avoiding writing sensitive data to nonvolatile storage.
Secrets are similar to ConfigMaps but are specifically intended to hold confidential data.
Kubernetes Secrets are, by default, stored unencrypted in the API server's underlying data store (etcd). Anyone with API access can retrieve or modify a Secret, and so can anyone with access to etcd. Additionally, anyone who is authorized to create a Pod in a namespace can use that access to read any Secret in that namespace; this includes indirect access such as the ability to create a Deployment.
In order to safely use Secrets, take at least the following steps:
- Enable Encryption at Rest for Secrets.
- Enable or configure RBAC rules with least-privilege access to Secrets.
- Restrict Secret access to specific containers.
- Consider using external Secret store providers.
For more guidelines to manage and improve the security of your Secrets, refer to Good practices for Kubernetes Secrets.
See Information security for Secrets for more details.
Uses for Secrets
You can use Secrets for purposes such as the following:
- Set environment variables for a container.
- Provide credentials such as SSH keys or passwords to Pods.
- Allow the kubelet to pull container images from private registries.
The Kubernetes control plane also uses Secrets; for example, bootstrap token Secrets are a mechanism to help automate node registration.
Use case: dotfiles in a secret volume
You can make your data "hidden" by defining a key that begins with a dot.
This key represents a dotfile or "hidden" file. For example, when the following Secret
is mounted into a volume, secret-volume
, the volume will contain a single file,
called .secret-file
, and the dotfile-test-container
will have this file
present at the path /etc/secret-volume/.secret-file
.
ls -l
;
you must use ls -la
to see them when listing directory contents.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: dotfile-secret
data:
.secret-file: dmFsdWUtMg0KDQo=
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: secret-dotfiles-pod
spec:
volumes:
- name: secret-volume
secret:
secretName: dotfile-secret
containers:
- name: dotfile-test-container
image: registry.k8s.io/busybox
command:
- ls
- "-l"
- "/etc/secret-volume"
volumeMounts:
- name: secret-volume
readOnly: true
mountPath: "/etc/secret-volume"
Use case: Secret visible to one container in a Pod
Consider a program that needs to handle HTTP requests, do some complex business logic, and then sign some messages with an HMAC. Because it has complex application logic, there might be an unnoticed remote file reading exploit in the server, which could expose the private key to an attacker.
This could be divided into two processes in two containers: a frontend container which handles user interaction and business logic, but which cannot see the private key; and a signer container that can see the private key, and responds to simple signing requests from the frontend (for example, over localhost networking).
With this partitioned approach, an attacker now has to trick the application server into doing something rather arbitrary, which may be harder than getting it to read a file.
Alternatives to Secrets
Rather than using a Secret to protect confidential data, you can pick from alternatives.
Here are some of your options:
- If your cloud-native component needs to authenticate to another application that you know is running within the same Kubernetes cluster, you can use a ServiceAccount and its tokens to identify your client.
- There are third-party tools that you can run, either within or outside your cluster, that manage sensitive data. For example, a service that Pods access over HTTPS, that reveals a Secret if the client correctly authenticates (for example, with a ServiceAccount token).
- For authentication, you can implement a custom signer for X.509 certificates, and use CertificateSigningRequests to let that custom signer issue certificates to Pods that need them.
- You can use a device plugin to expose node-local encryption hardware to a specific Pod. For example, you can schedule trusted Pods onto nodes that provide a Trusted Platform Module, configured out-of-band.
You can also combine two or more of those options, including the option to use Secret objects themselves.
For example: implement (or deploy) an operator that fetches short-lived session tokens from an external service, and then creates Secrets based on those short-lived session tokens. Pods running in your cluster can make use of the session tokens, and operator ensures they are valid. This separation means that you can run Pods that are unaware of the exact mechanisms for issuing and refreshing those session tokens.
Types of Secret
When creating a Secret, you can specify its type using the type
field of
the Secret
resource, or certain equivalent kubectl
command line flags (if available).
The Secret type is used to facilitate programmatic handling of the Secret data.
Kubernetes provides several built-in types for some common usage scenarios. These types vary in terms of the validations performed and the constraints Kubernetes imposes on them.
Built-in Type | Usage |
---|---|
Opaque |
arbitrary user-defined data |
kubernetes.io/service-account-token |
ServiceAccount token |
kubernetes.io/dockercfg |
serialized ~/.dockercfg file |
kubernetes.io/dockerconfigjson |
serialized ~/.docker/config.json file |
kubernetes.io/basic-auth |
credentials for basic authentication |
kubernetes.io/ssh-auth |
credentials for SSH authentication |
kubernetes.io/tls |
data for a TLS client or server |
bootstrap.kubernetes.io/token |
bootstrap token data |
You can define and use your own Secret type by assigning a non-empty string as the
type
value for a Secret object (an empty string is treated as an Opaque
type).
Kubernetes doesn't impose any constraints on the type name. However, if you are using one of the built-in types, you must meet all the requirements defined for that type.
If you are defining a type of Secret that's for public use, follow the convention
and structure the Secret type to have your domain name before the name, separated
by a /
. For example: cloud-hosting.example.net/cloud-api-credentials
.
Opaque Secrets
Opaque
is the default Secret type if you don't explicitly specify a type in
a Secret manifest. When you create a Secret using kubectl
, you must use the
generic
subcommand to indicate an Opaque
Secret type. For example, the
following command creates an empty Secret of type Opaque
:
kubectl create secret generic empty-secret
kubectl get secret empty-secret
The output looks like:
NAME TYPE DATA AGE
empty-secret Opaque 0 2m6s
The DATA
column shows the number of data items stored in the Secret.
In this case, 0
means you have created an empty Secret.
ServiceAccount token Secrets
A kubernetes.io/service-account-token
type of Secret is used to store a
token credential that identifies a
ServiceAccount. This
is a legacy mechanism that provides long-lived ServiceAccount credentials to
Pods.
In Kubernetes v1.22 and later, the recommended approach is to obtain a
short-lived, automatically rotating ServiceAccount token by using the
TokenRequest
API instead. You can get these short-lived tokens using the following methods:
- Call the
TokenRequest
API either directly or by using an API client likekubectl
. For example, you can use thekubectl create token
command. - Request a mounted token in a projected volume in your Pod manifest. Kubernetes creates the token and mounts it in the Pod. The token is automatically invalidated when the Pod that it's mounted in is deleted. For details, see Launch a Pod using service account token projection.
TokenRequest
API to obtain a token,
and the security exposure of persisting a non-expiring token credential
in a readable API object is acceptable to you. For instructions, see
Manually create a long-lived API token for a ServiceAccount.
When using this Secret type, you need to ensure that the
kubernetes.io/service-account.name
annotation is set to an existing
ServiceAccount name. If you are creating both the ServiceAccount and
the Secret objects, you should create the ServiceAccount object first.
After the Secret is created, a Kubernetes controller
fills in some other fields such as the kubernetes.io/service-account.uid
annotation, and the
token
key in the data
field, which is populated with an authentication token.
The following example configuration declares a ServiceAccount token Secret:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: secret-sa-sample
annotations:
kubernetes.io/service-account.name: "sa-name"
type: kubernetes.io/service-account-token
data:
extra: YmFyCg==
After creating the Secret, wait for Kubernetes to populate the token
key in the data
field.
See the ServiceAccount
documentation for more information on how ServiceAccounts work.
You can also check the automountServiceAccountToken
field and the
serviceAccountName
field of the
Pod
for information on referencing ServiceAccount credentials from within Pods.
Docker config Secrets
If you are creating a Secret to store credentials for accessing a container image registry,
you must use one of the following type
values for that Secret:
kubernetes.io/dockercfg
: store a serialized~/.dockercfg
which is the legacy format for configuring Docker command line. The Secretdata
field contains a.dockercfg
key whose value is the content of a base64 encoded~/.dockercfg
file.kubernetes.io/dockerconfigjson
: store a serialized JSON that follows the same format rules as the~/.docker/config.json
file, which is a new format for~/.dockercfg
. The Secretdata
field must contain a.dockerconfigjson
key for which the value is the content of a base64 encoded~/.docker/config.json
file.
Below is an example for a kubernetes.io/dockercfg
type of Secret:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: secret-dockercfg
type: kubernetes.io/dockercfg
data:
.dockercfg: |
eyJhdXRocyI6eyJodHRwczovL2V4YW1wbGUvdjEvIjp7ImF1dGgiOiJvcGVuc2VzYW1lIn19fQo=
stringData
field instead.
When you create Docker config Secrets using a manifest, the API
server checks whether the expected key exists in the data
field, and
it verifies if the value provided can be parsed as a valid JSON. The API
server doesn't validate if the JSON actually is a Docker config file.
You can also use kubectl
to create a Secret for accessing a container
registry, such as when you don't have a Docker configuration file:
kubectl create secret docker-registry secret-tiger-docker \
--docker-email=tiger@acme.example \
--docker-username=tiger \
--docker-password=pass1234 \
--docker-server=my-registry.example:5000
This command creates a Secret of type kubernetes.io/dockerconfigjson
.
Retrieve the .data.dockerconfigjson
field from that new Secret and decode the
data:
kubectl get secret secret-tiger-docker -o jsonpath='{.data.*}' | base64 -d
The output is equivalent to the following JSON document (which is also a valid Docker configuration file):
{
"auths": {
"my-registry.example:5000": {
"username": "tiger",
"password": "pass1234",
"email": "tiger@acme.example",
"auth": "dGlnZXI6cGFzczEyMzQ="
}
}
}
The auth
value there is base64 encoded; it is obscured but not secret.
Anyone who can read that Secret can learn the registry access bearer token.
It is suggested to use credential providers to dynamically and securely provide pull secrets on-demand.
Basic authentication Secret
The kubernetes.io/basic-auth
type is provided for storing credentials needed
for basic authentication. When using this Secret type, the data
field of the
Secret must contain one of the following two keys:
username
: the user name for authenticationpassword
: the password or token for authentication
Both values for the above two keys are base64 encoded strings. You can
alternatively provide the clear text content using the stringData
field in the
Secret manifest.
The following manifest is an example of a basic authentication Secret:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: secret-basic-auth
type: kubernetes.io/basic-auth
stringData:
username: admin # required field for kubernetes.io/basic-auth
password: t0p-Secret # required field for kubernetes.io/basic-auth
stringData
field for a Secret does not work well with server-side apply.
The basic authentication Secret type is provided only for convenience.
You can create an Opaque
type for credentials used for basic authentication.
However, using the defined and public Secret type (kubernetes.io/basic-auth
) helps other
people to understand the purpose of your Secret, and sets a convention for what key names
to expect.
The Kubernetes API verifies that the required keys are set for a Secret of this type.
SSH authentication Secrets
The builtin type kubernetes.io/ssh-auth
is provided for storing data used in
SSH authentication. When using this Secret type, you will have to specify a
ssh-privatekey
key-value pair in the data
(or stringData
) field
as the SSH credential to use.
The following manifest is an example of a Secret used for SSH public/private key authentication:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: secret-ssh-auth
type: kubernetes.io/ssh-auth
data:
# the data is abbreviated in this example
ssh-privatekey: |
UG91cmluZzYlRW1vdGljb24lU2N1YmE=
The SSH authentication Secret type is provided only for convenience.
You can create an Opaque
type for credentials used for SSH authentication.
However, using the defined and public Secret type (kubernetes.io/ssh-auth
) helps other
people to understand the purpose of your Secret, and sets a convention for what key names
to expect.
The Kubernetes API verifies that the required keys are set for a Secret of this type.
known_hosts
file added to a ConfigMap.
TLS Secrets
The kubernetes.io/tls
Secret type is for storing
a certificate and its associated key that are typically used for TLS.
One common use for TLS Secrets is to configure encryption in transit for
an Ingress, but you can also use it
with other resources or directly in your workload.
When using this type of Secret, the tls.key
and the tls.crt
key must be provided
in the data
(or stringData
) field of the Secret configuration, although the API
server doesn't actually validate the values for each key.
As an alternative to using stringData
, you can use the data
field to provide
the base64 encoded certificate and private key. For details, see
Constraints on Secret names and data.
The following YAML contains an example config for a TLS Secret:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: secret-tls
type: kubernetes.io/tls
data:
# values are base64 encoded, which obscures them but does NOT provide
# any useful level of confidentiality
tls.crt: |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# In this example, the key data is not a real PEM-encoded private key
tls.key: |
RXhhbXBsZSBkYXRhIGZvciB0aGUgVExTIGNydCBmaWVsZA==
The TLS Secret type is provided only for convenience.
You can create an Opaque
type for credentials used for TLS authentication.
However, using the defined and public Secret type (kubernetes.io/tls
)
helps ensure the consistency of Secret format in your project. The API server
verifies if the required keys are set for a Secret of this type.
To create a TLS Secret using kubectl
, use the tls
subcommand:
kubectl create secret tls my-tls-secret \
--cert=path/to/cert/file \
--key=path/to/key/file
The public/private key pair must exist before hand. The public key certificate for --cert
must be .PEM encoded
and must match the given private key for --key
.
Bootstrap token Secrets
The bootstrap.kubernetes.io/token
Secret type is for
tokens used during the node bootstrap process. It stores tokens used to sign
well-known ConfigMaps.
A bootstrap token Secret is usually created in the kube-system
namespace and
named in the form bootstrap-token-<token-id>
where <token-id>
is a 6 character
string of the token ID.
As a Kubernetes manifest, a bootstrap token Secret might look like the following:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: bootstrap-token-5emitj
namespace: kube-system
type: bootstrap.kubernetes.io/token
data:
auth-extra-groups: c3lzdGVtOmJvb3RzdHJhcHBlcnM6a3ViZWFkbTpkZWZhdWx0LW5vZGUtdG9rZW4=
expiration: MjAyMC0wOS0xM1QwNDozOToxMFo=
token-id: NWVtaXRq
token-secret: a3E0Z2lodnN6emduMXAwcg==
usage-bootstrap-authentication: dHJ1ZQ==
usage-bootstrap-signing: dHJ1ZQ==
A bootstrap token Secret has the following keys specified under data
:
token-id
: A random 6 character string as the token identifier. Required.token-secret
: A random 16 character string as the actual token Secret. Required.description
: A human-readable string that describes what the token is used for. Optional.expiration
: An absolute UTC time using RFC3339 specifying when the token should be expired. Optional.usage-bootstrap-<usage>
: A boolean flag indicating additional usage for the bootstrap token.auth-extra-groups
: A comma-separated list of group names that will be authenticated as in addition to thesystem:bootstrappers
group.
You can alternatively provide the values in the stringData
field of the Secret
without base64 encoding them:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
# Note how the Secret is named
name: bootstrap-token-5emitj
# A bootstrap token Secret usually resides in the kube-system namespace
namespace: kube-system
type: bootstrap.kubernetes.io/token
stringData:
auth-extra-groups: "system:bootstrappers:kubeadm:default-node-token"
expiration: "2020-09-13T04:39:10Z"
# This token ID is used in the name
token-id: "5emitj"
token-secret: "kq4gihvszzgn1p0r"
# This token can be used for authentication
usage-bootstrap-authentication: "true"
# and it can be used for signing
usage-bootstrap-signing: "true"
stringData
field for a Secret does not work well with server-side apply.
Working with Secrets
Creating a Secret
There are several options to create a Secret:
Constraints on Secret names and data
The name of a Secret object must be a valid DNS subdomain name.
You can specify the data
and/or the stringData
field when creating a
configuration file for a Secret. The data
and the stringData
fields are optional.
The values for all keys in the data
field have to be base64-encoded strings.
If the conversion to base64 string is not desirable, you can choose to specify
the stringData
field instead, which accepts arbitrary strings as values.
The keys of data
and stringData
must consist of alphanumeric characters,
-
, _
or .
. All key-value pairs in the stringData
field are internally
merged into the data
field. If a key appears in both the data
and the
stringData
field, the value specified in the stringData
field takes
precedence.
Size limit
Individual Secrets are limited to 1MiB in size. This is to discourage creation of very large Secrets that could exhaust the API server and kubelet memory. However, creation of many smaller Secrets could also exhaust memory. You can use a resource quota to limit the number of Secrets (or other resources) in a namespace.
Editing a Secret
You can edit an existing Secret unless it is immutable. To edit a Secret, use one of the following methods:
You can also edit the data in a Secret using the Kustomize tool. However, this
method creates a new Secret
object with the edited data.
Depending on how you created the Secret, as well as how the Secret is used in
your Pods, updates to existing Secret
objects are propagated automatically to
Pods that use the data. For more information, refer to Using Secrets as files from a Pod section.
Using a Secret
Secrets can be mounted as data volumes or exposed as environment variables to be used by a container in a Pod. Secrets can also be used by other parts of the system, without being directly exposed to the Pod. For example, Secrets can hold credentials that other parts of the system should use to interact with external systems on your behalf.
Secret volume sources are validated to ensure that the specified object reference actually points to an object of type Secret. Therefore, a Secret needs to be created before any Pods that depend on it.
If the Secret cannot be fetched (perhaps because it does not exist, or due to a temporary lack of connection to the API server) the kubelet periodically retries running that Pod. The kubelet also reports an Event for that Pod, including details of the problem fetching the Secret.
Optional Secrets
When you reference a Secret in a Pod, you can mark the Secret as optional, such as in the following example. If an optional Secret doesn't exist, Kubernetes ignores it.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: mypod
spec:
containers:
- name: mypod
image: redis
volumeMounts:
- name: foo
mountPath: "/etc/foo"
readOnly: true
volumes:
- name: foo
secret:
secretName: mysecret
optional: true
By default, Secrets are required. None of a Pod's containers will start until all non-optional Secrets are available.
If a Pod references a specific key in a non-optional Secret and that Secret does exist, but is missing the named key, the Pod fails during startup.
Using Secrets as files from a Pod
If you want to access data from a Secret in a Pod, one way to do that is to have Kubernetes make the value of that Secret be available as a file inside the filesystem of one or more of the Pod's containers.
For instructions, refer to Distribute credentials securely using Secrets.
When a volume contains data from a Secret, and that Secret is updated, Kubernetes tracks this and updates the data in the volume, using an eventually-consistent approach.
The kubelet keeps a cache of the current keys and values for the Secrets that are used in
volumes for pods on that node.
You can configure the way that the kubelet detects changes from the cached values. The
configMapAndSecretChangeDetectionStrategy
field in the
kubelet configuration controls
which strategy the kubelet uses. The default strategy is Watch
.
Updates to Secrets can be either propagated by an API watch mechanism (the default), based on a cache with a defined time-to-live, or polled from the cluster API server on each kubelet synchronisation loop.
As a result, the total delay from the moment when the Secret is updated to the moment when new keys are projected to the Pod can be as long as the kubelet sync period + cache propagation delay, where the cache propagation delay depends on the chosen cache type (following the same order listed in the previous paragraph, these are: watch propagation delay, the configured cache TTL, or zero for direct polling).
Using Secrets as environment variables
To use a Secret in an environment variable in a Pod:
- For each container in your Pod specification, add an environment variable
for each Secret key that you want to use to the
env[].valueFrom.secretKeyRef
field. - Modify your image and/or command line so that the program looks for values in the specified environment variables.
For instructions, refer to Define container environment variables using Secret data.
Invalid environment variables
If your environment variable definitions in your Pod specification are considered to be invalid environment variable names, those keys aren't made available to your container. The Pod is allowed to start.
Kubernetes adds an Event with the reason set to InvalidVariableNames
and a
message that lists the skipped invalid keys. The following example shows a Pod that refers to a Secret named mysecret
, where mysecret
contains 2 invalid keys: 1badkey
and 2alsobad
.
kubectl get events
The output is similar to:
LASTSEEN FIRSTSEEN COUNT NAME KIND SUBOBJECT TYPE REASON
0s 0s 1 dapi-test-pod Pod Warning InvalidEnvironmentVariableNames kubelet, 127.0.0.1 Keys [1badkey, 2alsobad] from the EnvFrom secret default/mysecret were skipped since they are considered invalid environment variable names.
Container image pull Secrets
If you want to fetch container images from a private repository, you need a way for the kubelet on each node to authenticate to that repository. You can configure image pull Secrets to make this possible. These Secrets are configured at the Pod level.
Using imagePullSecrets
The imagePullSecrets
field is a list of references to Secrets in the same namespace.
You can use an imagePullSecrets
to pass a Secret that contains a Docker (or other) image registry
password to the kubelet. The kubelet uses this information to pull a private image on behalf of your Pod.
See the PodSpec API
for more information about the imagePullSecrets
field.
Manually specifying an imagePullSecret
You can learn how to specify imagePullSecrets
from the
container images
documentation.
Arranging for imagePullSecrets to be automatically attached
You can manually create imagePullSecrets
, and reference these from a ServiceAccount. Any Pods
created with that ServiceAccount or created with that ServiceAccount by default, will get their
imagePullSecrets
field set to that of the service account.
See Add ImagePullSecrets to a service account
for a detailed explanation of that process.
Using Secrets with static Pods
You cannot use ConfigMaps or Secrets with static Pods.
Immutable Secrets
Kubernetes v1.21 [stable]
Kubernetes lets you mark specific Secrets (and ConfigMaps) as immutable. Preventing changes to the data of an existing Secret has the following benefits:
- protects you from accidental (or unwanted) updates that could cause applications outages
- (for clusters that extensively use Secrets - at least tens of thousands of unique Secret to Pod mounts), switching to immutable Secrets improves the performance of your cluster by significantly reducing load on kube-apiserver. The kubelet does not need to maintain a [watch] on any Secrets that are marked as immutable.
Marking a Secret as immutable
You can create an immutable Secret by setting the immutable
field to true
. For example,
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata: ...
data: ...
immutable: true
You can also update any existing mutable Secret to make it immutable.
data
field. You can only delete and recreate the Secret.
Existing Pods maintain a mount point to the deleted Secret - it is recommended to recreate
these pods.
Information security for Secrets
Although ConfigMap and Secret work similarly, Kubernetes applies some additional protection for Secret objects.
Secrets often hold values that span a spectrum of importance, many of which can cause escalations within Kubernetes (e.g. service account tokens) and to external systems. Even if an individual app can reason about the power of the Secrets it expects to interact with, other apps within the same namespace can render those assumptions invalid.
A Secret is only sent to a node if a Pod on that node requires it.
For mounting Secrets into Pods, the kubelet stores a copy of the data into a tmpfs
so that the confidential data is not written to durable storage.
Once the Pod that depends on the Secret is deleted, the kubelet deletes its local copy
of the confidential data from the Secret.
There may be several containers in a Pod. By default, containers you define only have access to the default ServiceAccount and its related Secret. You must explicitly define environment variables or map a volume into a container in order to provide access to any other Secret.
There may be Secrets for several Pods on the same node. However, only the Secrets that a Pod requests are potentially visible within its containers. Therefore, one Pod does not have access to the Secrets of another Pod.
Configure least-privilege access to Secrets
To enhance the security measures around Secrets, Kubernetes provides a mechanism: you can
annotate a ServiceAccount as kubernetes.io/enforce-mountable-secrets: "true"
.
For more information, you can refer to the documentation about this annotation.
privileged: true
on a node can access all
Secrets used on that node.
What's next
- For guidelines to manage and improve the security of your Secrets, refer to Good practices for Kubernetes Secrets.
- Learn how to manage Secrets using
kubectl
- Learn how to manage Secrets using config file
- Learn how to manage Secrets using kustomize
- Read the API reference for
Secret
7.4 - Resource Management for Pods and Containers
When you specify a Pod, you can optionally specify how much of each resource a container needs. The most common resources to specify are CPU and memory (RAM); there are others.
When you specify the resource request for containers in a Pod, the kube-scheduler uses this information to decide which node to place the Pod on. When you specify a resource limit for a container, the kubelet enforces those limits so that the running container is not allowed to use more of that resource than the limit you set. The kubelet also reserves at least the request amount of that system resource specifically for that container to use.
Requests and limits
If the node where a Pod is running has enough of a resource available, it's possible (and
allowed) for a container to use more resource than its request
for that resource specifies.
However, a container is not allowed to use more than its resource limit
.
For example, if you set a memory
request of 256 MiB for a container, and that container is in
a Pod scheduled to a Node with 8GiB of memory and no other Pods, then the container can try to use
more RAM.
If you set a memory
limit of 4GiB for that container, the kubelet (and
container runtime) enforce the limit.
The runtime prevents the container from using more than the configured resource limit. For example:
when a process in the container tries to consume more than the allowed amount of memory,
the system kernel terminates the process that attempted the allocation, with an out of memory
(OOM) error.
Limits can be implemented either reactively (the system intervenes once it sees a violation) or by enforcement (the system prevents the container from ever exceeding the limit). Different runtimes can have different ways to implement the same restrictions.
Resource types
CPU and memory are each a resource type. A resource type has a base unit. CPU represents compute processing and is specified in units of Kubernetes CPUs. Memory is specified in units of bytes. For Linux workloads, you can specify huge page resources. Huge pages are a Linux-specific feature where the node kernel allocates blocks of memory that are much larger than the default page size.
For example, on a system where the default page size is 4KiB, you could specify a limit,
hugepages-2Mi: 80Mi
. If the container tries allocating over 40 2MiB huge pages (a
total of 80 MiB), that allocation fails.
hugepages-*
resources.
This is different from the memory
and cpu
resources.
CPU and memory are collectively referred to as compute resources, or resources. Compute resources are measurable quantities that can be requested, allocated, and consumed. They are distinct from API resources. API resources, such as Pods and Services are objects that can be read and modified through the Kubernetes API server.
Resource requests and limits of Pod and container
For each container, you can specify resource limits and requests, including the following:
spec.containers[].resources.limits.cpu
spec.containers[].resources.limits.memory
spec.containers[].resources.limits.hugepages-<size>
spec.containers[].resources.requests.cpu
spec.containers[].resources.requests.memory
spec.containers[].resources.requests.hugepages-<size>
Although you can only specify requests and limits for individual containers, it is also useful to think about the overall resource requests and limits for a Pod. For a particular resource, a Pod resource request/limit is the sum of the resource requests/limits of that type for each container in the Pod.
Resource units in Kubernetes
CPU resource units
Limits and requests for CPU resources are measured in cpu units. In Kubernetes, 1 CPU unit is equivalent to 1 physical CPU core, or 1 virtual core, depending on whether the node is a physical host or a virtual machine running inside a physical machine.
Fractional requests are allowed. When you define a container with
spec.containers[].resources.requests.cpu
set to 0.5
, you are requesting half
as much CPU time compared to if you asked for 1.0
CPU.
For CPU resource units, the quantity expression 0.1
is equivalent to the
expression 100m
, which can be read as "one hundred millicpu". Some people say
"one hundred millicores", and this is understood to mean the same thing.
CPU resource is always specified as an absolute amount of resource, never as a relative amount. For example,
500m
CPU represents the roughly same amount of computing power whether that container
runs on a single-core, dual-core, or 48-core machine.
Kubernetes doesn't allow you to specify CPU resources with a precision finer than
1m
or 0.001
CPU. To avoid accidentally using an invalid CPU quantity, it's useful to specify CPU units using the milliCPU form
instead of the decimal form when using less than 1 CPU unit.
For example, you have a Pod that uses 5m
or 0.005
CPU and would like to decrease
its CPU resources. By using the decimal form, it's harder to spot that 0.0005
CPU
is an invalid value, while by using the milliCPU form, it's easier to spot that
0.5m
is an invalid value.
Memory resource units
Limits and requests for memory
are measured in bytes. You can express memory as
a plain integer or as a fixed-point number using one of these
quantity suffixes:
E, P, T, G, M, k. You can also use the power-of-two equivalents: Ei, Pi, Ti, Gi,
Mi, Ki. For example, the following represent roughly the same value:
128974848, 129e6, 129M, 128974848000m, 123Mi
Pay attention to the case of the suffixes. If you request 400m
of memory, this is a request
for 0.4 bytes. Someone who types that probably meant to ask for 400 mebibytes (400Mi
)
or 400 megabytes (400M
).
Container resources example
The following Pod has two containers. Both containers are defined with a request for 0.25 CPU and 64MiB (226 bytes) of memory. Each container has a limit of 0.5 CPU and 128MiB of memory. You can say the Pod has a request of 0.5 CPU and 128 MiB of memory, and a limit of 1 CPU and 256MiB of memory.
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: frontend
spec:
containers:
- name: app
image: images.my-company.example/app:v4
resources:
requests:
memory: "64Mi"
cpu: "250m"
limits:
memory: "128Mi"
cpu: "500m"
- name: log-aggregator
image: images.my-company.example/log-aggregator:v6
resources:
requests:
memory: "64Mi"
cpu: "250m"
limits:
memory: "128Mi"
cpu: "500m"
How Pods with resource requests are scheduled
When you create a Pod, the Kubernetes scheduler selects a node for the Pod to run on. Each node has a maximum capacity for each of the resource types: the amount of CPU and memory it can provide for Pods. The scheduler ensures that, for each resource type, the sum of the resource requests of the scheduled containers is less than the capacity of the node. Note that although actual memory or CPU resource usage on nodes is very low, the scheduler still refuses to place a Pod on a node if the capacity check fails. This protects against a resource shortage on a node when resource usage later increases, for example, during a daily peak in request rate.
How Kubernetes applies resource requests and limits
When the kubelet starts a container as part of a Pod, the kubelet passes that container's requests and limits for memory and CPU to the container runtime.
On Linux, the container runtime typically configures kernel cgroups that apply and enforce the limits you defined.
- The CPU limit defines a hard ceiling on how much CPU time that the container can use. During each scheduling interval (time slice), the Linux kernel checks to see if this limit is exceeded; if so, the kernel waits before allowing that cgroup to resume execution.
- The CPU request typically defines a weighting. If several different containers (cgroups) want to run on a contended system, workloads with larger CPU requests are allocated more CPU time than workloads with small requests.
- The memory request is mainly used during (Kubernetes) Pod scheduling. On a node that uses
cgroups v2, the container runtime might use the memory request as a hint to set
memory.min
andmemory.low
. - The memory limit defines a memory limit for that cgroup. If the container tries to allocate more memory than this limit, the Linux kernel out-of-memory subsystem activates and, typically, intervenes by stopping one of the processes in the container that tried to allocate memory. If that process is the container's PID 1, and the container is marked as restartable, Kubernetes restarts the container.
- The memory limit for the Pod or container can also apply to pages in memory backed
volumes, such as an
emptyDir
. The kubelet trackstmpfs
emptyDir volumes as container memory use, rather than as local ephemeral storage.
If a container exceeds its memory request and the node that it runs on becomes short of memory overall, it is likely that the Pod the container belongs to will be evicted.
A container might or might not be allowed to exceed its CPU limit for extended periods of time. However, container runtimes don't terminate Pods or containers for excessive CPU usage.
To determine whether a container cannot be scheduled or is being killed due to resource limits, see the Troubleshooting section.
Monitoring compute & memory resource usage
The kubelet reports the resource usage of a Pod as part of the Pod
status
.
If optional tools for monitoring are available in your cluster, then Pod resource usage can be retrieved either from the Metrics API directly or from your monitoring tools.
Local ephemeral storage
Kubernetes v1.25 [stable]
Nodes have local ephemeral storage, backed by locally-attached writeable devices or, sometimes, by RAM. "Ephemeral" means that there is no long-term guarantee about durability.
Pods use ephemeral local storage for scratch space, caching, and for logs.
The kubelet can provide scratch space to Pods using local ephemeral storage to
mount emptyDir
volumes into containers.
The kubelet also uses this kind of storage to hold node-level container logs, container images, and the writable layers of running containers.
To make the resource quota work on ephemeral-storage, two things need to be done:
- An admin sets the resource quota for ephemeral-storage in a namespace.
- A user needs to specify limits for the ephemeral-storage resource in the Pod spec.
If the user doesn't specify the ephemeral-storage resource limit in the Pod spec, the resource quota is not enforced on ephemeral-storage.
Kubernetes lets you track, reserve and limit the amount of ephemeral local storage a Pod can consume.
Configurations for local ephemeral storage
Kubernetes supports two ways to configure local ephemeral storage on a node:
In this configuration, you place all different kinds of ephemeral local data
(emptyDir
volumes, writeable layers, container images, logs) into one filesystem.
The most effective way to configure the kubelet means dedicating this filesystem
to Kubernetes (kubelet) data.
The kubelet also writes node-level container logs and treats these similarly to ephemeral local storage.
The kubelet writes logs to files inside its configured log directory (/var/log
by default); and has a base directory for other locally stored data
(/var/lib/kubelet
by default).
Typically, both /var/lib/kubelet
and /var/log
are on the system root filesystem,
and the kubelet is designed with that layout in mind.
Your node can have as many other filesystems, not used for Kubernetes, as you like.
You have a filesystem on the node that you're using for ephemeral data that
comes from running Pods: logs, and emptyDir
volumes. You can use this filesystem
for other data (for example: system logs not related to Kubernetes); it can even
be the root filesystem.
The kubelet also writes node-level container logs into the first filesystem, and treats these similarly to ephemeral local storage.
You also use a separate filesystem, backed by a different logical storage device. In this configuration, the directory where you tell the kubelet to place container image layers and writeable layers is on this second filesystem.
The first filesystem does not hold any image layers or writeable layers.
Your node can have as many other filesystems, not used for Kubernetes, as you like.
The kubelet can measure how much local storage it is using. It does this provided that you have set up the node using one of the supported configurations for local ephemeral storage.
If you have a different configuration, then the kubelet does not apply resource limits for ephemeral local storage.
tmpfs
emptyDir volumes as container memory use, rather
than as local ephemeral storage.
/var/lib/kubelet
or /var/lib/containers
will not report ephemeral storage correctly.
Setting requests and limits for local ephemeral storage
You can specify ephemeral-storage
for managing local ephemeral storage. Each
container of a Pod can specify either or both of the following:
spec.containers[].resources.limits.ephemeral-storage
spec.containers[].resources.requests.ephemeral-storage
Limits and requests for ephemeral-storage
are measured in byte quantities.
You can express storage as a plain integer or as a fixed-point number using one of these suffixes:
E, P, T, G, M, k. You can also use the power-of-two equivalents: Ei, Pi, Ti, Gi,
Mi, Ki. For example, the following quantities all represent roughly the same value:
128974848
129e6
129M
123Mi
Pay attention to the case of the suffixes. If you request 400m
of ephemeral-storage, this is a request
for 0.4 bytes. Someone who types that probably meant to ask for 400 mebibytes (400Mi
)
or 400 megabytes (400M
).
In the following example, the Pod has two containers. Each container has a request of
2GiB of local ephemeral storage. Each container has a limit of 4GiB of local ephemeral
storage. Therefore, the Pod has a request of 4GiB of local ephemeral storage, and
a limit of 8GiB of local ephemeral storage. 500Mi of that limit could be
consumed by the emptyDir
volume.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: frontend
spec:
containers:
- name: app
image: images.my-company.example/app:v4
resources:
requests:
ephemeral-storage: "2Gi"
limits:
ephemeral-storage: "4Gi"
volumeMounts:
- name: ephemeral
mountPath: "/tmp"
- name: log-aggregator
image: images.my-company.example/log-aggregator:v6
resources:
requests:
ephemeral-storage: "2Gi"
limits:
ephemeral-storage: "4Gi"
volumeMounts:
- name: ephemeral
mountPath: "/tmp"
volumes:
- name: ephemeral
emptyDir:
sizeLimit: 500Mi
How Pods with ephemeral-storage requests are scheduled
When you create a Pod, the Kubernetes scheduler selects a node for the Pod to run on. Each node has a maximum amount of local ephemeral storage it can provide for Pods. For more information, see Node Allocatable.
The scheduler ensures that the sum of the resource requests of the scheduled containers is less than the capacity of the node.
Ephemeral storage consumption management
If the kubelet is managing local ephemeral storage as a resource, then the kubelet measures storage use in:
emptyDir
volumes, except tmpfsemptyDir
volumes- directories holding node-level logs
- writeable container layers
If a Pod is using more ephemeral storage than you allow it to, the kubelet sets an eviction signal that triggers Pod eviction.
For container-level isolation, if a container's writable layer and log usage exceeds its storage limit, the kubelet marks the Pod for eviction.
For pod-level isolation the kubelet works out an overall Pod storage limit by
summing the limits for the containers in that Pod. In this case, if the sum of
the local ephemeral storage usage from all containers and also the Pod's emptyDir
volumes exceeds the overall Pod storage limit, then the kubelet also marks the Pod
for eviction.
If the kubelet is not measuring local ephemeral storage, then a Pod that exceeds its local storage limit will not be evicted for breaching local storage resource limits.
However, if the filesystem space for writeable container layers, node-level logs,
or emptyDir
volumes falls low, the node
taints itself as short on local storage
and this taint triggers eviction for any Pods that don't specifically tolerate the taint.
See the supported configurations for ephemeral local storage.
The kubelet supports different ways to measure Pod storage use:
The kubelet performs regular, scheduled checks that scan each
emptyDir
volume, container log directory, and writeable container layer.
The scan measures how much space is used.
In this mode, the kubelet does not track open file descriptors for deleted files.
If you (or a container) create a file inside an emptyDir
volume,
something then opens that file, and you delete the file while it is
still open, then the inode for the deleted file stays until you close
that file but the kubelet does not categorize the space as in use.
Kubernetes v1.15 [alpha]
Project quotas are an operating-system level feature for managing
storage use on filesystems. With Kubernetes, you can enable project
quotas for monitoring storage use. Make sure that the filesystem
backing the emptyDir
volumes, on the node, provides project quota support.
For example, XFS and ext4fs offer project quotas.
Kubernetes uses project IDs starting from 1048576
. The IDs in use are
registered in /etc/projects
and /etc/projid
. If project IDs in
this range are used for other purposes on the system, those project
IDs must be registered in /etc/projects
and /etc/projid
so that
Kubernetes does not use them.
Quotas are faster and more accurate than directory scanning. When a directory is assigned to a project, all files created under a directory are created in that project, and the kernel merely has to keep track of how many blocks are in use by files in that project. If a file is created and deleted, but has an open file descriptor, it continues to consume space. Quota tracking records that space accurately whereas directory scans overlook the storage used by deleted files.
If you want to use project quotas, you should:
-
Enable the
LocalStorageCapacityIsolationFSQuotaMonitoring=true
feature gate using thefeatureGates
field in the kubelet configuration or the--feature-gates
command line flag. -
Ensure that the root filesystem (or optional runtime filesystem) has project quotas enabled. All XFS filesystems support project quotas. For ext4 filesystems, you need to enable the project quota tracking feature while the filesystem is not mounted.
# For ext4, with /dev/block-device not mounted sudo tune2fs -O project -Q prjquota /dev/block-device
-
Ensure that the root filesystem (or optional runtime filesystem) is mounted with project quotas enabled. For both XFS and ext4fs, the mount option is named
prjquota
.
Extended resources
Extended resources are fully-qualified resource names outside the
kubernetes.io
domain. They allow cluster operators to advertise and users to
consume the non-Kubernetes-built-in resources.
There are two steps required to use Extended Resources. First, the cluster operator must advertise an Extended Resource. Second, users must request the Extended Resource in Pods.
Managing extended resources
Node-level extended resources
Node-level extended resources are tied to nodes.
Device plugin managed resources
See Device Plugin for how to advertise device plugin managed resources on each node.
Other resources
To advertise a new node-level extended resource, the cluster operator can
submit a PATCH
HTTP request to the API server to specify the available
quantity in the status.capacity
for a node in the cluster. After this
operation, the node's status.capacity
will include a new resource. The
status.allocatable
field is updated automatically with the new resource
asynchronously by the kubelet.
Because the scheduler uses the node's status.allocatable
value when
evaluating Pod fitness, the scheduler only takes account of the new value after
that asynchronous update. There may be a short delay between patching the
node capacity with a new resource and the time when the first Pod that requests
the resource can be scheduled on that node.
Example:
Here is an example showing how to use curl
to form an HTTP request that
advertises five "example.com/foo" resources on node k8s-node-1
whose master
is k8s-master
.
curl --header "Content-Type: application/json-patch+json" \
--request PATCH \
--data '[{"op": "add", "path": "/status/capacity/example.com~1foo", "value": "5"}]' \
http://k8s-master:8080/api/v1/nodes/k8s-node-1/status
~1
is the encoding for the character /
in the patch path. The operation path value in JSON-Patch is interpreted as a
JSON-Pointer. For more details, see
IETF RFC 6901, section 3.
Cluster-level extended resources
Cluster-level extended resources are not tied to nodes. They are usually managed by scheduler extenders, which handle the resource consumption and resource quota.
You can specify the extended resources that are handled by scheduler extenders in scheduler configuration
Example:
The following configuration for a scheduler policy indicates that the cluster-level extended resource "example.com/foo" is handled by the scheduler extender.
- The scheduler sends a Pod to the scheduler extender only if the Pod requests "example.com/foo".
- The
ignoredByScheduler
field specifies that the scheduler does not check the "example.com/foo" resource in itsPodFitsResources
predicate.
{
"kind": "Policy",
"apiVersion": "v1",
"extenders": [
{
"urlPrefix":"<extender-endpoint>",
"bindVerb": "bind",
"managedResources": [
{
"name": "example.com/foo",
"ignoredByScheduler": true
}
]
}
]
}
Consuming extended resources
Users can consume extended resources in Pod specs like CPU and memory. The scheduler takes care of the resource accounting so that no more than the available amount is simultaneously allocated to Pods.
The API server restricts quantities of extended resources to whole numbers.
Examples of valid quantities are 3
, 3000m
and 3Ki
. Examples of
invalid quantities are 0.5
and 1500m
.
kubernetes.io
which is reserved.
To consume an extended resource in a Pod, include the resource name as a key
in the spec.containers[].resources.limits
map in the container spec.
A Pod is scheduled only if all of the resource requests are satisfied, including
CPU, memory and any extended resources. The Pod remains in the PENDING
state
as long as the resource request cannot be satisfied.
Example:
The Pod below requests 2 CPUs and 1 "example.com/foo" (an extended resource).
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: my-pod
spec:
containers:
- name: my-container
image: myimage
resources:
requests:
cpu: 2
example.com/foo: 1
limits:
example.com/foo: 1
PID limiting
Process ID (PID) limits allow for the configuration of a kubelet to limit the number of PIDs that a given Pod can consume. See PID Limiting for information.
Troubleshooting
My Pods are pending with event message FailedScheduling
If the scheduler cannot find any node where a Pod can fit, the Pod remains
unscheduled until a place can be found. An
Event is produced
each time the scheduler fails to find a place for the Pod. You can use kubectl
to view the events for a Pod; for example:
kubectl describe pod frontend | grep -A 9999999999 Events
Events:
Type Reason Age From Message
---- ------ ---- ---- -------
Warning FailedScheduling 23s default-scheduler 0/42 nodes available: insufficient cpu
In the preceding example, the Pod named "frontend" fails to be scheduled due to insufficient CPU resource on any node. Similar error messages can also suggest failure due to insufficient memory (PodExceedsFreeMemory). In general, if a Pod is pending with a message of this type, there are several things to try:
- Add more nodes to the cluster.
- Terminate unneeded Pods to make room for pending Pods.
- Check that the Pod is not larger than all the nodes. For example, if all the
nodes have a capacity of
cpu: 1
, then a Pod with a request ofcpu: 1.1
will never be scheduled. - Check for node taints. If most of your nodes are tainted, and the new Pod does not tolerate that taint, the scheduler only considers placements onto the remaining nodes that don't have that taint.
You can check node capacities and amounts allocated with the
kubectl describe nodes
command. For example:
kubectl describe nodes e2e-test-node-pool-4lw4
Name: e2e-test-node-pool-4lw4
[ ... lines removed for clarity ...]
Capacity:
cpu: 2
memory: 7679792Ki
pods: 110
Allocatable:
cpu: 1800m
memory: 7474992Ki
pods: 110
[ ... lines removed for clarity ...]
Non-terminated Pods: (5 in total)
Namespace Name CPU Requests CPU Limits Memory Requests Memory Limits
--------- ---- ------------ ---------- --------------- -------------
kube-system fluentd-gcp-v1.38-28bv1 100m (5%) 0 (0%) 200Mi (2%) 200Mi (2%)
kube-system kube-dns-3297075139-61lj3 260m (13%) 0 (0%) 100Mi (1%) 170Mi (2%)
kube-system kube-proxy-e2e-test-... 100m (5%) 0 (0%) 0 (0%) 0 (0%)
kube-system monitoring-influxdb-grafana-v4-z1m12 200m (10%) 200m (10%) 600Mi (8%) 600Mi (8%)
kube-system node-problem-detector-v0.1-fj7m3 20m (1%) 200m (10%) 20Mi (0%) 100Mi (1%)
Allocated resources:
(Total limits may be over 100 percent, i.e., overcommitted.)
CPU Requests CPU Limits Memory Requests Memory Limits
------------ ---------- --------------- -------------
680m (34%) 400m (20%) 920Mi (11%) 1070Mi (13%)
In the preceding output, you can see that if a Pod requests more than 1.120 CPUs or more than 6.23Gi of memory, that Pod will not fit on the node.
By looking at the “Pods” section, you can see which Pods are taking up space on the node.
The amount of resources available to Pods is less than the node capacity because
system daemons use a portion of the available resources. Within the Kubernetes API,
each Node has a .status.allocatable
field
(see NodeStatus
for details).
The .status.allocatable
field describes the amount of resources that are available
to Pods on that node (for example: 15 virtual CPUs and 7538 MiB of memory).
For more information on node allocatable resources in Kubernetes, see
Reserve Compute Resources for System Daemons.
You can configure resource quotas to limit the total amount of resources that a namespace can consume. Kubernetes enforces quotas for objects in particular namespace when there is a ResourceQuota in that namespace. For example, if you assign specific namespaces to different teams, you can add ResourceQuotas into those namespaces. Setting resource quotas helps to prevent one team from using so much of any resource that this over-use affects other teams.
You should also consider what access you grant to that namespace: full write access to a namespace allows someone with that access to remove any resource, including a configured ResourceQuota.
My container is terminated
Your container might get terminated because it is resource-starved. To check
whether a container is being killed because it is hitting a resource limit, call
kubectl describe pod
on the Pod of interest:
kubectl describe pod simmemleak-hra99
The output is similar to:
Name: simmemleak-hra99
Namespace: default
Image(s): saadali/simmemleak
Node: kubernetes-node-tf0f/10.240.216.66
Labels: name=simmemleak
Status: Running
Reason:
Message:
IP: 10.244.2.75
Containers:
simmemleak:
Image: saadali/simmemleak:latest
Limits:
cpu: 100m
memory: 50Mi
State: Running
Started: Tue, 07 Jul 2019 12:54:41 -0700
Last State: Terminated
Reason: OOMKilled
Exit Code: 137
Started: Fri, 07 Jul 2019 12:54:30 -0700
Finished: Fri, 07 Jul 2019 12:54:33 -0700
Ready: False
Restart Count: 5
Conditions:
Type Status
Ready False
Events:
Type Reason Age From Message
---- ------ ---- ---- -------
Normal Scheduled 42s default-scheduler Successfully assigned simmemleak-hra99 to kubernetes-node-tf0f
Normal Pulled 41s kubelet Container image "saadali/simmemleak:latest" already present on machine
Normal Created 41s kubelet Created container simmemleak
Normal Started 40s kubelet Started container simmemleak
Normal Killing 32s kubelet Killing container with id ead3fb35-5cf5-44ed-9ae1-488115be66c6: Need to kill Pod
In the preceding example, the Restart Count: 5
indicates that the simmemleak
container in the Pod was terminated and restarted five times (so far).
The OOMKilled
reason shows that the container tried to use more memory than its limit.
Your next step might be to check the application code for a memory leak. If you find that the application is behaving how you expect, consider setting a higher memory limit (and possibly request) for that container.
What's next
- Get hands-on experience assigning Memory resources to containers and Pods.
- Get hands-on experience assigning CPU resources to containers and Pods.
- Read how the API reference defines a container and its resource requirements
- Read about project quotas in XFS
- Read more about the kube-scheduler configuration reference (v1)
- Read more about Quality of Service classes for Pods
7.5 - Organizing Cluster Access Using kubeconfig Files
Use kubeconfig files to organize information about clusters, users, namespaces, and
authentication mechanisms. The kubectl
command-line tool uses kubeconfig files to
find the information it needs to choose a cluster and communicate with the API server
of a cluster.
kubeconfig
.
By default, kubectl
looks for a file named config
in the $HOME/.kube
directory.
You can specify other kubeconfig files by setting the KUBECONFIG
environment
variable or by setting the
--kubeconfig
flag.
For step-by-step instructions on creating and specifying kubeconfig files, see Configure Access to Multiple Clusters.
Supporting multiple clusters, users, and authentication mechanisms
Suppose you have several clusters, and your users and components authenticate in a variety of ways. For example:
- A running kubelet might authenticate using certificates.
- A user might authenticate using tokens.
- Administrators might have sets of certificates that they provide to individual users.
With kubeconfig files, you can organize your clusters, users, and namespaces. You can also define contexts to quickly and easily switch between clusters and namespaces.
Context
A context element in a kubeconfig file is used to group access parameters
under a convenient name. Each context has three parameters: cluster, namespace, and user.
By default, the kubectl
command-line tool uses parameters from
the current context to communicate with the cluster.
To choose the current context:
kubectl config use-context
The KUBECONFIG environment variable
The KUBECONFIG
environment variable holds a list of kubeconfig files.
For Linux and Mac, the list is colon-delimited. For Windows, the list
is semicolon-delimited. The KUBECONFIG
environment variable is not
required. If the KUBECONFIG
environment variable doesn't exist,
kubectl
uses the default kubeconfig file, $HOME/.kube/config
.
If the KUBECONFIG
environment variable does exist, kubectl
uses
an effective configuration that is the result of merging the files
listed in the KUBECONFIG
environment variable.
Merging kubeconfig files
To see your configuration, enter this command:
kubectl config view
As described previously, the output might be from a single kubeconfig file, or it might be the result of merging several kubeconfig files.
Here are the rules that kubectl
uses when it merges kubeconfig files:
-
If the
--kubeconfig
flag is set, use only the specified file. Do not merge. Only one instance of this flag is allowed.Otherwise, if the
KUBECONFIG
environment variable is set, use it as a list of files that should be merged. Merge the files listed in theKUBECONFIG
environment variable according to these rules:- Ignore empty filenames.
- Produce errors for files with content that cannot be deserialized.
- The first file to set a particular value or map key wins.
- Never change the value or map key.
Example: Preserve the context of the first file to set
current-context
. Example: If two files specify ared-user
, use only values from the first file'sred-user
. Even if the second file has non-conflicting entries underred-user
, discard them.
For an example of setting the
KUBECONFIG
environment variable, see Setting the KUBECONFIG environment variable.Otherwise, use the default kubeconfig file,
$HOME/.kube/config
, with no merging. -
Determine the context to use based on the first hit in this chain:
- Use the
--context
command-line flag if it exists. - Use the
current-context
from the merged kubeconfig files.
An empty context is allowed at this point.
- Use the
-
Determine the cluster and user. At this point, there might or might not be a context. Determine the cluster and user based on the first hit in this chain, which is run twice: once for user and once for cluster:
- Use a command-line flag if it exists:
--user
or--cluster
. - If the context is non-empty, take the user or cluster from the context.
The user and cluster can be empty at this point.
- Use a command-line flag if it exists:
-
Determine the actual cluster information to use. At this point, there might or might not be cluster information. Build each piece of the cluster information based on this chain; the first hit wins:
- Use command line flags if they exist:
--server
,--certificate-authority
,--insecure-skip-tls-verify
. - If any cluster information attributes exist from the merged kubeconfig files, use them.
- If there is no server location, fail.
- Use command line flags if they exist:
-
Determine the actual user information to use. Build user information using the same rules as cluster information, except allow only one authentication technique per user:
- Use command line flags if they exist:
--client-certificate
,--client-key
,--username
,--password
,--token
. - Use the
user
fields from the merged kubeconfig files. - If there are two conflicting techniques, fail.
- Use command line flags if they exist:
-
For any information still missing, use default values and potentially prompt for authentication information.
File references
File and path references in a kubeconfig file are relative to the location of the kubeconfig file.
File references on the command line are relative to the current working directory.
In $HOME/.kube/config
, relative paths are stored relatively, and absolute paths
are stored absolutely.
Proxy
You can configure kubectl
to use a proxy per cluster using proxy-url
in your kubeconfig file, like this:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Config
clusters:
- cluster:
proxy-url: http://proxy.example.org:3128
server: https://k8s.example.org/k8s/clusters/c-xxyyzz
name: development
users:
- name: developer
contexts:
- context:
name: development
What's next
7.6 - Resource Management for Windows nodes
This page outlines the differences in how resources are managed between Linux and Windows.
On Linux nodes, cgroups are used as a pod boundary for resource control. Containers are created within that boundary for network, process and file system isolation. The Linux cgroup APIs can be used to gather CPU, I/O, and memory use statistics.
In contrast, Windows uses a job object per container with a system namespace filter to contain all processes in a container and provide logical isolation from the host. (Job objects are a Windows process isolation mechanism and are different from what Kubernetes refers to as a Job).
There is no way to run a Windows container without the namespace filtering in place. This means that system privileges cannot be asserted in the context of the host, and thus privileged containers are not available on Windows. Containers cannot assume an identity from the host because the Security Account Manager (SAM) is separate.
Memory management
Windows does not have an out-of-memory process killer as Linux does. Windows always treats all user-mode memory allocations as virtual, and pagefiles are mandatory.
Windows nodes do not overcommit memory for processes. The net effect is that Windows won't reach out of memory conditions the same way Linux does, and processes page to disk instead of being subject to out of memory (OOM) termination. If memory is over-provisioned and all physical memory is exhausted, then paging can slow down performance.
CPU management
Windows can limit the amount of CPU time allocated for different processes but cannot guarantee a minimum amount of CPU time.
On Windows, the kubelet supports a command-line flag to set the
scheduling priority of the
kubelet process: --windows-priorityclass
. This flag allows the kubelet process to get
more CPU time slices when compared to other processes running on the Windows host.
More information on the allowable values and their meaning is available at
Windows Priority Classes.
To ensure that running Pods do not starve the kubelet of CPU cycles, set this flag to ABOVE_NORMAL_PRIORITY_CLASS
or above.
Resource reservation
To account for memory and CPU used by the operating system, the container runtime, and by
Kubernetes host processes such as the kubelet, you can (and should) reserve
memory and CPU resources with the --kube-reserved
and/or --system-reserved
kubelet flags.
On Windows these values are only used to calculate the node's
allocatable resources.
As you deploy workloads, set resource memory and CPU limits on containers.
This also subtracts from NodeAllocatable
and helps the cluster-wide scheduler in determining which pods to place on which nodes.
Scheduling pods without limits may over-provision the Windows nodes and in extreme cases can cause the nodes to become unhealthy.
On Windows, a good practice is to reserve at least 2GiB of memory.
To determine how much CPU to reserve, identify the maximum pod density for each node and monitor the CPU usage of the system services running there, then choose a value that meets your workload needs.
8 - Security
This section of the Kubernetes documentation aims to help you learn to run workloads more securely, and about the essential aspects of keeping a Kubernetes cluster secure.
Kubernetes is based on a cloud-native architecture, and draws on advice from the CNCF about good practice for cloud native information security.
Read Cloud Native Security and Kubernetes for the broader context about how to secure your cluster and the applications that you're running on it.
Kubernetes security mechanisms
Kubernetes includes several APIs and security controls, as well as ways to define policies that can form part of how you manage information security.
Control plane protection
A key security mechanism for any Kubernetes cluster is to control access to the Kubernetes API.
Kubernetes expects you to configure and use TLS to provide data encryption in transit within the control plane, and between the control plane and its clients. You can also enable encryption at rest for the data stored within Kubernetes control plane; this is separate from using encryption at rest for your own workloads' data, which might also be a good idea.
Secrets
The Secret API provides basic protection for configuration values that require confidentiality.
Workload protection
Enforce Pod security standards to ensure that Pods and their containers are isolated appropriately. You can also use RuntimeClasses to define custom isolation if you need it.
Network policies let you control network traffic between Pods, or between Pods and the network outside your cluster.
You can deploy security controls from the wider ecosystem to implement preventative or detective controls around Pods, their containers, and the images that run in them.
Auditing
Kubernetes audit logging provides a security-relevant, chronological set of records documenting the sequence of actions in a cluster. The cluster audits the activities generated by users, by applications that use the Kubernetes API, and by the control plane itself.
Cloud provider security
If you are running a Kubernetes cluster on your own hardware or a different cloud provider, consult your documentation for security best practices. Here are links to some of the popular cloud providers' security documentation:
IaaS Provider | Link |
---|---|
Alibaba Cloud | https://www.alibabacloud.com/trust-center |
Amazon Web Services | https://aws.amazon.com/security |
Google Cloud Platform | https://cloud.google.com/security |
Huawei Cloud | https://www.huaweicloud.com/intl/en-us/securecenter/overallsafety |
IBM Cloud | https://www.ibm.com/cloud/security |
Microsoft Azure | https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/security/azure-security |
Oracle Cloud Infrastructure | https://www.oracle.com/security |
VMware vSphere | https://www.vmware.com/security/hardening-guides |
Policies
You can define security policies using Kubernetes-native mechanisms, such as NetworkPolicy (declarative control over network packet filtering) or ValidatingAdmisisonPolicy (declarative restrictions on what changes someone can make using the Kubernetes API).
However, you can also rely on policy implementations from the wider ecosystem around Kubernetes. Kubernetes provides extension mechanisms to let those ecosystem projects implement their own policy controls on source code review, container image approval, API access controls, networking, and more.
For more information about policy mechanisms and Kubernetes, read Policies.
What's next
Learn about related Kubernetes security topics:
- Securing your cluster
- Known vulnerabilities in Kubernetes (and links to further information)
- Data encryption in transit for the control plane
- Data encryption at rest
- Controlling Access to the Kubernetes API
- Network policies for Pods
- Secrets in Kubernetes
- Pod security standards
- RuntimeClasses
Learn the context:
Get certified:
- Certified Kubernetes Security Specialist certification and official training course.
Read more in this section:
8.1 - Cloud Native Security and Kubernetes
Kubernetes is based on a cloud-native architecture, and draws on advice from the CNCF about good practice for cloud native information security.
Read on through this page for an overview of how Kubernetes is designed to help you deploy a secure cloud native platform.
Cloud native information security
The CNCF white paper on cloud native security defines security controls and practices that are appropriate to different lifecycle phases.
Develop lifecycle phase
- Ensure the integrity of development environments.
- Design applications following good practice for information security, appropriate for your context.
- Consider end user security as part of solution design.
To achieve this, you can:
- Adopt an architecture, such as zero trust, that minimizes attack surfaces, even for internal threats.
- Define a code review process that considers security concerns.
- Build a threat model of your system or application that identifies trust boundaries. Use that to model to identify risks and to help find ways to treat those risks.
- Incorporate advanced security automation, such as fuzzing and security chaos engineering, where it's justified.
Distribute lifecycle phase
- Ensure the security of the supply chain for container images you execute.
- Ensure the security of the supply chain for the cluster and other components that execute your application. An example of another component might be an external database that your cloud-native application uses for persistence.
To achieve this, you can:
- Scan container images and other artifacts for known vulnerabilities.
- Ensure that software distribution uses encryption in transit, with a chain of trust for the software source.
- Adopt and follow processes to update dependencies when updates are available, especially in response to security announcements.
- Use validation mechanisms such as digital certificates for supply chain assurance.
- Subscribe to feeds and other mechanisms to alert you to security risks.
- Restrict access to artifacts. Place container images in a private registry that only allows authorized clients to pull images.
Deploy lifecycle phase
Ensure appropriate restrictions on what can be deployed, who can deploy it, and where it can be deployed to. You can enforce measures from the distribute phase, such as verifying the cryptographic identity of container image artifacts.
When you deploy Kubernetes, you also set the foundation for your applications' runtime environment: a Kubernetes cluster (or multiple clusters). That IT infrastructure must provide the security guarantees that higher layers expect.
Runtime lifecycle phase
The Runtime phase comprises three critical areas: compute, access, and storage.
Runtime protection: access
The Kubernetes API is what makes your cluster work. Protecting this API is key to providing effective cluster security.
Other pages in the Kubernetes documentation have more detail about how to set up specific aspects of access control. The security checklist has a set of suggested basic checks for your cluster.
Beyond that, securing your cluster means implementing effective authentication and authorization for API access. Use ServiceAccounts to provide and manage security identities for workloads and cluster components.
Kubernetes uses TLS to protect API traffic; make sure to deploy the cluster using TLS (including for traffic between nodes and the control plane), and protect the encryption keys. If you use Kubernetes' own API for CertificateSigningRequests, pay special attention to restricting misuse there.
Runtime protection: compute
Containers provide two things: isolation between different applications, and a mechanism to combine those isolated applications to run on the same host computer. Those two aspects, isolation and aggregation, mean that runtime security involves trade-offs and finding an appropriate balance.
Kubernetes relies on a container runtime to actually set up and run containers. The Kubernetes project does not recommend a specific container runtime and you should make sure that the runtime(s) that you choose meet your information security needs.
To protect your compute at runtime, you can:
-
Enforce Pod security standards for applications, to help ensure they run with only the necessary privileges.
-
Run a specialized operating system on your nodes that is designed specifically for running containerized workloads. This is typically based on a read-only operating system (immutable image) that provides only the services essential for running containers.
Container-specific operating systems help to isolate system components and present a reduced attack surface in case of a container escape.
-
Define ResourceQuotas to fairly allocate shared resources, and use mechanisms such as LimitRanges to ensure that Pods specify their resource requirements.
-
Partition workloads across different nodes. Use node isolation mechanisms, either from Kubernetes itself or from the ecosystem, to ensure that Pods with different trust contexts are run on separate sets of nodes.
-
Use a container runtime that provides security restrictions.
-
On Linux nodes, use a Linux security module such as AppArmor (beta) or seccomp.
Runtime protection: storage
To protect storage for your cluster and the applications that run there, you can:
- Integrate your cluster with an external storage plugin that provides encryption at rest for volumes.
- Enable encryption at rest for API objects.
- Protect data durability using backups. Verify that you can restore these, whenever you need to.
- Authenticate connections between cluster nodes and any network storage they rely upon.
- Implement data encryption within your own application.
For encryption keys, generating these within specialized hardware provides the best protection against disclosure risks. A hardware security module can let you perform cryptographic operations without allowing the security key to be copied elsewhere.
Networking and security
You should also consider network security measures, such as NetworkPolicy or a service mesh. Some network plugins for Kubernetes provide encryption for your cluster network, using technologies such as a virtual private network (VPN) overlay. By design, Kubernetes lets you use your own networking plugin for your cluster (if you use managed Kubernetes, the person or organization managing your cluster may have chosen a network plugin for you).
The network plugin you choose and the way you integrate it can have a strong impact on the security of information in transit.
Observability and runtime security
Kubernetes lets you extend your cluster with extra tooling. You can set up third party solutions to help you monitor or troubleshoot your applications and the clusters they are running. You also get some basic observability features built in to Kubernetes itself. Your code running in containers can generate logs, publish metrics or provide other observability data; at deploy time, you need to make sure your cluster provides an appropriate level of protection there.
If you set up a metrics dashboard or something similar, review the chain of components that populate data into that dashboard, as well as the dashboard itself. Make sure that the whole chain is designed with enough resilience and enough integrity protection that you can rely on it even during an incident where your cluster might be degraded.
Where appropriate, deploy security measures below the level of Kubernetes itself, such as cryptographically measured boot, or authenticated distribution of time (which helps ensure the fidelity of logs and audit records).
For a high assurance environment, deploy cryptographic protections to ensure that logs are both tamper-proof and confidential.
What's next
Cloud native security
- CNCF white paper on cloud native security.
- CNCF white paper on good practices for securing a software supply chain.
- Fixing the Kubernetes clusterf**k: Understanding security from the kernel up (FOSDEM 2020)
- Kubernetes Security Best Practices (Kubernetes Forum Seoul 2019)
- Towards Measured Boot Out of the Box (Linux Security Summit 2016)
Kubernetes and information security
8.2 - Pod Security Standards
The Pod Security Standards define three different policies to broadly cover the security spectrum. These policies are cumulative and range from highly-permissive to highly-restrictive. This guide outlines the requirements of each policy.
Profile | Description |
---|---|
Privileged | Unrestricted policy, providing the widest possible level of permissions. This policy allows for known privilege escalations. |
Baseline | Minimally restrictive policy which prevents known privilege escalations. Allows the default (minimally specified) Pod configuration. |
Restricted | Heavily restricted policy, following current Pod hardening best practices. |
Profile Details
Privileged
The Privileged policy is purposely-open, and entirely unrestricted. This type of policy is typically aimed at system- and infrastructure-level workloads managed by privileged, trusted users.
The Privileged policy is defined by an absence of restrictions. Allow-by-default mechanisms (such as gatekeeper) may be Privileged by default. In contrast, for a deny-by-default mechanism (such as Pod Security Policy) the Privileged policy should disable all restrictions.
Baseline
The Baseline policy is aimed at ease of adoption for common containerized workloads while preventing known privilege escalations. This policy is targeted at application operators and developers of non-critical applications. The following listed controls should be enforced/disallowed:
*
) indicate all elements in a list. For example,
spec.containers[*].securityContext
refers to the Security Context object for all defined
containers. If any of the listed containers fails to meet the requirements, the entire pod will
fail validation.
Control | Policy |
---|---|
HostProcess |
Windows pods offer the ability to run HostProcess containers which enables privileged access to the Windows node. Privileged access to the host is disallowed in the baseline policy.
FEATURE STATE:
Kubernetes v1.26 [stable]
Restricted Fields
Allowed Values
|
Host Namespaces |
Sharing the host namespaces must be disallowed. Restricted Fields
Allowed Values
|
Privileged Containers |
Privileged Pods disable most security mechanisms and must be disallowed. Restricted Fields
Allowed Values
|
Capabilities |
Adding additional capabilities beyond those listed below must be disallowed. Restricted Fields
Allowed Values
|
HostPath Volumes |
HostPath volumes must be forbidden. Restricted Fields
Allowed Values
|
Host Ports |
HostPorts should be disallowed entirely (recommended) or restricted to a known list Restricted Fields
Allowed Values
|
AppArmor |
On supported hosts, the Restricted Fields
Allowed Values
|
SELinux |
Setting the SELinux type is restricted, and setting a custom SELinux user or role option is forbidden. Restricted Fields
Allowed Values
Restricted Fields
Allowed Values
|
/proc Mount Type |
The default Restricted Fields
Allowed Values
|
Seccomp |
Seccomp profile must not be explicitly set to Restricted Fields
Allowed Values
|
Sysctls |
Sysctls can disable security mechanisms or affect all containers on a host, and should be disallowed except for an allowed "safe" subset. A sysctl is considered safe if it is namespaced in the container or the Pod, and it is isolated from other Pods or processes on the same Node. Restricted Fields
Allowed Values
|
Restricted
The Restricted policy is aimed at enforcing current Pod hardening best practices, at the expense of some compatibility. It is targeted at operators and developers of security-critical applications, as well as lower-trust users. The following listed controls should be enforced/disallowed:
*
) indicate all elements in a list. For example,
spec.containers[*].securityContext
refers to the Security Context object for all defined
containers. If any of the listed containers fails to meet the requirements, the entire pod will
fail validation.
Control | Policy |
Everything from the baseline profile. | |
Volume Types |
The restricted policy only permits the following volume types. Restricted Fields
Allowed Values Every item in thespec.volumes[*] list must set one of the following fields to a non-null value:
|
Privilege Escalation (v1.8+) |
Privilege escalation (such as via set-user-ID or set-group-ID file mode) should not be allowed. This is Linux only policy in v1.25+ Restricted Fields
Allowed Values
|
Running as Non-root |
Containers must be required to run as non-root users. Restricted Fields
Allowed Values
nil if the pod-level
spec.securityContext.runAsNonRoot is set to true .
|
Running as Non-root user (v1.23+) |
Containers must not set runAsUser to 0 Restricted Fields
Allowed Values
|
Seccomp (v1.19+) |
Seccomp profile must be explicitly set to one of the allowed values. Both the Restricted Fields
Allowed Values
nil if the pod-level
spec.securityContext.seccompProfile.type field is set appropriately.
Conversely, the pod-level field may be undefined/nil if _all_ container-
level fields are set.
|
Capabilities (v1.22+) |
Containers must drop Restricted Fields
Allowed Values
Restricted Fields
Allowed Values
|
Policy Instantiation
Decoupling policy definition from policy instantiation allows for a common understanding and consistent language of policies across clusters, independent of the underlying enforcement mechanism.
As mechanisms mature, they will be defined below on a per-policy basis. The methods of enforcement of individual policies are not defined here.
Pod Security Admission Controller
Alternatives
Other alternatives for enforcing policies are being developed in the Kubernetes ecosystem, such as:
Pod OS field
Kubernetes lets you use nodes that run either Linux or Windows. You can mix both kinds of
node in one cluster.
Windows in Kubernetes has some limitations and differentiators from Linux-based
workloads. Specifically, many of the Pod securityContext
fields
have no effect on Windows.
Restricted Pod Security Standard changes
Another important change, made in Kubernetes v1.25 is that the restricted Pod security
has been updated to use the pod.spec.os.name
field. Based on the OS name, certain policies that are specific
to a particular OS can be relaxed for the other OS.
OS-specific policy controls
Restrictions on the following controls are only required if .spec.os.name
is not windows
:
- Privilege Escalation
- Seccomp
- Linux Capabilities
User namespaces
User Namespaces are a Linux-only feature to run workloads with increased isolation. How they work together with Pod Security Standards is described in the documentation for Pods that use user namespaces.
FAQ
Why isn't there a profile between privileged and baseline?
The three profiles defined here have a clear linear progression from most secure (restricted) to least secure (privileged), and cover a broad set of workloads. Privileges required above the baseline policy are typically very application specific, so we do not offer a standard profile in this niche. This is not to say that the privileged profile should always be used in this case, but that policies in this space need to be defined on a case-by-case basis.
SIG Auth may reconsider this position in the future, should a clear need for other profiles arise.
What's the difference between a security profile and a security context?
Security Contexts configure Pods and Containers at runtime. Security contexts are defined as part of the Pod and container specifications in the Pod manifest, and represent parameters to the container runtime.
Security profiles are control plane mechanisms to enforce specific settings in the Security Context, as well as other related parameters outside the Security Context. As of July 2021, Pod Security Policies are deprecated in favor of the built-in Pod Security Admission Controller.
What about sandboxed Pods?
There is not currently an API standard that controls whether a Pod is considered sandboxed or not. Sandbox Pods may be identified by the use of a sandboxed runtime (such as gVisor or Kata Containers), but there is no standard definition of what a sandboxed runtime is.
The protections necessary for sandboxed workloads can differ from others. For example, the need to restrict privileged permissions is lessened when the workload is isolated from the underlying kernel. This allows for workloads requiring heightened permissions to still be isolated.
Additionally, the protection of sandboxed workloads is highly dependent on the method of sandboxing. As such, no single recommended profile is recommended for all sandboxed workloads.
8.3 - Pod Security Admission
Kubernetes v1.25 [stable]
The Kubernetes Pod Security Standards define different isolation levels for Pods. These standards let you define how you want to restrict the behavior of pods in a clear, consistent fashion.
Kubernetes offers a built-in Pod Security admission controller to enforce the Pod Security Standards. Pod security restrictions are applied at the namespace level when pods are created.
Built-in Pod Security admission enforcement
This page is part of the documentation for Kubernetes v1.29. If you are running a different version of Kubernetes, consult the documentation for that release.
Pod Security levels
Pod Security admission places requirements on a Pod's Security
Context and other related fields according
to the three levels defined by the Pod Security
Standards: privileged
, baseline
, and
restricted
. Refer to the Pod Security Standards
page for an in-depth look at those requirements.
Pod Security Admission labels for namespaces
Once the feature is enabled or the webhook is installed, you can configure namespaces to define the admission control mode you want to use for pod security in each namespace. Kubernetes defines a set of labels that you can set to define which of the predefined Pod Security Standard levels you want to use for a namespace. The label you select defines what action the control plane takes if a potential violation is detected:
Mode | Description |
---|---|
enforce | Policy violations will cause the pod to be rejected. |
audit | Policy violations will trigger the addition of an audit annotation to the event recorded in the audit log, but are otherwise allowed. |
warn | Policy violations will trigger a user-facing warning, but are otherwise allowed. |
A namespace can configure any or all modes, or even set a different level for different modes.
For each mode, there are two labels that determine the policy used:
# The per-mode level label indicates which policy level to apply for the mode.
#
# MODE must be one of `enforce`, `audit`, or `warn`.
# LEVEL must be one of `privileged`, `baseline`, or `restricted`.
pod-security.kubernetes.io/<MODE>: <LEVEL>
# Optional: per-mode version label that can be used to pin the policy to the
# version that shipped with a given Kubernetes minor version (for example v1.29).
#
# MODE must be one of `enforce`, `audit`, or `warn`.
# VERSION must be a valid Kubernetes minor version, or `latest`.
pod-security.kubernetes.io/<MODE>-version: <VERSION>
Check out Enforce Pod Security Standards with Namespace Labels to see example usage.
Workload resources and Pod templates
Pods are often created indirectly, by creating a workload object such as a Deployment or Job. The workload object defines a Pod template and a controller for the workload resource creates Pods based on that template. To help catch violations early, both the audit and warning modes are applied to the workload resources. However, enforce mode is not applied to workload resources, only to the resulting pod objects.
Exemptions
You can define exemptions from pod security enforcement in order to allow the creation of pods that would have otherwise been prohibited due to the policy associated with a given namespace. Exemptions can be statically configured in the Admission Controller configuration.
Exemptions must be explicitly enumerated. Requests meeting exemption criteria are ignored by the
Admission Controller (all enforce
, audit
and warn
behaviors are skipped). Exemption dimensions include:
- Usernames: requests from users with an exempt authenticated (or impersonated) username are ignored.
- RuntimeClassNames: pods and workload resources specifying an exempt runtime class name are ignored.
- Namespaces: pods and workload resources in an exempt namespace are ignored.
system:serviceaccount:kube-system:replicaset-controller
)
should generally not be exempted, as doing so would implicitly exempt any user that can create the
corresponding workload resource.
Updates to the following pod fields are exempt from policy checks, meaning that if a pod update request only changes these fields, it will not be denied even if the pod is in violation of the current policy level:
- Any metadata updates except changes to the seccomp or AppArmor annotations:
seccomp.security.alpha.kubernetes.io/pod
(deprecated)container.seccomp.security.alpha.kubernetes.io/*
(deprecated)container.apparmor.security.beta.kubernetes.io/*
- Valid updates to
.spec.activeDeadlineSeconds
- Valid updates to
.spec.tolerations
Metrics
Here are the Prometheus metrics exposed by kube-apiserver:
pod_security_errors_total
: This metric indicates the number of errors preventing normal evaluation. Non-fatal errors may result in the latest restricted profile being used for enforcement.pod_security_evaluations_total
: This metric indicates the number of policy evaluations that have occurred, not counting ignored or exempt requests during exporting.pod_security_exemptions_total
: This metric indicates the number of exempt requests, not counting ignored or out of scope requests.
What's next
- Pod Security Standards
- Enforcing Pod Security Standards
- Enforce Pod Security Standards by Configuring the Built-in Admission Controller
- Enforce Pod Security Standards with Namespace Labels
If you are running an older version of Kubernetes and want to upgrade to a version of Kubernetes that does not include PodSecurityPolicies, read migrate from PodSecurityPolicy to the Built-In PodSecurity Admission Controller.
8.4 - Service Accounts
This page introduces the ServiceAccount object in Kubernetes, providing information about how service accounts work, use cases, limitations, alternatives, and links to resources for additional guidance.
What are service accounts?
A service account is a type of non-human account that, in Kubernetes, provides a distinct identity in a Kubernetes cluster. Application Pods, system components, and entities inside and outside the cluster can use a specific ServiceAccount's credentials to identify as that ServiceAccount. This identity is useful in various situations, including authenticating to the API server or implementing identity-based security policies.
Service accounts exist as ServiceAccount objects in the API server. Service accounts have the following properties:
-
Namespaced: Each service account is bound to a Kubernetes namespace. Every namespace gets a
default
ServiceAccount upon creation. -
Lightweight: Service accounts exist in the cluster and are defined in the Kubernetes API. You can quickly create service accounts to enable specific tasks.
-
Portable: A configuration bundle for a complex containerized workload might include service account definitions for the system's components. The lightweight nature of service accounts and the namespaced identities make the configurations portable.
Service accounts are different from user accounts, which are authenticated human users in the cluster. By default, user accounts don't exist in the Kubernetes API server; instead, the API server treats user identities as opaque data. You can authenticate as a user account using multiple methods. Some Kubernetes distributions might add custom extension APIs to represent user accounts in the API server.
Description | ServiceAccount | User or group |
---|---|---|
Location | Kubernetes API (ServiceAccount object) | External |
Access control | Kubernetes RBAC or other authorization mechanisms | Kubernetes RBAC or other identity and access management mechanisms |
Intended use | Workloads, automation | People |
Default service accounts
When you create a cluster, Kubernetes automatically creates a ServiceAccount
object named default
for every namespace in your cluster. The default
service accounts in each namespace get no permissions by default other than the
default API discovery permissions
that Kubernetes grants to all authenticated principals if role-based access control (RBAC) is enabled.
If you delete the default
ServiceAccount object in a namespace, the
control plane
replaces it with a new one.
If you deploy a Pod in a namespace, and you don't
manually assign a ServiceAccount to the Pod, Kubernetes
assigns the default
ServiceAccount for that namespace to the Pod.
Use cases for Kubernetes service accounts
As a general guideline, you can use service accounts to provide identities in the following scenarios:
- Your Pods need to communicate with the Kubernetes API server, for example in
situations such as the following:
- Providing read-only access to sensitive information stored in Secrets.
- Granting cross-namespace access, such as allowing a
Pod in namespace
example
to read, list, and watch for Lease objects in thekube-node-lease
namespace.
- Your Pods need to communicate with an external service. For example, a workload Pod requires an identity for a commercially available cloud API, and the commercial provider allows configuring a suitable trust relationship.
- Authenticating to a private image registry using an
imagePullSecret
. - An external service needs to communicate with the Kubernetes API server. For example, authenticating to the cluster as part of a CI/CD pipeline.
- You use third-party security software in your cluster that relies on the ServiceAccount identity of different Pods to group those Pods into different contexts.
How to use service accounts
To use a Kubernetes service account, you do the following:
-
Create a ServiceAccount object using a Kubernetes client like
kubectl
or a manifest that defines the object. -
Grant permissions to the ServiceAccount object using an authorization mechanism such as RBAC.
-
Assign the ServiceAccount object to Pods during Pod creation.
If you're using the identity from an external service, retrieve the ServiceAccount token and use it from that service instead.
For instructions, refer to Configure Service Accounts for Pods.
Grant permissions to a ServiceAccount
You can use the built-in Kubernetes role-based access control (RBAC) mechanism to grant the minimum permissions required by each service account. You create a role, which grants access, and then bind the role to your ServiceAccount. RBAC lets you define a minimum set of permissions so that the service account permissions follow the principle of least privilege. Pods that use that service account don't get more permissions than are required to function correctly.
For instructions, refer to ServiceAccount permissions.
Cross-namespace access using a ServiceAccount
You can use RBAC to allow service accounts in one namespace to perform actions
on resources in a different namespace in the cluster. For example, consider a
scenario where you have a service account and Pod in the dev
namespace and
you want your Pod to see Jobs running in the maintenance
namespace. You could
create a Role object that grants permissions to list Job objects. Then,
you'd create a RoleBinding object in the maintenance
namespace to bind the
Role to the ServiceAccount object. Now, Pods in the dev
namespace can list
Job objects in the maintenance
namespace using that service account.
Assign a ServiceAccount to a Pod
To assign a ServiceAccount to a Pod, you set the spec.serviceAccountName
field in the Pod specification. Kubernetes then automatically provides the
credentials for that ServiceAccount to the Pod. In v1.22 and later, Kubernetes
gets a short-lived, automatically rotating token using the TokenRequest
API and mounts the token as a
projected volume.
By default, Kubernetes provides the Pod
with the credentials for an assigned ServiceAccount, whether that is the
default
ServiceAccount or a custom ServiceAccount that you specify.
To prevent Kubernetes from automatically injecting
credentials for a specified ServiceAccount or the default
ServiceAccount, set the
automountServiceAccountToken
field in your Pod specification to false
.
In versions earlier than 1.22, Kubernetes provides a long-lived, static token to the Pod as a Secret.
Manually retrieve ServiceAccount credentials
If you need the credentials for a ServiceAccount to mount in a non-standard location, or for an audience that isn't the API server, use one of the following methods:
- TokenRequest API (recommended): Request a short-lived service account token from within your own application code. The token expires automatically and can rotate upon expiration. If you have a legacy application that is not aware of Kubernetes, you could use a sidecar container within the same pod to fetch these tokens and make them available to the application workload.
- Token Volume Projection (also recommended): In Kubernetes v1.20 and later, use the Pod specification to tell the kubelet to add the service account token to the Pod as a projected volume. Projected tokens expire automatically, and the kubelet rotates the token before it expires.
- Service Account Token Secrets
(not recommended): You can mount service account tokens as Kubernetes
Secrets in Pods. These tokens don't expire and don't rotate.
This method is not recommended, especially at scale, because of the risks associated
with static, long-lived credentials. In Kubernetes v1.24 and later, the
LegacyServiceAccountTokenNoAutoGeneration feature gate
prevents Kubernetes from automatically creating these tokens for
ServiceAccounts.
LegacyServiceAccountTokenNoAutoGeneration
is enabled by default; in other words, Kubernetes does not create these tokens.
For applications running outside your Kubernetes cluster, you might be considering
creating a long-lived ServiceAccount token that is stored in a Secret. This allows authentication, but the Kubernetes project recommends you avoid this approach.
Long-lived bearer tokens represent a security risk as, once disclosed, the token
can be misused. Instead, consider using an alternative. For example, your external
application can authenticate using a well-protected private key and
a certificate,
or using a custom mechanism such as an authentication webhook that you implement yourself.
You can also use TokenRequest to obtain short-lived tokens for your external application.
Restricting access to Secrets
Kubernetes provides an annotation called kubernetes.io/enforce-mountable-secrets
that you can add to your ServiceAccounts. When this annotation is applied,
the ServiceAccount's secrets can only be mounted on specified types of resources,
enhancing the security posture of your cluster.
You can add the annotation to a ServiceAccount using a manifest:
apiVersion: v1
kind: ServiceAccount
metadata:
annotations:
kubernetes.io/enforce-mountable-secrets: "true"
name: my-serviceaccount
namespace: my-namespace
When this annotation is set to "true", the Kubernetes control plane ensures that the Secrets from this ServiceAccount are subject to certain mounting restrictions.
- The name of each Secret that is mounted as a volume in a Pod must appear in the
secrets
field of the Pod's ServiceAccount. - The name of each Secret referenced using
envFrom
in a Pod must also appear in thesecrets
field of the Pod's ServiceAccount. - The name of each Secret referenced using
imagePullSecrets
in a Pod must also appear in thesecrets
field of the Pod's ServiceAccount.
By understanding and enforcing these restrictions, cluster administrators can maintain a tighter security profile and ensure that secrets are accessed only by the appropriate resources.
Authenticating service account credentials
ServiceAccounts use signed
JSON Web Tokens (JWTs)
to authenticate to the Kubernetes API server, and to any other system where a
trust relationship exists. Depending on how the token was issued
(either time-limited using a TokenRequest
or using a legacy mechanism with
a Secret), a ServiceAccount token might also have an expiry time, an audience,
and a time after which the token starts being valid. When a client that is
acting as a ServiceAccount tries to communicate with the Kubernetes API server,
the client includes an Authorization: Bearer <token>
header with the HTTP
request. The API server checks the validity of that bearer token as follows:
- Checks the token signature.
- Checks whether the token has expired.
- Checks whether object references in the token claims are currently valid.
- Checks whether the token is currently valid.
- Checks the audience claims.
The TokenRequest API produces bound tokens for a ServiceAccount. This binding is linked to the lifetime of the client, such as a Pod, that is acting as that ServiceAccount. See Token Volume Projection for an example of a bound pod service account token's JWT schema and payload.
For tokens issued using the TokenRequest
API, the API server also checks that
the specific object reference that is using the ServiceAccount still exists,
matching by the unique ID of that
object. For legacy tokens that are mounted as Secrets in Pods, the API server
checks the token against the Secret.
For more information about the authentication process, refer to Authentication.
Authenticating service account credentials in your own code
If you have services of your own that need to validate Kubernetes service account credentials, you can use the following methods:
- TokenReview API (recommended)
- OIDC discovery
The Kubernetes project recommends that you use the TokenReview API, because this method invalidates tokens that are bound to API objects such as Secrets, ServiceAccounts, Pods or Nodes when those objects are deleted. For example, if you delete the Pod that contains a projected ServiceAccount token, the cluster invalidates that token immediately and a TokenReview immediately fails. If you use OIDC validation instead, your clients continue to treat the token as valid until the token reaches its expiration timestamp.
Your application should always define the audience that it accepts, and should check that the token's audiences match the audiences that the application expects. This helps to minimize the scope of the token so that it can only be used in your application and nowhere else.
Alternatives
- Issue your own tokens using another mechanism, and then use Webhook Token Authentication to validate bearer tokens using your own validation service.
- Provide your own identities to Pods.
-
Use the SPIFFE CSI driver plugin to provide SPIFFE SVIDs as X.509 certificate pairs to Pods.
🛇 This item links to a third party project or product that is not part of Kubernetes itself. More information -
Use a service mesh such as Istio to provide certificates to Pods.
-
- Authenticate from outside the cluster to the API server without using service account tokens:
- Configure the API server to accept OpenID Connect (OIDC) tokens from your identity provider.
- Use service accounts or user accounts created using an external Identity and Access Management (IAM) service, such as from a cloud provider, to authenticate to your cluster.
- Use the CertificateSigningRequest API with client certificates.
- Configure the kubelet to retrieve credentials from an image registry.
- Use a Device Plugin to access a virtual Trusted Platform Module (TPM), which then allows authentication using a private key.
What's next
- Learn how to manage your ServiceAccounts as a cluster administrator.
- Learn how to assign a ServiceAccount to a Pod.
- Read the ServiceAccount API reference.
8.5 - Pod Security Policies
Removed feature
PodSecurityPolicy was deprecated in Kubernetes v1.21, and removed from Kubernetes in v1.25.Instead of using PodSecurityPolicy, you can enforce similar restrictions on Pods using either or both:
- Pod Security Admission
- a 3rd party admission plugin, that you deploy and configure yourself
For a migration guide, see Migrate from PodSecurityPolicy to the Built-In PodSecurity Admission Controller. For more information on the removal of this API, see PodSecurityPolicy Deprecation: Past, Present, and Future.
If you are not running Kubernetes v1.29, check the documentation for your version of Kubernetes.
8.6 - Security For Windows Nodes
This page describes security considerations and best practices specific to the Windows operating system.
Protection for Secret data on nodes
On Windows, data from Secrets are written out in clear text onto the node's local storage (as compared to using tmpfs / in-memory filesystems on Linux). As a cluster operator, you should take both of the following additional measures:
- Use file ACLs to secure the Secrets' file location.
- Apply volume-level encryption using BitLocker.
Container users
RunAsUsername can be specified for Windows Pods or containers to execute the container processes as specific user. This is roughly equivalent to RunAsUser.
Windows containers offer two default user accounts, ContainerUser and ContainerAdministrator. The differences between these two user accounts are covered in When to use ContainerAdmin and ContainerUser user accounts within Microsoft's Secure Windows containers documentation.
Local users can be added to container images during the container build process.
- Nano Server based images run as
ContainerUser
by default - Server Core based images run as
ContainerAdministrator
by default
Windows containers can also run as Active Directory identities by utilizing Group Managed Service Accounts
Pod-level security isolation
Linux-specific pod security context mechanisms (such as SELinux, AppArmor, Seccomp, or custom POSIX capabilities) are not supported on Windows nodes.
Privileged containers are not supported on Windows. Instead HostProcess containers can be used on Windows to perform many of the tasks performed by privileged containers on Linux.
8.7 - Controlling Access to the Kubernetes API
This page provides an overview of controlling access to the Kubernetes API.
Users access the Kubernetes API using kubectl
,
client libraries, or by making REST requests. Both human users and
Kubernetes service accounts can be
authorized for API access.
When a request reaches the API, it goes through several stages, illustrated in the
following diagram:
Transport security
By default, the Kubernetes API server listens on port 6443 on the first non-localhost
network interface, protected by TLS. In a typical production Kubernetes cluster, the
API serves on port 443. The port can be changed with the --secure-port
, and the
listening IP address with the --bind-address
flag.
The API server presents a certificate. This certificate may be signed using
a private certificate authority (CA), or based on a public key infrastructure linked
to a generally recognized CA. The certificate and corresponding private key can be set
by using the --tls-cert-file
and --tls-private-key-file
flags.
If your cluster uses a private certificate authority, you need a copy of that CA
certificate configured into your ~/.kube/config
on the client, so that you can
trust the connection and be confident it was not intercepted.
Your client can present a TLS client certificate at this stage.
Authentication
Once TLS is established, the HTTP request moves to the Authentication step. This is shown as step 1 in the diagram. The cluster creation script or cluster admin configures the API server to run one or more Authenticator modules. Authenticators are described in more detail in Authentication.
The input to the authentication step is the entire HTTP request; however, it typically examines the headers and/or client certificate.
Authentication modules include client certificates, password, and plain tokens, bootstrap tokens, and JSON Web Tokens (used for service accounts).
Multiple authentication modules can be specified, in which case each one is tried in sequence, until one of them succeeds.
If the request cannot be authenticated, it is rejected with HTTP status code 401.
Otherwise, the user is authenticated as a specific username
, and the user name
is available to subsequent steps to use in their decisions. Some authenticators
also provide the group memberships of the user, while other authenticators
do not.
While Kubernetes uses usernames for access control decisions and in request logging,
it does not have a User
object nor does it store usernames or other information about
users in its API.
Authorization
After the request is authenticated as coming from a specific user, the request must be authorized. This is shown as step 2 in the diagram.
A request must include the username of the requester, the requested action, and the object affected by the action. The request is authorized if an existing policy declares that the user has permissions to complete the requested action.
For example, if Bob has the policy below, then he can read pods only in the namespace projectCaribou
:
{
"apiVersion": "abac.authorization.kubernetes.io/v1beta1",
"kind": "Policy",
"spec": {
"user": "bob",
"namespace": "projectCaribou",
"resource": "pods",
"readonly": true
}
}
If Bob makes the following request, the request is authorized because he is
allowed to read objects in the projectCaribou
namespace:
{
"apiVersion": "authorization.k8s.io/v1beta1",
"kind": "SubjectAccessReview",
"spec": {
"resourceAttributes": {
"namespace": "projectCaribou",
"verb": "get",
"group": "unicorn.example.org",
"resource": "pods"
}
}
}
If Bob makes a request to write (create
or update
) to the objects in the
projectCaribou
namespace, his authorization is denied. If Bob makes a request
to read (get
) objects in a different namespace such as projectFish
, then his authorization is denied.
Kubernetes authorization requires that you use common REST attributes to interact with existing organization-wide or cloud-provider-wide access control systems. It is important to use REST formatting because these control systems might interact with other APIs besides the Kubernetes API.
Kubernetes supports multiple authorization modules, such as ABAC mode, RBAC Mode, and Webhook mode. When an administrator creates a cluster, they configure the authorization modules that should be used in the API server. If more than one authorization modules are configured, Kubernetes checks each module, and if any module authorizes the request, then the request can proceed. If all of the modules deny the request, then the request is denied (HTTP status code 403).
To learn more about Kubernetes authorization, including details about creating policies using the supported authorization modules, see Authorization.
Admission control
Admission Control modules are software modules that can modify or reject requests. In addition to the attributes available to Authorization modules, Admission Control modules can access the contents of the object that is being created or modified.
Admission controllers act on requests that create, modify, delete, or connect to (proxy) an object. Admission controllers do not act on requests that merely read objects. When multiple admission controllers are configured, they are called in order.
This is shown as step 3 in the diagram.
Unlike Authentication and Authorization modules, if any admission controller module rejects, then the request is immediately rejected.
In addition to rejecting objects, admission controllers can also set complex defaults for fields.
The available Admission Control modules are described in Admission Controllers.
Once a request passes all admission controllers, it is validated using the validation routines for the corresponding API object, and then written to the object store (shown as step 4).
Auditing
Kubernetes auditing provides a security-relevant, chronological set of records documenting the sequence of actions in a cluster. The cluster audits the activities generated by users, by applications that use the Kubernetes API, and by the control plane itself.
For more information, see Auditing.
What's next
Read more documentation on authentication, authorization and API access control:
- Authenticating
- Admission Controllers
- Authorization
- Certificate Signing Requests
- including CSR approval and certificate signing
- Service accounts
You can learn about:
- how Pods can use Secrets to obtain API credentials.
8.8 - Role Based Access Control Good Practices
Kubernetes RBAC is a key security control to ensure that cluster users and workloads have only the access to resources required to execute their roles. It is important to ensure that, when designing permissions for cluster users, the cluster administrator understands the areas where privilege escalation could occur, to reduce the risk of excessive access leading to security incidents.
The good practices laid out here should be read in conjunction with the general RBAC documentation.
General good practice
Least privilege
Ideally, minimal RBAC rights should be assigned to users and service accounts. Only permissions explicitly required for their operation should be used. While each cluster will be different, some general rules that can be applied are :
- Assign permissions at the namespace level where possible. Use RoleBindings as opposed to ClusterRoleBindings to give users rights only within a specific namespace.
- Avoid providing wildcard permissions when possible, especially to all resources. As Kubernetes is an extensible system, providing wildcard access gives rights not just to all object types that currently exist in the cluster, but also to all object types which are created in the future.
- Administrators should not use
cluster-admin
accounts except where specifically needed. Providing a low privileged account with impersonation rights can avoid accidental modification of cluster resources. - Avoid adding users to the
system:masters
group. Any user who is a member of this group bypasses all RBAC rights checks and will always have unrestricted superuser access, which cannot be revoked by removing RoleBindings or ClusterRoleBindings. As an aside, if a cluster is using an authorization webhook, membership of this group also bypasses that webhook (requests from users who are members of that group are never sent to the webhook)
Minimize distribution of privileged tokens
Ideally, pods shouldn't be assigned service accounts that have been granted powerful permissions (for example, any of the rights listed under privilege escalation risks). In cases where a workload requires powerful permissions, consider the following practices:
- Limit the number of nodes running powerful pods. Ensure that any DaemonSets you run are necessary and are run with least privilege to limit the blast radius of container escapes.
- Avoid running powerful pods alongside untrusted or publicly-exposed ones. Consider using Taints and Toleration, NodeAffinity, or PodAntiAffinity to ensure pods don't run alongside untrusted or less-trusted Pods. Pay special attention to situations where less-trustworthy Pods are not meeting the Restricted Pod Security Standard.
Hardening
Kubernetes defaults to providing access which may not be required in every cluster. Reviewing
the RBAC rights provided by default can provide opportunities for security hardening.
In general, changes should not be made to rights provided to system:
accounts some options
to harden cluster rights exist:
- Review bindings for the
system:unauthenticated
group and remove them where possible, as this gives access to anyone who can contact the API server at a network level. - Avoid the default auto-mounting of service account tokens by setting
automountServiceAccountToken: false
. For more details, see using default service account token. Setting this value for a Pod will overwrite the service account setting, workloads which require service account tokens can still mount them.
Periodic review
It is vital to periodically review the Kubernetes RBAC settings for redundant entries and possible privilege escalations. If an attacker is able to create a user account with the same name as a deleted user, they can automatically inherit all the rights of the deleted user, especially the rights assigned to that user.
Kubernetes RBAC - privilege escalation risks
Within Kubernetes RBAC there are a number of privileges which, if granted, can allow a user or a service account to escalate their privileges in the cluster or affect systems outside the cluster.
This section is intended to provide visibility of the areas where cluster operators should take care, to ensure that they do not inadvertently allow for more access to clusters than intended.
Listing secrets
It is generally clear that allowing get
access on Secrets will allow a user to read their contents.
It is also important to note that list
and watch
access also effectively allow for users to reveal the Secret contents.
For example, when a List response is returned (for example, via kubectl get secrets -A -o yaml
), the response
includes the contents of all Secrets.
Workload creation
Permission to create workloads (either Pods, or workload resources that manage Pods) in a namespace implicitly grants access to many other resources in that namespace, such as Secrets, ConfigMaps, and PersistentVolumes that can be mounted in Pods. Additionally, since Pods can run as any ServiceAccount, granting permission to create workloads also implicitly grants the API access levels of any service account in that namespace.
Users who can run privileged Pods can use that access to gain node access and potentially to further elevate their privileges. Where you do not fully trust a user or other principal with the ability to create suitably secure and isolated Pods, you should enforce either the Baseline or Restricted Pod Security Standard. You can use Pod Security admission or other (third party) mechanisms to implement that enforcement.
For these reasons, namespaces should be used to separate resources requiring different levels of trust or tenancy. It is still considered best practice to follow least privilege principles and assign the minimum set of permissions, but boundaries within a namespace should be considered weak.
Persistent volume creation
If someone - or some application - is allowed to create arbitrary PersistentVolumes, that access
includes the creation of hostPath
volumes, which then means that a Pod would get access
to the underlying host filesystem(s) on the associated node. Granting that ability is a security risk.
There are many ways a container with unrestricted access to the host filesystem can escalate privileges, including reading data from other containers, and abusing the credentials of system services, such as Kubelet.
You should only allow access to create PersistentVolume objects for:
- Users (cluster operators) that need this access for their work, and who you trust.
- The Kubernetes control plane components which creates PersistentVolumes based on PersistentVolumeClaims that are configured for automatic provisioning. This is usually setup by the Kubernetes provider or by the operator when installing a CSI driver.
Where access to persistent storage is required trusted administrators should create PersistentVolumes, and constrained users should use PersistentVolumeClaims to access that storage.
Access to proxy
subresource of Nodes
Users with access to the proxy sub-resource of node objects have rights to the Kubelet API, which allows for command execution on every pod on the node(s) to which they have rights. This access bypasses audit logging and admission control, so care should be taken before granting rights to this resource.
Escalate verb
Generally, the RBAC system prevents users from creating clusterroles with more rights than the user possesses.
The exception to this is the escalate
verb. As noted in the RBAC documentation,
users with this right can effectively escalate their privileges.
Bind verb
Similar to the escalate
verb, granting users this right allows for the bypass of Kubernetes
in-built protections against privilege escalation, allowing users to create bindings to
roles with rights they do not already have.
Impersonate verb
This verb allows users to impersonate and gain the rights of other users in the cluster. Care should be taken when granting it, to ensure that excessive permissions cannot be gained via one of the impersonated accounts.
CSRs and certificate issuing
The CSR API allows for users with create
rights to CSRs and update
rights on certificatesigningrequests/approval
where the signer is kubernetes.io/kube-apiserver-client
to create new client certificates
which allow users to authenticate to the cluster. Those client certificates can have arbitrary
names including duplicates of Kubernetes system components. This will effectively allow for privilege escalation.
Token request
Users with create
rights on serviceaccounts/token
can create TokenRequests to issue
tokens for existing service accounts.
Control admission webhooks
Users with control over validatingwebhookconfigurations
or mutatingwebhookconfigurations
can control webhooks that can read any object admitted to the cluster, and in the case of
mutating webhooks, also mutate admitted objects.
Kubernetes RBAC - denial of service risks
Object creation denial-of-service
Users who have rights to create objects in a cluster may be able to create sufficient large objects to create a denial of service condition either based on the size or number of objects, as discussed in etcd used by Kubernetes is vulnerable to OOM attack. This may be specifically relevant in multi-tenant clusters if semi-trusted or untrusted users are allowed limited access to a system.
One option for mitigation of this issue would be to use resource quotas to limit the quantity of objects which can be created.
What's next
- To learn more about RBAC, see the RBAC documentation.
8.9 - Good practices for Kubernetes Secrets
In Kubernetes, a Secret is an object that stores sensitive information, such as passwords, OAuth tokens, and SSH keys.
Secrets give you more control over how sensitive information is used and reduces the risk of accidental exposure. Secret values are encoded as base64 strings and are stored unencrypted by default, but can be configured to be encrypted at rest.
A Pod can reference the Secret in a variety of ways, such as in a volume mount or as an environment variable. Secrets are designed for confidential data and ConfigMaps are designed for non-confidential data.
The following good practices are intended for both cluster administrators and application developers. Use these guidelines to improve the security of your sensitive information in Secret objects, as well as to more effectively manage your Secrets.
Cluster administrators
This section provides good practices that cluster administrators can use to improve the security of confidential information in the cluster.
Configure encryption at rest
By default, Secret objects are stored unencrypted in etcd. You should configure encryption of your Secret
data in etcd
. For instructions, refer to
Encrypt Secret Data at Rest.
Configure least-privilege access to Secrets
When planning your access control mechanism, such as Kubernetes
Role-based Access Control (RBAC),
consider the following guidelines for access to Secret
objects. You should
also follow the other guidelines in
RBAC good practices.
- Components: Restrict
watch
orlist
access to only the most privileged, system-level components. Only grantget
access for Secrets if the component's normal behavior requires it. - Humans: Restrict
get
,watch
, orlist
access to Secrets. Only allow cluster administrators to accessetcd
. This includes read-only access. For more complex access control, such as restricting access to Secrets with specific annotations, consider using third-party authorization mechanisms.
list
access to Secrets implicitly lets the subject fetch the
contents of the Secrets.
A user who can create a Pod that uses a Secret can also see the value of that Secret. Even if cluster policies do not allow a user to read the Secret directly, the same user could have access to run a Pod that then exposes the Secret. You can detect or limit the impact caused by Secret data being exposed, either intentionally or unintentionally, by a user with this access. Some recommendations include:
- Use short-lived Secrets
- Implement audit rules that alert on specific events, such as concurrent reading of multiple Secrets by a single user
Additional ServiceAccount annotations for Secret management
You can also use the kubernetes.io/enforce-mountable-secrets
annotation on
a ServiceAccount to enforce specific rules on how Secrets are used in a Pod.
For more details, see the documentation on this annotation.
Improve etcd management policies
Consider wiping or shredding the durable storage used by etcd
once it is
no longer in use.
If there are multiple etcd
instances, configure encrypted SSL/TLS
communication between the instances to protect the Secret data in transit.
Configure access to external Secrets
You can use third-party Secrets store providers to keep your confidential data outside your cluster and then configure Pods to access that information. The Kubernetes Secrets Store CSI Driver is a DaemonSet that lets the kubelet retrieve Secrets from external stores, and mount the Secrets as a volume into specific Pods that you authorize to access the data.
For a list of supported providers, refer to Providers for the Secret Store CSI Driver.
Developers
This section provides good practices for developers to use to improve the security of confidential data when building and deploying Kubernetes resources.
Restrict Secret access to specific containers
If you are defining multiple containers in a Pod, and only one of those containers needs access to a Secret, define the volume mount or environment variable configuration so that the other containers do not have access to that Secret.
Protect Secret data after reading
Applications still need to protect the value of confidential information after reading it from an environment variable or volume. For example, your application must avoid logging the secret data in the clear or transmitting it to an untrusted party.
Avoid sharing Secret manifests
If you configure a Secret through a manifest, with the secret data encoded as base64, sharing this file or checking it in to a source repository means the secret is available to everyone who can read the manifest.
8.10 - Multi-tenancy
This page provides an overview of available configuration options and best practices for cluster multi-tenancy.
Sharing clusters saves costs and simplifies administration. However, sharing clusters also presents challenges such as security, fairness, and managing noisy neighbors.
Clusters can be shared in many ways. In some cases, different applications may run in the same cluster. In other cases, multiple instances of the same application may run in the same cluster, one for each end user. All these types of sharing are frequently described using the umbrella term multi-tenancy.
While Kubernetes does not have first-class concepts of end users or tenants, it provides several features to help manage different tenancy requirements. These are discussed below.
Use cases
The first step to determining how to share your cluster is understanding your use case, so you can evaluate the patterns and tools available. In general, multi-tenancy in Kubernetes clusters falls into two broad categories, though many variations and hybrids are also possible.
Multiple teams
A common form of multi-tenancy is to share a cluster between multiple teams within an organization, each of whom may operate one or more workloads. These workloads frequently need to communicate with each other, and with other workloads located on the same or different clusters.
In this scenario, members of the teams often have direct access to Kubernetes resources via tools
such as kubectl
, or indirect access through GitOps controllers or other types of release
automation tools. There is often some level of trust between members of different teams, but
Kubernetes policies such as RBAC, quotas, and network policies are essential to safely and fairly
share clusters.
Multiple customers
The other major form of multi-tenancy frequently involves a Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) vendor running multiple instances of a workload for customers. This business model is so strongly associated with this deployment style that many people call it "SaaS tenancy." However, a better term might be "multi-customer tenancy," since SaaS vendors may also use other deployment models, and this deployment model can also be used outside of SaaS.
In this scenario, the customers do not have access to the cluster; Kubernetes is invisible from their perspective and is only used by the vendor to manage the workloads. Cost optimization is frequently a critical concern, and Kubernetes policies are used to ensure that the workloads are strongly isolated from each other.
Terminology
Tenants
When discussing multi-tenancy in Kubernetes, there is no single definition for a "tenant". Rather, the definition of a tenant will vary depending on whether multi-team or multi-customer tenancy is being discussed.
In multi-team usage, a tenant is typically a team, where each team typically deploys a small number of workloads that scales with the complexity of the service. However, the definition of "team" may itself be fuzzy, as teams may be organized into higher-level divisions or subdivided into smaller teams.
By contrast, if each team deploys dedicated workloads for each new client, they are using a multi-customer model of tenancy. In this case, a "tenant" is simply a group of users who share a single workload. This may be as large as an entire company, or as small as a single team at that company.
In many cases, the same organization may use both definitions of "tenants" in different contexts. For example, a platform team may offer shared services such as security tools and databases to multiple internal “customers” and a SaaS vendor may also have multiple teams sharing a development cluster. Finally, hybrid architectures are also possible, such as a SaaS provider using a combination of per-customer workloads for sensitive data, combined with multi-tenant shared services.
Isolation
There are several ways to design and build multi-tenant solutions with Kubernetes. Each of these methods comes with its own set of tradeoffs that impact the isolation level, implementation effort, operational complexity, and cost of service.
A Kubernetes cluster consists of a control plane which runs Kubernetes software, and a data plane consisting of worker nodes where tenant workloads are executed as pods. Tenant isolation can be applied in both the control plane and the data plane based on organizational requirements.
The level of isolation offered is sometimes described using terms like “hard” multi-tenancy, which implies strong isolation, and “soft” multi-tenancy, which implies weaker isolation. In particular, "hard" multi-tenancy is often used to describe cases where the tenants do not trust each other, often from security and resource sharing perspectives (e.g. guarding against attacks such as data exfiltration or DoS). Since data planes typically have much larger attack surfaces, "hard" multi-tenancy often requires extra attention to isolating the data-plane, though control plane isolation also remains critical.
However, the terms "hard" and "soft" can often be confusing, as there is no single definition that will apply to all users. Rather, "hardness" or "softness" is better understood as a broad spectrum, with many different techniques that can be used to maintain different types of isolation in your clusters, based on your requirements.
In more extreme cases, it may be easier or necessary to forgo any cluster-level sharing at all and assign each tenant their dedicated cluster, possibly even running on dedicated hardware if VMs are not considered an adequate security boundary. This may be easier with managed Kubernetes clusters, where the overhead of creating and operating clusters is at least somewhat taken on by a cloud provider. The benefit of stronger tenant isolation must be evaluated against the cost and complexity of managing multiple clusters. The Multi-cluster SIG is responsible for addressing these types of use cases.
The remainder of this page focuses on isolation techniques used for shared Kubernetes clusters. However, even if you are considering dedicated clusters, it may be valuable to review these recommendations, as it will give you the flexibility to shift to shared clusters in the future if your needs or capabilities change.
Control plane isolation
Control plane isolation ensures that different tenants cannot access or affect each others' Kubernetes API resources.
Namespaces
In Kubernetes, a Namespace provides a mechanism for isolating groups of API resources within a single cluster. This isolation has two key dimensions:
-
Object names within a namespace can overlap with names in other namespaces, similar to files in folders. This allows tenants to name their resources without having to consider what other tenants are doing.
-
Many Kubernetes security policies are scoped to namespaces. For example, RBAC Roles and Network Policies are namespace-scoped resources. Using RBAC, Users and Service Accounts can be restricted to a namespace.
In a multi-tenant environment, a Namespace helps segment a tenant's workload into a logical and distinct management unit. In fact, a common practice is to isolate every workload in its own namespace, even if multiple workloads are operated by the same tenant. This ensures that each workload has its own identity and can be configured with an appropriate security policy.
The namespace isolation model requires configuration of several other Kubernetes resources, networking plugins, and adherence to security best practices to properly isolate tenant workloads. These considerations are discussed below.
Access controls
The most important type of isolation for the control plane is authorization. If teams or their workloads can access or modify each others' API resources, they can change or disable all other types of policies thereby negating any protection those policies may offer. As a result, it is critical to ensure that each tenant has the appropriate access to only the namespaces they need, and no more. This is known as the "Principle of Least Privilege."
Role-based access control (RBAC) is commonly used to enforce authorization in the Kubernetes control plane, for both users and workloads (service accounts). Roles and RoleBindings are Kubernetes objects that are used at a namespace level to enforce access control in your application; similar objects exist for authorizing access to cluster-level objects, though these are less useful for multi-tenant clusters.
In a multi-team environment, RBAC must be used to restrict tenants' access to the appropriate namespaces, and ensure that cluster-wide resources can only be accessed or modified by privileged users such as cluster administrators.
If a policy ends up granting a user more permissions than they need, this is likely a signal that the namespace containing the affected resources should be refactored into finer-grained namespaces. Namespace management tools may simplify the management of these finer-grained namespaces by applying common RBAC policies to different namespaces, while still allowing fine-grained policies where necessary.
Quotas
Kubernetes workloads consume node resources, like CPU and memory. In a multi-tenant environment, you can use Resource Quotas to manage resource usage of tenant workloads. For the multiple teams use case, where tenants have access to the Kubernetes API, you can use resource quotas to limit the number of API resources (for example: the number of Pods, or the number of ConfigMaps) that a tenant can create. Limits on object count ensure fairness and aim to avoid noisy neighbor issues from affecting other tenants that share a control plane.
Resource quotas are namespaced objects. By mapping tenants to namespaces, cluster admins can use quotas to ensure that a tenant cannot monopolize a cluster's resources or overwhelm its control plane. Namespace management tools simplify the administration of quotas. In addition, while Kubernetes quotas only apply within a single namespace, some namespace management tools allow groups of namespaces to share quotas, giving administrators far more flexibility with less effort than built-in quotas.
Quotas prevent a single tenant from consuming greater than their allocated share of resources hence minimizing the “noisy neighbor” issue, where one tenant negatively impacts the performance of other tenants' workloads.
When you apply a quota to namespace, Kubernetes requires you to also specify resource requests and limits for each container. Limits are the upper bound for the amount of resources that a container can consume. Containers that attempt to consume resources that exceed the configured limits will either be throttled or killed, based on the resource type. When resource requests are set lower than limits, each container is guaranteed the requested amount but there may still be some potential for impact across workloads.
Quotas cannot protect against all kinds of resource sharing, such as network traffic. Node isolation (described below) may be a better solution for this problem.
Data Plane Isolation
Data plane isolation ensures that pods and workloads for different tenants are sufficiently isolated.
Network isolation
By default, all pods in a Kubernetes cluster are allowed to communicate with each other, and all network traffic is unencrypted. This can lead to security vulnerabilities where traffic is accidentally or maliciously sent to an unintended destination, or is intercepted by a workload on a compromised node.
Pod-to-pod communication can be controlled using Network Policies, which restrict communication between pods using namespace labels or IP address ranges. In a multi-tenant environment where strict network isolation between tenants is required, starting with a default policy that denies communication between pods is recommended with another rule that allows all pods to query the DNS server for name resolution. With such a default policy in place, you can begin adding more permissive rules that allow for communication within a namespace. It is also recommended not to use empty label selector '{}' for namespaceSelector field in network policy definition, in case traffic need to be allowed between namespaces. This scheme can be further refined as required. Note that this only applies to pods within a single control plane; pods that belong to different virtual control planes cannot talk to each other via Kubernetes networking.
Namespace management tools may simplify the creation of default or common network policies. In addition, some of these tools allow you to enforce a consistent set of namespace labels across your cluster, ensuring that they are a trusted basis for your policies.
More advanced network isolation may be provided by service meshes, which provide OSI Layer 7 policies based on workload identity, in addition to namespaces. These higher-level policies can make it easier to manage namespace-based multi-tenancy, especially when multiple namespaces are dedicated to a single tenant. They frequently also offer encryption using mutual TLS, protecting your data even in the presence of a compromised node, and work across dedicated or virtual clusters. However, they can be significantly more complex to manage and may not be appropriate for all users.
Storage isolation
Kubernetes offers several types of volumes that can be used as persistent storage for workloads. For security and data-isolation, dynamic volume provisioning is recommended and volume types that use node resources should be avoided.
StorageClasses allow you to describe custom "classes" of storage offered by your cluster, based on quality-of-service levels, backup policies, or custom policies determined by the cluster administrators.
Pods can request storage using a PersistentVolumeClaim. A PersistentVolumeClaim is a namespaced resource, which enables isolating portions of the storage system and dedicating it to tenants within the shared Kubernetes cluster. However, it is important to note that a PersistentVolume is a cluster-wide resource and has a lifecycle independent of workloads and namespaces.
For example, you can configure a separate StorageClass for each tenant and use this to strengthen isolation.
If a StorageClass is shared, you should set a reclaim policy of Delete
to ensure that a PersistentVolume cannot be reused across different namespaces.
Sandboxing containers
Kubernetes pods are composed of one or more containers that execute on worker nodes. Containers utilize OS-level virtualization and hence offer a weaker isolation boundary than virtual machines that utilize hardware-based virtualization.
In a shared environment, unpatched vulnerabilities in the application and system layers can be exploited by attackers for container breakouts and remote code execution that allow access to host resources. In some applications, like a Content Management System (CMS), customers may be allowed the ability to upload and execute untrusted scripts or code. In either case, mechanisms to further isolate and protect workloads using strong isolation are desirable.
Sandboxing provides a way to isolate workloads running in a shared cluster. It typically involves
running each pod in a separate execution environment such as a virtual machine or a userspace
kernel. Sandboxing is often recommended when you are running untrusted code, where workloads are
assumed to be malicious. Part of the reason this type of isolation is necessary is because
containers are processes running on a shared kernel; they mount file systems like /sys
and /proc
from the underlying host, making them less secure than an application that runs on a virtual
machine which has its own kernel. While controls such as seccomp, AppArmor, and SELinux can be
used to strengthen the security of containers, it is hard to apply a universal set of rules to all
workloads running in a shared cluster. Running workloads in a sandbox environment helps to
insulate the host from container escapes, where an attacker exploits a vulnerability to gain
access to the host system and all the processes/files running on that host.
Virtual machines and userspace kernels are 2 popular approaches to sandboxing. The following sandboxing implementations are available:
- gVisor intercepts syscalls from containers and runs them through a userspace kernel, written in Go, with limited access to the underlying host.
- Kata Containers provide a secure container runtime that allows you to run containers in a VM. The hardware virtualization available in Kata offers an added layer of security for containers running untrusted code.
Node Isolation
Node isolation is another technique that you can use to isolate tenant workloads from each other. With node isolation, a set of nodes is dedicated to running pods from a particular tenant and co-mingling of tenant pods is prohibited. This configuration reduces the noisy tenant issue, as all pods running on a node will belong to a single tenant. The risk of information disclosure is slightly lower with node isolation because an attacker that manages to escape from a container will only have access to the containers and volumes mounted to that node.
Although workloads from different tenants are running on different nodes, it is important to be aware that the kubelet and (unless using virtual control planes) the API service are still shared services. A skilled attacker could use the permissions assigned to the kubelet or other pods running on the node to move laterally within the cluster and gain access to tenant workloads running on other nodes. If this is a major concern, consider implementing compensating controls such as seccomp, AppArmor or SELinux or explore using sandboxed containers or creating separate clusters for each tenant.
Node isolation is a little easier to reason about from a billing standpoint than sandboxing containers since you can charge back per node rather than per pod. It also has fewer compatibility and performance issues and may be easier to implement than sandboxing containers. For example, nodes for each tenant can be configured with taints so that only pods with the corresponding toleration can run on them. A mutating webhook could then be used to automatically add tolerations and node affinities to pods deployed into tenant namespaces so that they run on a specific set of nodes designated for that tenant.
Node isolation can be implemented using an pod node selectors or a Virtual Kubelet.
Additional Considerations
This section discusses other Kubernetes constructs and patterns that are relevant for multi-tenancy.
API Priority and Fairness
API priority and fairness is a Kubernetes feature that allows you to assign a priority to certain pods running within the cluster. When an application calls the Kubernetes API, the API server evaluates the priority assigned to pod. Calls from pods with higher priority are fulfilled before those with a lower priority. When contention is high, lower priority calls can be queued until the server is less busy or you can reject the requests.
Using API priority and fairness will not be very common in SaaS environments unless you are allowing customers to run applications that interface with the Kubernetes API, for example, a controller.
Quality-of-Service (QoS)
When you’re running a SaaS application, you may want the ability to offer different Quality-of-Service (QoS) tiers of service to different tenants. For example, you may have freemium service that comes with fewer performance guarantees and features and a for-fee service tier with specific performance guarantees. Fortunately, there are several Kubernetes constructs that can help you accomplish this within a shared cluster, including network QoS, storage classes, and pod priority and preemption. The idea with each of these is to provide tenants with the quality of service that they paid for. Let’s start by looking at networking QoS.
Typically, all pods on a node share a network interface. Without network QoS, some pods may consume an unfair share of the available bandwidth at the expense of other pods. The Kubernetes bandwidth plugin creates an extended resource for networking that allows you to use Kubernetes resources constructs, i.e. requests/limits, to apply rate limits to pods by using Linux tc queues. Be aware that the plugin is considered experimental as per the Network Plugins documentation and should be thoroughly tested before use in production environments.
For storage QoS, you will likely want to create different storage classes or profiles with different performance characteristics. Each storage profile can be associated with a different tier of service that is optimized for different workloads such IO, redundancy, or throughput. Additional logic might be necessary to allow the tenant to associate the appropriate storage profile with their workload.
Finally, there’s pod priority and preemption where you can assign priority values to pods. When scheduling pods, the scheduler will try evicting pods with lower priority when there are insufficient resources to schedule pods that are assigned a higher priority. If you have a use case where tenants have different service tiers in a shared cluster e.g. free and paid, you may want to give higher priority to certain tiers using this feature.
DNS
Kubernetes clusters include a Domain Name System (DNS) service to provide translations from names to IP addresses, for all Services and Pods. By default, the Kubernetes DNS service allows lookups across all namespaces in the cluster.
In multi-tenant environments where tenants can access pods and other Kubernetes resources, or where stronger isolation is required, it may be necessary to prevent pods from looking up services in other Namespaces. You can restrict cross-namespace DNS lookups by configuring security rules for the DNS service. For example, CoreDNS (the default DNS service for Kubernetes) can leverage Kubernetes metadata to restrict queries to Pods and Services within a namespace. For more information, read an example of configuring this within the CoreDNS documentation.
When a Virtual Control Plane per tenant model is used, a DNS service must be configured per tenant or a multi-tenant DNS service must be used. Here is an example of a customized version of CoreDNS that supports multiple tenants.
Operators
Operators are Kubernetes controllers that manage applications. Operators can simplify the management of multiple instances of an application, like a database service, which makes them a common building block in the multi-consumer (SaaS) multi-tenancy use case.
Operators used in a multi-tenant environment should follow a stricter set of guidelines. Specifically, the Operator should:
- Support creating resources within different tenant namespaces, rather than just in the namespace in which the Operator is deployed.
- Ensure that the Pods are configured with resource requests and limits, to ensure scheduling and fairness.
- Support configuration of Pods for data-plane isolation techniques such as node isolation and sandboxed containers.
Implementations
There are two primary ways to share a Kubernetes cluster for multi-tenancy: using Namespaces (that is, a Namespace per tenant) or by virtualizing the control plane (that is, virtual control plane per tenant).
In both cases, data plane isolation, and management of additional considerations such as API Priority and Fairness, is also recommended.
Namespace isolation is well-supported by Kubernetes, has a negligible resource cost, and provides mechanisms to allow tenants to interact appropriately, such as by allowing service-to-service communication. However, it can be difficult to configure, and doesn't apply to Kubernetes resources that can't be namespaced, such as Custom Resource Definitions, Storage Classes, and Webhooks.
Control plane virtualization allows for isolation of non-namespaced resources at the cost of somewhat higher resource usage and more difficult cross-tenant sharing. It is a good option when namespace isolation is insufficient but dedicated clusters are undesirable, due to the high cost of maintaining them (especially on-prem) or due to their higher overhead and lack of resource sharing. However, even within a virtualized control plane, you will likely see benefits by using namespaces as well.
The two options are discussed in more detail in the following sections.
Namespace per tenant
As previously mentioned, you should consider isolating each workload in its own namespace, even if you are using dedicated clusters or virtualized control planes. This ensures that each workload only has access to its own resources, such as ConfigMaps and Secrets, and allows you to tailor dedicated security policies for each workload. In addition, it is a best practice to give each namespace names that are unique across your entire fleet (that is, even if they are in separate clusters), as this gives you the flexibility to switch between dedicated and shared clusters in the future, or to use multi-cluster tooling such as service meshes.
Conversely, there are also advantages to assigning namespaces at the tenant level, not just the workload level, since there are often policies that apply to all workloads owned by a single tenant. However, this raises its own problems. Firstly, this makes it difficult or impossible to customize policies to individual workloads, and secondly, it may be challenging to come up with a single level of "tenancy" that should be given a namespace. For example, an organization may have divisions, teams, and subteams - which should be assigned a namespace?
To solve this, Kubernetes provides the Hierarchical Namespace Controller (HNC), which allows you to organize your namespaces into hierarchies, and share certain policies and resources between them. It also helps you manage namespace labels, namespace lifecycles, and delegated management, and share resource quotas across related namespaces. These capabilities can be useful in both multi-team and multi-customer scenarios.
Other projects that provide similar capabilities and aid in managing namespaced resources are listed below.
Multi-team tenancy
Multi-customer tenancy
Policy engines
Policy engines provide features to validate and generate tenant configurations:
Virtual control plane per tenant
Another form of control-plane isolation is to use Kubernetes extensions to provide each tenant a virtual control-plane that enables segmentation of cluster-wide API resources. Data plane isolation techniques can be used with this model to securely manage worker nodes across tenants.
The virtual control plane based multi-tenancy model extends namespace-based multi-tenancy by providing each tenant with dedicated control plane components, and hence complete control over cluster-wide resources and add-on services. Worker nodes are shared across all tenants, and are managed by a Kubernetes cluster that is normally inaccessible to tenants. This cluster is often referred to as a super-cluster (or sometimes as a host-cluster). Since a tenant’s control-plane is not directly associated with underlying compute resources it is referred to as a virtual control plane.
A virtual control plane typically consists of the Kubernetes API server, the controller manager, and the etcd data store. It interacts with the super cluster via a metadata synchronization controller which coordinates changes across tenant control planes and the control plane of the super-cluster.
By using per-tenant dedicated control planes, most of the isolation problems due to sharing one API server among all tenants are solved. Examples include noisy neighbors in the control plane, uncontrollable blast radius of policy misconfigurations, and conflicts between cluster scope objects such as webhooks and CRDs. Hence, the virtual control plane model is particularly suitable for cases where each tenant requires access to a Kubernetes API server and expects the full cluster manageability.
The improved isolation comes at the cost of running and maintaining an individual virtual control plane per tenant. In addition, per-tenant control planes do not solve isolation problems in the data plane, such as node-level noisy neighbors or security threats. These must still be addressed separately.
The Kubernetes Cluster API - Nested (CAPN) project provides an implementation of virtual control planes.
Other implementations
8.11 - Hardening Guide - Authentication Mechanisms
Selecting the appropriate authentication mechanism(s) is a crucial aspect of securing your cluster. Kubernetes provides several built-in mechanisms, each with its own strengths and weaknesses that should be carefully considered when choosing the best authentication mechanism for your cluster.
In general, it is recommended to enable as few authentication mechanisms as possible to simplify user management and prevent cases where users retain access to a cluster that is no longer required.
It is important to note that Kubernetes does not have an in-built user database within the cluster. Instead, it takes user information from the configured authentication system and uses that to make authorization decisions. Therefore, to audit user access, you need to review credentials from every configured authentication source.
For production clusters with multiple users directly accessing the Kubernetes API, it is recommended to use external authentication sources such as OIDC. The internal authentication mechanisms, such as client certificates and service account tokens, described below, are not suitable for this use-case.
X.509 client certificate authentication
Kubernetes leverages X.509 client certificate authentication for system components, such as when the Kubelet authenticates to the API Server. While this mechanism can also be used for user authentication, it might not be suitable for production use due to several restrictions:
- Client certificates cannot be individually revoked. Once compromised, a certificate can be used by an attacker until it expires. To mitigate this risk, it is recommended to configure short lifetimes for user authentication credentials created using client certificates.
- If a certificate needs to be invalidated, the certificate authority must be re-keyed, which can introduce availability risks to the cluster.
- There is no permanent record of client certificates created in the cluster. Therefore, all issued certificates must be recorded if you need to keep track of them.
- Private keys used for client certificate authentication cannot be password-protected. Anyone who can read the file containing the key will be able to make use of it.
- Using client certificate authentication requires a direct connection from the client to the API server with no intervening TLS termination points, which can complicate network architectures.
- Group data is embedded in the
O
value of the client certificate, which means the user's group memberships cannot be changed for the lifetime of the certificate.
Static token file
Although Kubernetes allows you to load credentials from a static token file located on the control plane node disks, this approach is not recommended for production servers due to several reasons:
- Credentials are stored in clear text on control plane node disks, which can be a security risk.
- Changing any credential requires a restart of the API server process to take effect, which can impact availability.
- There is no mechanism available to allow users to rotate their credentials. To rotate a credential, a cluster administrator must modify the token on disk and distribute it to the users.
- There is no lockout mechanism available to prevent brute-force attacks.
Bootstrap tokens
Bootstrap tokens are used for joining nodes to clusters and are not recommended for user authentication due to several reasons:
- They have hard-coded group memberships that are not suitable for general use, making them unsuitable for authentication purposes.
- Manually generating bootstrap tokens can lead to weak tokens that can be guessed by an attacker, which can be a security risk.
- There is no lockout mechanism available to prevent brute-force attacks, making it easier for attackers to guess or crack the token.
ServiceAccount secret tokens
Service account secrets are available as an option to allow workloads running in the cluster to authenticate to the API server. In Kubernetes < 1.23, these were the default option, however, they are being replaced with TokenRequest API tokens. While these secrets could be used for user authentication, they are generally unsuitable for a number of reasons:
- They cannot be set with an expiry and will remain valid until the associated service account is deleted.
- The authentication tokens are visible to any cluster user who can read secrets in the namespace that they are defined in.
- Service accounts cannot be added to arbitrary groups complicating RBAC management where they are used.
TokenRequest API tokens
The TokenRequest API is a useful tool for generating short-lived credentials for service authentication to the API server or third-party systems. However, it is not generally recommended for user authentication as there is no revocation method available, and distributing credentials to users in a secure manner can be challenging.
When using TokenRequest tokens for service authentication, it is recommended to implement a short lifespan to reduce the impact of compromised tokens.
OpenID Connect token authentication
Kubernetes supports integrating external authentication services with the Kubernetes API using OpenID Connect (OIDC). There is a wide variety of software that can be used to integrate Kubernetes with an identity provider. However, when using OIDC authentication for Kubernetes, it is important to consider the following hardening measures:
- The software installed in the cluster to support OIDC authentication should be isolated from general workloads as it will run with high privileges.
- Some Kubernetes managed services are limited in the OIDC providers that can be used.
- As with TokenRequest tokens, OIDC tokens should have a short lifespan to reduce the impact of compromised tokens.
Webhook token authentication
Webhook token authentication is another option for integrating external authentication providers into Kubernetes. This mechanism allows for an authentication service, either running inside the cluster or externally, to be contacted for an authentication decision over a webhook. It is important to note that the suitability of this mechanism will likely depend on the software used for the authentication service, and there are some Kubernetes-specific considerations to take into account.
To configure Webhook authentication, access to control plane server filesystems is required. This means that it will not be possible with Managed Kubernetes unless the provider specifically makes it available. Additionally, any software installed in the cluster to support this access should be isolated from general workloads, as it will run with high privileges.
Authenticating proxy
Another option for integrating external authentication systems into Kubernetes is to use an authenticating proxy. With this mechanism, Kubernetes expects to receive requests from the proxy with specific header values set, indicating the username and group memberships to assign for authorization purposes. It is important to note that there are specific considerations to take into account when using this mechanism.
Firstly, securely configured TLS must be used between the proxy and Kubernetes API server to mitigate the risk of traffic interception or sniffing attacks. This ensures that the communication between the proxy and Kubernetes API server is secure.
Secondly, it is important to be aware that an attacker who is able to modify the headers of the request may be able to gain unauthorized access to Kubernetes resources. As such, it is important to ensure that the headers are properly secured and cannot be tampered with.
8.12 - Kubernetes API Server Bypass Risks
The Kubernetes API server is the main point of entry to a cluster for external parties (users and services) interacting with it.
As part of this role, the API server has several key built-in security controls, such as audit logging and admission controllers. However, there are ways to modify the configuration or content of the cluster that bypass these controls.
This page describes the ways in which the security controls built into the Kubernetes API server can be bypassed, so that cluster operators and security architects can ensure that these bypasses are appropriately restricted.
Static Pods
The kubelet on each node loads and directly manages any manifests that are stored in a named directory or fetched from a specific URL as static Pods in your cluster. The API server doesn't manage these static Pods. An attacker with write access to this location could modify the configuration of static pods loaded from that source, or could introduce new static Pods.
Static Pods are restricted from accessing other objects in the Kubernetes API. For example,
you can't configure a static Pod to mount a Secret from the cluster. However, these Pods can
take other security sensitive actions, such as using hostPath
mounts from the underlying
node.
By default, the kubelet creates a mirror pod so that the static Pods are visible in the Kubernetes API. However, if the attacker uses an invalid namespace name when creating the Pod, it will not be visible in the Kubernetes API and can only be discovered by tooling that has access to the affected host(s).
If a static Pod fails admission control, the kubelet won't register the Pod with the API server. However, the Pod still runs on the node. For more information, refer to kubeadm issue #1541.
Mitigations
- Only enable the kubelet static Pod manifest functionality if required by the node.
- If a node uses the static Pod functionality, restrict filesystem access to the static Pod manifest directory or URL to users who need the access.
- Restrict access to kubelet configuration parameters and files to prevent an attacker setting a static Pod path or URL.
- Regularly audit and centrally report all access to directories or web storage locations that host static Pod manifests and kubelet configuration files.
The kubelet API
The kubelet provides an HTTP API that is typically exposed on TCP port 10250 on cluster worker nodes. The API might also be exposed on control plane nodes depending on the Kubernetes distribution in use. Direct access to the API allows for disclosure of information about the pods running on a node, the logs from those pods, and execution of commands in every container running on the node.
When Kubernetes cluster users have RBAC access to Node
object sub-resources, that access
serves as authorization to interact with the kubelet API. The exact access depends on
which sub-resource access has been granted, as detailed in
kubelet authorization.
Direct access to the kubelet API is not subject to admission control and is not logged by Kubernetes audit logging. An attacker with direct access to this API may be able to bypass controls that detect or prevent certain actions.
The kubelet API can be configured to authenticate requests in a number of ways.
By default, the kubelet configuration allows anonymous access. Most Kubernetes providers
change the default to use webhook and certificate authentication. This lets the control plane
ensure that the caller is authorized to access the nodes
API resource or sub-resources.
The default anonymous access doesn't make this assertion with the control plane.
Mitigations
- Restrict access to sub-resources of the
nodes
API object using mechanisms such as RBAC. Only grant this access when required, such as by monitoring services. - Restrict access to the kubelet port. Only allow specified and trusted IP address ranges to access the port.
- Ensure that kubelet authentication. is set to webhook or certificate mode.
- Ensure that the unauthenticated "read-only" Kubelet port is not enabled on the cluster.
The etcd API
Kubernetes clusters use etcd as a datastore. The etcd
service listens on TCP port 2379.
The only clients that need access are the Kubernetes API server and any backup tooling
that you use. Direct access to this API allows for disclosure or modification of any
data held in the cluster.
Access to the etcd API is typically managed by client certificate authentication. Any certificate issued by a certificate authority that etcd trusts allows full access to the data stored inside etcd.
Direct access to etcd is not subject to Kubernetes admission control and is not logged by Kubernetes audit logging. An attacker who has read access to the API server's etcd client certificate private key (or can create a new trusted client certificate) can gain cluster admin rights by accessing cluster secrets or modifying access rules. Even without elevating their Kubernetes RBAC privileges, an attacker who can modify etcd can retrieve any API object or create new workloads inside the cluster.
Many Kubernetes providers configure etcd to use mutual TLS (both client and server verify each other's certificate for authentication). There is no widely accepted implementation of authorization for the etcd API, although the feature exists. Since there is no authorization model, any certificate with client access to etcd can be used to gain full access to etcd. Typically, etcd client certificates that are only used for health checking can also grant full read and write access.
Mitigations
- Ensure that the certificate authority trusted by etcd is used only for the purposes of authentication to that service.
- Control access to the private key for the etcd server certificate, and to the API server's client certificate and key.
- Consider restricting access to the etcd port at a network level, to only allow access from specified and trusted IP address ranges.
Container runtime socket
On each node in a Kubernetes cluster, access to interact with containers is controlled by the container runtime (or runtimes, if you have configured more than one). Typically, the container runtime exposes a Unix socket that the kubelet can access. An attacker with access to this socket can launch new containers or interact with running containers.
At the cluster level, the impact of this access depends on whether the containers that run on the compromised node have access to Secrets or other confidential data that an attacker could use to escalate privileges to other worker nodes or to control plane components.
Mitigations
- Ensure that you tightly control filesystem access to container runtime sockets.
When possible, restrict this access to the
root
user. - Isolate the kubelet from other components running on the node, using mechanisms such as Linux kernel namespaces.
- Ensure that you restrict or forbid the use of
hostPath
mounts that include the container runtime socket, either directly or by mounting a parent directory. AlsohostPath
mounts must be set as read-only to mitigate risks of attackers bypassing directory restrictions. - Restrict user access to nodes, and especially restrict superuser access to nodes.
8.13 - Security Checklist
This checklist aims at providing a basic list of guidance with links to more comprehensive documentation on each topic. It does not claim to be exhaustive and is meant to evolve.
On how to read and use this document:
- The order of topics does not reflect an order of priority.
- Some checklist items are detailed in the paragraph below the list of each section.
Authentication & Authorization
-
system:masters
group is not used for user or component authentication after bootstrapping. - The kube-controller-manager is running with
--use-service-account-credentials
enabled. - The root certificate is protected (either an offline CA, or a managed online CA with effective access controls).
- Intermediate and leaf certificates have an expiry date no more than 3 years in the future.
- A process exists for periodic access review, and reviews occur no more than 24 months apart.
- The Role Based Access Control Good Practices is followed for guidance related to authentication and authorization.
After bootstrapping, neither users nor components should authenticate to the
Kubernetes API as system:masters
. Similarly, running all of
kube-controller-manager as system:masters
should be avoided. In fact,
system:masters
should only be used as a break-glass mechanism, as opposed to
an admin user.
Network security
- CNI plugins in-use supports network policies.
- Ingress and egress network policies are applied to all workloads in the cluster.
- Default network policies within each namespace, selecting all pods, denying everything, are in place.
- If appropriate, a service mesh is used to encrypt all communications inside of the cluster.
- The Kubernetes API, kubelet API and etcd are not exposed publicly on Internet.
- Access from the workloads to the cloud metadata API is filtered.
- Use of LoadBalancer and ExternalIPs is restricted.
A number of Container Network Interface (CNI) plugins plugins provide the functionality to restrict network resources that pods may communicate with. This is most commonly done through Network Policies which provide a namespaced resource to define rules. Default network policies blocking everything egress and ingress, in each namespace, selecting all the pods, can be useful to adopt an allow list approach, ensuring that no workloads is missed.
Not all CNI plugins provide encryption in transit. If the chosen plugin lacks this feature, an alternative solution could be to use a service mesh to provide that functionality.
The etcd datastore of the control plane should have controls to limit access and not be publicly exposed on the Internet. Furthermore, mutual TLS (mTLS) should be used to communicate securely with it. The certificate authority for this should be unique to etcd.
External Internet access to the Kubernetes API server should be restricted to not expose the API publicly. Be careful as many managed Kubernetes distribution are publicly exposing the API server by default. You can then use a bastion host to access the server.
The kubelet API access
should be restricted and not publicly exposed, the defaults authentication and
authorization settings, when no configuration file specified with the --config
flag, are overly permissive.
If a cloud provider is used for hosting Kubernetes, the access from pods to the cloud
metadata API 169.254.169.254
should also be restricted or blocked if not needed
because it may leak information.
For restricted LoadBalancer and ExternalIPs use, see CVE-2020-8554: Man in the middle using LoadBalancer or ExternalIPs and the DenyServiceExternalIPs admission controller for further information.
Pod security
- RBAC rights to
create
,update
,patch
,delete
workloads is only granted if necessary. - Appropriate Pod Security Standards policy is applied for all namespaces and enforced.
- Memory limit is set for the workloads with a limit equal or inferior to the request.
- CPU limit might be set on sensitive workloads.
- For nodes that support it, Seccomp is enabled with appropriate syscalls profile for programs.
- For nodes that support it, AppArmor or SELinux is enabled with appropriate profile for programs.
RBAC authorization is crucial but
cannot be granular enough to have authorization on the Pods' resources
(or on any resource that manages Pods). The only granularity is the API verbs
on the resource itself, for example, create
on Pods. Without
additional admission, the authorization to create these resources allows direct
unrestricted access to the schedulable nodes of a cluster.
The Pod Security Standards
define three different policies, privileged, baseline and restricted that limit
how fields can be set in the PodSpec
regarding security.
These standards can be enforced at the namespace level with the new
Pod Security admission,
enabled by default, or by third-party admission webhook. Please note that,
contrary to the removed PodSecurityPolicy admission it replaces,
Pod Security
admission can be easily combined with admission webhooks and external services.
Pod Security admission restricted
policy, the most restrictive policy of the
Pod Security Standards set,
can operate in several modes,
warn
, audit
or enforce
to gradually apply the most appropriate
security context
according to security best practices. Nevertheless, pods'
security context
should be separately investigated to limit the privileges and access pods may
have on top of the predefined security standards, for specific use cases.
For a hands-on tutorial on Pod Security, see the blog post Kubernetes 1.23: Pod Security Graduates to Beta.
Memory and CPU limits should be set in order to restrict the memory and CPU resources a pod can consume on a node, and therefore prevent potential DoS attacks from malicious or breached workloads. Such policy can be enforced by an admission controller. Please note that CPU limits will throttle usage and thus can have unintended effects on auto-scaling features or efficiency i.e. running the process in best effort with the CPU resource available.
Enabling Seccomp
Seccomp stands for secure computing mode and has been a feature of the Linux kernel since version 2.6.12. It can be used to sandbox the privileges of a process, restricting the calls it is able to make from userspace into the kernel. Kubernetes lets you automatically apply seccomp profiles loaded onto a node to your Pods and containers.
Seccomp can improve the security of your workloads by reducing the Linux kernel syscall attack surface available inside containers. The seccomp filter mode leverages BPF to create an allow or deny list of specific syscalls, named profiles.
Since Kubernetes 1.27, you can enable the use of RuntimeDefault
as the default seccomp profile
for all workloads. A security tutorial is available on this
topic. In addition, the
Kubernetes Security Profiles Operator
is a project that facilitates the management and use of seccomp in clusters.
Enabling AppArmor or SELinux
AppArmor
AppArmor is a Linux kernel security module that can provide an easy way to implement Mandatory Access Control (MAC) and better auditing through system logs. To enable AppArmor in Kubernetes, at least version 1.4 is required. Like seccomp, AppArmor is also configured through profiles, where each profile is either running in enforcing mode, which blocks access to disallowed resources or complain mode, which only reports violations. AppArmor profiles are enforced on a per-container basis, with an annotation, allowing for processes to gain just the right privileges.
SELinux
SELinux is also a
Linux kernel security module that can provide a mechanism for supporting access
control security policies, including Mandatory Access Controls (MAC). SELinux
labels can be assigned to containers or pods
via their securityContext
section.
Logs and auditing
- Audit logs, if enabled, are protected from general access.
Pod placement
- Pod placement is done in accordance with the tiers of sensitivity of the application.
- Sensitive applications are running isolated on nodes or with specific sandboxed runtimes.
Pods that are on different tiers of sensitivity, for example, an application pod and the Kubernetes API server, should be deployed onto separate nodes. The purpose of node isolation is to prevent an application container breakout to directly providing access to applications with higher level of sensitivity to easily pivot within the cluster. This separation should be enforced to prevent pods accidentally being deployed onto the same node. This could be enforced with the following features:
- Node Selectors
- Key-value pairs, as part of the pod specification, that specify which nodes to deploy onto. These can be enforced at the namespace and cluster level with the PodNodeSelector admission controller.
- PodTolerationRestriction
- An admission controller that allows administrators to restrict permitted tolerations within a namespace. Pods within a namespace may only utilize the tolerations specified on the namespace object annotation keys that provide a set of default and allowed tolerations.
- RuntimeClass
- RuntimeClass is a feature for selecting the container runtime configuration. The container runtime configuration is used to run a Pod's containers and can provide more or less isolation from the host at the cost of performance overhead.
Secrets
- ConfigMaps are not used to hold confidential data.
- Encryption at rest is configured for the Secret API.
- If appropriate, a mechanism to inject secrets stored in third-party storage is deployed and available.
- Service account tokens are not mounted in pods that don't require them.
- Bound service account token volume is in-use instead of non-expiring tokens.
Secrets required for pods should be stored within Kubernetes Secrets as opposed to alternatives such as ConfigMap. Secret resources stored within etcd should be encrypted at rest.
Pods needing secrets should have these automatically mounted through volumes,
preferably stored in memory like with the emptyDir.medium
option.
Mechanism can be used to also inject secrets from third-party storages as
volume, like the Secrets Store CSI Driver.
This should be done preferentially as compared to providing the pods service
account RBAC access to secrets. This would allow adding secrets into the pod as
environment variables or files. Please note that the environment variable method
might be more prone to leakage due to crash dumps in logs and the
non-confidential nature of environment variable in Linux, as opposed to the
permission mechanism on files.
Service account tokens should not be mounted into pods that do not require them. This can be configured by setting
automountServiceAccountToken
to false
either within the service account to apply throughout the namespace
or specifically for a pod. For Kubernetes v1.22 and above, use
Bound Service Accounts
for time-bound service account credentials.
Images
- Minimize unnecessary content in container images.
- Container images are configured to be run as unprivileged user.
- References to container images are made by sha256 digests (rather than tags) or the provenance of the image is validated by verifying the image's digital signature at deploy time via admission control.
- Container images are regularly scanned during creation and in deployment, and known vulnerable software is patched.
Container image should contain the bare minimum to run the program they package. Preferably, only the program and its dependencies, building the image from the minimal possible base. In particular, image used in production should not contain shells or debugging utilities, as an ephemeral debug container can be used for troubleshooting.
Build images to directly start with an unprivileged user by using the
USER
instruction in Dockerfile.
The Security Context
allows a container image to be started with a specific user and group with
runAsUser
and runAsGroup
, even if not specified in the image manifest.
However, the file permissions in the image layers might make it impossible to just
start the process with a new unprivileged user without image modification.
Avoid using image tags to reference an image, especially the latest
tag, the
image behind a tag can be easily modified in a registry. Prefer using the
complete sha256
digest which is unique to the image manifest. This policy can be
enforced via an ImagePolicyWebhook.
Image signatures can also be automatically verified with an admission controller
at deploy time to validate their authenticity and integrity.
Scanning a container image can prevent critical vulnerabilities from being deployed to the cluster alongside the container image. Image scanning should be completed before deploying a container image to a cluster and is usually done as part of the deployment process in a CI/CD pipeline. The purpose of an image scan is to obtain information about possible vulnerabilities and their prevention in the container image, such as a Common Vulnerability Scoring System (CVSS) score. If the result of the image scans is combined with the pipeline compliance rules, only properly patched container images will end up in Production.
Admission controllers
- An appropriate selection of admission controllers is enabled.
- A pod security policy is enforced by the Pod Security Admission or/and a webhook admission controller.
- The admission chain plugins and webhooks are securely configured.
Admission controllers can help to improve the security of the cluster. However, they can present risks themselves as they extend the API server and should be properly secured.
The following lists present a number of admission controllers that could be considered to enhance the security posture of your cluster and application. It includes controllers that may be referenced in other parts of this document.
This first group of admission controllers includes plugins enabled by default, consider to leave them enabled unless you know what you are doing:
CertificateApproval
- Performs additional authorization checks to ensure the approving user has permission to approve certificate request.
CertificateSigning
- Performs additional authorization checks to ensure the signing user has permission to sign certificate requests.
CertificateSubjectRestriction
- Rejects any certificate request that specifies a 'group' (or 'organization
attribute') of
system:masters
. LimitRanger
- Enforce the LimitRange API constraints.
MutatingAdmissionWebhook
- Allows the use of custom controllers through webhooks, these controllers may mutate requests that it reviews.
PodSecurity
- Replacement for Pod Security Policy, restricts security contexts of deployed Pods.
ResourceQuota
- Enforces resource quotas to prevent over-usage of resources.
ValidatingAdmissionWebhook
- Allows the use of custom controllers through webhooks, these controllers do not mutate requests that it reviews.
The second group includes plugin that are not enabled by default but in general availability state and recommended to improve your security posture:
DenyServiceExternalIPs
- Rejects all net-new usage of the
Service.spec.externalIPs
field. This is a mitigation for CVE-2020-8554: Man in the middle using LoadBalancer or ExternalIPs. NodeRestriction
- Restricts kubelet's permissions to only modify the pods API resources they own
or the node API resource that represent themselves. It also prevents kubelet
from using the
node-restriction.kubernetes.io/
annotation, which can be used by an attacker with access to the kubelet's credentials to influence pod placement to the controlled node.
The third group includes plugins that are not enabled by default but could be considered for certain use cases:
AlwaysPullImages
- Enforces the usage of the latest version of a tagged image and ensures that the deployer has permissions to use the image.
ImagePolicyWebhook
- Allows enforcing additional controls for images through webhooks.
What's next
- RBAC Good Practices for further information on authorization.
- Securing a Cluster for information on protecting a cluster from accidental or malicious access.
- Cluster Multi-tenancy guide for configuration options recommendations and best practices on multi-tenancy.
- Blog post "A Closer Look at NSA/CISA Kubernetes Hardening Guidance" for complementary resource on hardening Kubernetes clusters.
9 - Policies
Kubernetes policies are configurations that manage other configurations or runtime behaviors. Kubernetes offers various forms of policies, described below:
Apply policies using API objects
Some API objects act as policies. Here are some examples:
- NetworkPolicies can be used to restrict ingress and egress traffic for a workload.
- LimitRanges manage resource allocation constraints across different object kinds.
- ResourceQuotas limit resource consumption for a namespace.
Apply policies using admission controllers
An admission controller
runs in the API server
and can validate or mutate API requests. Some admission controllers act to apply policies.
For example, the AlwaysPullImages admission controller modifies a new Pod to set the image pull policy to Always
.
Kubernetes has several built-in admission controllers that are configurable via the API server --enable-admission-plugins
flag.
Details on admission controllers, with the complete list of available admission controllers, are documented in a dedicated section:
Apply policies using ValidatingAdmissionPolicy
Validating admission policies allow configurable validation checks to be executed in the API server using the Common Expression Language (CEL). For example, a ValidatingAdmissionPolicy
can be used to disallow use of the latest
image tag.
A ValidatingAdmissionPolicy
operates on an API request and can be used to block, audit, and warn users about non-compliant configurations.
Details on the ValidatingAdmissionPolicy
API, with examples, are documented in a dedicated section:
Apply policies using dynamic admission control
Dynamic admission controllers (or admission webhooks) run outside the API server as separate applications that register to receive webhooks requests to perform validation or mutation of API requests.
Dynamic admission controllers can be used to apply policies on API requests and trigger other policy-based workflows. A dynamic admission controller can perform complex checks including those that require retrieval of other cluster resources and external data. For example, an image verification check can lookup data from OCI registries to validate the container image signatures and attestations.
Details on dynamic admission control are documented in a dedicated section:
Implementations
Dynamic Admission Controllers that act as flexible policy engines are being developed in the Kubernetes ecosystem, such as:
Apply policies using Kubelet configurations
Kubernetes allows configuring the Kubelet on each worker node. Some Kubelet configurations act as policies:
- Process ID limits and reservations are used to limit and reserve allocatable PIDs.
- Node Resource Managers can manage compute, memory, and device resources for latency-critical and high-throughput workloads.
9.1 - Limit Ranges
By default, containers run with unbounded compute resources on a Kubernetes cluster. Using Kubernetes resource quotas, administrators (also termed cluster operators) can restrict consumption and creation of cluster resources (such as CPU time, memory, and persistent storage) within a specified namespace. Within a namespace, a Pod can consume as much CPU and memory as is allowed by the ResourceQuotas that apply to that namespace. As a cluster operator, or as a namespace-level administrator, you might also be concerned about making sure that a single object cannot monopolize all available resources within a namespace.
A LimitRange is a policy to constrain the resource allocations (limits and requests) that you can specify for each applicable object kind (such as Pod or PersistentVolumeClaim) in a namespace.
A LimitRange provides constraints that can:
- Enforce minimum and maximum compute resources usage per Pod or Container in a namespace.
- Enforce minimum and maximum storage request per PersistentVolumeClaim in a namespace.
- Enforce a ratio between request and limit for a resource in a namespace.
- Set default request/limit for compute resources in a namespace and automatically inject them to Containers at runtime.
A LimitRange is enforced in a particular namespace when there is a LimitRange object in that namespace.
The name of a LimitRange object must be a valid DNS subdomain name.
Constraints on resource limits and requests
- The administrator creates a LimitRange in a namespace.
- Users create (or try to create) objects in that namespace, such as Pods or PersistentVolumeClaims.
- First, the
LimitRange
admission controller applies default request and limit values for all Pods (and their containers) that do not set compute resource requirements. - Second, the
LimitRange
tracks usage to ensure it does not exceed resource minimum, maximum and ratio defined in anyLimitRange
present in the namespace. - If you attempt to create or update an object (Pod or PersistentVolumeClaim) that violates a
LimitRange
constraint, your request to the API server will fail with an HTTP status code403 Forbidden
and a message explaining the constraint that has been violated. - If you add a
LimitRange
in a namespace that applies to compute-related resources such ascpu
andmemory
, you must specify requests or limits for those values. Otherwise, the system may reject Pod creation. LimitRange
validations occur only at Pod admission stage, not on running Pods. If you add or modify a LimitRange, the Pods that already exist in that namespace continue unchanged.- If two or more
LimitRange
objects exist in the namespace, it is not deterministic which default value will be applied.
LimitRange and admission checks for Pods
A LimitRange
does not check the consistency of the default values it applies. This means that a default value for the limit that is set by LimitRange
may be less than the request value specified for the container in the spec that a client submits to the API server. If that happens, the final Pod will not be schedulable.
For example, you define a LimitRange
with this manifest:
apiVersion: v1
kind: LimitRange
metadata:
name: cpu-resource-constraint
spec:
limits:
- default: # this section defines default limits
cpu: 500m
defaultRequest: # this section defines default requests
cpu: 500m
max: # max and min define the limit range
cpu: "1"
min:
cpu: 100m
type: Container
along with a Pod that declares a CPU resource request of 700m
, but not a limit:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: example-conflict-with-limitrange-cpu
spec:
containers:
- name: demo
image: registry.k8s.io/pause:2.0
resources:
requests:
cpu: 700m
then that Pod will not be scheduled, failing with an error similar to:
Pod "example-conflict-with-limitrange-cpu" is invalid: spec.containers[0].resources.requests: Invalid value: "700m": must be less than or equal to cpu limit
If you set both request
and limit
, then that new Pod will be scheduled successfully even with the same LimitRange
in place:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: example-no-conflict-with-limitrange-cpu
spec:
containers:
- name: demo
image: registry.k8s.io/pause:2.0
resources:
requests:
cpu: 700m
limits:
cpu: 700m
Example resource constraints
Examples of policies that could be created using LimitRange
are:
- In a 2 node cluster with a capacity of 8 GiB RAM and 16 cores, constrain Pods in a namespace to request 100m of CPU with a max limit of 500m for CPU and request 200Mi for Memory with a max limit of 600Mi for Memory.
- Define default CPU limit and request to 150m and memory default request to 300Mi for Containers started with no cpu and memory requests in their specs.
In the case where the total limits of the namespace is less than the sum of the limits of the Pods/Containers, there may be contention for resources. In this case, the Containers or Pods will not be created.
Neither contention nor changes to a LimitRange will affect already created resources.
What's next
For examples on using limits, see:
- how to configure minimum and maximum CPU constraints per namespace.
- how to configure minimum and maximum Memory constraints per namespace.
- how to configure default CPU Requests and Limits per namespace.
- how to configure default Memory Requests and Limits per namespace.
- how to configure minimum and maximum Storage consumption per namespace.
- a detailed example on configuring quota per namespace.
Refer to the LimitRanger design document for context and historical information.
9.2 - Resource Quotas
When several users or teams share a cluster with a fixed number of nodes, there is a concern that one team could use more than its fair share of resources.
Resource quotas are a tool for administrators to address this concern.
A resource quota, defined by a ResourceQuota
object, provides constraints that limit
aggregate resource consumption per namespace. It can limit the quantity of objects that can
be created in a namespace by type, as well as the total amount of compute resources that may
be consumed by resources in that namespace.
Resource quotas work like this:
-
Different teams work in different namespaces. This can be enforced with RBAC.
-
The administrator creates one ResourceQuota for each namespace.
-
Users create resources (pods, services, etc.) in the namespace, and the quota system tracks usage to ensure it does not exceed hard resource limits defined in a ResourceQuota.
-
If creating or updating a resource violates a quota constraint, the request will fail with HTTP status code
403 FORBIDDEN
with a message explaining the constraint that would have been violated. -
If quota is enabled in a namespace for compute resources like
cpu
andmemory
, users must specify requests or limits for those values; otherwise, the quota system may reject pod creation. Hint: Use theLimitRanger
admission controller to force defaults for pods that make no compute resource requirements.See the walkthrough for an example of how to avoid this problem.
- For
cpu
andmemory
resources, ResourceQuotas enforce that every (new) pod in that namespace sets a limit for that resource. If you enforce a resource quota in a namespace for eithercpu
ormemory
, you, and other clients, must specify eitherrequests
orlimits
for that resource, for every new Pod you submit. If you don't, the control plane may reject admission for that Pod. - For other resources: ResourceQuota works and will ignore pods in the namespace without setting a limit or request for that resource. It means that you can create a new pod without limit/request ephemeral storage if the resource quota limits the ephemeral storage of this namespace. You can use a LimitRange to automatically set a default request for these resources.
The name of a ResourceQuota object must be a valid DNS subdomain name.
Examples of policies that could be created using namespaces and quotas are:
- In a cluster with a capacity of 32 GiB RAM, and 16 cores, let team A use 20 GiB and 10 cores, let B use 10GiB and 4 cores, and hold 2GiB and 2 cores in reserve for future allocation.
- Limit the "testing" namespace to using 1 core and 1GiB RAM. Let the "production" namespace use any amount.
In the case where the total capacity of the cluster is less than the sum of the quotas of the namespaces, there may be contention for resources. This is handled on a first-come-first-served basis.
Neither contention nor changes to quota will affect already created resources.
Enabling Resource Quota
Resource Quota support is enabled by default for many Kubernetes distributions. It is
enabled when the API server
--enable-admission-plugins=
flag has ResourceQuota
as
one of its arguments.
A resource quota is enforced in a particular namespace when there is a ResourceQuota in that namespace.
Compute Resource Quota
You can limit the total sum of compute resources that can be requested in a given namespace.
The following resource types are supported:
Resource Name | Description |
---|---|
limits.cpu |
Across all pods in a non-terminal state, the sum of CPU limits cannot exceed this value. |
limits.memory |
Across all pods in a non-terminal state, the sum of memory limits cannot exceed this value. |
requests.cpu |
Across all pods in a non-terminal state, the sum of CPU requests cannot exceed this value. |
requests.memory |
Across all pods in a non-terminal state, the sum of memory requests cannot exceed this value. |
hugepages-<size> |
Across all pods in a non-terminal state, the number of huge page requests of the specified size cannot exceed this value. |
cpu |
Same as requests.cpu |
memory |
Same as requests.memory |
Resource Quota For Extended Resources
In addition to the resources mentioned above, in release 1.10, quota support for extended resources is added.
As overcommit is not allowed for extended resources, it makes no sense to specify both requests
and limits
for the same extended resource in a quota. So for extended resources, only quota items
with prefix requests.
is allowed for now.
Take the GPU resource as an example, if the resource name is nvidia.com/gpu
, and you want to
limit the total number of GPUs requested in a namespace to 4, you can define a quota as follows:
requests.nvidia.com/gpu: 4
See Viewing and Setting Quotas for more detail information.
Storage Resource Quota
You can limit the total sum of storage resources that can be requested in a given namespace.
In addition, you can limit consumption of storage resources based on associated storage-class.
Resource Name | Description |
---|---|
requests.storage |
Across all persistent volume claims, the sum of storage requests cannot exceed this value. |
persistentvolumeclaims |
The total number of PersistentVolumeClaims that can exist in the namespace. |
<storage-class-name>.storageclass.storage.k8s.io/requests.storage |
Across all persistent volume claims associated with the <storage-class-name> , the sum of storage requests cannot exceed this value. |
<storage-class-name>.storageclass.storage.k8s.io/persistentvolumeclaims |
Across all persistent volume claims associated with the <storage-class-name> , the total number of persistent volume claims that can exist in the namespace. |
For example, if an operator wants to quota storage with gold
storage class separate from bronze
storage class, the operator can
define a quota as follows:
gold.storageclass.storage.k8s.io/requests.storage: 500Gi
bronze.storageclass.storage.k8s.io/requests.storage: 100Gi
In release 1.8, quota support for local ephemeral storage is added as an alpha feature:
Resource Name | Description |
---|---|
requests.ephemeral-storage |
Across all pods in the namespace, the sum of local ephemeral storage requests cannot exceed this value. |
limits.ephemeral-storage |
Across all pods in the namespace, the sum of local ephemeral storage limits cannot exceed this value. |
ephemeral-storage |
Same as requests.ephemeral-storage . |
Object Count Quota
You can set quota for the total number of certain resources of all standard, namespaced resource types using the following syntax:
count/<resource>.<group>
for resources from non-core groupscount/<resource>
for resources from the core group
Here is an example set of resources users may want to put under object count quota:
count/persistentvolumeclaims
count/services
count/secrets
count/configmaps
count/replicationcontrollers
count/deployments.apps
count/replicasets.apps
count/statefulsets.apps
count/jobs.batch
count/cronjobs.batch
The same syntax can be used for custom resources.
For example, to create a quota on a widgets
custom resource in the example.com
API group, use count/widgets.example.com
.
When using count/*
resource quota, an object is charged against the quota if it exists in server storage.
These types of quotas are useful to protect against exhaustion of storage resources. For example, you may
want to limit the number of Secrets in a server given their large size. Too many Secrets in a cluster can
actually prevent servers and controllers from starting. You can set a quota for Jobs to protect against
a poorly configured CronJob. CronJobs that create too many Jobs in a namespace can lead to a denial of service.
It is also possible to do generic object count quota on a limited set of resources. The following types are supported:
Resource Name | Description |
---|---|
configmaps |
The total number of ConfigMaps that can exist in the namespace. |
persistentvolumeclaims |
The total number of PersistentVolumeClaims that can exist in the namespace. |
pods |
The total number of Pods in a non-terminal state that can exist in the namespace. A pod is in a terminal state if .status.phase in (Failed, Succeeded) is true. |
replicationcontrollers |
The total number of ReplicationControllers that can exist in the namespace. |
resourcequotas |
The total number of ResourceQuotas that can exist in the namespace. |
services |
The total number of Services that can exist in the namespace. |
services.loadbalancers |
The total number of Services of type LoadBalancer that can exist in the namespace. |
services.nodeports |
The total number of Services of type NodePort that can exist in the namespace. |
secrets |
The total number of Secrets that can exist in the namespace. |
For example, pods
quota counts and enforces a maximum on the number of pods
created in a single namespace that are not terminal. You might want to set a pods
quota on a namespace to avoid the case where a user creates many small pods and
exhausts the cluster's supply of Pod IPs.
Quota Scopes
Each quota can have an associated set of scopes
. A quota will only measure usage for a resource if it matches
the intersection of enumerated scopes.
When a scope is added to the quota, it limits the number of resources it supports to those that pertain to the scope. Resources specified on the quota outside of the allowed set results in a validation error.
Scope | Description |
---|---|
Terminating |
Match pods where .spec.activeDeadlineSeconds >= 0 |
NotTerminating |
Match pods where .spec.activeDeadlineSeconds is nil |
BestEffort |
Match pods that have best effort quality of service. |
NotBestEffort |
Match pods that do not have best effort quality of service. |
PriorityClass |
Match pods that references the specified priority class. |
CrossNamespacePodAffinity |
Match pods that have cross-namespace pod (anti)affinity terms. |
The BestEffort
scope restricts a quota to tracking the following resource:
pods
The Terminating
, NotTerminating
, NotBestEffort
and PriorityClass
scopes restrict a quota to tracking the following resources:
pods
cpu
memory
requests.cpu
requests.memory
limits.cpu
limits.memory
Note that you cannot specify both the Terminating
and the NotTerminating
scopes in the same quota, and you cannot specify both the BestEffort
and
NotBestEffort
scopes in the same quota either.
The scopeSelector
supports the following values in the operator
field:
In
NotIn
Exists
DoesNotExist
When using one of the following values as the scopeName
when defining the
scopeSelector
, the operator
must be Exists
.
Terminating
NotTerminating
BestEffort
NotBestEffort
If the operator
is In
or NotIn
, the values
field must have at least
one value. For example:
scopeSelector:
matchExpressions:
- scopeName: PriorityClass
operator: In
values:
- middle
If the operator
is Exists
or DoesNotExist
, the values
field must NOT be
specified.
Resource Quota Per PriorityClass
Kubernetes v1.17 [stable]
Pods can be created at a specific priority.
You can control a pod's consumption of system resources based on a pod's priority, by using the scopeSelector
field in the quota spec.
A quota is matched and consumed only if scopeSelector
in the quota spec selects the pod.
When quota is scoped for priority class using scopeSelector
field, quota object
is restricted to track only following resources:
pods
cpu
memory
ephemeral-storage
limits.cpu
limits.memory
limits.ephemeral-storage
requests.cpu
requests.memory
requests.ephemeral-storage
This example creates a quota object and matches it with pods at specific priorities. The example works as follows:
- Pods in the cluster have one of the three priority classes, "low", "medium", "high".
- One quota object is created for each priority.
Save the following YAML to a file quota.yml
.
apiVersion: v1
kind: List
items:
- apiVersion: v1
kind: ResourceQuota
metadata:
name: pods-high
spec:
hard:
cpu: "1000"
memory: 200Gi
pods: "10"
scopeSelector:
matchExpressions:
- operator : In
scopeName: PriorityClass
values: ["high"]
- apiVersion: v1
kind: ResourceQuota
metadata:
name: pods-medium
spec:
hard:
cpu: "10"
memory: 20Gi
pods: "10"
scopeSelector:
matchExpressions:
- operator : In
scopeName: PriorityClass
values: ["medium"]
- apiVersion: v1
kind: ResourceQuota
metadata:
name: pods-low
spec:
hard:
cpu: "5"
memory: 10Gi
pods: "10"
scopeSelector:
matchExpressions:
- operator : In
scopeName: PriorityClass
values: ["low"]
Apply the YAML using kubectl create
.
kubectl create -f ./quota.yml
resourcequota/pods-high created
resourcequota/pods-medium created
resourcequota/pods-low created
Verify that Used
quota is 0
using kubectl describe quota
.
kubectl describe quota
Name: pods-high
Namespace: default
Resource Used Hard
-------- ---- ----
cpu 0 1k
memory 0 200Gi
pods 0 10
Name: pods-low
Namespace: default
Resource Used Hard
-------- ---- ----
cpu 0 5
memory 0 10Gi
pods 0 10
Name: pods-medium
Namespace: default
Resource Used Hard
-------- ---- ----
cpu 0 10
memory 0 20Gi
pods 0 10
Create a pod with priority "high". Save the following YAML to a
file high-priority-pod.yml
.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: high-priority
spec:
containers:
- name: high-priority
image: ubuntu
command: ["/bin/sh"]
args: ["-c", "while true; do echo hello; sleep 10;done"]
resources:
requests:
memory: "10Gi"
cpu: "500m"
limits:
memory: "10Gi"
cpu: "500m"
priorityClassName: high
Apply it with kubectl create
.
kubectl create -f ./high-priority-pod.yml
Verify that "Used" stats for "high" priority quota, pods-high
, has changed and that
the other two quotas are unchanged.
kubectl describe quota
Name: pods-high
Namespace: default
Resource Used Hard
-------- ---- ----
cpu 500m 1k
memory 10Gi 200Gi
pods 1 10
Name: pods-low
Namespace: default
Resource Used Hard
-------- ---- ----
cpu 0 5
memory 0 10Gi
pods 0 10
Name: pods-medium
Namespace: default
Resource Used Hard
-------- ---- ----
cpu 0 10
memory 0 20Gi
pods 0 10
Cross-namespace Pod Affinity Quota
Kubernetes v1.24 [stable]
Operators can use CrossNamespacePodAffinity
quota scope to limit which namespaces are allowed to
have pods with affinity terms that cross namespaces. Specifically, it controls which pods are allowed
to set namespaces
or namespaceSelector
fields in pod affinity terms.
Preventing users from using cross-namespace affinity terms might be desired since a pod with anti-affinity constraints can block pods from all other namespaces from getting scheduled in a failure domain.
Using this scope operators can prevent certain namespaces (foo-ns
in the example below)
from having pods that use cross-namespace pod affinity by creating a resource quota object in
that namespace with CrossNamespacePodAffinity
scope and hard limit of 0:
apiVersion: v1
kind: ResourceQuota
metadata:
name: disable-cross-namespace-affinity
namespace: foo-ns
spec:
hard:
pods: "0"
scopeSelector:
matchExpressions:
- scopeName: CrossNamespacePodAffinity
operator: Exists
If operators want to disallow using namespaces
and namespaceSelector
by default, and
only allow it for specific namespaces, they could configure CrossNamespacePodAffinity
as a limited resource by setting the kube-apiserver flag --admission-control-config-file
to the path of the following configuration file:
apiVersion: apiserver.config.k8s.io/v1
kind: AdmissionConfiguration
plugins:
- name: "ResourceQuota"
configuration:
apiVersion: apiserver.config.k8s.io/v1
kind: ResourceQuotaConfiguration
limitedResources:
- resource: pods
matchScopes:
- scopeName: CrossNamespacePodAffinity
operator: Exists
With the above configuration, pods can use namespaces
and namespaceSelector
in pod affinity only
if the namespace where they are created have a resource quota object with
CrossNamespacePodAffinity
scope and a hard limit greater than or equal to the number of pods using those fields.
Requests compared to Limits
When allocating compute resources, each container may specify a request and a limit value for either CPU or memory. The quota can be configured to quota either value.
If the quota has a value specified for requests.cpu
or requests.memory
, then it requires that every incoming
container makes an explicit request for those resources. If the quota has a value specified for limits.cpu
or limits.memory
,
then it requires that every incoming container specifies an explicit limit for those resources.
Viewing and Setting Quotas
Kubectl supports creating, updating, and viewing quotas:
kubectl create namespace myspace
cat <<EOF > compute-resources.yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: ResourceQuota
metadata:
name: compute-resources
spec:
hard:
requests.cpu: "1"
requests.memory: 1Gi
limits.cpu: "2"
limits.memory: 2Gi
requests.nvidia.com/gpu: 4
EOF
kubectl create -f ./compute-resources.yaml --namespace=myspace
cat <<EOF > object-counts.yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: ResourceQuota
metadata:
name: object-counts
spec:
hard:
configmaps: "10"
persistentvolumeclaims: "4"
pods: "4"
replicationcontrollers: "20"
secrets: "10"
services: "10"
services.loadbalancers: "2"
EOF
kubectl create -f ./object-counts.yaml --namespace=myspace
kubectl get quota --namespace=myspace
NAME AGE
compute-resources 30s
object-counts 32s
kubectl describe quota compute-resources --namespace=myspace
Name: compute-resources
Namespace: myspace
Resource Used Hard
-------- ---- ----
limits.cpu 0 2
limits.memory 0 2Gi
requests.cpu 0 1
requests.memory 0 1Gi
requests.nvidia.com/gpu 0 4
kubectl describe quota object-counts --namespace=myspace
Name: object-counts
Namespace: myspace
Resource Used Hard
-------- ---- ----
configmaps 0 10
persistentvolumeclaims 0 4
pods 0 4
replicationcontrollers 0 20
secrets 1 10
services 0 10
services.loadbalancers 0 2
Kubectl also supports object count quota for all standard namespaced resources
using the syntax count/<resource>.<group>
:
kubectl create namespace myspace
kubectl create quota test --hard=count/deployments.apps=2,count/replicasets.apps=4,count/pods=3,count/secrets=4 --namespace=myspace
kubectl create deployment nginx --image=nginx --namespace=myspace --replicas=2
kubectl describe quota --namespace=myspace
Name: test
Namespace: myspace
Resource Used Hard
-------- ---- ----
count/deployments.apps 1 2
count/pods 2 3
count/replicasets.apps 1 4
count/secrets 1 4
Quota and Cluster Capacity
ResourceQuotas are independent of the cluster capacity. They are expressed in absolute units. So, if you add nodes to your cluster, this does not automatically give each namespace the ability to consume more resources.
Sometimes more complex policies may be desired, such as:
- Proportionally divide total cluster resources among several teams.
- Allow each tenant to grow resource usage as needed, but have a generous limit to prevent accidental resource exhaustion.
- Detect demand from one namespace, add nodes, and increase quota.
Such policies could be implemented using ResourceQuotas
as building blocks, by
writing a "controller" that watches the quota usage and adjusts the quota
hard limits of each namespace according to other signals.
Note that resource quota divides up aggregate cluster resources, but it creates no restrictions around nodes: pods from several namespaces may run on the same node.
Limit Priority Class consumption by default
It may be desired that pods at a particular priority, eg. "cluster-services", should be allowed in a namespace, if and only if, a matching quota object exists.
With this mechanism, operators are able to restrict usage of certain high priority classes to a limited number of namespaces and not every namespace will be able to consume these priority classes by default.
To enforce this, kube-apiserver
flag --admission-control-config-file
should be
used to pass path to the following configuration file:
apiVersion: apiserver.config.k8s.io/v1
kind: AdmissionConfiguration
plugins:
- name: "ResourceQuota"
configuration:
apiVersion: apiserver.config.k8s.io/v1
kind: ResourceQuotaConfiguration
limitedResources:
- resource: pods
matchScopes:
- scopeName: PriorityClass
operator: In
values: ["cluster-services"]
Then, create a resource quota object in the kube-system
namespace:
apiVersion: v1
kind: ResourceQuota
metadata:
name: pods-cluster-services
spec:
scopeSelector:
matchExpressions:
- operator : In
scopeName: PriorityClass
values: ["cluster-services"]
kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/policy/priority-class-resourcequota.yaml -n kube-system
resourcequota/pods-cluster-services created
In this case, a pod creation will be allowed if:
- the Pod's
priorityClassName
is not specified. - the Pod's
priorityClassName
is specified to a value other thancluster-services
. - the Pod's
priorityClassName
is set tocluster-services
, it is to be created in thekube-system
namespace, and it has passed the resource quota check.
A Pod creation request is rejected if its priorityClassName
is set to cluster-services
and it is to be created in a namespace other than kube-system
.
What's next
- See ResourceQuota design doc for more information.
- See a detailed example for how to use resource quota.
- Read Quota support for priority class design doc.
- See LimitedResources
9.3 - Process ID Limits And Reservations
Kubernetes v1.20 [stable]
Kubernetes allow you to limit the number of process IDs (PIDs) that a Pod can use. You can also reserve a number of allocatable PIDs for each node for use by the operating system and daemons (rather than by Pods).
Process IDs (PIDs) are a fundamental resource on nodes. It is trivial to hit the task limit without hitting any other resource limits, which can then cause instability to a host machine.
Cluster administrators require mechanisms to ensure that Pods running in the cluster cannot induce PID exhaustion that prevents host daemons (such as the kubelet or kube-proxy, and potentially also the container runtime) from running. In addition, it is important to ensure that PIDs are limited among Pods in order to ensure they have limited impact on other workloads on the same node.
32768
. Consider raising the value of /proc/sys/kernel/pid_max
.
You can configure a kubelet to limit the number of PIDs a given Pod can consume.
For example, if your node's host OS is set to use a maximum of 262144
PIDs and
expect to host less than 250
Pods, one can give each Pod a budget of 1000
PIDs to prevent using up that node's overall number of available PIDs. If the
admin wants to overcommit PIDs similar to CPU or memory, they may do so as well
with some additional risks. Either way, a single Pod will not be able to bring
the whole machine down. This kind of resource limiting helps to prevent simple
fork bombs from affecting operation of an entire cluster.
Per-Pod PID limiting allows administrators to protect one Pod from another, but does not ensure that all Pods scheduled onto that host are unable to impact the node overall. Per-Pod limiting also does not protect the node agents themselves from PID exhaustion.
You can also reserve an amount of PIDs for node overhead, separate from the allocation to Pods. This is similar to how you can reserve CPU, memory, or other resources for use by the operating system and other facilities outside of Pods and their containers.
PID limiting is a an important sibling to compute
resource requests
and limits. However, you specify it in a different way: rather than defining a
Pod's resource limit in the .spec
for a Pod, you configure the limit as a
setting on the kubelet. Pod-defined PID limits are not currently supported.
Node PID limits
Kubernetes allows you to reserve a number of process IDs for the system use. To
configure the reservation, use the parameter pid=<number>
in the
--system-reserved
and --kube-reserved
command line options to the kubelet.
The value you specified declares that the specified number of process IDs will
be reserved for the system as a whole and for Kubernetes system daemons
respectively.
Pod PID limits
Kubernetes allows you to limit the number of processes running in a Pod. You
specify this limit at the node level, rather than configuring it as a resource
limit for a particular Pod. Each Node can have a different PID limit.
To configure the limit, you can specify the command line parameter --pod-max-pids
to the kubelet, or set PodPidsLimit
in the kubelet
configuration file.
PID based eviction
You can configure kubelet to start terminating a Pod when it is misbehaving and consuming abnormal amount of resources.
This feature is called eviction. You can
Configure Out of Resource Handling
for various eviction signals.
Use pid.available
eviction signal to configure the threshold for number of PIDs used by Pod.
You can set soft and hard eviction policies.
However, even with the hard eviction policy, if the number of PIDs growing very fast,
node can still get into unstable state by hitting the node PIDs limit.
Eviction signal value is calculated periodically and does NOT enforce the limit.
PID limiting - per Pod and per Node sets the hard limit. Once the limit is hit, workload will start experiencing failures when trying to get a new PID. It may or may not lead to rescheduling of a Pod, depending on how workload reacts on these failures and how liveness and readiness probes are configured for the Pod. However, if limits were set correctly, you can guarantee that other Pods workload and system processes will not run out of PIDs when one Pod is misbehaving.
What's next
- Refer to the PID Limiting enhancement document for more information.
- For historical context, read Process ID Limiting for Stability Improvements in Kubernetes 1.14.
- Read Managing Resources for Containers.
- Learn how to Configure Out of Resource Handling.
9.4 - Node Resource Managers
In order to support latency-critical and high-throughput workloads, Kubernetes offers a suite of Resource Managers. The managers aim to co-ordinate and optimise node's resources alignment for pods configured with a specific requirement for CPUs, devices, and memory (hugepages) resources.
The main manager, the Topology Manager, is a Kubelet component that co-ordinates the overall resource management process through its policy.
The configuration of individual managers is elaborated in dedicated documents:
10 - Scheduling, Preemption and Eviction
In Kubernetes, scheduling refers to making sure that Pods are matched to Nodes so that the kubelet can run them. Preemption is the process of terminating Pods with lower Priority so that Pods with higher Priority can schedule on Nodes. Eviction is the process of terminating one or more Pods on Nodes.
Scheduling
- Kubernetes Scheduler
- Assigning Pods to Nodes
- Pod Overhead
- Pod Topology Spread Constraints
- Taints and Tolerations
- Scheduling Framework
- Dynamic Resource Allocation
- Scheduler Performance Tuning
- Resource Bin Packing for Extended Resources
- Pod Scheduling Readiness
- Descheduler
Pod Disruption
Pod disruption is the process by which Pods on Nodes are terminated either voluntarily or involuntarily.
Voluntary disruptions are started intentionally by application owners or cluster administrators. Involuntary disruptions are unintentional and can be triggered by unavoidable issues like Nodes running out of resources, or by accidental deletions.
10.1 - Kubernetes Scheduler
In Kubernetes, scheduling refers to making sure that Pods are matched to Nodes so that Kubelet can run them.
Scheduling overview
A scheduler watches for newly created Pods that have no Node assigned. For every Pod that the scheduler discovers, the scheduler becomes responsible for finding the best Node for that Pod to run on. The scheduler reaches this placement decision taking into account the scheduling principles described below.
If you want to understand why Pods are placed onto a particular Node, or if you're planning to implement a custom scheduler yourself, this page will help you learn about scheduling.
kube-scheduler
kube-scheduler is the default scheduler for Kubernetes and runs as part of the control plane. kube-scheduler is designed so that, if you want and need to, you can write your own scheduling component and use that instead.
Kube-scheduler selects an optimal node to run newly created or not yet scheduled (unscheduled) pods. Since containers in pods - and pods themselves - can have different requirements, the scheduler filters out any nodes that don't meet a Pod's specific scheduling needs. Alternatively, the API lets you specify a node for a Pod when you create it, but this is unusual and is only done in special cases.
In a cluster, Nodes that meet the scheduling requirements for a Pod are called feasible nodes. If none of the nodes are suitable, the pod remains unscheduled until the scheduler is able to place it.
The scheduler finds feasible Nodes for a Pod and then runs a set of functions to score the feasible Nodes and picks a Node with the highest score among the feasible ones to run the Pod. The scheduler then notifies the API server about this decision in a process called binding.
Factors that need to be taken into account for scheduling decisions include individual and collective resource requirements, hardware / software / policy constraints, affinity and anti-affinity specifications, data locality, inter-workload interference, and so on.
Node selection in kube-scheduler
kube-scheduler selects a node for the pod in a 2-step operation:
- Filtering
- Scoring
The filtering step finds the set of Nodes where it's feasible to schedule the Pod. For example, the PodFitsResources filter checks whether a candidate Node has enough available resources to meet a Pod's specific resource requests. After this step, the node list contains any suitable Nodes; often, there will be more than one. If the list is empty, that Pod isn't (yet) schedulable.
In the scoring step, the scheduler ranks the remaining nodes to choose the most suitable Pod placement. The scheduler assigns a score to each Node that survived filtering, basing this score on the active scoring rules.
Finally, kube-scheduler assigns the Pod to the Node with the highest ranking. If there is more than one node with equal scores, kube-scheduler selects one of these at random.
There are two supported ways to configure the filtering and scoring behavior of the scheduler:
- Scheduling Policies allow you to configure Predicates for filtering and Priorities for scoring.
- Scheduling Profiles allow you to configure Plugins that implement different scheduling stages, including:
QueueSort
,Filter
,Score
,Bind
,Reserve
,Permit
, and others. You can also configure the kube-scheduler to run different profiles.
What's next
- Read about scheduler performance tuning
- Read about Pod topology spread constraints
- Read the reference documentation for kube-scheduler
- Read the kube-scheduler config (v1) reference
- Learn about configuring multiple schedulers
- Learn about topology management policies
- Learn about Pod Overhead
- Learn about scheduling of Pods that use volumes in:
10.2 - Assigning Pods to Nodes
You can constrain a Pod so that it is restricted to run on particular node(s), or to prefer to run on particular nodes. There are several ways to do this and the recommended approaches all use label selectors to facilitate the selection. Often, you do not need to set any such constraints; the scheduler will automatically do a reasonable placement (for example, spreading your Pods across nodes so as not place Pods on a node with insufficient free resources). However, there are some circumstances where you may want to control which node the Pod deploys to, for example, to ensure that a Pod ends up on a node with an SSD attached to it, or to co-locate Pods from two different services that communicate a lot into the same availability zone.
You can use any of the following methods to choose where Kubernetes schedules specific Pods:
- nodeSelector field matching against node labels
- Affinity and anti-affinity
- nodeName field
- Pod topology spread constraints
Node labels
Like many other Kubernetes objects, nodes have labels. You can attach labels manually. Kubernetes also populates a standard set of labels on all nodes in a cluster.
kubernetes.io/hostname
may be the same as the node name in some environments
and a different value in other environments.
Node isolation/restriction
Adding labels to nodes allows you to target Pods for scheduling on specific nodes or groups of nodes. You can use this functionality to ensure that specific Pods only run on nodes with certain isolation, security, or regulatory properties.
If you use labels for node isolation, choose label keys that the kubelet cannot modify. This prevents a compromised node from setting those labels on itself so that the scheduler schedules workloads onto the compromised node.
The NodeRestriction
admission plugin
prevents the kubelet from setting or modifying labels with a
node-restriction.kubernetes.io/
prefix.
To make use of that label prefix for node isolation:
- Ensure you are using the Node authorizer and have enabled the
NodeRestriction
admission plugin. - Add labels with the
node-restriction.kubernetes.io/
prefix to your nodes, and use those labels in your node selectors. For example,example.com.node-restriction.kubernetes.io/fips=true
orexample.com.node-restriction.kubernetes.io/pci-dss=true
.
nodeSelector
nodeSelector
is the simplest recommended form of node selection constraint.
You can add the nodeSelector
field to your Pod specification and specify the
node labels you want the target node to have.
Kubernetes only schedules the Pod onto nodes that have each of the labels you
specify.
See Assign Pods to Nodes for more information.
Affinity and anti-affinity
nodeSelector
is the simplest way to constrain Pods to nodes with specific
labels. Affinity and anti-affinity expands the types of constraints you can
define. Some of the benefits of affinity and anti-affinity include:
- The affinity/anti-affinity language is more expressive.
nodeSelector
only selects nodes with all the specified labels. Affinity/anti-affinity gives you more control over the selection logic. - You can indicate that a rule is soft or preferred, so that the scheduler still schedules the Pod even if it can't find a matching node.
- You can constrain a Pod using labels on other Pods running on the node (or other topological domain), instead of just node labels, which allows you to define rules for which Pods can be co-located on a node.
The affinity feature consists of two types of affinity:
- Node affinity functions like the
nodeSelector
field but is more expressive and allows you to specify soft rules. - Inter-pod affinity/anti-affinity allows you to constrain Pods against labels on other Pods.
Node affinity
Node affinity is conceptually similar to nodeSelector
, allowing you to constrain which nodes your
Pod can be scheduled on based on node labels. There are two types of node
affinity:
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution
: The scheduler can't schedule the Pod unless the rule is met. This functions likenodeSelector
, but with a more expressive syntax.preferredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution
: The scheduler tries to find a node that meets the rule. If a matching node is not available, the scheduler still schedules the Pod.
IgnoredDuringExecution
means that if the node labels
change after Kubernetes schedules the Pod, the Pod continues to run.
You can specify node affinities using the .spec.affinity.nodeAffinity
field in
your Pod spec.
For example, consider the following Pod spec:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: with-node-affinity
spec:
affinity:
nodeAffinity:
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
nodeSelectorTerms:
- matchExpressions:
- key: topology.kubernetes.io/zone
operator: In
values:
- antarctica-east1
- antarctica-west1
preferredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
- weight: 1
preference:
matchExpressions:
- key: another-node-label-key
operator: In
values:
- another-node-label-value
containers:
- name: with-node-affinity
image: registry.k8s.io/pause:2.0
In this example, the following rules apply:
- The node must have a label with the key
topology.kubernetes.io/zone
and the value of that label must be eitherantarctica-east1
orantarctica-west1
. - The node preferably has a label with the key
another-node-label-key
and the valueanother-node-label-value
.
You can use the operator
field to specify a logical operator for Kubernetes to use when
interpreting the rules. You can use In
, NotIn
, Exists
, DoesNotExist
,
Gt
and Lt
.
Read Operators to learn more about how these work.
NotIn
and DoesNotExist
allow you to define node anti-affinity behavior.
Alternatively, you can use node taints
to repel Pods from specific nodes.
If you specify both nodeSelector
and nodeAffinity
, both must be satisfied
for the Pod to be scheduled onto a node.
If you specify multiple terms in nodeSelectorTerms
associated with nodeAffinity
types, then the Pod can be scheduled onto a node if one of the specified terms
can be satisfied (terms are ORed).
If you specify multiple expressions in a single matchExpressions
field associated with a
term in nodeSelectorTerms
, then the Pod can be scheduled onto a node only
if all the expressions are satisfied (expressions are ANDed).
See Assign Pods to Nodes using Node Affinity for more information.
Node affinity weight
You can specify a weight
between 1 and 100 for each instance of the
preferredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution
affinity type. When the
scheduler finds nodes that meet all the other scheduling requirements of the Pod, the
scheduler iterates through every preferred rule that the node satisfies and adds the
value of the weight
for that expression to a sum.
The final sum is added to the score of other priority functions for the node. Nodes with the highest total score are prioritized when the scheduler makes a scheduling decision for the Pod.
For example, consider the following Pod spec:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: with-affinity-anti-affinity
spec:
affinity:
nodeAffinity:
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
nodeSelectorTerms:
- matchExpressions:
- key: kubernetes.io/os
operator: In
values:
- linux
preferredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
- weight: 1
preference:
matchExpressions:
- key: label-1
operator: In
values:
- key-1
- weight: 50
preference:
matchExpressions:
- key: label-2
operator: In
values:
- key-2
containers:
- name: with-node-affinity
image: registry.k8s.io/pause:2.0
If there are two possible nodes that match the
preferredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution
rule, one with the
label-1:key-1
label and another with the label-2:key-2
label, the scheduler
considers the weight
of each node and adds the weight to the other scores for
that node, and schedules the Pod onto the node with the highest final score.
kubernetes.io/os=linux
label.
Node affinity per scheduling profile
Kubernetes v1.20 [beta]
When configuring multiple scheduling profiles, you can associate
a profile with a node affinity, which is useful if a profile only applies to a specific set of nodes.
To do so, add an addedAffinity
to the args
field of the NodeAffinity
plugin
in the scheduler configuration. For example:
apiVersion: kubescheduler.config.k8s.io/v1beta3
kind: KubeSchedulerConfiguration
profiles:
- schedulerName: default-scheduler
- schedulerName: foo-scheduler
pluginConfig:
- name: NodeAffinity
args:
addedAffinity:
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
nodeSelectorTerms:
- matchExpressions:
- key: scheduler-profile
operator: In
values:
- foo
The addedAffinity
is applied to all Pods that set .spec.schedulerName
to foo-scheduler
, in addition to the
NodeAffinity specified in the PodSpec.
That is, in order to match the Pod, nodes need to satisfy addedAffinity
and
the Pod's .spec.NodeAffinity
.
Since the addedAffinity
is not visible to end users, its behavior might be
unexpected to them. Use node labels that have a clear correlation to the
scheduler profile name.
nodeAffinity
rules in the DaemonSet controller.
Inter-pod affinity and anti-affinity
Inter-pod affinity and anti-affinity allow you to constrain which nodes your Pods can be scheduled on based on the labels of Pods already running on that node, instead of the node labels.
Inter-pod affinity and anti-affinity rules take the form "this Pod should (or, in the case of anti-affinity, should not) run in an X if that X is already running one or more Pods that meet rule Y", where X is a topology domain like node, rack, cloud provider zone or region, or similar and Y is the rule Kubernetes tries to satisfy.
You express these rules (Y) as label selectors with an optional associated list of namespaces. Pods are namespaced objects in Kubernetes, so Pod labels also implicitly have namespaces. Any label selectors for Pod labels should specify the namespaces in which Kubernetes should look for those labels.
You express the topology domain (X) using a topologyKey
, which is the key for
the node label that the system uses to denote the domain. For examples, see
Well-Known Labels, Annotations and Taints.
topologyKey
.
If some or all nodes are missing the specified topologyKey
label, it can lead
to unintended behavior.
Types of inter-pod affinity and anti-affinity
Similar to node affinity are two types of Pod affinity and anti-affinity as follows:
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution
preferredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution
For example, you could use
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution
affinity to tell the scheduler to
co-locate Pods of two services in the same cloud provider zone because they
communicate with each other a lot. Similarly, you could use
preferredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution
anti-affinity to spread Pods
from a service across multiple cloud provider zones.
To use inter-pod affinity, use the affinity.podAffinity
field in the Pod spec.
For inter-pod anti-affinity, use the affinity.podAntiAffinity
field in the Pod
spec.
Scheduling a group of pods with inter-pod affinity to themselves
If the current Pod being scheduled is the first in a series that have affinity to themselves, it is allowed to be scheduled if it passes all other affinity checks. This is determined by verifying that no other pod in the cluster matches the namespace and selector of this pod, that the pod matches its own terms, and the chosen node matches all requested topologies. This ensures that there will not be a deadlock even if all the pods have inter-pod affinity specified.
Pod affinity example
Consider the following Pod spec:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: with-pod-affinity
spec:
affinity:
podAffinity:
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
- labelSelector:
matchExpressions:
- key: security
operator: In
values:
- S1
topologyKey: topology.kubernetes.io/zone
podAntiAffinity:
preferredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
- weight: 100
podAffinityTerm:
labelSelector:
matchExpressions:
- key: security
operator: In
values:
- S2
topologyKey: topology.kubernetes.io/zone
containers:
- name: with-pod-affinity
image: registry.k8s.io/pause:2.0
This example defines one Pod affinity rule and one Pod anti-affinity rule. The
Pod affinity rule uses the "hard"
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution
, while the anti-affinity rule
uses the "soft" preferredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution
.
The affinity rule specifies that the scheduler is allowed to place the example Pod
on a node only if that node belongs to a specific zone
where other Pods have been labeled with security=S1
.
For instance, if we have a cluster with a designated zone, let's call it "Zone V,"
consisting of nodes labeled with topology.kubernetes.io/zone=V
, the scheduler can
assign the Pod to any node within Zone V, as long as there is at least one Pod within
Zone V already labeled with security=S1
. Conversely, if there are no Pods with security=S1
labels in Zone V, the scheduler will not assign the example Pod to any node in that zone.
The anti-affinity rule specifies that the scheduler should try to avoid scheduling the Pod
on a node if that node belongs to a specific zone
where other Pods have been labeled with security=S2
.
For instance, if we have a cluster with a designated zone, let's call it "Zone R,"
consisting of nodes labeled with topology.kubernetes.io/zone=R
, the scheduler should avoid
assigning the Pod to any node within Zone R, as long as there is at least one Pod within
Zone R already labeled with security=S2
. Conversely, the anti-affinity rule does not impact
scheduling into Zone R if there are no Pods with security=S2
labels.
To get yourself more familiar with the examples of Pod affinity and anti-affinity, refer to the design proposal.
You can use the In
, NotIn
, Exists
and DoesNotExist
values in the
operator
field for Pod affinity and anti-affinity.
Read Operators to learn more about how these work.
In principle, the topologyKey
can be any allowed label key with the following
exceptions for performance and security reasons:
- For Pod affinity and anti-affinity, an empty
topologyKey
field is not allowed in bothrequiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution
andpreferredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution
. - For
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution
Pod anti-affinity rules, the admission controllerLimitPodHardAntiAffinityTopology
limitstopologyKey
tokubernetes.io/hostname
. You can modify or disable the admission controller if you want to allow custom topologies.
In addition to labelSelector
and topologyKey
, you can optionally specify a list
of namespaces which the labelSelector
should match against using the
namespaces
field at the same level as labelSelector
and topologyKey
.
If omitted or empty, namespaces
defaults to the namespace of the Pod where the
affinity/anti-affinity definition appears.
Namespace selector
Kubernetes v1.24 [stable]
You can also select matching namespaces using namespaceSelector
, which is a label query over the set of namespaces.
The affinity term is applied to namespaces selected by both namespaceSelector
and the namespaces
field.
Note that an empty namespaceSelector
({}) matches all namespaces, while a null or empty namespaces
list and
null namespaceSelector
matches the namespace of the Pod where the rule is defined.
matchLabelKeys
Kubernetes v1.29 [alpha]
The matchLabelKeys
field is an alpha-level field and is disabled by default in
Kubernetes 1.29.
When you want to use it, you have to enable it via the
MatchLabelKeysInPodAffinity
feature gate.
Kubernetes includes an optional matchLabelKeys
field for Pod affinity
or anti-affinity. The field specifies keys for the labels that should match with the incoming Pod's labels,
when satisfying the Pod (anti)affinity.
The keys are used to look up values from the pod labels; those key-value labels are combined
(using AND
) with the match restrictions defined using the labelSelector
field. The combined
filtering selects the set of existing pods that will be taken into Pod (anti)affinity calculation.
A common use case is to use matchLabelKeys
with pod-template-hash
(set on Pods
managed as part of a Deployment, where the value is unique for each revision).
Using pod-template-hash
in matchLabelKeys
allows you to target the Pods that belong
to the same revision as the incoming Pod, so that a rolling upgrade won't break affinity.
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: application-server
...
spec:
template:
spec:
affinity:
podAffinity:
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
- labelSelector:
matchExpressions:
- key: app
operator: In
values:
- database
topologyKey: topology.kubernetes.io/zone
# Only Pods from a given rollout are taken into consideration when calculating pod affinity.
# If you update the Deployment, the replacement Pods follow their own affinity rules
# (if there are any defined in the new Pod template)
matchLabelKeys:
- pod-template-hash
mismatchLabelKeys
Kubernetes v1.29 [alpha]
The mismatchLabelKeys
field is an alpha-level field and is disabled by default in
Kubernetes 1.29.
When you want to use it, you have to enable it via the
MatchLabelKeysInPodAffinity
feature gate.
Kubernetes includes an optional mismatchLabelKeys
field for Pod affinity
or anti-affinity. The field specifies keys for the labels that should not match with the incoming Pod's labels,
when satisfying the Pod (anti)affinity.
One example use case is to ensure Pods go to the topology domain (node, zone, etc) where only Pods from the same tenant or team are scheduled in. In other words, you want to avoid running Pods from two different tenants on the same topology domain at the same time.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
labels:
# Assume that all relevant Pods have a "tenant" label set
tenant: tenant-a
...
spec:
affinity:
podAffinity:
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
# ensure that pods associated with this tenant land on the correct node pool
- matchLabelKeys:
- tenant
topologyKey: node-pool
podAntiAffinity:
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
# ensure that pods associated with this tenant can't schedule to nodes used for another tenant
- mismatchLabelKeys:
- tenant # whatever the value of the "tenant" label for this Pod, prevent
# scheduling to nodes in any pool where any Pod from a different
# tenant is running.
labelSelector:
# We have to have the labelSelector which selects only Pods with the tenant label,
# otherwise this Pod would hate Pods from daemonsets as well, for example,
# which aren't supposed to have the tenant label.
matchExpressions:
- key: tenant
operator: Exists
topologyKey: node-pool
More practical use-cases
Inter-pod affinity and anti-affinity can be even more useful when they are used with higher level collections such as ReplicaSets, StatefulSets, Deployments, etc. These rules allow you to configure that a set of workloads should be co-located in the same defined topology; for example, preferring to place two related Pods onto the same node.
For example: imagine a three-node cluster. You use the cluster to run a web application and also an in-memory cache (such as Redis). For this example, also assume that latency between the web application and the memory cache should be as low as is practical. You could use inter-pod affinity and anti-affinity to co-locate the web servers with the cache as much as possible.
In the following example Deployment for the Redis cache, the replicas get the label app=store
. The
podAntiAffinity
rule tells the scheduler to avoid placing multiple replicas
with the app=store
label on a single node. This creates each cache in a
separate node.
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: redis-cache
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
app: store
replicas: 3
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: store
spec:
affinity:
podAntiAffinity:
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
- labelSelector:
matchExpressions:
- key: app
operator: In
values:
- store
topologyKey: "kubernetes.io/hostname"
containers:
- name: redis-server
image: redis:3.2-alpine
The following example Deployment for the web servers creates replicas with the label app=web-store
.
The Pod affinity rule tells the scheduler to place each replica on a node that has a Pod
with the label app=store
. The Pod anti-affinity rule tells the scheduler never to place
multiple app=web-store
servers on a single node.
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: web-server
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
app: web-store
replicas: 3
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: web-store
spec:
affinity:
podAntiAffinity:
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
- labelSelector:
matchExpressions:
- key: app
operator: In
values:
- web-store
topologyKey: "kubernetes.io/hostname"
podAffinity:
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
- labelSelector:
matchExpressions:
- key: app
operator: In
values:
- store
topologyKey: "kubernetes.io/hostname"
containers:
- name: web-app
image: nginx:1.16-alpine
Creating the two preceding Deployments results in the following cluster layout, where each web server is co-located with a cache, on three separate nodes.
node-1 | node-2 | node-3 |
---|---|---|
webserver-1 | webserver-2 | webserver-3 |
cache-1 | cache-2 | cache-3 |
The overall effect is that each cache instance is likely to be accessed by a single client that is running on the same node. This approach aims to minimize both skew (imbalanced load) and latency.
You might have other reasons to use Pod anti-affinity. See the ZooKeeper tutorial for an example of a StatefulSet configured with anti-affinity for high availability, using the same technique as this example.
nodeName
nodeName
is a more direct form of node selection than affinity or
nodeSelector
. nodeName
is a field in the Pod spec. If the nodeName
field
is not empty, the scheduler ignores the Pod and the kubelet on the named node
tries to place the Pod on that node. Using nodeName
overrules using
nodeSelector
or affinity and anti-affinity rules.
Some of the limitations of using nodeName
to select nodes are:
- If the named node does not exist, the Pod will not run, and in some cases may be automatically deleted.
- If the named node does not have the resources to accommodate the Pod, the Pod will fail and its reason will indicate why, for example OutOfmemory or OutOfcpu.
- Node names in cloud environments are not always predictable or stable.
nodeName
is intended for use by custom schedulers or advanced use cases where
you need to bypass any configured schedulers. Bypassing the schedulers might lead to
failed Pods if the assigned Nodes get oversubscribed. You can use the node affinity or the nodeselector
field to assign a Pod to a specific Node without bypassing the schedulers.
Here is an example of a Pod spec using the nodeName
field:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: nginx
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx
nodeName: kube-01
The above Pod will only run on the node kube-01
.
Pod topology spread constraints
You can use topology spread constraints to control how Pods are spread across your cluster among failure-domains such as regions, zones, nodes, or among any other topology domains that you define. You might do this to improve performance, expected availability, or overall utilization.
Read Pod topology spread constraints to learn more about how these work.
Operators
The following are all the logical operators that you can use in the operator
field for nodeAffinity
and podAffinity
mentioned above.
Operator | Behavior |
---|---|
In |
The label value is present in the supplied set of strings |
NotIn |
The label value is not contained in the supplied set of strings |
Exists |
A label with this key exists on the object |
DoesNotExist |
No label with this key exists on the object |
The following operators can only be used with nodeAffinity
.
Operator | Behaviour |
---|---|
Gt |
The supplied value will be parsed as an integer, and that integer is less than the integer that results from parsing the value of a label named by this selector |
Lt |
The supplied value will be parsed as an integer, and that integer is greater than the integer that results from parsing the value of a label named by this selector |
Gt
and Lt
operators will not work with non-integer values. If the given value
doesn't parse as an integer, the pod will fail to get scheduled. Also, Gt
and Lt
are not available for podAffinity
.
What's next
- Read more about taints and tolerations .
- Read the design docs for node affinity and for inter-pod affinity/anti-affinity.
- Learn about how the topology manager takes part in node-level resource allocation decisions.
- Learn how to use nodeSelector.
- Learn how to use affinity and anti-affinity.
10.3 - Pod Overhead
Kubernetes v1.24 [stable]
When you run a Pod on a Node, the Pod itself takes an amount of system resources. These resources are additional to the resources needed to run the container(s) inside the Pod. In Kubernetes, Pod Overhead is a way to account for the resources consumed by the Pod infrastructure on top of the container requests & limits.
In Kubernetes, the Pod's overhead is set at admission time according to the overhead associated with the Pod's RuntimeClass.
A pod's overhead is considered in addition to the sum of container resource requests when scheduling a Pod. Similarly, the kubelet will include the Pod overhead when sizing the Pod cgroup, and when carrying out Pod eviction ranking.
Configuring Pod overhead
You need to make sure a RuntimeClass
is utilized which defines the overhead
field.
Usage example
To work with Pod overhead, you need a RuntimeClass that defines the overhead
field. As
an example, you could use the following RuntimeClass definition with a virtualization container
runtime that uses around 120MiB per Pod for the virtual machine and the guest OS:
apiVersion: node.k8s.io/v1
kind: RuntimeClass
metadata:
name: kata-fc
handler: kata-fc
overhead:
podFixed:
memory: "120Mi"
cpu: "250m"
Workloads which are created which specify the kata-fc
RuntimeClass handler will take the memory and
cpu overheads into account for resource quota calculations, node scheduling, as well as Pod cgroup sizing.
Consider running the given example workload, test-pod:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: test-pod
spec:
runtimeClassName: kata-fc
containers:
- name: busybox-ctr
image: busybox:1.28
stdin: true
tty: true
resources:
limits:
cpu: 500m
memory: 100Mi
- name: nginx-ctr
image: nginx
resources:
limits:
cpu: 1500m
memory: 100Mi
At admission time the RuntimeClass admission controller
updates the workload's PodSpec to include the overhead
as described in the RuntimeClass. If the PodSpec already has this field defined,
the Pod will be rejected. In the given example, since only the RuntimeClass name is specified, the admission controller mutates the Pod
to include an overhead
.
After the RuntimeClass admission controller has made modifications, you can check the updated Pod overhead value:
kubectl get pod test-pod -o jsonpath='{.spec.overhead}'
The output is:
map[cpu:250m memory:120Mi]
If a ResourceQuota is defined, the sum of container requests as well as the
overhead
field are counted.
When the kube-scheduler is deciding which node should run a new Pod, the scheduler considers that Pod's
overhead
as well as the sum of container requests for that Pod. For this example, the scheduler adds the
requests and the overhead, then looks for a node that has 2.25 CPU and 320 MiB of memory available.
Once a Pod is scheduled to a node, the kubelet on that node creates a new cgroup for the Pod. It is within this pod that the underlying container runtime will create containers.
If the resource has a limit defined for each container (Guaranteed QoS or Burstable QoS with limits defined),
the kubelet will set an upper limit for the pod cgroup associated with that resource (cpu.cfs_quota_us for CPU
and memory.limit_in_bytes memory). This upper limit is based on the sum of the container limits plus the overhead
defined in the PodSpec.
For CPU, if the Pod is Guaranteed or Burstable QoS, the kubelet will set cpu.shares
based on the
sum of container requests plus the overhead
defined in the PodSpec.
Looking at our example, verify the container requests for the workload:
kubectl get pod test-pod -o jsonpath='{.spec.containers[*].resources.limits}'
The total container requests are 2000m CPU and 200MiB of memory:
map[cpu: 500m memory:100Mi] map[cpu:1500m memory:100Mi]
Check this against what is observed by the node:
kubectl describe node | grep test-pod -B2
The output shows requests for 2250m CPU, and for 320MiB of memory. The requests include Pod overhead:
Namespace Name CPU Requests CPU Limits Memory Requests Memory Limits AGE
--------- ---- ------------ ---------- --------------- ------------- ---
default test-pod 2250m (56%) 2250m (56%) 320Mi (1%) 320Mi (1%) 36m
Verify Pod cgroup limits
Check the Pod's memory cgroups on the node where the workload is running. In the following example,
crictl
is used on the node, which provides a CLI for CRI-compatible container runtimes. This is an
advanced example to show Pod overhead behavior, and it is not expected that users should need to check
cgroups directly on the node.
First, on the particular node, determine the Pod identifier:
# Run this on the node where the Pod is scheduled
POD_ID="$(sudo crictl pods --name test-pod -q)"
From this, you can determine the cgroup path for the Pod:
# Run this on the node where the Pod is scheduled
sudo crictl inspectp -o=json $POD_ID | grep cgroupsPath
The resulting cgroup path includes the Pod's pause
container. The Pod level cgroup is one directory above.
"cgroupsPath": "/kubepods/podd7f4b509-cf94-4951-9417-d1087c92a5b2/7ccf55aee35dd16aca4189c952d83487297f3cd760f1bbf09620e206e7d0c27a"
In this specific case, the pod cgroup path is kubepods/podd7f4b509-cf94-4951-9417-d1087c92a5b2
.
Verify the Pod level cgroup setting for memory:
# Run this on the node where the Pod is scheduled.
# Also, change the name of the cgroup to match the cgroup allocated for your pod.
cat /sys/fs/cgroup/memory/kubepods/podd7f4b509-cf94-4951-9417-d1087c92a5b2/memory.limit_in_bytes
This is 320 MiB, as expected:
335544320
Observability
Some kube_pod_overhead_*
metrics are available in kube-state-metrics
to help identify when Pod overhead is being utilized and to help observe stability of workloads
running with a defined overhead.
What's next
- Learn more about RuntimeClass
- Read the PodOverhead Design enhancement proposal for extra context
10.4 - Pod Scheduling Readiness
Kubernetes v1.27 [beta]
Pods were considered ready for scheduling once created. Kubernetes scheduler does its due diligence to find nodes to place all pending Pods. However, in a real-world case, some Pods may stay in a "miss-essential-resources" state for a long period. These Pods actually churn the scheduler (and downstream integrators like Cluster AutoScaler) in an unnecessary manner.
By specifying/removing a Pod's .spec.schedulingGates
, you can control when a Pod is ready
to be considered for scheduling.
Configuring Pod schedulingGates
The schedulingGates
field contains a list of strings, and each string literal is perceived as a
criteria that Pod should be satisfied before considered schedulable. This field can be initialized
only when a Pod is created (either by the client, or mutated during admission). After creation,
each schedulingGate can be removed in arbitrary order, but addition of a new scheduling gate is disallowed.
Usage example
To mark a Pod not-ready for scheduling, you can create it with one or more scheduling gates like this:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: test-pod
spec:
schedulingGates:
- name: example.com/foo
- name: example.com/bar
containers:
- name: pause
image: registry.k8s.io/pause:3.6
After the Pod's creation, you can check its state using:
kubectl get pod test-pod
The output reveals it's in SchedulingGated
state:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
test-pod 0/1 SchedulingGated 0 7s
You can also check its schedulingGates
field by running:
kubectl get pod test-pod -o jsonpath='{.spec.schedulingGates}'
The output is:
[{"name":"example.com/foo"},{"name":"example.com/bar"}]
To inform scheduler this Pod is ready for scheduling, you can remove its schedulingGates
entirely
by reapplying a modified manifest:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: test-pod
spec:
containers:
- name: pause
image: registry.k8s.io/pause:3.6
You can check if the schedulingGates
is cleared by running:
kubectl get pod test-pod -o jsonpath='{.spec.schedulingGates}'
The output is expected to be empty. And you can check its latest status by running:
kubectl get pod test-pod -o wide
Given the test-pod doesn't request any CPU/memory resources, it's expected that this Pod's state get
transited from previous SchedulingGated
to Running
:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE IP NODE
test-pod 1/1 Running 0 15s 10.0.0.4 node-2
Observability
The metric scheduler_pending_pods
comes with a new label "gated"
to distinguish whether a Pod
has been tried scheduling but claimed as unschedulable, or explicitly marked as not ready for
scheduling. You can use scheduler_pending_pods{queue="gated"}
to check the metric result.
Mutable Pod Scheduling Directives
Kubernetes v1.27 [beta]
You can mutate scheduling directives of Pods while they have scheduling gates, with certain constraints. At a high level, you can only tighten the scheduling directives of a Pod. In other words, the updated directives would cause the Pods to only be able to be scheduled on a subset of the nodes that it would previously match. More concretely, the rules for updating a Pod's scheduling directives are as follows:
-
For
.spec.nodeSelector
, only additions are allowed. If absent, it will be allowed to be set. -
For
spec.affinity.nodeAffinity
, if nil, then setting anything is allowed. -
If
NodeSelectorTerms
was empty, it will be allowed to be set. If not empty, then only additions ofNodeSelectorRequirements
tomatchExpressions
orfieldExpressions
are allowed, and no changes to existingmatchExpressions
andfieldExpressions
will be allowed. This is because the terms in.requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution.NodeSelectorTerms
, are ORed while the expressions innodeSelectorTerms[].matchExpressions
andnodeSelectorTerms[].fieldExpressions
are ANDed. -
For
.preferredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution
, all updates are allowed. This is because preferred terms are not authoritative, and so policy controllers don't validate those terms.
What's next
- Read the PodSchedulingReadiness KEP for more details
10.5 - Pod Topology Spread Constraints
You can use topology spread constraints to control how Pods are spread across your cluster among failure-domains such as regions, zones, nodes, and other user-defined topology domains. This can help to achieve high availability as well as efficient resource utilization.
You can set cluster-level constraints as a default, or configure topology spread constraints for individual workloads.
Motivation
Imagine that you have a cluster of up to twenty nodes, and you want to run a workload that automatically scales how many replicas it uses. There could be as few as two Pods or as many as fifteen. When there are only two Pods, you'd prefer not to have both of those Pods run on the same node: you would run the risk that a single node failure takes your workload offline.
In addition to this basic usage, there are some advanced usage examples that enable your workloads to benefit on high availability and cluster utilization.
As you scale up and run more Pods, a different concern becomes important. Imagine that you have three nodes running five Pods each. The nodes have enough capacity to run that many replicas; however, the clients that interact with this workload are split across three different datacenters (or infrastructure zones). Now you have less concern about a single node failure, but you notice that latency is higher than you'd like, and you are paying for network costs associated with sending network traffic between the different zones.
You decide that under normal operation you'd prefer to have a similar number of replicas scheduled into each infrastructure zone, and you'd like the cluster to self-heal in the case that there is a problem.
Pod topology spread constraints offer you a declarative way to configure that.
topologySpreadConstraints
field
The Pod API includes a field, spec.topologySpreadConstraints
. The usage of this field looks like
the following:
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: example-pod
spec:
# Configure a topology spread constraint
topologySpreadConstraints:
- maxSkew: <integer>
minDomains: <integer> # optional; beta since v1.25
topologyKey: <string>
whenUnsatisfiable: <string>
labelSelector: <object>
matchLabelKeys: <list> # optional; beta since v1.27
nodeAffinityPolicy: [Honor|Ignore] # optional; beta since v1.26
nodeTaintsPolicy: [Honor|Ignore] # optional; beta since v1.26
### other Pod fields go here
You can read more about this field by running kubectl explain Pod.spec.topologySpreadConstraints
or
refer to the scheduling section of the API reference for Pod.
Spread constraint definition
You can define one or multiple topologySpreadConstraints
entries to instruct the
kube-scheduler how to place each incoming Pod in relation to the existing Pods across
your cluster. Those fields are:
-
maxSkew describes the degree to which Pods may be unevenly distributed. You must specify this field and the number must be greater than zero. Its semantics differ according to the value of
whenUnsatisfiable
:- if you select
whenUnsatisfiable: DoNotSchedule
, thenmaxSkew
defines the maximum permitted difference between the number of matching pods in the target topology and the global minimum (the minimum number of matching pods in an eligible domain or zero if the number of eligible domains is less than MinDomains). For example, if you have 3 zones with 2, 2 and 1 matching pods respectively,MaxSkew
is set to 1 then the global minimum is 1. - if you select
whenUnsatisfiable: ScheduleAnyway
, the scheduler gives higher precedence to topologies that would help reduce the skew.
- if you select
-
minDomains indicates a minimum number of eligible domains. This field is optional. A domain is a particular instance of a topology. An eligible domain is a domain whose nodes match the node selector.
Note: TheMinDomainsInPodTopologySpread
feature gate enablesminDomains
for pod topology spread. Starting from v1.28, theMinDomainsInPodTopologySpread
gate is enabled by default. In older Kubernetes clusters it might be explicitly disabled or the field might not be available.- The value of
minDomains
must be greater than 0, when specified. You can only specifyminDomains
in conjunction withwhenUnsatisfiable: DoNotSchedule
. - When the number of eligible domains with match topology keys is less than
minDomains
, Pod topology spread treats global minimum as 0, and then the calculation ofskew
is performed. The global minimum is the minimum number of matching Pods in an eligible domain, or zero if the number of eligible domains is less thanminDomains
. - When the number of eligible domains with matching topology keys equals or is greater than
minDomains
, this value has no effect on scheduling. - If you do not specify
minDomains
, the constraint behaves as ifminDomains
is 1.
- The value of
-
topologyKey is the key of node labels. Nodes that have a label with this key and identical values are considered to be in the same topology. We call each instance of a topology (in other words, a <key, value> pair) a domain. The scheduler will try to put a balanced number of pods into each domain. Also, we define an eligible domain as a domain whose nodes meet the requirements of nodeAffinityPolicy and nodeTaintsPolicy.
-
whenUnsatisfiable indicates how to deal with a Pod if it doesn't satisfy the spread constraint:
DoNotSchedule
(default) tells the scheduler not to schedule it.ScheduleAnyway
tells the scheduler to still schedule it while prioritizing nodes that minimize the skew.
-
labelSelector is used to find matching Pods. Pods that match this label selector are counted to determine the number of Pods in their corresponding topology domain. See Label Selectors for more details.
-
matchLabelKeys is a list of pod label keys to select the pods over which spreading will be calculated. The keys are used to lookup values from the pod labels, those key-value labels are ANDed with
labelSelector
to select the group of existing pods over which spreading will be calculated for the incoming pod. The same key is forbidden to exist in bothmatchLabelKeys
andlabelSelector
.matchLabelKeys
cannot be set whenlabelSelector
isn't set. Keys that don't exist in the pod labels will be ignored. A null or empty list means only match against thelabelSelector
.With
matchLabelKeys
, you don't need to update thepod.spec
between different revisions. The controller/operator just needs to set different values to the same label key for different revisions. The scheduler will assume the values automatically based onmatchLabelKeys
. For example, if you are configuring a Deployment, you can use the label keyed with pod-template-hash, which is added automatically by the Deployment controller, to distinguish between different revisions in a single Deployment.topologySpreadConstraints: - maxSkew: 1 topologyKey: kubernetes.io/hostname whenUnsatisfiable: DoNotSchedule labelSelector: matchLabels: app: foo matchLabelKeys: - pod-template-hash
Note: ThematchLabelKeys
field is a beta-level field and enabled by default in 1.27. You can disable it by disabling theMatchLabelKeysInPodTopologySpread
feature gate. -
nodeAffinityPolicy indicates how we will treat Pod's nodeAffinity/nodeSelector when calculating pod topology spread skew. Options are:
- Honor: only nodes matching nodeAffinity/nodeSelector are included in the calculations.
- Ignore: nodeAffinity/nodeSelector are ignored. All nodes are included in the calculations.
If this value is null, the behavior is equivalent to the Honor policy.
Note: ThenodeAffinityPolicy
is a beta-level field and enabled by default in 1.26. You can disable it by disabling theNodeInclusionPolicyInPodTopologySpread
feature gate. -
nodeTaintsPolicy indicates how we will treat node taints when calculating pod topology spread skew. Options are:
- Honor: nodes without taints, along with tainted nodes for which the incoming pod has a toleration, are included.
- Ignore: node taints are ignored. All nodes are included.
If this value is null, the behavior is equivalent to the Ignore policy.
Note: ThenodeTaintsPolicy
is a beta-level field and enabled by default in 1.26. You can disable it by disabling theNodeInclusionPolicyInPodTopologySpread
feature gate.
When a Pod defines more than one topologySpreadConstraint
, those constraints are
combined using a logical AND operation: the kube-scheduler looks for a node for the incoming Pod
that satisfies all the configured constraints.
Node labels
Topology spread constraints rely on node labels to identify the topology domain(s) that each node is in. For example, a node might have labels:
region: us-east-1
zone: us-east-1a
For brevity, this example doesn't use the
well-known label keys
topology.kubernetes.io/zone
and topology.kubernetes.io/region
. However,
those registered label keys are nonetheless recommended rather than the private
(unqualified) label keys region
and zone
that are used here.
You can't make a reliable assumption about the meaning of a private label key between different contexts.
Suppose you have a 4-node cluster with the following labels:
NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION LABELS
node1 Ready <none> 4m26s v1.16.0 node=node1,zone=zoneA
node2 Ready <none> 3m58s v1.16.0 node=node2,zone=zoneA
node3 Ready <none> 3m17s v1.16.0 node=node3,zone=zoneB
node4 Ready <none> 2m43s v1.16.0 node=node4,zone=zoneB
Then the cluster is logically viewed as below:
Consistency
You should set the same Pod topology spread constraints on all pods in a group.
Usually, if you are using a workload controller such as a Deployment, the pod template takes care of this for you. If you mix different spread constraints then Kubernetes follows the API definition of the field; however, the behavior is more likely to become confusing and troubleshooting is less straightforward.
You need a mechanism to ensure that all the nodes in a topology domain (such as a
cloud provider region) are labeled consistently.
To avoid you needing to manually label nodes, most clusters automatically
populate well-known labels such as kubernetes.io/hostname
. Check whether
your cluster supports this.
Topology spread constraint examples
Example: one topology spread constraint
Suppose you have a 4-node cluster where 3 Pods labeled foo: bar
are located in
node1, node2 and node3 respectively:
If you want an incoming Pod to be evenly spread with existing Pods across zones, you can use a manifest similar to:
kind: Pod
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
name: mypod
labels:
foo: bar
spec:
topologySpreadConstraints:
- maxSkew: 1
topologyKey: zone
whenUnsatisfiable: DoNotSchedule
labelSelector:
matchLabels:
foo: bar
containers:
- name: pause
image: registry.k8s.io/pause:3.1
From that manifest, topologyKey: zone
implies the even distribution will only be applied
to nodes that are labeled zone: <any value>
(nodes that don't have a zone
label
are skipped). The field whenUnsatisfiable: DoNotSchedule
tells the scheduler to let the
incoming Pod stay pending if the scheduler can't find a way to satisfy the constraint.
If the scheduler placed this incoming Pod into zone A
, the distribution of Pods would
become [3, 1]
. That means the actual skew is then 2 (calculated as 3 - 1
), which
violates maxSkew: 1
. To satisfy the constraints and context for this example, the
incoming Pod can only be placed onto a node in zone B
:
OR
You can tweak the Pod spec to meet various kinds of requirements:
- Change
maxSkew
to a bigger value - such as2
- so that the incoming Pod can be placed into zoneA
as well. - Change
topologyKey
tonode
so as to distribute the Pods evenly across nodes instead of zones. In the above example, ifmaxSkew
remains1
, the incoming Pod can only be placed onto the nodenode4
. - Change
whenUnsatisfiable: DoNotSchedule
towhenUnsatisfiable: ScheduleAnyway
to ensure the incoming Pod to be always schedulable (suppose other scheduling APIs are satisfied). However, it's preferred to be placed into the topology domain which has fewer matching Pods. (Be aware that this preference is jointly normalized with other internal scheduling priorities such as resource usage ratio).
Example: multiple topology spread constraints
This builds upon the previous example. Suppose you have a 4-node cluster where 3
existing Pods labeled foo: bar
are located on node1, node2 and node3 respectively:
You can combine two topology spread constraints to control the spread of Pods both by node and by zone:
kind: Pod
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
name: mypod
labels:
foo: bar
spec:
topologySpreadConstraints:
- maxSkew: 1
topologyKey: zone
whenUnsatisfiable: DoNotSchedule
labelSelector:
matchLabels:
foo: bar
- maxSkew: 1
topologyKey: node
whenUnsatisfiable: DoNotSchedule
labelSelector:
matchLabels:
foo: bar
containers:
- name: pause
image: registry.k8s.io/pause:3.1
In this case, to match the first constraint, the incoming Pod can only be placed onto
nodes in zone B
; while in terms of the second constraint, the incoming Pod can only be
scheduled to the node node4
. The scheduler only considers options that satisfy all
defined constraints, so the only valid placement is onto node node4
.
Example: conflicting topology spread constraints
Multiple constraints can lead to conflicts. Suppose you have a 3-node cluster across 2 zones:
If you were to apply
two-constraints.yaml
(the manifest from the previous example)
to this cluster, you would see that the Pod mypod
stays in the Pending
state.
This happens because: to satisfy the first constraint, the Pod mypod
can only
be placed into zone B
; while in terms of the second constraint, the Pod mypod
can only schedule to node node2
. The intersection of the two constraints returns
an empty set, and the scheduler cannot place the Pod.
To overcome this situation, you can either increase the value of maxSkew
or modify
one of the constraints to use whenUnsatisfiable: ScheduleAnyway
. Depending on
circumstances, you might also decide to delete an existing Pod manually - for example,
if you are troubleshooting why a bug-fix rollout is not making progress.
Interaction with node affinity and node selectors
The scheduler will skip the non-matching nodes from the skew calculations if the
incoming Pod has spec.nodeSelector
or spec.affinity.nodeAffinity
defined.
Example: topology spread constraints with node affinity
Suppose you have a 5-node cluster ranging across zones A to C:
and you know that zone C
must be excluded. In this case, you can compose a manifest
as below, so that Pod mypod
will be placed into zone B
instead of zone C
.
Similarly, Kubernetes also respects spec.nodeSelector
.
kind: Pod
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
name: mypod
labels:
foo: bar
spec:
topologySpreadConstraints:
- maxSkew: 1
topologyKey: zone
whenUnsatisfiable: DoNotSchedule
labelSelector:
matchLabels:
foo: bar
affinity:
nodeAffinity:
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
nodeSelectorTerms:
- matchExpressions:
- key: zone
operator: NotIn
values:
- zoneC
containers:
- name: pause
image: registry.k8s.io/pause:3.1
Implicit conventions
There are some implicit conventions worth noting here:
-
Only the Pods holding the same namespace as the incoming Pod can be matching candidates.
-
The scheduler bypasses any nodes that don't have any
topologySpreadConstraints[*].topologyKey
present. This implies that:- any Pods located on those bypassed nodes do not impact
maxSkew
calculation - in the above example, suppose the nodenode1
does not have a label "zone", then the 2 Pods will be disregarded, hence the incoming Pod will be scheduled into zoneA
. - the incoming Pod has no chances to be scheduled onto this kind of nodes -
in the above example, suppose a node
node5
has the mistyped labelzone-typo: zoneC
(and nozone
label set). After nodenode5
joins the cluster, it will be bypassed and Pods for this workload aren't scheduled there.
- any Pods located on those bypassed nodes do not impact
-
Be aware of what will happen if the incoming Pod's
topologySpreadConstraints[*].labelSelector
doesn't match its own labels. In the above example, if you remove the incoming Pod's labels, it can still be placed onto nodes in zoneB
, since the constraints are still satisfied. However, after that placement, the degree of imbalance of the cluster remains unchanged - it's still zoneA
having 2 Pods labeled asfoo: bar
, and zoneB
having 1 Pod labeled asfoo: bar
. If this is not what you expect, update the workload'stopologySpreadConstraints[*].labelSelector
to match the labels in the pod template.
Cluster-level default constraints
It is possible to set default topology spread constraints for a cluster. Default topology spread constraints are applied to a Pod if, and only if:
- It doesn't define any constraints in its
.spec.topologySpreadConstraints
. - It belongs to a Service, ReplicaSet, StatefulSet or ReplicationController.
Default constraints can be set as part of the PodTopologySpread
plugin
arguments in a scheduling profile.
The constraints are specified with the same API above, except that
labelSelector
must be empty. The selectors are calculated from the Services,
ReplicaSets, StatefulSets or ReplicationControllers that the Pod belongs to.
An example configuration might look like follows:
apiVersion: kubescheduler.config.k8s.io/v1beta3
kind: KubeSchedulerConfiguration
profiles:
- schedulerName: default-scheduler
pluginConfig:
- name: PodTopologySpread
args:
defaultConstraints:
- maxSkew: 1
topologyKey: topology.kubernetes.io/zone
whenUnsatisfiable: ScheduleAnyway
defaultingType: List
Built-in default constraints
Kubernetes v1.24 [stable]
If you don't configure any cluster-level default constraints for pod topology spreading, then kube-scheduler acts as if you specified the following default topology constraints:
defaultConstraints:
- maxSkew: 3
topologyKey: "kubernetes.io/hostname"
whenUnsatisfiable: ScheduleAnyway
- maxSkew: 5
topologyKey: "topology.kubernetes.io/zone"
whenUnsatisfiable: ScheduleAnyway
Also, the legacy SelectorSpread
plugin, which provides an equivalent behavior,
is disabled by default.
The PodTopologySpread
plugin does not score the nodes that don't have
the topology keys specified in the spreading constraints. This might result
in a different default behavior compared to the legacy SelectorSpread
plugin when
using the default topology constraints.
If your nodes are not expected to have both kubernetes.io/hostname
and
topology.kubernetes.io/zone
labels set, define your own constraints
instead of using the Kubernetes defaults.
If you don't want to use the default Pod spreading constraints for your cluster,
you can disable those defaults by setting defaultingType
to List
and leaving
empty defaultConstraints
in the PodTopologySpread
plugin configuration:
apiVersion: kubescheduler.config.k8s.io/v1beta3
kind: KubeSchedulerConfiguration
profiles:
- schedulerName: default-scheduler
pluginConfig:
- name: PodTopologySpread
args:
defaultConstraints: []
defaultingType: List
Comparison with podAffinity and podAntiAffinity
In Kubernetes, inter-Pod affinity and anti-affinity control how Pods are scheduled in relation to one another - either more packed or more scattered.
podAffinity
- attracts Pods; you can try to pack any number of Pods into qualifying topology domain(s).
podAntiAffinity
- repels Pods. If you set this to
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution
mode then only a single Pod can be scheduled into a single topology domain; if you choosepreferredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution
then you lose the ability to enforce the constraint.
For finer control, you can specify topology spread constraints to distribute Pods across different topology domains - to achieve either high availability or cost-saving. This can also help on rolling update workloads and scaling out replicas smoothly.
For more context, see the Motivation section of the enhancement proposal about Pod topology spread constraints.
Known limitations
-
There's no guarantee that the constraints remain satisfied when Pods are removed. For example, scaling down a Deployment may result in imbalanced Pods distribution.
You can use a tool such as the Descheduler to rebalance the Pods distribution.
-
Pods matched on tainted nodes are respected. See Issue 80921.
-
The scheduler doesn't have prior knowledge of all the zones or other topology domains that a cluster has. They are determined from the existing nodes in the cluster. This could lead to a problem in autoscaled clusters, when a node pool (or node group) is scaled to zero nodes, and you're expecting the cluster to scale up, because, in this case, those topology domains won't be considered until there is at least one node in them.
You can work around this by using a cluster autoscaling tool that is aware of Pod topology spread constraints and is also aware of the overall set of topology domains.
What's next
- The blog article Introducing PodTopologySpread
explains
maxSkew
in some detail, as well as covering some advanced usage examples. - Read the scheduling section of the API reference for Pod.
10.6 - Taints and Tolerations
Node affinity is a property of Pods that attracts them to a set of nodes (either as a preference or a hard requirement). Taints are the opposite -- they allow a node to repel a set of pods.
Tolerations are applied to pods. Tolerations allow the scheduler to schedule pods with matching taints. Tolerations allow scheduling but don't guarantee scheduling: the scheduler also evaluates other parameters as part of its function.
Taints and tolerations work together to ensure that pods are not scheduled onto inappropriate nodes. One or more taints are applied to a node; this marks that the node should not accept any pods that do not tolerate the taints.
Concepts
You add a taint to a node using kubectl taint. For example,
kubectl taint nodes node1 key1=value1:NoSchedule
places a taint on node node1
. The taint has key key1
, value value1
, and taint effect NoSchedule
.
This means that no pod will be able to schedule onto node1
unless it has a matching toleration.
To remove the taint added by the command above, you can run:
kubectl taint nodes node1 key1=value1:NoSchedule-
You specify a toleration for a pod in the PodSpec. Both of the following tolerations "match" the
taint created by the kubectl taint
line above, and thus a pod with either toleration would be able
to schedule onto node1
:
tolerations:
- key: "key1"
operator: "Equal"
value: "value1"
effect: "NoSchedule"
tolerations:
- key: "key1"
operator: "Exists"
effect: "NoSchedule"
Here's an example of a pod that uses tolerations:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: nginx
labels:
env: test
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx
imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
tolerations:
- key: "example-key"
operator: "Exists"
effect: "NoSchedule"
The default value for operator
is Equal
.
A toleration "matches" a taint if the keys are the same and the effects are the same, and:
- the
operator
isExists
(in which case novalue
should be specified), or - the
operator
isEqual
and the values should be equal.
There are two special cases:
An empty key
with operator Exists
matches all keys, values and effects which means this
will tolerate everything.
An empty effect
matches all effects with key key1
.
The above example used the effect
of NoSchedule
. Alternatively, you can use the effect
of PreferNoSchedule
.
The allowed values for the effect
field are:
NoExecute
- This affects pods that are already running on the node as follows:
- Pods that do not tolerate the taint are evicted immediately
- Pods that tolerate the taint without specifying
tolerationSeconds
in their toleration specification remain bound forever - Pods that tolerate the taint with a specified
tolerationSeconds
remain bound for the specified amount of time. After that time elapses, the node lifecycle controller evicts the Pods from the node.
NoSchedule
- No new Pods will be scheduled on the tainted node unless they have a matching toleration. Pods currently running on the node are not evicted.
PreferNoSchedule
PreferNoSchedule
is a "preference" or "soft" version ofNoSchedule
. The control plane will try to avoid placing a Pod that does not tolerate the taint on the node, but it is not guaranteed.
You can put multiple taints on the same node and multiple tolerations on the same pod. The way Kubernetes processes multiple taints and tolerations is like a filter: start with all of a node's taints, then ignore the ones for which the pod has a matching toleration; the remaining un-ignored taints have the indicated effects on the pod. In particular,
- if there is at least one un-ignored taint with effect
NoSchedule
then Kubernetes will not schedule the pod onto that node - if there is no un-ignored taint with effect
NoSchedule
but there is at least one un-ignored taint with effectPreferNoSchedule
then Kubernetes will try to not schedule the pod onto the node - if there is at least one un-ignored taint with effect
NoExecute
then the pod will be evicted from the node (if it is already running on the node), and will not be scheduled onto the node (if it is not yet running on the node).
For example, imagine you taint a node like this
kubectl taint nodes node1 key1=value1:NoSchedule
kubectl taint nodes node1 key1=value1:NoExecute
kubectl taint nodes node1 key2=value2:NoSchedule
And a pod has two tolerations:
tolerations:
- key: "key1"
operator: "Equal"
value: "value1"
effect: "NoSchedule"
- key: "key1"
operator: "Equal"
value: "value1"
effect: "NoExecute"
In this case, the pod will not be able to schedule onto the node, because there is no toleration matching the third taint. But it will be able to continue running if it is already running on the node when the taint is added, because the third taint is the only one of the three that is not tolerated by the pod.
Normally, if a taint with effect NoExecute
is added to a node, then any pods that do
not tolerate the taint will be evicted immediately, and pods that do tolerate the
taint will never be evicted. However, a toleration with NoExecute
effect can specify
an optional tolerationSeconds
field that dictates how long the pod will stay bound
to the node after the taint is added. For example,
tolerations:
- key: "key1"
operator: "Equal"
value: "value1"
effect: "NoExecute"
tolerationSeconds: 3600
means that if this pod is running and a matching taint is added to the node, then the pod will stay bound to the node for 3600 seconds, and then be evicted. If the taint is removed before that time, the pod will not be evicted.
Example Use Cases
Taints and tolerations are a flexible way to steer pods away from nodes or evict pods that shouldn't be running. A few of the use cases are
-
Dedicated Nodes: If you want to dedicate a set of nodes for exclusive use by a particular set of users, you can add a taint to those nodes (say,
kubectl taint nodes nodename dedicated=groupName:NoSchedule
) and then add a corresponding toleration to their pods (this would be done most easily by writing a custom admission controller). The pods with the tolerations will then be allowed to use the tainted (dedicated) nodes as well as any other nodes in the cluster. If you want to dedicate the nodes to them and ensure they only use the dedicated nodes, then you should additionally add a label similar to the taint to the same set of nodes (e.g.dedicated=groupName
), and the admission controller should additionally add a node affinity to require that the pods can only schedule onto nodes labeled withdedicated=groupName
. -
Nodes with Special Hardware: In a cluster where a small subset of nodes have specialized hardware (for example GPUs), it is desirable to keep pods that don't need the specialized hardware off of those nodes, thus leaving room for later-arriving pods that do need the specialized hardware. This can be done by tainting the nodes that have the specialized hardware (e.g.
kubectl taint nodes nodename special=true:NoSchedule
orkubectl taint nodes nodename special=true:PreferNoSchedule
) and adding a corresponding toleration to pods that use the special hardware. As in the dedicated nodes use case, it is probably easiest to apply the tolerations using a custom admission controller. For example, it is recommended to use Extended Resources to represent the special hardware, taint your special hardware nodes with the extended resource name and run the ExtendedResourceToleration admission controller. Now, because the nodes are tainted, no pods without the toleration will schedule on them. But when you submit a pod that requests the extended resource, theExtendedResourceToleration
admission controller will automatically add the correct toleration to the pod and that pod will schedule on the special hardware nodes. This will make sure that these special hardware nodes are dedicated for pods requesting such hardware and you don't have to manually add tolerations to your pods. -
Taint based Evictions: A per-pod-configurable eviction behavior when there are node problems, which is described in the next section.
Taint based Evictions
Kubernetes v1.18 [stable]
The node controller automatically taints a Node when certain conditions are true. The following taints are built in:
node.kubernetes.io/not-ready
: Node is not ready. This corresponds to the NodeConditionReady
being "False
".node.kubernetes.io/unreachable
: Node is unreachable from the node controller. This corresponds to the NodeConditionReady
being "Unknown
".node.kubernetes.io/memory-pressure
: Node has memory pressure.node.kubernetes.io/disk-pressure
: Node has disk pressure.node.kubernetes.io/pid-pressure
: Node has PID pressure.node.kubernetes.io/network-unavailable
: Node's network is unavailable.node.kubernetes.io/unschedulable
: Node is unschedulable.node.cloudprovider.kubernetes.io/uninitialized
: When the kubelet is started with an "external" cloud provider, this taint is set on a node to mark it as unusable. After a controller from the cloud-controller-manager initializes this node, the kubelet removes this taint.
In case a node is to be drained, the node controller or the kubelet adds relevant taints
with NoExecute
effect. This effect is added by default for the
node.kubernetes.io/not-ready
and node.kubernetes.io/unreachable
taints.
If the fault condition returns to normal, the kubelet or node
controller can remove the relevant taint(s).
In some cases when the node is unreachable, the API server is unable to communicate with the kubelet on the node. The decision to delete the pods cannot be communicated to the kubelet until communication with the API server is re-established. In the meantime, the pods that are scheduled for deletion may continue to run on the partitioned node.
You can specify tolerationSeconds
for a Pod to define how long that Pod stays bound
to a failing or unresponsive Node.
For example, you might want to keep an application with a lot of local state bound to node for a long time in the event of network partition, hoping that the partition will recover and thus the pod eviction can be avoided. The toleration you set for that Pod might look like:
tolerations:
- key: "node.kubernetes.io/unreachable"
operator: "Exists"
effect: "NoExecute"
tolerationSeconds: 6000
Kubernetes automatically adds a toleration for
node.kubernetes.io/not-ready
and node.kubernetes.io/unreachable
with tolerationSeconds=300
,
unless you, or a controller, set those tolerations explicitly.
These automatically-added tolerations mean that Pods remain bound to Nodes for 5 minutes after one of these problems is detected.
DaemonSet pods are created with
NoExecute
tolerations for the following taints with no tolerationSeconds
:
node.kubernetes.io/unreachable
node.kubernetes.io/not-ready
This ensures that DaemonSet pods are never evicted due to these problems.
Taint Nodes by Condition
The control plane, using the node controller,
automatically creates taints with a NoSchedule
effect for
node conditions.
The scheduler checks taints, not node conditions, when it makes scheduling
decisions. This ensures that node conditions don't directly affect scheduling.
For example, if the DiskPressure
node condition is active, the control plane
adds the node.kubernetes.io/disk-pressure
taint and does not schedule new pods
onto the affected node. If the MemoryPressure
node condition is active, the
control plane adds the node.kubernetes.io/memory-pressure
taint.
You can ignore node conditions for newly created pods by adding the corresponding
Pod tolerations. The control plane also adds the node.kubernetes.io/memory-pressure
toleration on pods that have a QoS class
other than BestEffort
. This is because Kubernetes treats pods in the Guaranteed
or Burstable
QoS classes (even pods with no memory request set) as if they are
able to cope with memory pressure, while new BestEffort
pods are not scheduled
onto the affected node.
The DaemonSet controller automatically adds the following NoSchedule
tolerations to all daemons, to prevent DaemonSets from breaking.
node.kubernetes.io/memory-pressure
node.kubernetes.io/disk-pressure
node.kubernetes.io/pid-pressure
(1.14 or later)node.kubernetes.io/unschedulable
(1.10 or later)node.kubernetes.io/network-unavailable
(host network only)
Adding these tolerations ensures backward compatibility. You can also add arbitrary tolerations to DaemonSets.
What's next
- Read about Node-pressure Eviction and how you can configure it
- Read about Pod Priority
10.7 - Scheduling Framework
Kubernetes v1.19 [stable]
The scheduling framework is a pluggable architecture for the Kubernetes scheduler. It consists of a set of "plugin" APIs that are compiled directly into the scheduler. These APIs allow most scheduling features to be implemented as plugins, while keeping the scheduling "core" lightweight and maintainable. Refer to the design proposal of the scheduling framework for more technical information on the design of the framework.
Framework workflow
The Scheduling Framework defines a few extension points. Scheduler plugins register to be invoked at one or more extension points. Some of these plugins can change the scheduling decisions and some are informational only.
Each attempt to schedule one Pod is split into two phases, the scheduling cycle and the binding cycle.
Scheduling cycle & binding cycle
The scheduling cycle selects a node for the Pod, and the binding cycle applies that decision to the cluster. Together, a scheduling cycle and binding cycle are referred to as a "scheduling context".
Scheduling cycles are run serially, while binding cycles may run concurrently.
A scheduling or binding cycle can be aborted if the Pod is determined to be unschedulable or if there is an internal error. The Pod will be returned to the queue and retried.
Interfaces
The following picture shows the scheduling context of a Pod and the interfaces that the scheduling framework exposes.
One plugin may implement multiple interfaces to perform more complex or stateful tasks.
Some interfaces match the scheduler extension points which can be configured through Scheduler Configuration.
PreEnqueue
These plugins are called prior to adding Pods to the internal active queue, where Pods are marked as ready for scheduling.
Only when all PreEnqueue plugins return Success
, the Pod is allowed to enter the active queue.
Otherwise, it's placed in the internal unschedulable Pods list, and doesn't get an Unschedulable
condition.
For more details about how internal scheduler queues work, read Scheduling queue in kube-scheduler.
EnqueueExtension
EnqueueExtension is the interface where the plugin can control whether to retry scheduling of Pods rejected by this plugin, based on changes in the cluster. Plugins that implement PreEnqueue, PreFilter, Filter, Reserve or Permit should implement this interface.
QueueingHint
Kubernetes v1.28 [beta]
QueueingHint is a callback function for deciding whether a Pod can be requeued to the active queue or backoff queue. It's executed every time a certain kind of event or change happens in the cluster. When the QueueingHint finds that the event might make the Pod schedulable, the Pod is put into the active queue or the backoff queue so that the scheduler will retry the scheduling of the Pod.
SchedulerQueueingHints
feature gate.
QueueSort
These plugins are used to sort Pods in the scheduling queue. A queue sort plugin
essentially provides a Less(Pod1, Pod2)
function. Only one queue sort
plugin may be enabled at a time.
PreFilter
These plugins are used to pre-process info about the Pod, or to check certain conditions that the cluster or the Pod must meet. If a PreFilter plugin returns an error, the scheduling cycle is aborted.
Filter
These plugins are used to filter out nodes that cannot run the Pod. For each node, the scheduler will call filter plugins in their configured order. If any filter plugin marks the node as infeasible, the remaining plugins will not be called for that node. Nodes may be evaluated concurrently.
PostFilter
These plugins are called after the Filter phase, but only when no feasible nodes
were found for the pod. Plugins are called in their configured order. If
any postFilter plugin marks the node as Schedulable
, the remaining plugins
will not be called. A typical PostFilter implementation is preemption, which
tries to make the pod schedulable by preempting other Pods.
PreScore
These plugins are used to perform "pre-scoring" work, which generates a sharable state for Score plugins to use. If a PreScore plugin returns an error, the scheduling cycle is aborted.
Score
These plugins are used to rank nodes that have passed the filtering phase. The scheduler will call each scoring plugin for each node. There will be a well defined range of integers representing the minimum and maximum scores. After the NormalizeScore phase, the scheduler will combine node scores from all plugins according to the configured plugin weights.
NormalizeScore
These plugins are used to modify scores before the scheduler computes a final ranking of Nodes. A plugin that registers for this extension point will be called with the Score results from the same plugin. This is called once per plugin per scheduling cycle.
For example, suppose a plugin BlinkingLightScorer
ranks Nodes based on how
many blinking lights they have.
func ScoreNode(_ *v1.pod, n *v1.Node) (int, error) {
return getBlinkingLightCount(n)
}
However, the maximum count of blinking lights may be small compared to
NodeScoreMax
. To fix this, BlinkingLightScorer
should also register for this
extension point.
func NormalizeScores(scores map[string]int) {
highest := 0
for _, score := range scores {
highest = max(highest, score)
}
for node, score := range scores {
scores[node] = score*NodeScoreMax/highest
}
}
If any NormalizeScore plugin returns an error, the scheduling cycle is aborted.
Reserve
A plugin that implements the Reserve interface has two methods, namely Reserve
and Unreserve
, that back two informational scheduling phases called Reserve
and Unreserve, respectively. Plugins which maintain runtime state (aka "stateful
plugins") should use these phases to be notified by the scheduler when resources
on a node are being reserved and unreserved for a given Pod.
The Reserve phase happens before the scheduler actually binds a Pod to its
designated node. It exists to prevent race conditions while the scheduler waits
for the bind to succeed. The Reserve
method of each Reserve plugin may succeed
or fail; if one Reserve
method call fails, subsequent plugins are not executed
and the Reserve phase is considered to have failed. If the Reserve
method of
all plugins succeed, the Reserve phase is considered to be successful and the
rest of the scheduling cycle and the binding cycle are executed.
The Unreserve phase is triggered if the Reserve phase or a later phase fails.
When this happens, the Unreserve
method of all Reserve plugins will be
executed in the reverse order of Reserve
method calls. This phase exists to
clean up the state associated with the reserved Pod.
Unreserve
method in Reserve plugins must be
idempotent and may not fail.
Permit
Permit plugins are invoked at the end of the scheduling cycle for each Pod, to prevent or delay the binding to the candidate node. A permit plugin can do one of the three things:
-
approve
Once all Permit plugins approve a Pod, it is sent for binding. -
deny
If any Permit plugin denies a Pod, it is returned to the scheduling queue. This will trigger the Unreserve phase in Reserve plugins. -
wait (with a timeout)
If a Permit plugin returns "wait", then the Pod is kept in an internal "waiting" Pods list, and the binding cycle of this Pod starts but directly blocks until it gets approved. If a timeout occurs, wait becomes deny and the Pod is returned to the scheduling queue, triggering the Unreserve phase in Reserve plugins.
FrameworkHandle
),
we expect only the permit plugins to approve binding of reserved Pods that are in "waiting" state.
Once a Pod is approved, it is sent to the PreBind phase.
PreBind
These plugins are used to perform any work required before a Pod is bound. For example, a pre-bind plugin may provision a network volume and mount it on the target node before allowing the Pod to run there.
If any PreBind plugin returns an error, the Pod is rejected and returned to the scheduling queue.
Bind
These plugins are used to bind a Pod to a Node. Bind plugins will not be called until all PreBind plugins have completed. Each bind plugin is called in the configured order. A bind plugin may choose whether or not to handle the given Pod. If a bind plugin chooses to handle a Pod, the remaining bind plugins are skipped.
PostBind
This is an informational interface. Post-bind plugins are called after a Pod is successfully bound. This is the end of a binding cycle, and can be used to clean up associated resources.
Plugin API
There are two steps to the plugin API. First, plugins must register and get configured, then they use the extension point interfaces. Extension point interfaces have the following form.
type Plugin interface {
Name() string
}
type QueueSortPlugin interface {
Plugin
Less(*v1.pod, *v1.pod) bool
}
type PreFilterPlugin interface {
Plugin
PreFilter(context.Context, *framework.CycleState, *v1.pod) error
}
// ...
Plugin configuration
You can enable or disable plugins in the scheduler configuration. If you are using Kubernetes v1.18 or later, most scheduling plugins are in use and enabled by default.
In addition to default plugins, you can also implement your own scheduling plugins and get them configured along with default plugins. You can visit scheduler-plugins for more details.
If you are using Kubernetes v1.18 or later, you can configure a set of plugins as a scheduler profile and then define multiple profiles to fit various kinds of workload. Learn more at multiple profiles.
10.8 - Dynamic Resource Allocation
Kubernetes v1.27 [alpha]
Dynamic resource allocation is an API for requesting and sharing resources between pods and containers inside a pod. It is a generalization of the persistent volumes API for generic resources. Third-party resource drivers are responsible for tracking and allocating resources. Different kinds of resources support arbitrary parameters for defining requirements and initialization.
Before you begin
Kubernetes v1.29 includes cluster-level API support for dynamic resource allocation, but it needs to be enabled explicitly. You also must install a resource driver for specific resources that are meant to be managed using this API. If you are not running Kubernetes v1.29, check the documentation for that version of Kubernetes.
API
The resource.k8s.io/v1alpha2
API group provides four types:
- ResourceClass
- Defines which resource driver handles a certain kind of resource and provides common parameters for it. ResourceClasses are created by a cluster administrator when installing a resource driver.
- ResourceClaim
- Defines a particular resource instance that is required by a workload. Created by a user (lifecycle managed manually, can be shared between different Pods) or for individual Pods by the control plane based on a ResourceClaimTemplate (automatic lifecycle, typically used by just one Pod).
- ResourceClaimTemplate
- Defines the spec and some metadata for creating ResourceClaims. Created by a user when deploying a workload.
- PodSchedulingContext
- Used internally by the control plane and resource drivers to coordinate pod scheduling when ResourceClaims need to be allocated for a Pod.
Parameters for ResourceClass and ResourceClaim are stored in separate objects, typically using the type defined by a CRD that was created when installing a resource driver.
The core/v1
PodSpec
defines ResourceClaims that are needed for a Pod in a
resourceClaims
field. Entries in that list reference either a ResourceClaim
or a ResourceClaimTemplate. When referencing a ResourceClaim, all Pods using
this PodSpec (for example, inside a Deployment or StatefulSet) share the same
ResourceClaim instance. When referencing a ResourceClaimTemplate, each Pod gets
its own instance.
The resources.claims
list for container resources defines whether a container gets
access to these resource instances, which makes it possible to share resources
between one or more containers.
Here is an example for a fictional resource driver. Two ResourceClaim objects will get created for this Pod and each container gets access to one of them.
apiVersion: resource.k8s.io/v1alpha2
kind: ResourceClass
name: resource.example.com
driverName: resource-driver.example.com
---
apiVersion: cats.resource.example.com/v1
kind: ClaimParameters
name: large-black-cat-claim-parameters
spec:
color: black
size: large
---
apiVersion: resource.k8s.io/v1alpha2
kind: ResourceClaimTemplate
metadata:
name: large-black-cat-claim-template
spec:
spec:
resourceClassName: resource.example.com
parametersRef:
apiGroup: cats.resource.example.com
kind: ClaimParameters
name: large-black-cat-claim-parameters
–--
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: pod-with-cats
spec:
containers:
- name: container0
image: ubuntu:20.04
command: ["sleep", "9999"]
resources:
claims:
- name: cat-0
- name: container1
image: ubuntu:20.04
command: ["sleep", "9999"]
resources:
claims:
- name: cat-1
resourceClaims:
- name: cat-0
source:
resourceClaimTemplateName: large-black-cat-claim-template
- name: cat-1
source:
resourceClaimTemplateName: large-black-cat-claim-template
Scheduling
In contrast to native resources (CPU, RAM) and extended resources (managed by a device plugin, advertised by kubelet), the scheduler has no knowledge of what dynamic resources are available in a cluster or how they could be split up to satisfy the requirements of a specific ResourceClaim. Resource drivers are responsible for that. They mark ResourceClaims as "allocated" once resources for it are reserved. This also then tells the scheduler where in the cluster a ResourceClaim is available.
ResourceClaims can get allocated as soon as they are created ("immediate allocation"), without considering which Pods will use them. The default is to delay allocation until a Pod gets scheduled which needs the ResourceClaim (i.e. "wait for first consumer").
In that mode, the scheduler checks all ResourceClaims needed by a Pod and creates a PodScheduling object where it informs the resource drivers responsible for those ResourceClaims about nodes that the scheduler considers suitable for the Pod. The resource drivers respond by excluding nodes that don't have enough of the driver's resources left. Once the scheduler has that information, it selects one node and stores that choice in the PodScheduling object. The resource drivers then allocate their ResourceClaims so that the resources will be available on that node. Once that is complete, the Pod gets scheduled.
As part of this process, ResourceClaims also get reserved for the Pod. Currently ResourceClaims can either be used exclusively by a single Pod or an unlimited number of Pods.
One key feature is that Pods do not get scheduled to a node unless all of their resources are allocated and reserved. This avoids the scenario where a Pod gets scheduled onto one node and then cannot run there, which is bad because such a pending Pod also blocks all other resources like RAM or CPU that were set aside for it.
Monitoring resources
The kubelet provides a gRPC service to enable discovery of dynamic resources of running Pods. For more information on the gRPC endpoints, see the resource allocation reporting.
Pre-scheduled Pods
When you - or another API client - create a Pod with spec.nodeName
already set, the scheduler gets bypassed.
If some ResourceClaim needed by that Pod does not exist yet, is not allocated
or not reserved for the Pod, then the kubelet will fail to run the Pod and
re-check periodically because those requirements might still get fulfilled
later.
Such a situation can also arise when support for dynamic resource allocation was not enabled in the scheduler at the time when the Pod got scheduled (version skew, configuration, feature gate, etc.). kube-controller-manager detects this and tries to make the Pod runnable by triggering allocation and/or reserving the required ResourceClaims.
However, it is better to avoid this because a Pod that is assigned to a node blocks normal resources (RAM, CPU) that then cannot be used for other Pods while the Pod is stuck. To make a Pod run on a specific node while still going through the normal scheduling flow, create the Pod with a node selector that exactly matches the desired node:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: pod-with-cats
spec:
nodeSelector:
kubernetes.io/hostname: name-of-the-intended-node
...
You may also be able to mutate the incoming Pod, at admission time, to unset
the .spec.nodeName
field and to use a node selector instead.
Enabling dynamic resource allocation
Dynamic resource allocation is an alpha feature and only enabled when the
DynamicResourceAllocation
feature
gate and the
resource.k8s.io/v1alpha2
API group are enabled. For details on that, see the
--feature-gates
and --runtime-config
kube-apiserver
parameters.
kube-scheduler, kube-controller-manager and kubelet also need the feature gate.
A quick check whether a Kubernetes cluster supports the feature is to list ResourceClass objects with:
kubectl get resourceclasses
If your cluster supports dynamic resource allocation, the response is either a list of ResourceClass objects or:
No resources found
If not supported, this error is printed instead:
error: the server doesn't have a resource type "resourceclasses"
The default configuration of kube-scheduler enables the "DynamicResources" plugin if and only if the feature gate is enabled and when using the v1 configuration API. Custom configurations may have to be modified to include it.
In addition to enabling the feature in the cluster, a resource driver also has to be installed. Please refer to the driver's documentation for details.
What's next
- For more information on the design, see the Dynamic Resource Allocation KEP.
10.9 - Scheduler Performance Tuning
Kubernetes v1.14 [beta]
kube-scheduler is the Kubernetes default scheduler. It is responsible for placement of Pods on Nodes in a cluster.
Nodes in a cluster that meet the scheduling requirements of a Pod are called feasible Nodes for the Pod. The scheduler finds feasible Nodes for a Pod and then runs a set of functions to score the feasible Nodes, picking a Node with the highest score among the feasible ones to run the Pod. The scheduler then notifies the API server about this decision in a process called Binding.
This page explains performance tuning optimizations that are relevant for large Kubernetes clusters.
In large clusters, you can tune the scheduler's behaviour balancing scheduling outcomes between latency (new Pods are placed quickly) and accuracy (the scheduler rarely makes poor placement decisions).
You configure this tuning setting via kube-scheduler setting
percentageOfNodesToScore
. This KubeSchedulerConfiguration setting determines
a threshold for scheduling nodes in your cluster.
Setting the threshold
The percentageOfNodesToScore
option accepts whole numeric values between 0
and 100. The value 0 is a special number which indicates that the kube-scheduler
should use its compiled-in default.
If you set percentageOfNodesToScore
above 100, kube-scheduler acts as if you
had set a value of 100.
To change the value, edit the
kube-scheduler configuration file
and then restart the scheduler.
In many cases, the configuration file can be found at /etc/kubernetes/config/kube-scheduler.yaml
.
After you have made this change, you can run
kubectl get pods -n kube-system | grep kube-scheduler
to verify that the kube-scheduler component is healthy.
Node scoring threshold
To improve scheduling performance, the kube-scheduler can stop looking for feasible nodes once it has found enough of them. In large clusters, this saves time compared to a naive approach that would consider every node.
You specify a threshold for how many nodes are enough, as a whole number percentage of all the nodes in your cluster. The kube-scheduler converts this into an integer number of nodes. During scheduling, if the kube-scheduler has identified enough feasible nodes to exceed the configured percentage, the kube-scheduler stops searching for more feasible nodes and moves on to the scoring phase.
How the scheduler iterates over Nodes describes the process in detail.
Default threshold
If you don't specify a threshold, Kubernetes calculates a figure using a linear formula that yields 50% for a 100-node cluster and yields 10% for a 5000-node cluster. The lower bound for the automatic value is 5%.
This means that the kube-scheduler always scores at least 5% of your cluster no
matter how large the cluster is, unless you have explicitly set
percentageOfNodesToScore
to be smaller than 5.
If you want the scheduler to score all nodes in your cluster, set
percentageOfNodesToScore
to 100.
Example
Below is an example configuration that sets percentageOfNodesToScore
to 50%.
apiVersion: kubescheduler.config.k8s.io/v1alpha1
kind: KubeSchedulerConfiguration
algorithmSource:
provider: DefaultProvider
...
percentageOfNodesToScore: 50
Tuning percentageOfNodesToScore
percentageOfNodesToScore
must be a value between 1 and 100 with the default
value being calculated based on the cluster size. There is also a hardcoded
minimum value of 50 nodes.
In clusters with less than 50 feasible nodes, the scheduler still checks all the nodes because there are not enough feasible nodes to stop the scheduler's search early.
In a small cluster, if you set a low value for percentageOfNodesToScore
, your
change will have no or little effect, for a similar reason.
If your cluster has several hundred Nodes or fewer, leave this configuration option at its default value. Making changes is unlikely to improve the scheduler's performance significantly.
An important detail to consider when setting this value is that when a smaller number of nodes in a cluster are checked for feasibility, some nodes are not sent to be scored for a given Pod. As a result, a Node which could possibly score a higher value for running the given Pod might not even be passed to the scoring phase. This would result in a less than ideal placement of the Pod.
You should avoid setting percentageOfNodesToScore
very low so that kube-scheduler
does not make frequent, poor Pod placement decisions. Avoid setting the
percentage to anything below 10%, unless the scheduler's throughput is critical
for your application and the score of nodes is not important. In other words, you
prefer to run the Pod on any Node as long as it is feasible.
How the scheduler iterates over Nodes
This section is intended for those who want to understand the internal details of this feature.
In order to give all the Nodes in a cluster a fair chance of being considered
for running Pods, the scheduler iterates over the nodes in a round robin
fashion. You can imagine that Nodes are in an array. The scheduler starts from
the start of the array and checks feasibility of the nodes until it finds enough
Nodes as specified by percentageOfNodesToScore
. For the next Pod, the
scheduler continues from the point in the Node array that it stopped at when
checking feasibility of Nodes for the previous Pod.
If Nodes are in multiple zones, the scheduler iterates over Nodes in various zones to ensure that Nodes from different zones are considered in the feasibility checks. As an example, consider six nodes in two zones:
Zone 1: Node 1, Node 2, Node 3, Node 4
Zone 2: Node 5, Node 6
The Scheduler evaluates feasibility of the nodes in this order:
Node 1, Node 5, Node 2, Node 6, Node 3, Node 4
After going over all the Nodes, it goes back to Node 1.
What's next
10.10 - Resource Bin Packing
In the scheduling-plugin NodeResourcesFit
of kube-scheduler, there are two
scoring strategies that support the bin packing of resources: MostAllocated
and RequestedToCapacityRatio
.
Enabling bin packing using MostAllocated strategy
The MostAllocated
strategy scores the nodes based on the utilization of resources, favoring the ones with higher allocation.
For each resource type, you can set a weight to modify its influence in the node score.
To set the MostAllocated
strategy for the NodeResourcesFit
plugin, use a
scheduler configuration similar to the following:
apiVersion: kubescheduler.config.k8s.io/v1
kind: KubeSchedulerConfiguration
profiles:
- pluginConfig:
- args:
scoringStrategy:
resources:
- name: cpu
weight: 1
- name: memory
weight: 1
- name: intel.com/foo
weight: 3
- name: intel.com/bar
weight: 3
type: MostAllocated
name: NodeResourcesFit
To learn more about other parameters and their default configuration, see the API documentation for
NodeResourcesFitArgs
.
Enabling bin packing using RequestedToCapacityRatio
The RequestedToCapacityRatio
strategy allows the users to specify the resources along with weights for
each resource to score nodes based on the request to capacity ratio. This
allows users to bin pack extended resources by using appropriate parameters
to improve the utilization of scarce resources in large clusters. It favors nodes according to a
configured function of the allocated resources. The behavior of the RequestedToCapacityRatio
in
the NodeResourcesFit
score function can be controlled by the
scoringStrategy field.
Within the scoringStrategy
field, you can configure two parameters: requestedToCapacityRatio
and
resources
. The shape
in the requestedToCapacityRatio
parameter allows the user to tune the function as least requested or most
requested based on utilization
and score
values. The resources
parameter
comprises both the name
of the resource to be considered during scoring and
its corresponding weight
, which specifies the weight of each resource.
Below is an example configuration that sets
the bin packing behavior for extended resources intel.com/foo
and intel.com/bar
using the requestedToCapacityRatio
field.
apiVersion: kubescheduler.config.k8s.io/v1
kind: KubeSchedulerConfiguration
profiles:
- pluginConfig:
- args:
scoringStrategy:
resources:
- name: intel.com/foo
weight: 3
- name: intel.com/bar
weight: 3
requestedToCapacityRatio:
shape:
- utilization: 0
score: 0
- utilization: 100
score: 10
type: RequestedToCapacityRatio
name: NodeResourcesFit
Referencing the KubeSchedulerConfiguration
file with the kube-scheduler
flag --config=/path/to/config/file
will pass the configuration to the
scheduler.
To learn more about other parameters and their default configuration, see the API documentation for
NodeResourcesFitArgs
.
Tuning the score function
shape
is used to specify the behavior of the RequestedToCapacityRatio
function.
shape:
- utilization: 0
score: 0
- utilization: 100
score: 10
The above arguments give the node a score
of 0 if utilization
is 0% and 10 for
utilization
100%, thus enabling bin packing behavior. To enable least
requested the score value must be reversed as follows.
shape:
- utilization: 0
score: 10
- utilization: 100
score: 0
resources
is an optional parameter which defaults to:
resources:
- name: cpu
weight: 1
- name: memory
weight: 1
It can be used to add extended resources as follows:
resources:
- name: intel.com/foo
weight: 5
- name: cpu
weight: 3
- name: memory
weight: 1
The weight
parameter is optional and is set to 1 if not specified. Also, the
weight
cannot be set to a negative value.
Node scoring for capacity allocation
This section is intended for those who want to understand the internal details of this feature. Below is an example of how the node score is calculated for a given set of values.
Requested resources:
intel.com/foo : 2
memory: 256MB
cpu: 2
Resource weights:
intel.com/foo : 5
memory: 1
cpu: 3
FunctionShapePoint {{0, 0}, {100, 10}}
Node 1 spec:
Available:
intel.com/foo: 4
memory: 1 GB
cpu: 8
Used:
intel.com/foo: 1
memory: 256MB
cpu: 1
Node score:
intel.com/foo = resourceScoringFunction((2+1),4)
= (100 - ((4-3)*100/4)
= (100 - 25)
= 75 # requested + used = 75% * available
= rawScoringFunction(75)
= 7 # floor(75/10)
memory = resourceScoringFunction((256+256),1024)
= (100 -((1024-512)*100/1024))
= 50 # requested + used = 50% * available
= rawScoringFunction(50)
= 5 # floor(50/10)
cpu = resourceScoringFunction((2+1),8)
= (100 -((8-3)*100/8))
= 37.5 # requested + used = 37.5% * available
= rawScoringFunction(37.5)
= 3 # floor(37.5/10)
NodeScore = ((7 * 5) + (5 * 1) + (3 * 3)) / (5 + 1 + 3)
= 5
Node 2 spec:
Available:
intel.com/foo: 8
memory: 1GB
cpu: 8
Used:
intel.com/foo: 2
memory: 512MB
cpu: 6
Node score:
intel.com/foo = resourceScoringFunction((2+2),8)
= (100 - ((8-4)*100/8)
= (100 - 50)
= 50
= rawScoringFunction(50)
= 5
memory = resourceScoringFunction((256+512),1024)
= (100 -((1024-768)*100/1024))
= 75
= rawScoringFunction(75)
= 7
cpu = resourceScoringFunction((2+6),8)
= (100 -((8-8)*100/8))
= 100
= rawScoringFunction(100)
= 10
NodeScore = ((5 * 5) + (7 * 1) + (10 * 3)) / (5 + 1 + 3)
= 7
What's next
- Read more about the scheduling framework
- Read more about scheduler configuration
10.11 - Pod Priority and Preemption
Kubernetes v1.14 [stable]
Pods can have priority. Priority indicates the importance of a Pod relative to other Pods. If a Pod cannot be scheduled, the scheduler tries to preempt (evict) lower priority Pods to make scheduling of the pending Pod possible.
In a cluster where not all users are trusted, a malicious user could create Pods at the highest possible priorities, causing other Pods to be evicted/not get scheduled. An administrator can use ResourceQuota to prevent users from creating pods at high priorities.
See limit Priority Class consumption by default for details.
How to use priority and preemption
To use priority and preemption:
-
Add one or more PriorityClasses.
-
Create Pods with
priorityClassName
set to one of the added PriorityClasses. Of course you do not need to create the Pods directly; normally you would addpriorityClassName
to the Pod template of a collection object like a Deployment.
Keep reading for more information about these steps.
system-cluster-critical
and system-node-critical
.
These are common classes and are used to ensure that critical components are always scheduled first.
PriorityClass
A PriorityClass is a non-namespaced object that defines a mapping from a
priority class name to the integer value of the priority. The name is specified
in the name
field of the PriorityClass object's metadata. The value is
specified in the required value
field. The higher the value, the higher the
priority.
The name of a PriorityClass object must be a valid
DNS subdomain name,
and it cannot be prefixed with system-
.
A PriorityClass object can have any 32-bit integer value smaller than or equal to 1 billion. This means that the range of values for a PriorityClass object is from -2147483648 to 1000000000 inclusive. Larger numbers are reserved for built-in PriorityClasses that represent critical system Pods. A cluster admin should create one PriorityClass object for each such mapping that they want.
PriorityClass also has two optional fields: globalDefault
and description
.
The globalDefault
field indicates that the value of this PriorityClass should
be used for Pods without a priorityClassName
. Only one PriorityClass with
globalDefault
set to true can exist in the system. If there is no
PriorityClass with globalDefault
set, the priority of Pods with no
priorityClassName
is zero.
The description
field is an arbitrary string. It is meant to tell users of the
cluster when they should use this PriorityClass.
Notes about PodPriority and existing clusters
-
If you upgrade an existing cluster without this feature, the priority of your existing Pods is effectively zero.
-
Addition of a PriorityClass with
globalDefault
set totrue
does not change the priorities of existing Pods. The value of such a PriorityClass is used only for Pods created after the PriorityClass is added. -
If you delete a PriorityClass, existing Pods that use the name of the deleted PriorityClass remain unchanged, but you cannot create more Pods that use the name of the deleted PriorityClass.
Example PriorityClass
apiVersion: scheduling.k8s.io/v1
kind: PriorityClass
metadata:
name: high-priority
value: 1000000
globalDefault: false
description: "This priority class should be used for XYZ service pods only."
Non-preempting PriorityClass
Kubernetes v1.24 [stable]
Pods with preemptionPolicy: Never
will be placed in the scheduling queue
ahead of lower-priority pods,
but they cannot preempt other pods.
A non-preempting pod waiting to be scheduled will stay in the scheduling queue,
until sufficient resources are free,
and it can be scheduled.
Non-preempting pods,
like other pods,
are subject to scheduler back-off.
This means that if the scheduler tries these pods and they cannot be scheduled,
they will be retried with lower frequency,
allowing other pods with lower priority to be scheduled before them.
Non-preempting pods may still be preempted by other, high-priority pods.
preemptionPolicy
defaults to PreemptLowerPriority
,
which will allow pods of that PriorityClass to preempt lower-priority pods
(as is existing default behavior).
If preemptionPolicy
is set to Never
,
pods in that PriorityClass will be non-preempting.
An example use case is for data science workloads.
A user may submit a job that they want to be prioritized above other workloads,
but do not wish to discard existing work by preempting running pods.
The high priority job with preemptionPolicy: Never
will be scheduled
ahead of other queued pods,
as soon as sufficient cluster resources "naturally" become free.
Example Non-preempting PriorityClass
apiVersion: scheduling.k8s.io/v1
kind: PriorityClass
metadata:
name: high-priority-nonpreempting
value: 1000000
preemptionPolicy: Never
globalDefault: false
description: "This priority class will not cause other pods to be preempted."
Pod priority
After you have one or more PriorityClasses, you can create Pods that specify one
of those PriorityClass names in their specifications. The priority admission
controller uses the priorityClassName
field and populates the integer value of
the priority. If the priority class is not found, the Pod is rejected.
The following YAML is an example of a Pod configuration that uses the PriorityClass created in the preceding example. The priority admission controller checks the specification and resolves the priority of the Pod to 1000000.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: nginx
labels:
env: test
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx
imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
priorityClassName: high-priority
Effect of Pod priority on scheduling order
When Pod priority is enabled, the scheduler orders pending Pods by their priority and a pending Pod is placed ahead of other pending Pods with lower priority in the scheduling queue. As a result, the higher priority Pod may be scheduled sooner than Pods with lower priority if its scheduling requirements are met. If such Pod cannot be scheduled, the scheduler will continue and try to schedule other lower priority Pods.
Preemption
When Pods are created, they go to a queue and wait to be scheduled. The scheduler picks a Pod from the queue and tries to schedule it on a Node. If no Node is found that satisfies all the specified requirements of the Pod, preemption logic is triggered for the pending Pod. Let's call the pending Pod P. Preemption logic tries to find a Node where removal of one or more Pods with lower priority than P would enable P to be scheduled on that Node. If such a Node is found, one or more lower priority Pods get evicted from the Node. After the Pods are gone, P can be scheduled on the Node.
User exposed information
When Pod P preempts one or more Pods on Node N, nominatedNodeName
field of Pod
P's status is set to the name of Node N. This field helps the scheduler track
resources reserved for Pod P and also gives users information about preemptions
in their clusters.
Please note that Pod P is not necessarily scheduled to the "nominated Node".
The scheduler always tries the "nominated Node" before iterating over any other nodes.
After victim Pods are preempted, they get their graceful termination period. If
another node becomes available while scheduler is waiting for the victim Pods to
terminate, scheduler may use the other node to schedule Pod P. As a result
nominatedNodeName
and nodeName
of Pod spec are not always the same. Also, if
the scheduler preempts Pods on Node N, but then a higher priority Pod than Pod P
arrives, the scheduler may give Node N to the new higher priority Pod. In such a
case, scheduler clears nominatedNodeName
of Pod P. By doing this, scheduler
makes Pod P eligible to preempt Pods on another Node.
Limitations of preemption
Graceful termination of preemption victims
When Pods are preempted, the victims get their graceful termination period. They have that much time to finish their work and exit. If they don't, they are killed. This graceful termination period creates a time gap between the point that the scheduler preempts Pods and the time when the pending Pod (P) can be scheduled on the Node (N). In the meantime, the scheduler keeps scheduling other pending Pods. As victims exit or get terminated, the scheduler tries to schedule Pods in the pending queue. Therefore, there is usually a time gap between the point that scheduler preempts victims and the time that Pod P is scheduled. In order to minimize this gap, one can set graceful termination period of lower priority Pods to zero or a small number.
PodDisruptionBudget is supported, but not guaranteed
A PodDisruptionBudget (PDB) allows application owners to limit the number of Pods of a replicated application that are down simultaneously from voluntary disruptions. Kubernetes supports PDB when preempting Pods, but respecting PDB is best effort. The scheduler tries to find victims whose PDB are not violated by preemption, but if no such victims are found, preemption will still happen, and lower priority Pods will be removed despite their PDBs being violated.
Inter-Pod affinity on lower-priority Pods
A Node is considered for preemption only when the answer to this question is yes: "If all the Pods with lower priority than the pending Pod are removed from the Node, can the pending Pod be scheduled on the Node?"
If a pending Pod has inter-pod affinity to one or more of the lower-priority Pods on the Node, the inter-Pod affinity rule cannot be satisfied in the absence of those lower-priority Pods. In this case, the scheduler does not preempt any Pods on the Node. Instead, it looks for another Node. The scheduler might find a suitable Node or it might not. There is no guarantee that the pending Pod can be scheduled.
Our recommended solution for this problem is to create inter-Pod affinity only towards equal or higher priority Pods.
Cross node preemption
Suppose a Node N is being considered for preemption so that a pending Pod P can be scheduled on N. P might become feasible on N only if a Pod on another Node is preempted. Here's an example:
- Pod P is being considered for Node N.
- Pod Q is running on another Node in the same Zone as Node N.
- Pod P has Zone-wide anti-affinity with Pod Q (
topologyKey: topology.kubernetes.io/zone
). - There are no other cases of anti-affinity between Pod P and other Pods in the Zone.
- In order to schedule Pod P on Node N, Pod Q can be preempted, but scheduler does not perform cross-node preemption. So, Pod P will be deemed unschedulable on Node N.
If Pod Q were removed from its Node, the Pod anti-affinity violation would be gone, and Pod P could possibly be scheduled on Node N.
We may consider adding cross Node preemption in future versions if there is enough demand and if we find an algorithm with reasonable performance.
Troubleshooting
Pod priority and preemption can have unwanted side effects. Here are some examples of potential problems and ways to deal with them.
Pods are preempted unnecessarily
Preemption removes existing Pods from a cluster under resource pressure to make
room for higher priority pending Pods. If you give high priorities to
certain Pods by mistake, these unintentionally high priority Pods may cause
preemption in your cluster. Pod priority is specified by setting the
priorityClassName
field in the Pod's specification. The integer value for
priority is then resolved and populated to the priority
field of podSpec
.
To address the problem, you can change the priorityClassName
for those Pods
to use lower priority classes, or leave that field empty. An empty
priorityClassName
is resolved to zero by default.
When a Pod is preempted, there will be events recorded for the preempted Pod. Preemption should happen only when a cluster does not have enough resources for a Pod. In such cases, preemption happens only when the priority of the pending Pod (preemptor) is higher than the victim Pods. Preemption must not happen when there is no pending Pod, or when the pending Pods have equal or lower priority than the victims. If preemption happens in such scenarios, please file an issue.
Pods are preempted, but the preemptor is not scheduled
When pods are preempted, they receive their requested graceful termination period, which is by default 30 seconds. If the victim Pods do not terminate within this period, they are forcibly terminated. Once all the victims go away, the preemptor Pod can be scheduled.
While the preemptor Pod is waiting for the victims to go away, a higher priority Pod may be created that fits on the same Node. In this case, the scheduler will schedule the higher priority Pod instead of the preemptor.
This is expected behavior: the Pod with the higher priority should take the place of a Pod with a lower priority.
Higher priority Pods are preempted before lower priority pods
The scheduler tries to find nodes that can run a pending Pod. If no node is found, the scheduler tries to remove Pods with lower priority from an arbitrary node in order to make room for the pending pod. If a node with low priority Pods is not feasible to run the pending Pod, the scheduler may choose another node with higher priority Pods (compared to the Pods on the other node) for preemption. The victims must still have lower priority than the preemptor Pod.
When there are multiple nodes available for preemption, the scheduler tries to choose the node with a set of Pods with lowest priority. However, if such Pods have PodDisruptionBudget that would be violated if they are preempted then the scheduler may choose another node with higher priority Pods.
When multiple nodes exist for preemption and none of the above scenarios apply, the scheduler chooses a node with the lowest priority.
Interactions between Pod priority and quality of service
Pod priority and QoS class
are two orthogonal features with few interactions and no default restrictions on
setting the priority of a Pod based on its QoS classes. The scheduler's
preemption logic does not consider QoS when choosing preemption targets.
Preemption considers Pod priority and attempts to choose a set of targets with
the lowest priority. Higher-priority Pods are considered for preemption only if
the removal of the lowest priority Pods is not sufficient to allow the scheduler
to schedule the preemptor Pod, or if the lowest priority Pods are protected by
PodDisruptionBudget
.
The kubelet uses Priority to determine pod order for node-pressure eviction. You can use the QoS class to estimate the order in which pods are most likely to get evicted. The kubelet ranks pods for eviction based on the following factors:
- Whether the starved resource usage exceeds requests
- Pod Priority
- Amount of resource usage relative to requests
See Pod selection for kubelet eviction for more details.
kubelet node-pressure eviction does not evict Pods when their usage does not exceed their requests. If a Pod with lower priority is not exceeding its requests, it won't be evicted. Another Pod with higher priority that exceeds its requests may be evicted.
What's next
- Read about using ResourceQuotas in connection with PriorityClasses: limit Priority Class consumption by default
- Learn about Pod Disruption
- Learn about API-initiated Eviction
- Learn about Node-pressure Eviction
10.12 - Node-pressure Eviction
Node-pressure eviction is the process by which the kubelet proactively terminates pods to reclaim resources on nodes.
The kubelet monitors resources like memory, disk space, and filesystem inodes on your cluster's nodes. When one or more of these resources reach specific consumption levels, the kubelet can proactively fail one or more pods on the node to reclaim resources and prevent starvation.
During a node-pressure eviction, the kubelet sets the phase for the
selected pods to Failed
, and terminates the Pod.
Node-pressure eviction is not the same as API-initiated eviction.
The kubelet does not respect your configured PodDisruptionBudget
or the pod's
terminationGracePeriodSeconds
. If you use soft eviction thresholds,
the kubelet respects your configured eviction-max-pod-grace-period
. If you use
hard eviction thresholds, the kubelet uses a 0s
grace period (immediate shutdown) for termination.
Self healing behavior
The kubelet attempts to reclaim node-level resources before it terminates end-user pods. For example, it removes unused container images when disk resources are starved.
If the pods are managed by a workload
management object (such as StatefulSet
or Deployment) that
replaces failed pods, the control plane (kube-controller-manager
) creates new
pods in place of the evicted pods.
Self healing for static pods
If you are running a static pod on a node that is under resource pressure, the kubelet may evict that static Pod. The kubelet then tries to create a replacement, because static Pods always represent an intent to run a Pod on that node.
The kubelet takes the priority of the static pod into account when creating a replacement. If the static pod manifest specifies a low priority, and there are higher-priority Pods defined within the cluster's control plane, and the node is under resource pressure, the kubelet may not be able to make room for that static pod. The kubelet continues to attempt to run all static pods even when there is resource pressure on a node.
Eviction signals and thresholds
The kubelet uses various parameters to make eviction decisions, like the following:
- Eviction signals
- Eviction thresholds
- Monitoring intervals
Eviction signals
Eviction signals are the current state of a particular resource at a specific point in time. Kubelet uses eviction signals to make eviction decisions by comparing the signals to eviction thresholds, which are the minimum amount of the resource that should be available on the node.
On Linux, the kubelet uses the following eviction signals:
Eviction Signal | Description |
---|---|
memory.available |
memory.available := node.status.capacity[memory] - node.stats.memory.workingSet |
nodefs.available |
nodefs.available := node.stats.fs.available |
nodefs.inodesFree |
nodefs.inodesFree := node.stats.fs.inodesFree |
imagefs.available |
imagefs.available := node.stats.runtime.imagefs.available |
imagefs.inodesFree |
imagefs.inodesFree := node.stats.runtime.imagefs.inodesFree |
pid.available |
pid.available := node.stats.rlimit.maxpid - node.stats.rlimit.curproc |
In this table, the Description column shows how kubelet gets the value of the signal. Each signal supports either a percentage or a literal value. Kubelet calculates the percentage value relative to the total capacity associated with the signal.
The value for memory.available
is derived from the cgroupfs instead of tools
like free -m
. This is important because free -m
does not work in a
container, and if users use the node allocatable
feature, out of resource decisions
are made local to the end user Pod part of the cgroup hierarchy as well as the
root node. This script or
cgroupv2 script
reproduces the same set of steps that the kubelet performs to calculate
memory.available
. The kubelet excludes inactive_file (the number of bytes of
file-backed memory on the inactive LRU list) from its calculation, as it assumes that
memory is reclaimable under pressure.
The kubelet recognizes two specific filesystem identifiers:
nodefs
: The node's main filesystem, used for local disk volumes, emptyDir volumes not backed by memory, log storage, and more. For example,nodefs
contains/var/lib/kubelet/
.imagefs
: An optional filesystem that container runtimes use to store container images and container writable layers.
Kubelet auto-discovers these filesystems and ignores other node local filesystems. Kubelet does not support other configurations.
Some kubelet garbage collection features are deprecated in favor of eviction:
Existing Flag | Rationale |
---|---|
--maximum-dead-containers |
deprecated once old logs are stored outside of container's context |
--maximum-dead-containers-per-container |
deprecated once old logs are stored outside of container's context |
--minimum-container-ttl-duration |
deprecated once old logs are stored outside of container's context |
Eviction thresholds
You can specify custom eviction thresholds for the kubelet to use when it makes eviction decisions. You can configure soft and hard eviction thresholds.
Eviction thresholds have the form [eviction-signal][operator][quantity]
, where:
eviction-signal
is the eviction signal to use.operator
is the relational operator you want, such as<
(less than).quantity
is the eviction threshold amount, such as1Gi
. The value ofquantity
must match the quantity representation used by Kubernetes. You can use either literal values or percentages (%
).
For example, if a node has 10GiB of total memory and you want trigger eviction if
the available memory falls below 1GiB, you can define the eviction threshold as
either memory.available<10%
or memory.available<1Gi
(you cannot use both).
Soft eviction thresholds
A soft eviction threshold pairs an eviction threshold with a required administrator-specified grace period. The kubelet does not evict pods until the grace period is exceeded. The kubelet returns an error on startup if you do not specify a grace period.
You can specify both a soft eviction threshold grace period and a maximum allowed pod termination grace period for kubelet to use during evictions. If you specify a maximum allowed grace period and the soft eviction threshold is met, the kubelet uses the lesser of the two grace periods. If you do not specify a maximum allowed grace period, the kubelet kills evicted pods immediately without graceful termination.
You can use the following flags to configure soft eviction thresholds:
eviction-soft
: A set of eviction thresholds likememory.available<1.5Gi
that can trigger pod eviction if held over the specified grace period.eviction-soft-grace-period
: A set of eviction grace periods likememory.available=1m30s
that define how long a soft eviction threshold must hold before triggering a Pod eviction.eviction-max-pod-grace-period
: The maximum allowed grace period (in seconds) to use when terminating pods in response to a soft eviction threshold being met.
Hard eviction thresholds
A hard eviction threshold has no grace period. When a hard eviction threshold is met, the kubelet kills pods immediately without graceful termination to reclaim the starved resource.
You can use the eviction-hard
flag to configure a set of hard eviction
thresholds like memory.available<1Gi
.
The kubelet has the following default hard eviction thresholds:
memory.available<100Mi
nodefs.available<10%
imagefs.available<15%
nodefs.inodesFree<5%
(Linux nodes)
These default values of hard eviction thresholds will only be set if none of the parameters is changed. If you change the value of any parameter, then the values of other parameters will not be inherited as the default values and will be set to zero. In order to provide custom values, you should provide all the thresholds respectively.
Eviction monitoring interval
The kubelet evaluates eviction thresholds based on its configured housekeeping-interval
,
which defaults to 10s
.
Node conditions
The kubelet reports node conditions to reflect that the node is under pressure because hard or soft eviction threshold is met, independent of configured grace periods.
The kubelet maps eviction signals to node conditions as follows:
Node Condition | Eviction Signal | Description |
---|---|---|
MemoryPressure |
memory.available |
Available memory on the node has satisfied an eviction threshold |
DiskPressure |
nodefs.available , nodefs.inodesFree , imagefs.available , or imagefs.inodesFree |
Available disk space and inodes on either the node's root filesystem or image filesystem has satisfied an eviction threshold |
PIDPressure |
pid.available |
Available processes identifiers on the (Linux) node has fallen below an eviction threshold |
The control plane also maps these node conditions to taints.
The kubelet updates the node conditions based on the configured
--node-status-update-frequency
, which defaults to 10s
.
Node condition oscillation
In some cases, nodes oscillate above and below soft eviction thresholds without
holding for the defined grace periods. This causes the reported node condition
to constantly switch between true
and false
, leading to bad eviction decisions.
To protect against oscillation, you can use the eviction-pressure-transition-period
flag, which controls how long the kubelet must wait before transitioning a node
condition to a different state. The transition period has a default value of 5m
.
Reclaiming node level resources
The kubelet tries to reclaim node-level resources before it evicts end-user pods.
When a DiskPressure
node condition is reported, the kubelet reclaims node-level
resources based on the filesystems on the node.
With imagefs
If the node has a dedicated imagefs
filesystem for container runtimes to use,
the kubelet does the following:
- If the
nodefs
filesystem meets the eviction thresholds, the kubelet garbage collects dead pods and containers. - If the
imagefs
filesystem meets the eviction thresholds, the kubelet deletes all unused images.
Without imagefs
If the node only has a nodefs
filesystem that meets eviction thresholds,
the kubelet frees up disk space in the following order:
- Garbage collect dead pods and containers
- Delete unused images
Pod selection for kubelet eviction
If the kubelet's attempts to reclaim node-level resources don't bring the eviction signal below the threshold, the kubelet begins to evict end-user pods.
The kubelet uses the following parameters to determine the pod eviction order:
- Whether the pod's resource usage exceeds requests
- Pod Priority
- The pod's resource usage relative to requests
As a result, kubelet ranks and evicts pods in the following order:
BestEffort
orBurstable
pods where the usage exceeds requests. These pods are evicted based on their Priority and then by how much their usage level exceeds the request.Guaranteed
pods andBurstable
pods where the usage is less than requests are evicted last, based on their Priority.
DiskPressure
.
Guaranteed
pods are guaranteed only when requests and limits are specified for
all the containers and they are equal. These pods will never be evicted because
of another pod's resource consumption. If a system daemon (such as kubelet
and journald
) is consuming more resources than were reserved via
system-reserved
or kube-reserved
allocations, and the node only has
Guaranteed
or Burstable
pods using less resources than requests left on it,
then the kubelet must choose to evict one of these pods to preserve node stability
and to limit the impact of resource starvation on other pods. In this case, it
will choose to evict pods of lowest Priority first.
If you are running a static pod
and want to avoid having it evicted under resource pressure, set the
priority
field for that Pod directly. Static pods do not support the
priorityClassName
field.
When the kubelet evicts pods in response to inode or process ID starvation, it uses the Pods' relative priority to determine the eviction order, because inodes and PIDs have no requests.
The kubelet sorts pods differently based on whether the node has a dedicated
imagefs
filesystem:
With imagefs
If nodefs
is triggering evictions, the kubelet sorts pods based on nodefs
usage (local volumes + logs of all containers
).
If imagefs
is triggering evictions, the kubelet sorts pods based on the
writable layer usage of all containers.
Without imagefs
If nodefs
is triggering evictions, the kubelet sorts pods based on their total
disk usage (local volumes + logs & writable layer of all containers
)
Minimum eviction reclaim
In some cases, pod eviction only reclaims a small amount of the starved resource. This can lead to the kubelet repeatedly hitting the configured eviction thresholds and triggering multiple evictions.
You can use the --eviction-minimum-reclaim
flag or a kubelet config file
to configure a minimum reclaim amount for each resource. When the kubelet notices
that a resource is starved, it continues to reclaim that resource until it
reclaims the quantity you specify.
For example, the following configuration sets minimum reclaim amounts:
apiVersion: kubelet.config.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: KubeletConfiguration
evictionHard:
memory.available: "500Mi"
nodefs.available: "1Gi"
imagefs.available: "100Gi"
evictionMinimumReclaim:
memory.available: "0Mi"
nodefs.available: "500Mi"
imagefs.available: "2Gi"
In this example, if the nodefs.available
signal meets the eviction threshold,
the kubelet reclaims the resource until the signal reaches the threshold of 1GiB,
and then continues to reclaim the minimum amount of 500MiB, until the available nodefs storage value reaches 1.5GiB.
Similarly, the kubelet tries to reclaim the imagefs
resource until the imagefs.available
value reaches 102Gi
, representing 102 GiB of available container image storage. If the amount
of storage that the kubelet could reclaim is less than 2GiB, the kubelet doesn't reclaim anything.
The default eviction-minimum-reclaim
is 0
for all resources.
Node out of memory behavior
If the node experiences an out of memory (OOM) event prior to the kubelet being able to reclaim memory, the node depends on the oom_killer to respond.
The kubelet sets an oom_score_adj
value for each container based on the QoS for the pod.
Quality of Service | oom_score_adj |
---|---|
Guaranteed |
-997 |
BestEffort |
1000 |
Burstable |
min(max(2, 1000 - (1000 × memoryRequestBytes) / machineMemoryCapacityBytes), 999) |
oom_score_adj
value of -997
for any containers in Pods that have
system-node-critical
Priority.
If the kubelet can't reclaim memory before a node experiences OOM, the
oom_killer
calculates an oom_score
based on the percentage of memory it's
using on the node, and then adds the oom_score_adj
to get an effective oom_score
for each container. It then kills the container with the highest score.
This means that containers in low QoS pods that consume a large amount of memory relative to their scheduling requests are killed first.
Unlike pod eviction, if a container is OOM killed, the kubelet can restart it
based on its restartPolicy
.
Good practices
The following sections describe good practice for eviction configuration.
Schedulable resources and eviction policies
When you configure the kubelet with an eviction policy, you should make sure that the scheduler will not schedule pods if they will trigger eviction because they immediately induce memory pressure.
Consider the following scenario:
- Node memory capacity: 10GiB
- Operator wants to reserve 10% of memory capacity for system daemons (kernel,
kubelet
, etc.) - Operator wants to evict Pods at 95% memory utilization to reduce incidence of system OOM.
For this to work, the kubelet is launched as follows:
--eviction-hard=memory.available<500Mi
--system-reserved=memory=1.5Gi
In this configuration, the --system-reserved
flag reserves 1.5GiB of memory
for the system, which is 10% of the total memory + the eviction threshold amount
.
The node can reach the eviction threshold if a pod is using more than its request,
or if the system is using more than 1GiB of memory, which makes the memory.available
signal fall below 500MiB and triggers the threshold.
DaemonSets and node-pressure eviction
Pod priority is a major factor in making eviction decisions. If you do not want
the kubelet to evict pods that belong to a DaemonSet, give those pods a high
enough priority by specifying a suitable priorityClassName
in the pod spec.
You can also use a lower priority, or the default, to only allow pods from that
DaemonSet to run when there are enough resources.
Known issues
The following sections describe known issues related to out of resource handling.
kubelet may not observe memory pressure right away
By default, the kubelet polls cAdvisor to collect memory usage stats at a
regular interval. If memory usage increases within that window rapidly, the
kubelet may not observe MemoryPressure
fast enough, and the OOM killer
will still be invoked.
You can use the --kernel-memcg-notification
flag to enable the memcg
notification API on the kubelet to get notified immediately when a threshold
is crossed.
If you are not trying to achieve extreme utilization, but a sensible measure of
overcommit, a viable workaround for this issue is to use the --kube-reserved
and --system-reserved
flags to allocate memory for the system.
active_file memory is not considered as available memory
On Linux, the kernel tracks the number of bytes of file-backed memory on active
least recently used (LRU) list as the active_file
statistic. The kubelet treats active_file
memory
areas as not reclaimable. For workloads that make intensive use of block-backed
local storage, including ephemeral local storage, kernel-level caches of file
and block data means that many recently accessed cache pages are likely to be
counted as active_file
. If enough of these kernel block buffers are on the
active LRU list, the kubelet is liable to observe this as high resource use and
taint the node as experiencing memory pressure - triggering pod eviction.
For more details, see https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/issues/43916
You can work around that behavior by setting the memory limit and memory request the same for containers likely to perform intensive I/O activity. You will need to estimate or measure an optimal memory limit value for that container.
What's next
- Learn about API-initiated Eviction
- Learn about Pod Priority and Preemption
- Learn about PodDisruptionBudgets
- Learn about Quality of Service (QoS)
- Check out the Eviction API
10.13 - API-initiated Eviction
API-initiated eviction is the process by which you use the Eviction API
to create an Eviction
object that triggers graceful pod termination.
You can request eviction by calling the Eviction API directly, or programmatically
using a client of the API server, like the kubectl drain
command. This
creates an Eviction
object, which causes the API server to terminate the Pod.
API-initiated evictions respect your configured PodDisruptionBudgets
and terminationGracePeriodSeconds
.
Using the API to create an Eviction object for a Pod is like performing a
policy-controlled DELETE
operation
on the Pod.
Calling the Eviction API
You can use a Kubernetes language client
to access the Kubernetes API and create an Eviction
object. To do this, you
POST the attempted operation, similar to the following example:
policy/v1
Eviction is available in v1.22+. Use policy/v1beta1
with prior releases.
{
"apiVersion": "policy/v1",
"kind": "Eviction",
"metadata": {
"name": "quux",
"namespace": "default"
}
}
policy/v1
{
"apiVersion": "policy/v1beta1",
"kind": "Eviction",
"metadata": {
"name": "quux",
"namespace": "default"
}
}
Alternatively, you can attempt an eviction operation by accessing the API using
curl
or wget
, similar to the following example:
curl -v -H 'Content-type: application/json' https://your-cluster-api-endpoint.example/api/v1/namespaces/default/pods/quux/eviction -d @eviction.json
How API-initiated eviction works
When you request an eviction using the API, the API server performs admission checks and responds in one of the following ways:
200 OK
: the eviction is allowed, theEviction
subresource is created, and the Pod is deleted, similar to sending aDELETE
request to the Pod URL.429 Too Many Requests
: the eviction is not currently allowed because of the configured PodDisruptionBudget. You may be able to attempt the eviction again later. You might also see this response because of API rate limiting.500 Internal Server Error
: the eviction is not allowed because there is a misconfiguration, like if multiple PodDisruptionBudgets reference the same Pod.
If the Pod you want to evict isn't part of a workload that has a
PodDisruptionBudget, the API server always returns 200 OK
and allows the
eviction.
If the API server allows the eviction, the Pod is deleted as follows:
- The
Pod
resource in the API server is updated with a deletion timestamp, after which the API server considers thePod
resource to be terminated. ThePod
resource is also marked with the configured grace period. - The kubelet on the node where the local Pod is running notices that the
Pod
resource is marked for termination and starts to gracefully shut down the local Pod. - While the kubelet is shutting the Pod down, the control plane removes the Pod from Endpoint and EndpointSlice objects. As a result, controllers no longer consider the Pod as a valid object.
- After the grace period for the Pod expires, the kubelet forcefully terminates the local Pod.
- The kubelet tells the API server to remove the
Pod
resource. - The API server deletes the
Pod
resource.
Troubleshooting stuck evictions
In some cases, your applications may enter a broken state, where the Eviction
API will only return 429
or 500
responses until you intervene. This can
happen if, for example, a ReplicaSet creates pods for your application but new
pods do not enter a Ready
state. You may also notice this behavior in cases
where the last evicted Pod had a long termination grace period.
If you notice stuck evictions, try one of the following solutions:
- Abort or pause the automated operation causing the issue. Investigate the stuck application before you restart the operation.
- Wait a while, then directly delete the Pod from your cluster control plane instead of using the Eviction API.
What's next
- Learn how to protect your applications with a Pod Disruption Budget.
- Learn about Node-pressure Eviction.
- Learn about Pod Priority and Preemption.
11 - Cluster Administration
The cluster administration overview is for anyone creating or administering a Kubernetes cluster. It assumes some familiarity with core Kubernetes concepts.
Planning a cluster
See the guides in Setup for examples of how to plan, set up, and configure Kubernetes clusters. The solutions listed in this article are called distros.
Before choosing a guide, here are some considerations:
- Do you want to try out Kubernetes on your computer, or do you want to build a high-availability, multi-node cluster? Choose distros best suited for your needs.
- Will you be using a hosted Kubernetes cluster, such as Google Kubernetes Engine, or hosting your own cluster?
- Will your cluster be on-premises, or in the cloud (IaaS)? Kubernetes does not directly support hybrid clusters. Instead, you can set up multiple clusters.
- If you are configuring Kubernetes on-premises, consider which networking model fits best.
- Will you be running Kubernetes on "bare metal" hardware or on virtual machines (VMs)?
- Do you want to run a cluster, or do you expect to do active development of Kubernetes project code? If the latter, choose an actively-developed distro. Some distros only use binary releases, but offer a greater variety of choices.
- Familiarize yourself with the components needed to run a cluster.
Managing a cluster
-
Learn how to manage nodes.
-
Learn how to set up and manage the resource quota for shared clusters.
Securing a cluster
-
Generate Certificates describes the steps to generate certificates using different tool chains.
-
Kubernetes Container Environment describes the environment for Kubelet managed containers on a Kubernetes node.
-
Controlling Access to the Kubernetes API describes how Kubernetes implements access control for its own API.
-
Authenticating explains authentication in Kubernetes, including the various authentication options.
-
Authorization is separate from authentication, and controls how HTTP calls are handled.
-
Using Admission Controllers explains plug-ins which intercepts requests to the Kubernetes API server after authentication and authorization.
-
Using Sysctls in a Kubernetes Cluster describes to an administrator how to use the
sysctl
command-line tool to set kernel parameters . -
Auditing describes how to interact with Kubernetes' audit logs.
Securing the kubelet
Optional Cluster Services
-
DNS Integration describes how to resolve a DNS name directly to a Kubernetes service.
-
Logging and Monitoring Cluster Activity explains how logging in Kubernetes works and how to implement it.
11.1 - Certificates
To learn how to generate certificates for your cluster, see Certificates.
11.2 - Managing Resources
You've deployed your application and exposed it via a service. Now what? Kubernetes provides a number of tools to help you manage your application deployment, including scaling and updating.
Organizing resource configurations
Many applications require multiple resources to be created, such as a Deployment and a Service.
Management of multiple resources can be simplified by grouping them together in the same file
(separated by ---
in YAML). For example:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: my-nginx-svc
labels:
app: nginx
spec:
type: LoadBalancer
ports:
- port: 80
selector:
app: nginx
---
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: my-nginx
labels:
app: nginx
spec:
replicas: 3
selector:
matchLabels:
app: nginx
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: nginx
spec:
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx:1.14.2
ports:
- containerPort: 80
Multiple resources can be created the same way as a single resource:
kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/application/nginx-app.yaml
service/my-nginx-svc created
deployment.apps/my-nginx created
The resources will be created in the order they appear in the file. Therefore, it's best to specify the service first, since that will ensure the scheduler can spread the pods associated with the service as they are created by the controller(s), such as Deployment.
kubectl apply
also accepts multiple -f
arguments:
kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/application/nginx/nginx-svc.yaml \
-f https://k8s.io/examples/application/nginx/nginx-deployment.yaml
It is a recommended practice to put resources related to the same microservice or application tier into the same file, and to group all of the files associated with your application in the same directory. If the tiers of your application bind to each other using DNS, you can deploy all of the components of your stack together.
A URL can also be specified as a configuration source, which is handy for deploying directly from configuration files checked into GitHub:
kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/application/nginx/nginx-deployment.yaml
deployment.apps/my-nginx created
Bulk operations in kubectl
Resource creation isn't the only operation that kubectl
can perform in bulk. It can also extract
resource names from configuration files in order to perform other operations, in particular to
delete the same resources you created:
kubectl delete -f https://k8s.io/examples/application/nginx-app.yaml
deployment.apps "my-nginx" deleted
service "my-nginx-svc" deleted
In the case of two resources, you can specify both resources on the command line using the resource/name syntax:
kubectl delete deployments/my-nginx services/my-nginx-svc
For larger numbers of resources, you'll find it easier to specify the selector (label query)
specified using -l
or --selector
, to filter resources by their labels:
kubectl delete deployment,services -l app=nginx
deployment.apps "my-nginx" deleted
service "my-nginx-svc" deleted
Because kubectl
outputs resource names in the same syntax it accepts, you can chain operations
using $()
or xargs
:
kubectl get $(kubectl create -f docs/concepts/cluster-administration/nginx/ -o name | grep service)
kubectl create -f docs/concepts/cluster-administration/nginx/ -o name | grep service | xargs -i kubectl get {}
NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
my-nginx-svc LoadBalancer 10.0.0.208 <pending> 80/TCP 0s
With the above commands, we first create resources under examples/application/nginx/
and print
the resources created with -o name
output format (print each resource as resource/name).
Then we grep
only the "service", and then print it with kubectl get
.
If you happen to organize your resources across several subdirectories within a particular
directory, you can recursively perform the operations on the subdirectories also, by specifying
--recursive
or -R
alongside the --filename,-f
flag.
For instance, assume there is a directory project/k8s/development
that holds all of the
manifests needed for the development environment,
organized by resource type:
project/k8s/development
├── configmap
│ └── my-configmap.yaml
├── deployment
│ └── my-deployment.yaml
└── pvc
└── my-pvc.yaml
By default, performing a bulk operation on project/k8s/development
will stop at the first level
of the directory, not processing any subdirectories. If we had tried to create the resources in
this directory using the following command, we would have encountered an error:
kubectl apply -f project/k8s/development
error: you must provide one or more resources by argument or filename (.json|.yaml|.yml|stdin)
Instead, specify the --recursive
or -R
flag with the --filename,-f
flag as such:
kubectl apply -f project/k8s/development --recursive
configmap/my-config created
deployment.apps/my-deployment created
persistentvolumeclaim/my-pvc created
The --recursive
flag works with any operation that accepts the --filename,-f
flag such as:
kubectl {create,get,delete,describe,rollout}
etc.
The --recursive
flag also works when multiple -f
arguments are provided:
kubectl apply -f project/k8s/namespaces -f project/k8s/development --recursive
namespace/development created
namespace/staging created
configmap/my-config created
deployment.apps/my-deployment created
persistentvolumeclaim/my-pvc created
If you're interested in learning more about kubectl
, go ahead and read
Command line tool (kubectl).
Canary deployments
Another scenario where multiple labels are needed is to distinguish deployments of different releases or configurations of the same component. It is common practice to deploy a canary of a new application release (specified via image tag in the pod template) side by side with the previous release so that the new release can receive live production traffic before fully rolling it out.
For instance, you can use a track
label to differentiate different releases.
The primary, stable release would have a track
label with value as stable
:
name: frontend
replicas: 3
...
labels:
app: guestbook
tier: frontend
track: stable
...
image: gb-frontend:v3
and then you can create a new release of the guestbook frontend that carries the track
label
with different value (i.e. canary
), so that two sets of pods would not overlap:
name: frontend-canary
replicas: 1
...
labels:
app: guestbook
tier: frontend
track: canary
...
image: gb-frontend:v4
The frontend service would span both sets of replicas by selecting the common subset of their
labels (i.e. omitting the track
label), so that the traffic will be redirected to both
applications:
selector:
app: guestbook
tier: frontend
You can tweak the number of replicas of the stable and canary releases to determine the ratio of each release that will receive live production traffic (in this case, 3:1). Once you're confident, you can update the stable track to the new application release and remove the canary one.
For a more concrete example, check the tutorial of deploying Ghost.
Updating annotations
Sometimes you would want to attach annotations to resources. Annotations are arbitrary
non-identifying metadata for retrieval by API clients such as tools, libraries, etc.
This can be done with kubectl annotate
. For example:
kubectl annotate pods my-nginx-v4-9gw19 description='my frontend running nginx'
kubectl get pods my-nginx-v4-9gw19 -o yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: pod
metadata:
annotations:
description: my frontend running nginx
...
For more information, see annotations and kubectl annotate document.
Scaling your application
When load on your application grows or shrinks, use kubectl
to scale your application.
For instance, to decrease the number of nginx replicas from 3 to 1, do:
kubectl scale deployment/my-nginx --replicas=1
deployment.apps/my-nginx scaled
Now you only have one pod managed by the deployment.
kubectl get pods -l app=nginx
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
my-nginx-2035384211-j5fhi 1/1 Running 0 30m
To have the system automatically choose the number of nginx replicas as needed, ranging from 1 to 3, do:
kubectl autoscale deployment/my-nginx --min=1 --max=3
horizontalpodautoscaler.autoscaling/my-nginx autoscaled
Now your nginx replicas will be scaled up and down as needed, automatically.
For more information, please see kubectl scale, kubectl autoscale and horizontal pod autoscaler document.
In-place updates of resources
Sometimes it's necessary to make narrow, non-disruptive updates to resources you've created.
kubectl apply
It is suggested to maintain a set of configuration files in source control
(see configuration as code),
so that they can be maintained and versioned along with the code for the resources they configure.
Then, you can use kubectl apply
to push your configuration changes to the cluster.
This command will compare the version of the configuration that you're pushing with the previous version and apply the changes you've made, without overwriting any automated changes to properties you haven't specified.
kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/application/nginx/nginx-deployment.yaml
deployment.apps/my-nginx configured
Note that kubectl apply
attaches an annotation to the resource in order to determine the changes
to the configuration since the previous invocation. When it's invoked, kubectl apply
does a
three-way diff between the previous configuration, the provided input and the current
configuration of the resource, in order to determine how to modify the resource.
Currently, resources are created without this annotation, so the first invocation of kubectl apply
will fall back to a two-way diff between the provided input and the current configuration
of the resource. During this first invocation, it cannot detect the deletion of properties set
when the resource was created. For this reason, it will not remove them.
All subsequent calls to kubectl apply
, and other commands that modify the configuration, such as
kubectl replace
and kubectl edit
, will update the annotation, allowing subsequent calls to
kubectl apply
to detect and perform deletions using a three-way diff.
kubectl edit
Alternatively, you may also update resources with kubectl edit
:
kubectl edit deployment/my-nginx
This is equivalent to first get
the resource, edit it in text editor, and then apply
the
resource with the updated version:
kubectl get deployment my-nginx -o yaml > /tmp/nginx.yaml
vi /tmp/nginx.yaml
# do some edit, and then save the file
kubectl apply -f /tmp/nginx.yaml
deployment.apps/my-nginx configured
rm /tmp/nginx.yaml
This allows you to do more significant changes more easily. Note that you can specify the editor
with your EDITOR
or KUBE_EDITOR
environment variables.
For more information, please see kubectl edit document.
kubectl patch
You can use kubectl patch
to update API objects in place. This command supports JSON patch,
JSON merge patch, and strategic merge patch. See
Update API Objects in Place Using kubectl patch
and
kubectl patch.
Disruptive updates
In some cases, you may need to update resource fields that cannot be updated once initialized, or
you may want to make a recursive change immediately, such as to fix broken pods created by a
Deployment. To change such fields, use replace --force
, which deletes and re-creates the
resource. In this case, you can modify your original configuration file:
kubectl replace -f https://k8s.io/examples/application/nginx/nginx-deployment.yaml --force
deployment.apps/my-nginx deleted
deployment.apps/my-nginx replaced
Updating your application without a service outage
At some point, you'll eventually need to update your deployed application, typically by specifying
a new image or image tag, as in the canary deployment scenario above. kubectl
supports several
update operations, each of which is applicable to different scenarios.
We'll guide you through how to create and update applications with Deployments.
Let's say you were running version 1.14.2 of nginx:
kubectl create deployment my-nginx --image=nginx:1.14.2
deployment.apps/my-nginx created
with 3 replicas (so the old and new revisions can coexist):
kubectl scale deployment my-nginx --current-replicas=1 --replicas=3
deployment.apps/my-nginx scaled
To update to version 1.16.1, change .spec.template.spec.containers[0].image
from nginx:1.14.2
to nginx:1.16.1
using the previous kubectl commands.
kubectl edit deployment/my-nginx
That's it! The Deployment will declaratively update the deployed nginx application progressively behind the scene. It ensures that only a certain number of old replicas may be down while they are being updated, and only a certain number of new replicas may be created above the desired number of pods. To learn more details about it, visit Deployment page.
What's next
11.3 - Cluster Networking
Networking is a central part of Kubernetes, but it can be challenging to understand exactly how it is expected to work. There are 4 distinct networking problems to address:
- Highly-coupled container-to-container communications: this is solved by
Pods and
localhost
communications. - Pod-to-Pod communications: this is the primary focus of this document.
- Pod-to-Service communications: this is covered by Services.
- External-to-Service communications: this is also covered by Services.
Kubernetes is all about sharing machines between applications. Typically, sharing machines requires ensuring that two applications do not try to use the same ports. Coordinating ports across multiple developers is very difficult to do at scale and exposes users to cluster-level issues outside of their control.
Dynamic port allocation brings a lot of complications to the system - every application has to take ports as flags, the API servers have to know how to insert dynamic port numbers into configuration blocks, services have to know how to find each other, etc. Rather than deal with this, Kubernetes takes a different approach.
To learn about the Kubernetes networking model, see here.
Kubernetes IP address ranges
Kubernetes clusters require to allocate non-overlapping IP addresses for Pods, Services and Nodes, from a range of available addresses configured in the following components:
- The network plugin is configured to assign IP addresses to Pods.
- The kube-apiserver is configured to assign IP addresses to Services.
- The kubelet or the cloud-controller-manager is configured to assign IP addresses to Nodes.
Cluster networking types
Kubernetes clusters, attending to the IP families configured, can be categorized into:
- IPv4 only: The network plugin, kube-apiserver and kubelet/cloud-controller-manager are configured to assign only IPv4 addresses.
- IPv6 only: The network plugin, kube-apiserver and kubelet/cloud-controller-manager are configured to assign only IPv6 addresses.
- IPv4/IPv6 or IPv6/IPv4 dual-stack:
- The network plugin is configured to assign IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.
- The kube-apiserver is configured to assign IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.
- The kubelet or cloud-controller-manager is configured to assign IPv4 and IPv6 address.
- All components must agree on the configured primary IP family.
Kubernetes clusters only consider the IP families present on the Pods, Services and Nodes objects,
independently of the existing IPs of the represented objects. Per example, a server or a pod can have multiple
IP addresses on its interfaces, but only the IP addresses in node.status.addresses
or pod.status.ips
are
considered for implementing the Kubernetes network model and defining the type of the cluster.
How to implement the Kubernetes network model
The network model is implemented by the container runtime on each node. The most common container runtimes use Container Network Interface (CNI) plugins to manage their network and security capabilities. Many different CNI plugins exist from many different vendors. Some of these provide only basic features of adding and removing network interfaces, while others provide more sophisticated solutions, such as integration with other container orchestration systems, running multiple CNI plugins, advanced IPAM features etc.
See this page for a non-exhaustive list of networking addons supported by Kubernetes.
What's next
The early design of the networking model and its rationale are described in more detail in the networking design document. For future plans and some on-going efforts that aim to improve Kubernetes networking, please refer to the SIG-Network KEPs.
11.4 - Logging Architecture
Application logs can help you understand what is happening inside your application. The logs are particularly useful for debugging problems and monitoring cluster activity. Most modern applications have some kind of logging mechanism. Likewise, container engines are designed to support logging. The easiest and most adopted logging method for containerized applications is writing to standard output and standard error streams.
However, the native functionality provided by a container engine or runtime is usually not enough for a complete logging solution.
For example, you may want to access your application's logs if a container crashes, a pod gets evicted, or a node dies.
In a cluster, logs should have a separate storage and lifecycle independent of nodes, pods, or containers. This concept is called cluster-level logging.
Cluster-level logging architectures require a separate backend to store, analyze, and query logs. Kubernetes does not provide a native storage solution for log data. Instead, there are many logging solutions that integrate with Kubernetes. The following sections describe how to handle and store logs on nodes.
Pod and container logs
Kubernetes captures logs from each container in a running Pod.
This example uses a manifest for a Pod
with a container
that writes text to the standard output stream, once per second.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: counter
spec:
containers:
- name: count
image: busybox:1.28
args: [/bin/sh, -c,
'i=0; while true; do echo "$i: $(date)"; i=$((i+1)); sleep 1; done']
To run this pod, use the following command:
kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/debug/counter-pod.yaml
The output is:
pod/counter created
To fetch the logs, use the kubectl logs
command, as follows:
kubectl logs counter
The output is similar to:
0: Fri Apr 1 11:42:23 UTC 2022
1: Fri Apr 1 11:42:24 UTC 2022
2: Fri Apr 1 11:42:25 UTC 2022
You can use kubectl logs --previous
to retrieve logs from a previous instantiation of a container.
If your pod has multiple containers, specify which container's logs you want to access by
appending a container name to the command, with a -c
flag, like so:
kubectl logs counter -c count
See the kubectl logs
documentation
for more details.
How nodes handle container logs
A container runtime handles and redirects any output generated to a containerized
application's stdout
and stderr
streams.
Different container runtimes implement this in different ways; however, the integration
with the kubelet is standardized as the CRI logging format.
By default, if a container restarts, the kubelet keeps one terminated container with its logs. If a pod is evicted from the node, all corresponding containers are also evicted, along with their logs.
The kubelet makes logs available to clients via a special feature of the Kubernetes API.
The usual way to access this is by running kubectl logs
.
Log rotation
Kubernetes v1.21 [stable]
The kubelet is responsible for rotating container logs and managing the logging directory structure. The kubelet sends this information to the container runtime (using CRI), and the runtime writes the container logs to the given location.
You can configure two kubelet configuration settings,
containerLogMaxSize
(default 10Mi) and containerLogMaxFiles
(default 5),
using the kubelet configuration file.
These settings let you configure the maximum size for each log file and the maximum number of
files allowed for each container respectively.
When you run kubectl logs
as in
the basic logging example, the kubelet on the node handles the request and
reads directly from the log file. The kubelet returns the content of the log file.
Only the contents of the latest log file are available through kubectl logs
.
For example, if a Pod writes 40 MiB of logs and the kubelet rotates logs
after 10 MiB, running kubectl logs
returns at most 10MiB of data.
System component logs
There are two types of system components: those that typically run in a container, and those components directly involved in running containers. For example:
- The kubelet and container runtime do not run in containers. The kubelet runs your containers (grouped together in pods)
- The Kubernetes scheduler, controller manager, and API server run within pods
(usually static Pods).
The etcd component runs in the control plane, and most commonly also as a static pod.
If your cluster uses kube-proxy, you typically run this as a
DaemonSet
.
Log locations
The way that the kubelet and container runtime write logs depends on the operating system that the node uses:
On Linux nodes that use systemd, the kubelet and container runtime write to journald
by default. You use journalctl
to read the systemd journal; for example:
journalctl -u kubelet
.
If systemd is not present, the kubelet and container runtime write to .log
files in the
/var/log
directory. If you want to have logs written elsewhere, you can indirectly
run the kubelet via a helper tool, kube-log-runner
, and use that tool to redirect
kubelet logs to a directory that you choose.
The kubelet always directs your container runtime to write logs into directories within
/var/log/pods
.
For more information on kube-log-runner
, read System Logs.
By default, the kubelet writes logs to files within the directory C:\var\logs
(notice that this is not C:\var\log
).
Although C:\var\log
is the Kubernetes default location for these logs, several
cluster deployment tools set up Windows nodes to log to C:\var\log\kubelet
instead.
If you want to have logs written elsewhere, you can indirectly
run the kubelet via a helper tool, kube-log-runner
, and use that tool to redirect
kubelet logs to a directory that you choose.
However, the kubelet always directs your container runtime to write logs within the
directory C:\var\log\pods
.
For more information on kube-log-runner
, read System Logs.
For Kubernetes cluster components that run in pods, these write to files inside
the /var/log
directory, bypassing the default logging mechanism (the components
do not write to the systemd journal). You can use Kubernetes' storage mechanisms
to map persistent storage into the container that runs the component.
For details about etcd and its logs, view the etcd documentation. Again, you can use Kubernetes' storage mechanisms to map persistent storage into the container that runs the component.
If you deploy Kubernetes cluster components (such as the scheduler) to log to a volume shared from the parent node, you need to consider and ensure that those logs are rotated. Kubernetes does not manage that log rotation.
Your operating system may automatically implement some log rotation - for example,
if you share the directory /var/log
into a static Pod for a component, node-level
log rotation treats a file in that directory the same as a file written by any component
outside Kubernetes.
Some deploy tools account for that log rotation and automate it; others leave this as your responsibility.
Cluster-level logging architectures
While Kubernetes does not provide a native solution for cluster-level logging, there are several common approaches you can consider. Here are some options:
- Use a node-level logging agent that runs on every node.
- Include a dedicated sidecar container for logging in an application pod.
- Push logs directly to a backend from within an application.
Using a node logging agent
You can implement cluster-level logging by including a node-level logging agent on each node. The logging agent is a dedicated tool that exposes logs or pushes logs to a backend. Commonly, the logging agent is a container that has access to a directory with log files from all of the application containers on that node.
Because the logging agent must run on every node, it is recommended to run the agent
as a DaemonSet
.
Node-level logging creates only one agent per node and doesn't require any changes to the applications running on the node.
Containers write to stdout and stderr, but with no agreed format. A node-level agent collects these logs and forwards them for aggregation.
Using a sidecar container with the logging agent
You can use a sidecar container in one of the following ways:
- The sidecar container streams application logs to its own
stdout
. - The sidecar container runs a logging agent, which is configured to pick up logs from an application container.
Streaming sidecar container
By having your sidecar containers write to their own stdout
and stderr
streams, you can take advantage of the kubelet and the logging agent that
already run on each node. The sidecar containers read logs from a file, a socket,
or journald. Each sidecar container prints a log to its own stdout
or stderr
stream.
This approach allows you to separate several log streams from different
parts of your application, some of which can lack support
for writing to stdout
or stderr
. The logic behind redirecting logs
is minimal, so it's not a significant overhead. Additionally, because
stdout
and stderr
are handled by the kubelet, you can use built-in tools
like kubectl logs
.
For example, a pod runs a single container, and the container writes to two different log files using two different formats. Here's a manifest for the Pod:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: counter
spec:
containers:
- name: count
image: busybox:1.28
args:
- /bin/sh
- -c
- >
i=0;
while true;
do
echo "$i: $(date)" >> /var/log/1.log;
echo "$(date) INFO $i" >> /var/log/2.log;
i=$((i+1));
sleep 1;
done
volumeMounts:
- name: varlog
mountPath: /var/log
volumes:
- name: varlog
emptyDir: {}
It is not recommended to write log entries with different formats to the same log
stream, even if you managed to redirect both components to the stdout
stream of
the container. Instead, you can create two sidecar containers. Each sidecar
container could tail a particular log file from a shared volume and then redirect
the logs to its own stdout
stream.
Here's a manifest for a pod that has two sidecar containers:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: counter
spec:
containers:
- name: count
image: busybox:1.28
args:
- /bin/sh
- -c
- >
i=0;
while true;
do
echo "$i: $(date)" >> /var/log/1.log;
echo "$(date) INFO $i" >> /var/log/2.log;
i=$((i+1));
sleep 1;
done
volumeMounts:
- name: varlog
mountPath: /var/log
- name: count-log-1
image: busybox:1.28
args: [/bin/sh, -c, 'tail -n+1 -F /var/log/1.log']
volumeMounts:
- name: varlog
mountPath: /var/log
- name: count-log-2
image: busybox:1.28
args: [/bin/sh, -c, 'tail -n+1 -F /var/log/2.log']
volumeMounts:
- name: varlog
mountPath: /var/log
volumes:
- name: varlog
emptyDir: {}
Now when you run this pod, you can access each log stream separately by running the following commands:
kubectl logs counter count-log-1
The output is similar to:
0: Fri Apr 1 11:42:26 UTC 2022
1: Fri Apr 1 11:42:27 UTC 2022
2: Fri Apr 1 11:42:28 UTC 2022
...
kubectl logs counter count-log-2
The output is similar to:
Fri Apr 1 11:42:29 UTC 2022 INFO 0
Fri Apr 1 11:42:30 UTC 2022 INFO 0
Fri Apr 1 11:42:31 UTC 2022 INFO 0
...
If you installed a node-level agent in your cluster, that agent picks up those log streams automatically without any further configuration. If you like, you can configure the agent to parse log lines depending on the source container.
Even for Pods that only have low CPU and memory usage (order of a couple of millicores
for cpu and order of several megabytes for memory), writing logs to a file and
then streaming them to stdout
can double how much storage you need on the node.
If you have an application that writes to a single file, it's recommended to set
/dev/stdout
as the destination rather than implement the streaming sidecar
container approach.
Sidecar containers can also be used to rotate log files that cannot be rotated by
the application itself. An example of this approach is a small container running
logrotate
periodically.
However, it's more straightforward to use stdout
and stderr
directly, and
leave rotation and retention policies to the kubelet.
Sidecar container with a logging agent
If the node-level logging agent is not flexible enough for your situation, you can create a sidecar container with a separate logging agent that you have configured specifically to run with your application.
kubectl logs
because they are not controlled
by the kubelet.
Here are two example manifests that you can use to implement a sidecar container with a logging agent.
The first manifest contains a ConfigMap
to configure fluentd.
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: fluentd-config
data:
fluentd.conf: |
<source>
type tail
format none
path /var/log/1.log
pos_file /var/log/1.log.pos
tag count.format1
</source>
<source>
type tail
format none
path /var/log/2.log
pos_file /var/log/2.log.pos
tag count.format2
</source>
<match **>
type google_cloud
</match>
The second manifest describes a pod that has a sidecar container running fluentd. The pod mounts a volume where fluentd can pick up its configuration data.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: counter
spec:
containers:
- name: count
image: busybox:1.28
args:
- /bin/sh
- -c
- >
i=0;
while true;
do
echo "$i: $(date)" >> /var/log/1.log;
echo "$(date) INFO $i" >> /var/log/2.log;
i=$((i+1));
sleep 1;
done
volumeMounts:
- name: varlog
mountPath: /var/log
- name: count-agent
image: registry.k8s.io/fluentd-gcp:1.30
env:
- name: FLUENTD_ARGS
value: -c /etc/fluentd-config/fluentd.conf
volumeMounts:
- name: varlog
mountPath: /var/log
- name: config-volume
mountPath: /etc/fluentd-config
volumes:
- name: varlog
emptyDir: {}
- name: config-volume
configMap:
name: fluentd-config
Exposing logs directly from the application
Cluster-logging that exposes or pushes logs directly from every application is outside the scope of Kubernetes.
What's next
- Read about Kubernetes system logs
- Learn about Traces For Kubernetes System Components
- Learn how to customise the termination message that Kubernetes records when a Pod fails
11.5 - Metrics For Kubernetes System Components
System component metrics can give a better look into what is happening inside them. Metrics are particularly useful for building dashboards and alerts.
Kubernetes components emit metrics in Prometheus format. This format is structured plain text, designed so that people and machines can both read it.
Metrics in Kubernetes
In most cases metrics are available on /metrics
endpoint of the HTTP server. For components that
don't expose endpoint by default, it can be enabled using --bind-address
flag.
Examples of those components:
In a production environment you may want to configure Prometheus Server or some other metrics scraper to periodically gather these metrics and make them available in some kind of time series database.
Note that kubelet also exposes metrics in
/metrics/cadvisor
, /metrics/resource
and /metrics/probes
endpoints. Those metrics do not
have the same lifecycle.
If your cluster uses RBAC, reading metrics requires
authorization via a user, group or ServiceAccount with a ClusterRole that allows accessing
/metrics
. For example:
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: ClusterRole
metadata:
name: prometheus
rules:
- nonResourceURLs:
- "/metrics"
verbs:
- get
Metric lifecycle
Alpha metric → Stable metric → Deprecated metric → Hidden metric → Deleted metric
Alpha metrics have no stability guarantees. These metrics can be modified or deleted at any time.
Stable metrics are guaranteed to not change. This means:
- A stable metric without a deprecated signature will not be deleted or renamed
- A stable metric's type will not be modified
Deprecated metrics are slated for deletion, but are still available for use. These metrics include an annotation about the version in which they became deprecated.
For example:
-
Before deprecation
# HELP some_counter this counts things # TYPE some_counter counter some_counter 0
-
After deprecation
# HELP some_counter (Deprecated since 1.15.0) this counts things # TYPE some_counter counter some_counter 0
Hidden metrics are no longer published for scraping, but are still available for use. To use a hidden metric, please refer to the Show hidden metrics section.
Deleted metrics are no longer published and cannot be used.
Show hidden metrics
As described above, admins can enable hidden metrics through a command-line flag on a specific binary. This intends to be used as an escape hatch for admins if they missed the migration of the metrics deprecated in the last release.
The flag show-hidden-metrics-for-version
takes a version for which you want to show metrics
deprecated in that release. The version is expressed as x.y, where x is the major version, y is
the minor version. The patch version is not needed even though a metrics can be deprecated in a
patch release, the reason for that is the metrics deprecation policy runs against the minor release.
The flag can only take the previous minor version as it's value. All metrics hidden in previous
will be emitted if admins set the previous version to show-hidden-metrics-for-version
. The too
old version is not allowed because this violates the metrics deprecated policy.
Take metric A
as an example, here assumed that A
is deprecated in 1.n. According to metrics
deprecated policy, we can reach the following conclusion:
- In release
1.n
, the metric is deprecated, and it can be emitted by default. - In release
1.n+1
, the metric is hidden by default and it can be emitted by command lineshow-hidden-metrics-for-version=1.n
. - In release
1.n+2
, the metric should be removed from the codebase. No escape hatch anymore.
If you're upgrading from release 1.12
to 1.13
, but still depend on a metric A
deprecated in
1.12
, you should set hidden metrics via command line: --show-hidden-metrics=1.12
and remember
to remove this metric dependency before upgrading to 1.14
Component metrics
kube-controller-manager metrics
Controller manager metrics provide important insight into the performance and health of the controller manager. These metrics include common Go language runtime metrics such as go_routine count and controller specific metrics such as etcd request latencies or Cloudprovider (AWS, GCE, OpenStack) API latencies that can be used to gauge the health of a cluster.
Starting from Kubernetes 1.7, detailed Cloudprovider metrics are available for storage operations for GCE, AWS, Vsphere and OpenStack. These metrics can be used to monitor health of persistent volume operations.
For example, for GCE these metrics are called:
cloudprovider_gce_api_request_duration_seconds { request = "instance_list"}
cloudprovider_gce_api_request_duration_seconds { request = "disk_insert"}
cloudprovider_gce_api_request_duration_seconds { request = "disk_delete"}
cloudprovider_gce_api_request_duration_seconds { request = "attach_disk"}
cloudprovider_gce_api_request_duration_seconds { request = "detach_disk"}
cloudprovider_gce_api_request_duration_seconds { request = "list_disk"}
kube-scheduler metrics
Kubernetes v1.21 [beta]
The scheduler exposes optional metrics that reports the requested resources and the desired limits of all running pods. These metrics can be used to build capacity planning dashboards, assess current or historical scheduling limits, quickly identify workloads that cannot schedule due to lack of resources, and compare actual usage to the pod's request.
The kube-scheduler identifies the resource requests and limits configured for each Pod; when either a request or limit is non-zero, the kube-scheduler reports a metrics timeseries. The time series is labelled by:
- namespace
- pod name
- the node where the pod is scheduled or an empty string if not yet scheduled
- priority
- the assigned scheduler for that pod
- the name of the resource (for example,
cpu
) - the unit of the resource if known (for example,
cores
)
Once a pod reaches completion (has a restartPolicy
of Never
or OnFailure
and is in the
Succeeded
or Failed
pod phase, or has been deleted and all containers have a terminated state)
the series is no longer reported since the scheduler is now free to schedule other pods to run.
The two metrics are called kube_pod_resource_request
and kube_pod_resource_limit
.
The metrics are exposed at the HTTP endpoint /metrics/resources
and require the same
authorization as the /metrics
endpoint on the scheduler. You must use the
--show-hidden-metrics-for-version=1.20
flag to expose these alpha stability metrics.
Disabling metrics
You can explicitly turn off metrics via command line flag --disabled-metrics
. This may be
desired if, for example, a metric is causing a performance problem. The input is a list of
disabled metrics (i.e. --disabled-metrics=metric1,metric2
).
Metric cardinality enforcement
Metrics with unbounded dimensions could cause memory issues in the components they instrument. To
limit resource use, you can use the --allow-label-value
command line option to dynamically
configure an allow-list of label values for a metric.
In alpha stage, the flag can only take in a series of mappings as metric label allow-list.
Each mapping is of the format <metric_name>,<label_name>=<allowed_labels>
where
<allowed_labels>
is a comma-separated list of acceptable label names.
The overall format looks like:
--allow-label-value <metric_name>,<label_name>='<allow_value1>, <allow_value2>...', <metric_name2>,<label_name>='<allow_value1>, <allow_value2>...', ...
Here is an example:
--allow-label-value number_count_metric,odd_number='1,3,5', number_count_metric,even_number='2,4,6', date_gauge_metric,weekend='Saturday,Sunday'
In addition to specifying this from the CLI, this can also be done within a configuration file. You
can specify the path to that configuration file using the --allow-metric-labels-manifest
command
line argument to a component. Here's an example of the contents of that configuration file:
allow-list:
- "metric1,label2": "v1,v2,v3"
- "metric2,label1": "v1,v2,v3"
Additionally, the cardinality_enforcement_unexpected_categorizations_total
meta-metric records the
count of unexpected categorizations during cardinality enforcement, that is, whenever a label value
is encountered that is not allowed with respect to the allow-list constraints.
What's next
- Read about the Prometheus text format for metrics
- See the list of stable Kubernetes metrics
- Read about the Kubernetes deprecation policy
11.6 - System Logs
System component logs record events happening in cluster, which can be very useful for debugging. You can configure log verbosity to see more or less detail. Logs can be as coarse-grained as showing errors within a component, or as fine-grained as showing step-by-step traces of events (like HTTP access logs, pod state changes, controller actions, or scheduler decisions).
Klog
klog is the Kubernetes logging library. klog generates log messages for the Kubernetes system components.
Kubernetes is in the process of simplifying logging in its components. The following klog command line flags are deprecated starting with Kubernetes v1.23 and removed in Kubernetes v1.26:
--add-dir-header
--alsologtostderr
--log-backtrace-at
--log-dir
--log-file
--log-file-max-size
--logtostderr
--one-output
--skip-headers
--skip-log-headers
--stderrthreshold
Output will always be written to stderr, regardless of the output format. Output redirection is expected to be handled by the component which invokes a Kubernetes component. This can be a POSIX shell or a tool like systemd.
In some cases, for example a distroless container or a Windows system service, those options are
not available. Then the
kube-log-runner
binary can be used as wrapper around a Kubernetes component to redirect
output. A prebuilt binary is included in several Kubernetes base images under
its traditional name as /go-runner
and as kube-log-runner
in server and
node release archives.
This table shows how kube-log-runner
invocations correspond to shell redirection:
Usage | POSIX shell (such as bash) | kube-log-runner <options> <cmd> |
---|---|---|
Merge stderr and stdout, write to stdout | 2>&1 |
kube-log-runner (default behavior) |
Redirect both into log file | 1>>/tmp/log 2>&1 |
kube-log-runner -log-file=/tmp/log |
Copy into log file and to stdout | 2>&1 | tee -a /tmp/log |
kube-log-runner -log-file=/tmp/log -also-stdout |
Redirect only stdout into log file | >/tmp/log |
kube-log-runner -log-file=/tmp/log -redirect-stderr=false |
Klog output
An example of the traditional klog native format:
I1025 00:15:15.525108 1 httplog.go:79] GET /api/v1/namespaces/kube-system/pods/metrics-server-v0.3.1-57c75779f-9p8wg: (1.512ms) 200 [pod_nanny/v0.0.0 (linux/amd64) kubernetes/$Format 10.56.1.19:51756]
The message string may contain line breaks:
I1025 00:15:15.525108 1 example.go:79] This is a message
which has a line break.
Structured Logging
Kubernetes v1.23 [beta]
Migration to structured log messages is an ongoing process. Not all log messages are structured in this version. When parsing log files, you must also handle unstructured log messages.
Log formatting and value serialization are subject to change.
Structured logging introduces a uniform structure in log messages allowing for programmatic extraction of information. You can store and process structured logs with less effort and cost. The code which generates a log message determines whether it uses the traditional unstructured klog output or structured logging.
The default formatting of structured log messages is as text, with a format that is backward compatible with traditional klog:
<klog header> "<message>" <key1>="<value1>" <key2>="<value2>" ...
Example:
I1025 00:15:15.525108 1 controller_utils.go:116] "Pod status updated" pod="kube-system/kubedns" status="ready"
Strings are quoted. Other values are formatted with
%+v
, which may cause log messages to
continue on the next line depending on the data.
I1025 00:15:15.525108 1 example.go:116] "Example" data="This is text with a line break\nand \"quotation marks\"." someInt=1 someFloat=0.1 someStruct={StringField: First line,
second line.}
Contextual Logging
Kubernetes v1.24 [alpha]
Contextual logging builds on top of structured logging. It is primarily about how developers use logging calls: code based on that concept is more flexible and supports additional use cases as described in the Contextual Logging KEP.
If developers use additional functions like WithValues
or WithName
in
their components, then log entries contain additional information that gets
passed into functions by their caller.
Currently this is gated behind the StructuredLogging
feature gate and
disabled by default. The infrastructure for this was added in 1.24 without
modifying components. The
component-base/logs/example
command demonstrates how to use the new logging calls and how a component
behaves that supports contextual logging.
$ cd $GOPATH/src/k8s.io/kubernetes/staging/src/k8s.io/component-base/logs/example/cmd/
$ go run . --help
...
--feature-gates mapStringBool A set of key=value pairs that describe feature gates for alpha/experimental features. Options are:
AllAlpha=true|false (ALPHA - default=false)
AllBeta=true|false (BETA - default=false)
ContextualLogging=true|false (ALPHA - default=false)
$ go run . --feature-gates ContextualLogging=true
...
I0404 18:00:02.916429 451895 logger.go:94] "example/myname: runtime" foo="bar" duration="1m0s"
I0404 18:00:02.916447 451895 logger.go:95] "example: another runtime" foo="bar" duration="1m0s"
The example
prefix and foo="bar"
were added by the caller of the function
which logs the runtime
message and duration="1m0s"
value, without having to
modify that function.
With contextual logging disable, WithValues
and WithName
do nothing and log
calls go through the global klog logger. Therefore this additional information
is not in the log output anymore:
$ go run . --feature-gates ContextualLogging=false
...
I0404 18:03:31.171945 452150 logger.go:94] "runtime" duration="1m0s"
I0404 18:03:31.171962 452150 logger.go:95] "another runtime" duration="1m0s"
JSON log format
Kubernetes v1.19 [alpha]
JSON output does not support many standard klog flags. For list of unsupported klog flags, see the Command line tool reference.
Not all logs are guaranteed to be written in JSON format (for example, during process start). If you intend to parse logs, make sure you can handle log lines that are not JSON as well.
Field names and JSON serialization are subject to change.
The --logging-format=json
flag changes the format of logs from klog native format to JSON format.
Example of JSON log format (pretty printed):
{
"ts": 1580306777.04728,
"v": 4,
"msg": "Pod status updated",
"pod":{
"name": "nginx-1",
"namespace": "default"
},
"status": "ready"
}
Keys with special meaning:
ts
- timestamp as Unix time (required, float)v
- verbosity (only for info and not for error messages, int)err
- error string (optional, string)msg
- message (required, string)
List of components currently supporting JSON format:
Log verbosity level
The -v
flag controls log verbosity. Increasing the value increases the number of logged events.
Decreasing the value decreases the number of logged events. Increasing verbosity settings logs
increasingly less severe events. A verbosity setting of 0 logs only critical events.
Log location
There are two types of system components: those that run in a container and those that do not run in a container. For example:
- The Kubernetes scheduler and kube-proxy run in a container.
- The kubelet and container runtime do not run in containers.
On machines with systemd, the kubelet and container runtime write to journald.
Otherwise, they write to .log
files in the /var/log
directory.
System components inside containers always write to .log
files in the /var/log
directory,
bypassing the default logging mechanism.
Similar to the container logs, you should rotate system component logs in the /var/log
directory.
In Kubernetes clusters created by the kube-up.sh
script, log rotation is configured by the logrotate
tool.
The logrotate
tool rotates logs daily, or once the log size is greater than 100MB.
Log query
Kubernetes v1.27 [alpha]
To help with debugging issues on nodes, Kubernetes v1.27 introduced a feature that allows viewing logs of services
running on the node. To use the feature, ensure that the NodeLogQuery
feature gate is enabled for that node, and that the
kubelet configuration options enableSystemLogHandler
and enableSystemLogQuery
are both set to true. On Linux
we assume that service logs are available via journald. On Windows we assume that service logs are available
in the application log provider. On both operating systems, logs are also available by reading files within
/var/log/
.
Provided you are authorized to interact with node objects, you can try out this alpha feature on all your nodes or just a subset. Here is an example to retrieve the kubelet service logs from a node:
# Fetch kubelet logs from a node named node-1.example
kubectl get --raw "/api/v1/nodes/node-1.example/proxy/logs/?query=kubelet"
You can also fetch files, provided that the files are in a directory that the kubelet allows for log
fetches. For example, you can fetch a log from /var/log
on a Linux node:
kubectl get --raw "/api/v1/nodes/<insert-node-name-here>/proxy/logs/?query=/<insert-log-file-name-here>"
The kubelet uses heuristics to retrieve logs. This helps if you are not aware whether a given system service is
writing logs to the operating system's native logger like journald or to a log file in /var/log/
. The heuristics
first checks the native logger and if that is not available attempts to retrieve the first logs from
/var/log/<servicename>
or /var/log/<servicename>.log
or /var/log/<servicename>/<servicename>.log
.
The complete list of options that can be used are:
Option | Description |
---|---|
boot |
boot show messages from a specific system boot |
pattern |
pattern filters log entries by the provided PERL-compatible regular expression |
query |
query specifies services(s) or files from which to return logs (required) |
sinceTime |
an RFC3339 timestamp from which to show logs (inclusive) |
untilTime |
an RFC3339 timestamp until which to show logs (inclusive) |
tailLines |
specify how many lines from the end of the log to retrieve; the default is to fetch the whole log |
Example of a more complex query:
# Fetch kubelet logs from a node named node-1.example that have the word "error"
kubectl get --raw "/api/v1/nodes/node-1.example/proxy/logs/?query=kubelet&pattern=error"
What's next
- Read about the Kubernetes Logging Architecture
- Read about Structured Logging
- Read about Contextual Logging
- Read about deprecation of klog flags
- Read about the Conventions for logging severity
11.7 - Traces For Kubernetes System Components
Kubernetes v1.27 [beta]
System component traces record the latency of and relationships between operations in the cluster.
Kubernetes components emit traces using the OpenTelemetry Protocol with the gRPC exporter and can be collected and routed to tracing backends using an OpenTelemetry Collector.
Trace Collection
For a complete guide to collecting traces and using the collector, see Getting Started with the OpenTelemetry Collector. However, there are a few things to note that are specific to Kubernetes components.
By default, Kubernetes components export traces using the grpc exporter for OTLP on the IANA OpenTelemetry port, 4317. As an example, if the collector is running as a sidecar to a Kubernetes component, the following receiver configuration will collect spans and log them to standard output:
receivers:
otlp:
protocols:
grpc:
exporters:
# Replace this exporter with the exporter for your backend
logging:
logLevel: debug
service:
pipelines:
traces:
receivers: [otlp]
exporters: [logging]
Component traces
kube-apiserver traces
The kube-apiserver generates spans for incoming HTTP requests, and for outgoing requests to webhooks, etcd, and re-entrant requests. It propagates the W3C Trace Context with outgoing requests but does not make use of the trace context attached to incoming requests, as the kube-apiserver is often a public endpoint.
Enabling tracing in the kube-apiserver
To enable tracing, provide the kube-apiserver with a tracing configuration file
with --tracing-config-file=<path-to-config>
. This is an example config that records
spans for 1 in 10000 requests, and uses the default OpenTelemetry endpoint:
apiVersion: apiserver.config.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: TracingConfiguration
# default value
#endpoint: localhost:4317
samplingRatePerMillion: 100
For more information about the TracingConfiguration
struct, see
API server config API (v1beta1).
kubelet traces
Kubernetes v1.27 [beta]
The kubelet CRI interface and authenticated http servers are instrumented to generate trace spans. As with the apiserver, the endpoint and sampling rate are configurable. Trace context propagation is also configured. A parent span's sampling decision is always respected. A provided tracing configuration sampling rate will apply to spans without a parent. Enabled without a configured endpoint, the default OpenTelemetry Collector receiver address of "localhost:4317" is set.
Enabling tracing in the kubelet
To enable tracing, apply the tracing configuration. This is an example snippet of a kubelet config that records spans for 1 in 10000 requests, and uses the default OpenTelemetry endpoint:
apiVersion: kubelet.config.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: KubeletConfiguration
featureGates:
KubeletTracing: true
tracing:
# default value
#endpoint: localhost:4317
samplingRatePerMillion: 100
If the samplingRatePerMillion
is set to one million (1000000
), then every
span will be sent to the exporter.
The kubelet in Kubernetes v1.29 collects spans from the garbage collection, pod synchronization routine as well as every gRPC method. The kubelet propagates trace context with gRPC requests so that container runtimes with trace instrumentation, such as CRI-O and containerd, can associate their exported spans with the trace context from the kubelet. The resulting traces will have parent-child links between kubelet and container runtime spans, providing helpful context when debugging node issues.
Please note that exporting spans always comes with a small performance overhead
on the networking and CPU side, depending on the overall configuration of the
system. If there is any issue like that in a cluster which is running with
tracing enabled, then mitigate the problem by either reducing the
samplingRatePerMillion
or disabling tracing completely by removing the
configuration.
Stability
Tracing instrumentation is still under active development, and may change in a variety of ways. This includes span names, attached attributes, instrumented endpoints, etc. Until this feature graduates to stable, there are no guarantees of backwards compatibility for tracing instrumentation.
What's next
11.8 - Proxies in Kubernetes
This page explains proxies used with Kubernetes.
Proxies
There are several different proxies you may encounter when using Kubernetes:
-
The kubectl proxy:
- runs on a user's desktop or in a pod
- proxies from a localhost address to the Kubernetes apiserver
- client to proxy uses HTTP
- proxy to apiserver uses HTTPS
- locates apiserver
- adds authentication headers
-
The apiserver proxy:
- is a bastion built into the apiserver
- connects a user outside of the cluster to cluster IPs which otherwise might not be reachable
- runs in the apiserver processes
- client to proxy uses HTTPS (or http if apiserver so configured)
- proxy to target may use HTTP or HTTPS as chosen by proxy using available information
- can be used to reach a Node, Pod, or Service
- does load balancing when used to reach a Service
-
The kube proxy:
- runs on each node
- proxies UDP, TCP and SCTP
- does not understand HTTP
- provides load balancing
- is only used to reach services
-
A Proxy/Load-balancer in front of apiserver(s):
- existence and implementation varies from cluster to cluster (e.g. nginx)
- sits between all clients and one or more apiservers
- acts as load balancer if there are several apiservers.
-
Cloud Load Balancers on external services:
- are provided by some cloud providers (e.g. AWS ELB, Google Cloud Load Balancer)
- are created automatically when the Kubernetes service has type
LoadBalancer
- usually supports UDP/TCP only
- SCTP support is up to the load balancer implementation of the cloud provider
- implementation varies by cloud provider.
Kubernetes users will typically not need to worry about anything other than the first two types. The cluster admin will typically ensure that the latter types are set up correctly.
Requesting redirects
Proxies have replaced redirect capabilities. Redirects have been deprecated.
11.9 - API Priority and Fairness
Kubernetes v1.29 [stable]
Controlling the behavior of the Kubernetes API server in an overload situation
is a key task for cluster administrators. The kube-apiserver has some controls available
(i.e. the --max-requests-inflight
and --max-mutating-requests-inflight
command-line flags) to limit the amount of outstanding work that will be
accepted, preventing a flood of inbound requests from overloading and
potentially crashing the API server, but these flags are not enough to ensure
that the most important requests get through in a period of high traffic.
The API Priority and Fairness feature (APF) is an alternative that improves upon aforementioned max-inflight limitations. APF classifies and isolates requests in a more fine-grained way. It also introduces a limited amount of queuing, so that no requests are rejected in cases of very brief bursts. Requests are dispatched from queues using a fair queuing technique so that, for example, a poorly-behaved controller need not starve others (even at the same priority level).
This feature is designed to work well with standard controllers, which use informers and react to failures of API requests with exponential back-off, and other clients that also work this way.
--max-requests-inflight
flag without the API Priority and Fairness
feature enabled. API Priority and Fairness does apply to watch
requests. When API Priority and Fairness is disabled, watch requests
are not subject to the --max-requests-inflight
limit.
Enabling/Disabling API Priority and Fairness
The API Priority and Fairness feature is controlled by a command-line flag
and is enabled by default. See
Options
for a general explanation of the available kube-apiserver command-line
options and how to enable and disable them. The name of the
command-line option for APF is "--enable-priority-and-fairness". This feature
also involves an API Group
with: (a) a stable v1
version, introduced in 1.29, and
enabled by default (b) a v1beta3
version, enabled by default, and
deprecated in v1.29. You can
disable the API group beta version v1beta3
by adding the
following command-line flags to your kube-apiserver
invocation:
kube-apiserver \
--runtime-config=flowcontrol.apiserver.k8s.io/v1beta3=false \
# …and other flags as usual
The command-line flag --enable-priority-and-fairness=false
will disable the
API Priority and Fairness feature.
Concepts
There are several distinct features involved in the API Priority and Fairness feature. Incoming requests are classified by attributes of the request using FlowSchemas, and assigned to priority levels. Priority levels add a degree of isolation by maintaining separate concurrency limits, so that requests assigned to different priority levels cannot starve each other. Within a priority level, a fair-queuing algorithm prevents requests from different flows from starving each other, and allows for requests to be queued to prevent bursty traffic from causing failed requests when the average load is acceptably low.
Priority Levels
Without APF enabled, overall concurrency in the API server is limited by the
kube-apiserver
flags --max-requests-inflight
and
--max-mutating-requests-inflight
. With APF enabled, the concurrency limits
defined by these flags are summed and then the sum is divided up among a
configurable set of priority levels. Each incoming request is assigned to a
single priority level, and each priority level will only dispatch as many
concurrent requests as its particular limit allows.
The default configuration, for example, includes separate priority levels for leader-election requests, requests from built-in controllers, and requests from Pods. This means that an ill-behaved Pod that floods the API server with requests cannot prevent leader election or actions by the built-in controllers from succeeding.
The concurrency limits of the priority levels are periodically adjusted, allowing under-utilized priority levels to temporarily lend concurrency to heavily-utilized levels. These limits are based on nominal limits and bounds on how much concurrency a priority level may lend and how much it may borrow, all derived from the configuration objects mentioned below.
Seats Occupied by a Request
The above description of concurrency management is the baseline story. Requests have different durations but are counted equally at any given moment when comparing against a priority level's concurrency limit. In the baseline story, each request occupies one unit of concurrency. The word "seat" is used to mean one unit of concurrency, inspired by the way each passenger on a train or aircraft takes up one of the fixed supply of seats.
But some requests take up more than one seat. Some of these are list requests that the server estimates will return a large number of objects. These have been found to put an exceptionally heavy burden on the server. For this reason, the server estimates the number of objects that will be returned and considers the request to take a number of seats that is proportional to that estimated number.
Execution time tweaks for watch requests
API Priority and Fairness manages watch requests, but this involves a couple more excursions from the baseline behavior. The first concerns how long a watch request is considered to occupy its seat. Depending on request parameters, the response to a watch request may or may not begin with create notifications for all the relevant pre-existing objects. API Priority and Fairness considers a watch request to be done with its seat once that initial burst of notifications, if any, is over.
The normal notifications are sent in a concurrent burst to all relevant watch response streams whenever the server is notified of an object create/update/delete. To account for this work, API Priority and Fairness considers every write request to spend some additional time occupying seats after the actual writing is done. The server estimates the number of notifications to be sent and adjusts the write request's number of seats and seat occupancy time to include this extra work.
Queuing
Even within a priority level there may be a large number of distinct sources of traffic. In an overload situation, it is valuable to prevent one stream of requests from starving others (in particular, in the relatively common case of a single buggy client flooding the kube-apiserver with requests, that buggy client would ideally not have much measurable impact on other clients at all). This is handled by use of a fair-queuing algorithm to process requests that are assigned the same priority level. Each request is assigned to a flow, identified by the name of the matching FlowSchema plus a flow distinguisher — which is either the requesting user, the target resource's namespace, or nothing — and the system attempts to give approximately equal weight to requests in different flows of the same priority level. To enable distinct handling of distinct instances, controllers that have many instances should authenticate with distinct usernames
After classifying a request into a flow, the API Priority and Fairness feature then may assign the request to a queue. This assignment uses a technique known as shuffle sharding, which makes relatively efficient use of queues to insulate low-intensity flows from high-intensity flows.
The details of the queuing algorithm are tunable for each priority level, and allow administrators to trade off memory use, fairness (the property that independent flows will all make progress when total traffic exceeds capacity), tolerance for bursty traffic, and the added latency induced by queuing.
Exempt requests
Some requests are considered sufficiently important that they are not subject to any of the limitations imposed by this feature. These exemptions prevent an improperly-configured flow control configuration from totally disabling an API server.
Resources
The flow control API involves two kinds of resources. PriorityLevelConfigurations define the available priority levels, the share of the available concurrency budget that each can handle, and allow for fine-tuning queuing behavior. FlowSchemas are used to classify individual inbound requests, matching each to a single PriorityLevelConfiguration.
PriorityLevelConfiguration
A PriorityLevelConfiguration represents a single priority level. Each PriorityLevelConfiguration has an independent limit on the number of outstanding requests, and limitations on the number of queued requests.
The nominal concurrency limit for a PriorityLevelConfiguration is not
specified in an absolute number of seats, but rather in "nominal
concurrency shares." The total concurrency limit for the API Server is
distributed among the existing PriorityLevelConfigurations in
proportion to these shares, to give each level its nominal limit in
terms of seats. This allows a cluster administrator to scale up or
down the total amount of traffic to a server by restarting
kube-apiserver
with a different value for --max-requests-inflight
(or --max-mutating-requests-inflight
), and all
PriorityLevelConfigurations will see their maximum allowed concurrency
go up (or down) by the same fraction.
v1beta3
the relevant
PriorityLevelConfiguration field is named "assured concurrency shares"
rather than "nominal concurrency shares". Also, in Kubernetes release
1.25 and earlier there were no periodic adjustments: the
nominal/assured limits were always applied without adjustment.
The bounds on how much concurrency a priority level may lend and how much it may borrow are expressed in the PriorityLevelConfiguration as percentages of the level's nominal limit. These are resolved to absolute numbers of seats by multiplying with the nominal limit / 100.0 and rounding. The dynamically adjusted concurrency limit of a priority level is constrained to lie between (a) a lower bound of its nominal limit minus its lendable seats and (b) an upper bound of its nominal limit plus the seats it may borrow. At each adjustment the dynamic limits are derived by each priority level reclaiming any lent seats for which demand recently appeared and then jointly fairly responding to the recent seat demand on the priority levels, within the bounds just described.
--max-requests-inflight
and
--max-mutating-requests-inflight
. There is no longer any distinction made
between mutating and non-mutating requests; if you want to treat them
separately for a given resource, make separate FlowSchemas that match the
mutating and non-mutating verbs respectively.
When the volume of inbound requests assigned to a single
PriorityLevelConfiguration is more than its permitted concurrency level, the
type
field of its specification determines what will happen to extra requests.
A type of Reject
means that excess traffic will immediately be rejected with
an HTTP 429 (Too Many Requests) error. A type of Queue
means that requests
above the threshold will be queued, with the shuffle sharding and fair queuing techniques used
to balance progress between request flows.
The queuing configuration allows tuning the fair queuing algorithm for a priority level. Details of the algorithm can be read in the enhancement proposal, but in short:
-
Increasing
queues
reduces the rate of collisions between different flows, at the cost of increased memory usage. A value of 1 here effectively disables the fair-queuing logic, but still allows requests to be queued. -
Increasing
queueLengthLimit
allows larger bursts of traffic to be sustained without dropping any requests, at the cost of increased latency and memory usage. -
Changing
handSize
allows you to adjust the probability of collisions between different flows and the overall concurrency available to a single flow in an overload situation.Note: A largerhandSize
makes it less likely for two individual flows to collide (and therefore for one to be able to starve the other), but more likely that a small number of flows can dominate the apiserver. A largerhandSize
also potentially increases the amount of latency that a single high-traffic flow can cause. The maximum number of queued requests possible from a single flow ishandSize * queueLengthLimit
.
Following is a table showing an interesting collection of shuffle sharding configurations, showing for each the probability that a given mouse (low-intensity flow) is squished by the elephants (high-intensity flows) for an illustrative collection of numbers of elephants. See https://play.golang.org/p/Gi0PLgVHiUg , which computes this table.
HandSize | Queues | 1 elephant | 4 elephants | 16 elephants |
---|---|---|---|---|
12 | 32 | 4.428838398950118e-09 | 0.11431348830099144 | 0.9935089607656024 |
10 | 32 | 1.550093439632541e-08 | 0.0626479840223545 | 0.9753101519027554 |
10 | 64 | 6.601827268370426e-12 | 0.00045571320990370776 | 0.49999929150089345 |
9 | 64 | 3.6310049976037345e-11 | 0.00045501212304112273 | 0.4282314876454858 |
8 | 64 | 2.25929199850899e-10 | 0.0004886697053040446 | 0.35935114681123076 |
8 | 128 | 6.994461389026097e-13 | 3.4055790161620863e-06 | 0.02746173137155063 |
7 | 128 | 1.0579122850901972e-11 | 6.960839379258192e-06 | 0.02406157386340147 |
7 | 256 | 7.597695465552631e-14 | 6.728547142019406e-08 | 0.0006709661542533682 |
6 | 256 | 2.7134626662687968e-12 | 2.9516464018476436e-07 | 0.0008895654642000348 |
6 | 512 | 4.116062922897309e-14 | 4.982983350480894e-09 | 2.26025764343413e-05 |
6 | 1024 | 6.337324016514285e-16 | 8.09060164312957e-11 | 4.517408062903668e-07 |
FlowSchema
A FlowSchema matches some inbound requests and assigns them to a
priority level. Every inbound request is tested against FlowSchemas,
starting with those with the numerically lowest matchingPrecedence
and
working upward. The first match wins.
matchingPrecedence
. If multiple FlowSchemas with equal
matchingPrecedence
match the same request, the one with lexicographically
smaller name
will win, but it's better not to rely on this, and instead to
ensure that no two FlowSchemas have the same matchingPrecedence
.
A FlowSchema matches a given request if at least one of its rules
matches. A rule matches if at least one of its subjects
and at least
one of its resourceRules
or nonResourceRules
(depending on whether the
incoming request is for a resource or non-resource URL) match the request.
For the name
field in subjects, and the verbs
, apiGroups
, resources
,
namespaces
, and nonResourceURLs
fields of resource and non-resource rules,
the wildcard *
may be specified to match all values for the given field,
effectively removing it from consideration.
A FlowSchema's distinguisherMethod.type
determines how requests matching that
schema will be separated into flows. It may be ByUser
, in which one requesting
user will not be able to starve other users of capacity; ByNamespace
, in which
requests for resources in one namespace will not be able to starve requests for
resources in other namespaces of capacity; or blank (or distinguisherMethod
may be
omitted entirely), in which all requests matched by this FlowSchema will be
considered part of a single flow. The correct choice for a given FlowSchema
depends on the resource and your particular environment.
Defaults
Each kube-apiserver maintains two sorts of APF configuration objects: mandatory and suggested.
Mandatory Configuration Objects
The four mandatory configuration objects reflect fixed built-in guardrail behavior. This is behavior that the servers have before those objects exist, and when those objects exist their specs reflect this behavior. The four mandatory objects are as follows.
-
The mandatory
exempt
priority level is used for requests that are not subject to flow control at all: they will always be dispatched immediately. The mandatoryexempt
FlowSchema classifies all requests from thesystem:masters
group into this priority level. You may define other FlowSchemas that direct other requests to this priority level, if appropriate. -
The mandatory
catch-all
priority level is used in combination with the mandatorycatch-all
FlowSchema to make sure that every request gets some kind of classification. Typically you should not rely on this catch-all configuration, and should create your own catch-all FlowSchema and PriorityLevelConfiguration (or use the suggestedglobal-default
priority level that is installed by default) as appropriate. Because it is not expected to be used normally, the mandatorycatch-all
priority level has a very small concurrency share and does not queue requests.
Suggested Configuration Objects
The suggested FlowSchemas and PriorityLevelConfigurations constitute a reasonable default configuration. You can modify these and/or create additional configuration objects if you want. If your cluster is likely to experience heavy load then you should consider what configuration will work best.
The suggested configuration groups requests into six priority levels:
-
The
node-high
priority level is for health updates from nodes. -
The
system
priority level is for non-health requests from thesystem:nodes
group, i.e. Kubelets, which must be able to contact the API server in order for workloads to be able to schedule on them. -
The
leader-election
priority level is for leader election requests from built-in controllers (in particular, requests forendpoints
,configmaps
, orleases
coming from thesystem:kube-controller-manager
orsystem:kube-scheduler
users and service accounts in thekube-system
namespace). These are important to isolate from other traffic because failures in leader election cause their controllers to fail and restart, which in turn causes more expensive traffic as the new controllers sync their informers. -
The
workload-high
priority level is for other requests from built-in controllers. -
The
workload-low
priority level is for requests from any other service account, which will typically include all requests from controllers running in Pods. -
The
global-default
priority level handles all other traffic, e.g. interactivekubectl
commands run by nonprivileged users.
The suggested FlowSchemas serve to steer requests into the above priority levels, and are not enumerated here.
Maintenance of the Mandatory and Suggested Configuration Objects
Each kube-apiserver
independently maintains the mandatory and
suggested configuration objects, using initial and periodic behavior.
Thus, in a situation with a mixture of servers of different versions
there may be thrashing as long as different servers have different
opinions of the proper content of these objects.
Each kube-apiserver
makes an initial maintenance pass over the
mandatory and suggested configuration objects, and after that does
periodic maintenance (once per minute) of those objects.
For the mandatory configuration objects, maintenance consists of ensuring that the object exists and, if it does, has the proper spec. The server refuses to allow a creation or update with a spec that is inconsistent with the server's guardrail behavior.
Maintenance of suggested configuration objects is designed to allow
their specs to be overridden. Deletion, on the other hand, is not
respected: maintenance will restore the object. If you do not want a
suggested configuration object then you need to keep it around but set
its spec to have minimal consequences. Maintenance of suggested
objects is also designed to support automatic migration when a new
version of the kube-apiserver
is rolled out, albeit potentially with
thrashing while there is a mixed population of servers.
Maintenance of a suggested configuration object consists of creating
it --- with the server's suggested spec --- if the object does not
exist. OTOH, if the object already exists, maintenance behavior
depends on whether the kube-apiservers
or the users control the
object. In the former case, the server ensures that the object's spec
is what the server suggests; in the latter case, the spec is left
alone.
The question of who controls the object is answered by first looking
for an annotation with key apf.kubernetes.io/autoupdate-spec
. If
there is such an annotation and its value is true
then the
kube-apiservers control the object. If there is such an annotation
and its value is false
then the users control the object. If
neither of those conditions holds then the metadata.generation
of the
object is consulted. If that is 1 then the kube-apiservers control
the object. Otherwise the users control the object. These rules were
introduced in release 1.22 and their consideration of
metadata.generation
is for the sake of migration from the simpler
earlier behavior. Users who wish to control a suggested configuration
object should set its apf.kubernetes.io/autoupdate-spec
annotation
to false
.
Maintenance of a mandatory or suggested configuration object also
includes ensuring that it has an apf.kubernetes.io/autoupdate-spec
annotation that accurately reflects whether the kube-apiservers
control the object.
Maintenance also includes deleting objects that are neither mandatory
nor suggested but are annotated
apf.kubernetes.io/autoupdate-spec=true
.
Health check concurrency exemption
The suggested configuration gives no special treatment to the health
check requests on kube-apiservers from their local kubelets --- which
tend to use the secured port but supply no credentials. With the
suggested config, these requests get assigned to the global-default
FlowSchema and the corresponding global-default
priority level,
where other traffic can crowd them out.
If you add the following additional FlowSchema, this exempts those requests from rate limiting.
apiVersion: flowcontrol.apiserver.k8s.io/v1
kind: FlowSchema
metadata:
name: health-for-strangers
spec:
matchingPrecedence: 1000
priorityLevelConfiguration:
name: exempt
rules:
- nonResourceRules:
- nonResourceURLs:
- "/healthz"
- "/livez"
- "/readyz"
verbs:
- "*"
subjects:
- kind: Group
group:
name: "system:unauthenticated"
Observability
Metrics
flow_schema
and
priority_level
were inconsistently named flowSchema
and priorityLevel
,
respectively. If you're running Kubernetes versions v1.19 and earlier, you
should refer to the documentation for your version.
When you enable the API Priority and Fairness feature, the kube-apiserver exports additional metrics. Monitoring these can help you determine whether your configuration is inappropriately throttling important traffic, or find poorly-behaved workloads that may be harming system health.
Maturity level BETA
-
apiserver_flowcontrol_rejected_requests_total
is a counter vector (cumulative since server start) of requests that were rejected, broken down by the labelsflow_schema
(indicating the one that matched the request),priority_level
(indicating the one to which the request was assigned), andreason
. Thereason
label will be one of the following values:queue-full
, indicating that too many requests were already queued.concurrency-limit
, indicating that the PriorityLevelConfiguration is configured to reject rather than queue excess requests.time-out
, indicating that the request was still in the queue when its queuing time limit expired.cancelled
, indicating that the request is not purge locked and has been ejected from the queue.
-
apiserver_flowcontrol_dispatched_requests_total
is a counter vector (cumulative since server start) of requests that began executing, broken down byflow_schema
andpriority_level
. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_current_inqueue_requests
is a gauge vector holding the instantaneous number of queued (not executing) requests, broken down bypriority_level
andflow_schema
. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_current_executing_requests
is a gauge vector holding the instantaneous number of executing (not waiting in a queue) requests, broken down bypriority_level
andflow_schema
. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_current_executing_seats
is a gauge vector holding the instantaneous number of occupied seats, broken down bypriority_level
andflow_schema
. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_request_wait_duration_seconds
is a histogram vector of how long requests spent queued, broken down by the labelsflow_schema
,priority_level
, andexecute
. Theexecute
label indicates whether the request has started executing.Note: Since each FlowSchema always assigns requests to a single PriorityLevelConfiguration, you can add the histograms for all the FlowSchemas for one priority level to get the effective histogram for requests assigned to that priority level. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_nominal_limit_seats
is a gauge vector holding each priority level's nominal concurrency limit, computed from the API server's total concurrency limit and the priority level's configured nominal concurrency shares.
Maturity level ALPHA
-
apiserver_current_inqueue_requests
is a gauge vector of recent high water marks of the number of queued requests, grouped by a label namedrequest_kind
whose value ismutating
orreadOnly
. These high water marks describe the largest number seen in the one second window most recently completed. These complement the olderapiserver_current_inflight_requests
gauge vector that holds the last window's high water mark of number of requests actively being served. -
apiserver_current_inqueue_seats
is a gauge vector of the sum over queued requests of the largest number of seats each will occupy, grouped by labels namedflow_schema
andpriority_level
. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_read_vs_write_current_requests
is a histogram vector of observations, made at the end of every nanosecond, of the number of requests broken down by the labelsphase
(which takes on the valueswaiting
andexecuting
) andrequest_kind
(which takes on the valuesmutating
andreadOnly
). Each observed value is a ratio, between 0 and 1, of the number of requests divided by the corresponding limit on the number of requests (queue volume limit for waiting and concurrency limit for executing). -
apiserver_flowcontrol_request_concurrency_in_use
is a gauge vector holding the instantaneous number of occupied seats, broken down bypriority_level
andflow_schema
. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_priority_level_request_utilization
is a histogram vector of observations, made at the end of each nanosecond, of the number of requests broken down by the labelsphase
(which takes on the valueswaiting
andexecuting
) andpriority_level
. Each observed value is a ratio, between 0 and 1, of a number of requests divided by the corresponding limit on the number of requests (queue volume limit for waiting and concurrency limit for executing). -
apiserver_flowcontrol_priority_level_seat_utilization
is a histogram vector of observations, made at the end of each nanosecond, of the utilization of a priority level's concurrency limit, broken down bypriority_level
. This utilization is the fraction (number of seats occupied) / (concurrency limit). This metric considers all stages of execution (both normal and the extra delay at the end of a write to cover for the corresponding notification work) of all requests except WATCHes; for those it considers only the initial stage that delivers notifications of pre-existing objects. Each histogram in the vector is also labeled withphase: executing
(there is no seat limit for the waiting phase). -
apiserver_flowcontrol_request_queue_length_after_enqueue
is a histogram vector of queue lengths for the queues, broken down bypriority_level
andflow_schema
, as sampled by the enqueued requests. Each request that gets queued contributes one sample to its histogram, reporting the length of the queue immediately after the request was added. Note that this produces different statistics than an unbiased survey would.Note: An outlier value in a histogram here means it is likely that a single flow (i.e., requests by one user or for one namespace, depending on configuration) is flooding the API server, and being throttled. By contrast, if one priority level's histogram shows that all queues for that priority level are longer than those for other priority levels, it may be appropriate to increase that PriorityLevelConfiguration's concurrency shares. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_request_concurrency_limit
is the same asapiserver_flowcontrol_nominal_limit_seats
. Before the introduction of concurrency borrowing between priority levels, this was always equal toapiserver_flowcontrol_current_limit_seats
(which did not exist as a distinct metric). -
apiserver_flowcontrol_lower_limit_seats
is a gauge vector holding the lower bound on each priority level's dynamic concurrency limit. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_upper_limit_seats
is a gauge vector holding the upper bound on each priority level's dynamic concurrency limit. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_demand_seats
is a histogram vector counting observations, at the end of every nanosecond, of each priority level's ratio of (seat demand) / (nominal concurrency limit). A priority level's seat demand is the sum, over both queued requests and those in the initial phase of execution, of the maximum of the number of seats occupied in the request's initial and final execution phases. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_demand_seats_high_watermark
is a gauge vector holding, for each priority level, the maximum seat demand seen during the last concurrency borrowing adjustment period. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_demand_seats_average
is a gauge vector holding, for each priority level, the time-weighted average seat demand seen during the last concurrency borrowing adjustment period. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_demand_seats_stdev
is a gauge vector holding, for each priority level, the time-weighted population standard deviation of seat demand seen during the last concurrency borrowing adjustment period. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_demand_seats_smoothed
is a gauge vector holding, for each priority level, the smoothed enveloped seat demand determined at the last concurrency adjustment. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_target_seats
is a gauge vector holding, for each priority level, the concurrency target going into the borrowing allocation problem. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_seat_fair_frac
is a gauge holding the fair allocation fraction determined in the last borrowing adjustment. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_current_limit_seats
is a gauge vector holding, for each priority level, the dynamic concurrency limit derived in the last adjustment. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_request_execution_seconds
is a histogram vector of how long requests took to actually execute, broken down byflow_schema
andpriority_level
. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_watch_count_samples
is a histogram vector of the number of active WATCH requests relevant to a given write, broken down byflow_schema
andpriority_level
. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_work_estimated_seats
is a histogram vector of the number of estimated seats (maximum of initial and final stage of execution) associated with requests, broken down byflow_schema
andpriority_level
. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_request_dispatch_no_accommodation_total
is a counter vector of the number of events that in principle could have led to a request being dispatched but did not, due to lack of available concurrency, broken down byflow_schema
andpriority_level
. -
apiserver_flowcontrol_epoch_advance_total
is a counter vector of the number of attempts to jump a priority level's progress meter backward to avoid numeric overflow, grouped bypriority_level
andsuccess
.
Good practices for using API Priority and Fairness
When a given priority level exceeds its permitted concurrency, requests can experience increased latency or be dropped with an HTTP 429 (Too Many Requests) error. To prevent these side effects of APF, you can modify your workload or tweak your APF settings to ensure there are sufficient seats available to serve your requests.
To detect whether requests are being rejected due to APF, check the following metrics:
- apiserver_flowcontrol_rejected_requests_total: the total number of requests rejected per FlowSchema and PriorityLevelConfiguration.
- apiserver_flowcontrol_current_inqueue_requests: the current number of requests queued per FlowSchema and PriorityLevelConfiguration.
- apiserver_flowcontrol_request_wait_duration_seconds: the latency added to requests waiting in queues.
- apiserver_flowcontrol_priority_level_seat_utilization: the seat utilization per PriorityLevelConfiguration.
Workload modifications
To prevent requests from queuing and adding latency or being dropped due to APF, you can optimize your requests by:
- Reducing the rate at which requests are executed. A fewer number of requests over a fixed period will result in a fewer number of seats being needed at a given time.
- Avoid issuing a large number of expensive requests concurrently. Requests can be optimized to use fewer seats or have lower latency so that these requests hold those seats for a shorter duration. List requests can occupy more than 1 seat depending on the number of objects fetched during the request. Restricting the number of objects retrieved in a list request, for example by using pagination, will use less total seats over a shorter period. Furthermore, replacing list requests with watch requests will require lower total concurrency shares as watch requests only occupy 1 seat during its initial burst of notifications. If using streaming lists in versions 1.27 and later, watch requests will occupy the same number of seats as a list request for its initial burst of notifications because the entire state of the collection has to be streamed. Note that in both cases, a watch request will not hold any seats after this initial phase.
Keep in mind that queuing or rejected requests from APF could be induced by either an increase in the number of requests or an increase in latency for existing requests. For example, if requests that normally take 1s to execute start taking 60s, it is possible that APF will start rejecting requests because requests are occupying seats for a longer duration than normal due to this increase in latency. If APF starts rejecting requests across multiple priority levels without a significant change in workload, it is possible there is an underlying issue with control plane performance rather than the workload or APF settings.
Priority and fairness settings
You can also modify the default FlowSchema and PriorityLevelConfiguration objects or create new objects of these types to better accommodate your workload.
APF settings can be modified to:
- Give more seats to high priority requests.
- Isolate non-essential or expensive requests that would starve a concurrency level if it was shared with other flows.
Give more seats to high priority requests
- If possible, the number of seats available across all priority levels for a
particular
kube-apiserver
can be increased by increasing the values for themax-requests-inflight
andmax-mutating-requests-inflight
flags. Alternatively, horizontally scaling the number ofkube-apiserver
instances will increase the total concurrency per priority level across the cluster assuming there is sufficient load balancing of requests. - You can create a new FlowSchema which references a PriorityLevelConfiguration
with a larger concurrency level. This new PriorityLevelConfiguration could be an
existing level or a new level with its own set of nominal concurrency shares.
For example, a new FlowSchema could be introduced to change the
PriorityLevelConfiguration for your requests from global-default to workload-low
to increase the number of seats available to your user. Creating a new
PriorityLevelConfiguration will reduce the number of seats designated for
existing levels. Recall that editing a default FlowSchema or
PriorityLevelConfiguration will require setting the
apf.kubernetes.io/autoupdate-spec
annotation to false. - You can also increase the NominalConcurrencyShares for the PriorityLevelConfiguration which is serving your high priority requests. Alternatively, for versions 1.26 and later, you can increase the LendablePercent for competing priority levels so that the given priority level has a higher pool of seats it can borrow.
Isolate non-essential requests from starving other flows
For request isolation, you can create a FlowSchema whose subject matches the user making these requests or create a FlowSchema that matches what the request is (corresponding to the resourceRules). Next, you can map this FlowSchema to a PriorityLevelConfiguration with a low share of seats.
For example, suppose list event requests from Pods running in the default namespace are using 10 seats each and execute for 1 minute. To prevent these expensive requests from impacting requests from other Pods using the existing service-accounts FlowSchema, you can apply the following FlowSchema to isolate these list calls from other requests.
Example FlowSchema object to isolate list event requests:
apiVersion: flowcontrol.apiserver.k8s.io/v1
kind: FlowSchema
metadata:
name: list-events-default-service-account
spec:
distinguisherMethod:
type: ByUser
matchingPrecedence: 8000
priorityLevelConfiguration:
name: catch-all
rules:
- resourceRules:
- apiGroups:
- '*'
namespaces:
- default
resources:
- events
verbs:
- list
subjects:
- kind: ServiceAccount
serviceAccount:
name: default
namespace: default
- This FlowSchema captures all list event calls made by the default service account in the default namespace. The matching precedence 8000 is lower than the value of 9000 used by the existing service-accounts FlowSchema so these list event calls will match list-events-default-service-account rather than service-accounts.
- The catch-all PriorityLevelConfiguration is used to isolate these requests. The catch-all priority level has a very small concurrency share and does not queue requests.
What's next
- You can visit flow control reference doc to learn more about troubleshooting.
- For background information on design details for API priority and fairness, see the enhancement proposal.
- You can make suggestions and feature requests via SIG API Machinery or the feature's slack channel.
11.10 - Installing Addons
Add-ons extend the functionality of Kubernetes.
This page lists some of the available add-ons and links to their respective installation instructions. The list does not try to be exhaustive.
Networking and Network Policy
- ACI provides integrated container networking and network security with Cisco ACI.
- Antrea operates at Layer 3/4 to provide networking and security services for Kubernetes, leveraging Open vSwitch as the networking data plane. Antrea is a CNCF project at the Sandbox level.
- Calico is a networking and network policy provider. Calico supports a flexible set of networking options so you can choose the most efficient option for your situation, including non-overlay and overlay networks, with or without BGP. Calico uses the same engine to enforce network policy for hosts, pods, and (if using Istio & Envoy) applications at the service mesh layer.
- Canal unites Flannel and Calico, providing networking and network policy.
- Cilium is a networking, observability, and security solution with an eBPF-based data plane. Cilium provides a simple flat Layer 3 network with the ability to span multiple clusters in either a native routing or overlay/encapsulation mode, and can enforce network policies on L3-L7 using an identity-based security model that is decoupled from network addressing. Cilium can act as a replacement for kube-proxy; it also offers additional, opt-in observability and security features. Cilium is a CNCF project at the Graduated level.
- CNI-Genie enables Kubernetes to seamlessly connect to a choice of CNI plugins, such as Calico, Canal, Flannel, or Weave. CNI-Genie is a CNCF project at the Sandbox level.
- Contiv provides configurable networking (native L3 using BGP, overlay using vxlan, classic L2, and Cisco-SDN/ACI) for various use cases and a rich policy framework. Contiv project is fully open sourced. The installer provides both kubeadm and non-kubeadm based installation options.
- Contrail, based on Tungsten Fabric, is an open source, multi-cloud network virtualization and policy management platform. Contrail and Tungsten Fabric are integrated with orchestration systems such as Kubernetes, OpenShift, OpenStack and Mesos, and provide isolation modes for virtual machines, containers/pods and bare metal workloads.
- Flannel is an overlay network provider that can be used with Kubernetes.
- Gateway API is an open source project managed by the SIG Network community and provides an expressive, extensible, and role-oriented API for modeling service networking.
- Knitter is a plugin to support multiple network interfaces in a Kubernetes pod.
- Multus is a Multi plugin for multiple network support in Kubernetes to support all CNI plugins (e.g. Calico, Cilium, Contiv, Flannel), in addition to SRIOV, DPDK, OVS-DPDK and VPP based workloads in Kubernetes.
- OVN-Kubernetes is a networking provider for Kubernetes based on OVN (Open Virtual Network), a virtual networking implementation that came out of the Open vSwitch (OVS) project. OVN-Kubernetes provides an overlay based networking implementation for Kubernetes, including an OVS based implementation of load balancing and network policy.
- Nodus is an OVN based CNI controller plugin to provide cloud native based Service function chaining(SFC).
- NSX-T Container Plug-in (NCP) provides integration between VMware NSX-T and container orchestrators such as Kubernetes, as well as integration between NSX-T and container-based CaaS/PaaS platforms such as Pivotal Container Service (PKS) and OpenShift.
- Nuage is an SDN platform that provides policy-based networking between Kubernetes Pods and non-Kubernetes environments with visibility and security monitoring.
- Romana is a Layer 3 networking solution for pod networks that also supports the NetworkPolicy API.
- Spiderpool is an underlay and RDMA networking solution for Kubernetes. Spiderpool is supported on bare metal, virtual machines, and public cloud environments.
- Weave Net provides networking and network policy, will carry on working on both sides of a network partition, and does not require an external database.
Service Discovery
Visualization & Control
- Dashboard is a dashboard web interface for Kubernetes.
- Weave Scope is a tool for visualizing your containers, Pods, Services and more.
Infrastructure
- KubeVirt is an add-on to run virtual machines on Kubernetes. Usually run on bare-metal clusters.
- The node problem detector runs on Linux nodes and reports system issues as either Events or Node conditions.
Legacy Add-ons
There are several other add-ons documented in the deprecated cluster/addons directory.
Well-maintained ones should be linked to here. PRs welcome!
12 - Windows in Kubernetes
Kubernetes supports worker nodes running either Linux or Microsoft Windows.
The CNCF and its parent the Linux Foundation take a vendor-neutral approach towards compatibility. It is possible to join your Windows server as a worker node to a Kubernetes cluster.
You can install and set up kubectl on Windows no matter what operating system you use within your cluster.
If you are using Windows nodes, you can read:
- Networking On Windows
- Windows Storage In Kubernetes
- Resource Management for Windows Nodes
- Configure RunAsUserName for Windows Pods and Containers
- Create A Windows HostProcess Pod
- Configure Group Managed Service Accounts for Windows Pods and Containers
- Security For Windows Nodes
- Windows Debugging Tips
- Guide for Scheduling Windows Containers in Kubernetes
or, for an overview, read:
12.1 - Windows containers in Kubernetes
Windows applications constitute a large portion of the services and applications that run in many organizations. Windows containers provide a way to encapsulate processes and package dependencies, making it easier to use DevOps practices and follow cloud native patterns for Windows applications.
Organizations with investments in Windows-based applications and Linux-based applications don't have to look for separate orchestrators to manage their workloads, leading to increased operational efficiencies across their deployments, regardless of operating system.
Windows nodes in Kubernetes
To enable the orchestration of Windows containers in Kubernetes, include Windows nodes in your existing Linux cluster. Scheduling Windows containers in Pods on Kubernetes is similar to scheduling Linux-based containers.
In order to run Windows containers, your Kubernetes cluster must include multiple operating systems. While you can only run the control plane on Linux, you can deploy worker nodes running either Windows or Linux.
Windows nodes are supported provided that the operating system is Windows Server 2019 or Windows Server 2022.
This document uses the term Windows containers to mean Windows containers with process isolation. Kubernetes does not support running Windows containers with Hyper-V isolation.
Compatibility and limitations
Some node features are only available if you use a specific container runtime; others are not available on Windows nodes, including:
- HugePages: not supported for Windows containers
- Privileged containers: not supported for Windows containers. HostProcess Containers offer similar functionality.
- TerminationGracePeriod: requires containerD
Not all features of shared namespaces are supported. See API compatibility for more details.
See Windows OS version compatibility for details on the Windows versions that Kubernetes is tested against.
From an API and kubectl perspective, Windows containers behave in much the same way as Linux-based containers. However, there are some notable differences in key functionality which are outlined in this section.
Comparison with Linux
Key Kubernetes elements work the same way in Windows as they do in Linux. This section refers to several key workload abstractions and how they map to Windows.
-
A Pod is the basic building block of Kubernetes–the smallest and simplest unit in the Kubernetes object model that you create or deploy. You may not deploy Windows and Linux containers in the same Pod. All containers in a Pod are scheduled onto a single Node where each Node represents a specific platform and architecture. The following Pod capabilities, properties and events are supported with Windows containers:
-
Single or multiple containers per Pod with process isolation and volume sharing
-
Pod
status
fields -
Readiness, liveness, and startup probes
-
postStart & preStop container lifecycle hooks
-
ConfigMap, Secrets: as environment variables or volumes
-
emptyDir
volumes -
Named pipe host mounts
-
Resource limits
-
OS field:
The
.spec.os.name
field should be set towindows
to indicate that the current Pod uses Windows containers.If you set the
.spec.os.name
field towindows
, you must not set the following fields in the.spec
of that Pod:spec.hostPID
spec.hostIPC
spec.securityContext.seLinuxOptions
spec.securityContext.seccompProfile
spec.securityContext.fsGroup
spec.securityContext.fsGroupChangePolicy
spec.securityContext.sysctls
spec.shareProcessNamespace
spec.securityContext.runAsUser
spec.securityContext.runAsGroup
spec.securityContext.supplementalGroups
spec.containers[*].securityContext.seLinuxOptions
spec.containers[*].securityContext.seccompProfile
spec.containers[*].securityContext.capabilities
spec.containers[*].securityContext.readOnlyRootFilesystem
spec.containers[*].securityContext.privileged
spec.containers[*].securityContext.allowPrivilegeEscalation
spec.containers[*].securityContext.procMount
spec.containers[*].securityContext.runAsUser
spec.containers[*].securityContext.runAsGroup
In the above list, wildcards (
*
) indicate all elements in a list. For example,spec.containers[*].securityContext
refers to the SecurityContext object for all containers. If any of these fields is specified, the Pod will not be admitted by the API server.
-
-
Workload resources including:
- ReplicaSet
- Deployment
- StatefulSet
- DaemonSet
- Job
- CronJob
- ReplicationController
-
Services See Load balancing and Services for more details.
Pods, workload resources, and Services are critical elements to managing Windows workloads on Kubernetes. However, on their own they are not enough to enable the proper lifecycle management of Windows workloads in a dynamic cloud native environment.
kubectl exec
- Pod and container metrics
- Horizontal pod autoscaling
- Resource quotas
- Scheduler preemption
Command line options for the kubelet
Some kubelet command line options behave differently on Windows, as described below:
- The
--windows-priorityclass
lets you set the scheduling priority of the kubelet process (see CPU resource management) - The
--kube-reserved
,--system-reserved
, and--eviction-hard
flags update NodeAllocatable - Eviction by using
--enforce-node-allocable
is not implemented - Eviction by using
--eviction-hard
and--eviction-soft
are not implemented - When running on a Windows node the kubelet does not have memory or CPU
restrictions.
--kube-reserved
and--system-reserved
only subtract fromNodeAllocatable
and do not guarantee resource provided for workloads. See Resource Management for Windows nodes for more information. - The
MemoryPressure
Condition is not implemented - The kubelet does not take OOM eviction actions
API compatibility
There are subtle differences in the way the Kubernetes APIs work for Windows due to the OS and container runtime. Some workload properties were designed for Linux, and fail to run on Windows.
At a high level, these OS concepts are different:
- Identity - Linux uses userID (UID) and groupID (GID) which
are represented as integer types. User and group names
are not canonical - they are just an alias in
/etc/groups
or/etc/passwd
back to UID+GID. Windows uses a larger binary security identifier (SID) which is stored in the Windows Security Access Manager (SAM) database. This database is not shared between the host and containers, or between containers. - File permissions - Windows uses an access control list based on (SIDs), whereas POSIX systems such as Linux use a bitmask based on object permissions and UID+GID, plus optional access control lists.
- File paths - the convention on Windows is to use
\
instead of/
. The Go IO libraries typically accept both and just make it work, but when you're setting a path or command line that's interpreted inside a container,\
may be needed. - Signals - Windows interactive apps handle termination differently, and can
implement one or more of these:
- A UI thread handles well-defined messages including
WM_CLOSE
. - Console apps handle Ctrl-C or Ctrl-break using a Control Handler.
- Services register a Service Control Handler function that can accept
SERVICE_CONTROL_STOP
control codes.
- A UI thread handles well-defined messages including
Container exit codes follow the same convention where 0 is success, and nonzero is failure. The specific error codes may differ across Windows and Linux. However, exit codes passed from the Kubernetes components (kubelet, kube-proxy) are unchanged.
Field compatibility for container specifications
The following list documents differences between how Pod container specifications work between Windows and Linux:
- Huge pages are not implemented in the Windows container runtime, and are not available. They require asserting a user privilege that's not configurable for containers.
requests.cpu
andrequests.memory
- requests are subtracted from node available resources, so they can be used to avoid overprovisioning a node. However, they cannot be used to guarantee resources in an overprovisioned node. They should be applied to all containers as a best practice if the operator wants to avoid overprovisioning entirely.securityContext.allowPrivilegeEscalation
- not possible on Windows; none of the capabilities are hooked upsecurityContext.capabilities
- POSIX capabilities are not implemented on WindowssecurityContext.privileged
- Windows doesn't support privileged containers, use HostProcess Containers insteadsecurityContext.procMount
- Windows doesn't have a/proc
filesystemsecurityContext.readOnlyRootFilesystem
- not possible on Windows; write access is required for registry & system processes to run inside the containersecurityContext.runAsGroup
- not possible on Windows as there is no GID supportsecurityContext.runAsNonRoot
- this setting will prevent containers from running asContainerAdministrator
which is the closest equivalent to a root user on Windows.securityContext.runAsUser
- userunAsUserName
insteadsecurityContext.seLinuxOptions
- not possible on Windows as SELinux is Linux-specificterminationMessagePath
- this has some limitations in that Windows doesn't support mapping single files. The default value is/dev/termination-log
, which does work because it does not exist on Windows by default.
Field compatibility for Pod specifications
The following list documents differences between how Pod specifications work between Windows and Linux:
hostIPC
andhostpid
- host namespace sharing is not possible on WindowshostNetwork
- see belowdnsPolicy
- setting the PoddnsPolicy
toClusterFirstWithHostNet
is not supported on Windows because host networking is not provided. Pods always run with a container network.podSecurityContext
see belowshareProcessNamespace
- this is a beta feature, and depends on Linux namespaces which are not implemented on Windows. Windows cannot share process namespaces or the container's root filesystem. Only the network can be shared.terminationGracePeriodSeconds
- this is not fully implemented in Docker on Windows, see the GitHub issue. The behavior today is that the ENTRYPOINT process is sent CTRL_SHUTDOWN_EVENT, then Windows waits 5 seconds by default, and finally shuts down all processes using the normal Windows shutdown behavior. The 5 second default is actually in the Windows registry inside the container, so it can be overridden when the container is built.volumeDevices
- this is a beta feature, and is not implemented on Windows. Windows cannot attach raw block devices to pods.volumes
- If you define an
emptyDir
volume, you cannot set its volume source tomemory
.
- If you define an
- You cannot enable
mountPropagation
for volume mounts as this is not supported on Windows.
Field compatibility for hostNetwork
Kubernetes v1.26 [alpha]
The kubelet can now request that pods running on Windows nodes use the host's network namespace instead
of creating a new pod network namespace. To enable this functionality pass --feature-gates=WindowsHostNetwork=true
to the kubelet.
Field compatibility for Pod security context
Only the securityContext.runAsNonRoot
and securityContext.windowsOptions
from the Pod
securityContext
fields work on Windows.
Node problem detector
The node problem detector (see Monitor Node Health) has preliminary support for Windows. For more information, visit the project's GitHub page.
Pause container
In a Kubernetes Pod, an infrastructure or “pause” container is first created to host the container. In Linux, the cgroups and namespaces that make up a pod need a process to maintain their continued existence; the pause process provides this. Containers that belong to the same pod, including infrastructure and worker containers, share a common network endpoint (same IPv4 and / or IPv6 address, same network port spaces). Kubernetes uses pause containers to allow for worker containers crashing or restarting without losing any of the networking configuration.
Kubernetes maintains a multi-architecture image that includes support for Windows.
For Kubernetes v1.29.2 the recommended pause image is registry.k8s.io/pause:3.6
.
The source code
is available on GitHub.
Microsoft maintains a different multi-architecture image, with Linux and Windows
amd64 support, that you can find as mcr.microsoft.com/oss/kubernetes/pause:3.6
.
This image is built from the same source as the Kubernetes maintained image but
all of the Windows binaries are authenticode signed by Microsoft.
The Kubernetes project recommends using the Microsoft maintained image if you are
deploying to a production or production-like environment that requires signed
binaries.
Container runtimes
You need to install a container runtime into each node in the cluster so that Pods can run there.
The following container runtimes work with Windows:
ContainerD
Kubernetes v1.20 [stable]
You can use ContainerD 1.4.0+ as the container runtime for Kubernetes nodes that run Windows.
Learn how to install ContainerD on a Windows node.
Mirantis Container Runtime
Mirantis Container Runtime (MCR) is available as a container runtime for all Windows Server 2019 and later versions.
See Install MCR on Windows Servers for more information.
Windows OS version compatibility
On Windows nodes, strict compatibility rules apply where the host OS version must match the container base image OS version. Only Windows containers with a container operating system of Windows Server 2019 are fully supported.
For Kubernetes v1.29, operating system compatibility for Windows nodes (and Pods) is as follows:
- Windows Server LTSC release
- Windows Server 2019
- Windows Server 2022
- Windows Server SAC release
- Windows Server version 20H2
The Kubernetes version-skew policy also applies.
Hardware recommendations and considerations
- 64-bit processor 4 CPU cores or more, capable of supporting virtualization
- 8GB or more of RAM
- 50GB or more of free disk space
Refer to Hardware requirements for Windows Server Microsoft documentation for the most up-to-date information on minimum hardware requirements. For guidance on deciding on resources for production worker nodes refer to Production worker nodes Kubernetes documentation.
To optimize system resources, if a graphical user interface is not required, it may be preferable to use a Windows Server OS installation that excludes the Windows Desktop Experience installation option, as this configuration typically frees up more system resources.
In assessing disk space for Windows worker nodes, take note that Windows container images are typically larger than
Linux container images, with container image sizes ranging
from 300MB to over 10GB
for a single image. Additionally, take note that the C:
drive in Windows containers represents a virtual free size of
20GB by default, which is not the actual consumed space, but rather the disk size for which a single container can grow
to occupy when using local storage on the host.
See Containers on Windows - Container Storage Documentation
for more detail.
Getting help and troubleshooting
Your main source of help for troubleshooting your Kubernetes cluster should start with the Troubleshooting page.
Some additional, Windows-specific troubleshooting help is included in this section. Logs are an important element of troubleshooting issues in Kubernetes. Make sure to include them any time you seek troubleshooting assistance from other contributors. Follow the instructions in the SIG Windows contributing guide on gathering logs.
Reporting issues and feature requests
If you have what looks like a bug, or you would like to make a feature request, please follow the SIG Windows contributing guide to create a new issue. You should first search the list of issues in case it was reported previously and comment with your experience on the issue and add additional logs. SIG Windows channel on the Kubernetes Slack is also a great avenue to get some initial support and troubleshooting ideas prior to creating a ticket.
Deployment tools
The kubeadm tool helps you to deploy a Kubernetes cluster, providing the control plane to manage the cluster it, and nodes to run your workloads.
The Kubernetes cluster API project also provides means to automate deployment of Windows nodes.
Windows distribution channels
For a detailed explanation of Windows distribution channels see the Microsoft documentation.
Information on the different Windows Server servicing channels including their support models can be found at Windows Server servicing channels.
12.2 - Guide for Running Windows Containers in Kubernetes
This page provides a walkthrough for some steps you can follow to run Windows containers using Kubernetes. The page also highlights some Windows specific functionality within Kubernetes.
It is important to note that creating and deploying services and workloads on Kubernetes behaves in much the same way for Linux and Windows containers. The kubectl commands to interface with the cluster are identical. The examples in this page are provided to jumpstart your experience with Windows containers.
Objectives
Configure an example deployment to run Windows containers on a Windows node.
Before you begin
You should already have access to a Kubernetes cluster that includes a worker node running Windows Server.
Getting Started: Deploying a Windows workload
The example YAML file below deploys a simple webserver application running inside a Windows container.
Create a manifest named win-webserver.yaml
with the contents below:
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: win-webserver
labels:
app: win-webserver
spec:
ports:
# the port that this service should serve on
- port: 80
targetPort: 80
selector:
app: win-webserver
type: NodePort
---
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
labels:
app: win-webserver
name: win-webserver
spec:
replicas: 2
selector:
matchLabels:
app: win-webserver
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: win-webserver
name: win-webserver
spec:
containers:
- name: windowswebserver
image: mcr.microsoft.com/windows/servercore:ltsc2019
command:
- powershell.exe
- -command
- "<#code used from https://gist.github.com/19WAS85/5424431#> ; $$listener = New-Object System.Net.HttpListener ; $$listener.Prefixes.Add('http://*:80/') ; $$listener.Start() ; $$callerCounts = @{} ; Write-Host('Listening at http://*:80/') ; while ($$listener.IsListening) { ;$$context = $$listener.GetContext() ;$$requestUrl = $$context.Request.Url ;$$clientIP = $$context.Request.RemoteEndPoint.Address ;$$response = $$context.Response ;Write-Host '' ;Write-Host('> {0}' -f $$requestUrl) ; ;$$count = 1 ;$$k=$$callerCounts.Get_Item($$clientIP) ;if ($$k -ne $$null) { $$count += $$k } ;$$callerCounts.Set_Item($$clientIP, $$count) ;$$ip=(Get-NetAdapter | Get-NetIpAddress); $$header='<html><body><H1>Windows Container Web Server</H1>' ;$$callerCountsString='' ;$$callerCounts.Keys | % { $$callerCountsString+='<p>IP {0} callerCount {1} ' -f $$ip[1].IPAddress,$$callerCounts.Item($$_) } ;$$footer='</body></html>' ;$$content='{0}{1}{2}' -f $$header,$$callerCountsString,$$footer ;Write-Output $$content ;$$buffer = [System.Text.Encoding]::UTF8.GetBytes($$content) ;$$response.ContentLength64 = $$buffer.Length ;$$response.OutputStream.Write($$buffer, 0, $$buffer.Length) ;$$response.Close() ;$$responseStatus = $$response.StatusCode ;Write-Host('< {0}' -f $$responseStatus) } ; "
nodeSelector:
kubernetes.io/os: windows
-
Check that all nodes are healthy:
kubectl get nodes
-
Deploy the service and watch for pod updates:
kubectl apply -f win-webserver.yaml kubectl get pods -o wide -w
When the service is deployed correctly both Pods are marked as Ready. To exit the watch command, press Ctrl+C.
-
Check that the deployment succeeded. To verify:
- Several pods listed from the Linux control plane node, use
kubectl get pods
- Node-to-pod communication across the network,
curl
port 80 of your pod IPs from the Linux control plane node to check for a web server response - Pod-to-pod communication, ping between pods (and across hosts, if you have more than one Windows node)
using
kubectl exec
- Service-to-pod communication,
curl
the virtual service IP (seen underkubectl get services
) from the Linux control plane node and from individual pods - Service discovery,
curl
the service name with the Kubernetes default DNS suffix - Inbound connectivity,
curl
the NodePort from the Linux control plane node or machines outside of the cluster - Outbound connectivity,
curl
external IPs from inside the pod usingkubectl exec
- Several pods listed from the Linux control plane node, use
Observability
Capturing logs from workloads
Logs are an important element of observability; they enable users to gain insights
into the operational aspect of workloads and are a key ingredient to troubleshooting issues.
Because Windows containers and workloads inside Windows containers behave differently from Linux containers,
users had a hard time collecting logs, limiting operational visibility.
Windows workloads for example are usually configured to log to ETW (Event Tracing for Windows)
or push entries to the application event log.
LogMonitor, an open source tool by Microsoft,
is the recommended way to monitor configured log sources inside a Windows container.
LogMonitor supports monitoring event logs, ETW providers, and custom application logs,
piping them to STDOUT for consumption by kubectl logs <pod>
.
Follow the instructions in the LogMonitor GitHub page to copy its binaries and configuration files to all your containers and add the necessary entrypoints for LogMonitor to push your logs to STDOUT.
Configuring container user
Using configurable Container usernames
Windows containers can be configured to run their entrypoints and processes with different usernames than the image defaults. Learn more about it here.
Managing Workload Identity with Group Managed Service Accounts
Windows container workloads can be configured to use Group Managed Service Accounts (GMSA). Group Managed Service Accounts are a specific type of Active Directory account that provide automatic password management, simplified service principal name (SPN) management, and the ability to delegate the management to other administrators across multiple servers. Containers configured with a GMSA can access external Active Directory Domain resources while carrying the identity configured with the GMSA. Learn more about configuring and using GMSA for Windows containers here.
Taints and tolerations
Users need to use some combination of taint and node selectors in order to schedule Linux and Windows workloads to their respective OS-specific nodes. The recommended approach is outlined below, with one of its main goals being that this approach should not break compatibility for existing Linux workloads.
You can (and should) set .spec.os.name
for each Pod, to indicate the operating system
that the containers in that Pod are designed for. For Pods that run Linux containers, set
.spec.os.name
to linux
. For Pods that run Windows containers, set .spec.os.name
to windows
.
IdentifyPodOS
feature gate
to be able to set a value for .spec.pod.os
.
The scheduler does not use the value of .spec.os.name
when assigning Pods to nodes. You should
use normal Kubernetes mechanisms for
assigning pods to nodes
to ensure that the control plane for your cluster places pods onto nodes that are running the
appropriate operating system.
The .spec.os.name
value has no effect on the scheduling of the Windows pods,
so taints and tolerations (or node selectors) are still required
to ensure that the Windows pods land onto appropriate Windows nodes.
Ensuring OS-specific workloads land on the appropriate container host
Users can ensure Windows containers can be scheduled on the appropriate host using taints and tolerations. All Kubernetes nodes running Kubernetes 1.29 have the following default labels:
- kubernetes.io/os = [windows|linux]
- kubernetes.io/arch = [amd64|arm64|...]
If a Pod specification does not specify a nodeSelector
such as "kubernetes.io/os": windows
,
it is possible the Pod can be scheduled on any host, Windows or Linux.
This can be problematic since a Windows container can only run on Windows and a Linux container can only run on Linux.
The best practice for Kubernetes 1.29 is to use a nodeSelector
.
However, in many cases users have a pre-existing large number of deployments for Linux containers,
as well as an ecosystem of off-the-shelf configurations, such as community Helm charts, and programmatic Pod generation cases, such as with operators.
In those situations, you may be hesitant to make the configuration change to add nodeSelector
fields to all Pods and Pod templates.
The alternative is to use taints. Because the kubelet can set taints during registration,
it could easily be modified to automatically add a taint when running on Windows only.
For example: --register-with-taints='os=windows:NoSchedule'
By adding a taint to all Windows nodes, nothing will be scheduled on them (that includes existing Linux Pods).
In order for a Windows Pod to be scheduled on a Windows node,
it would need both the nodeSelector
and the appropriate matching toleration to choose Windows.
nodeSelector:
kubernetes.io/os: windows
node.kubernetes.io/windows-build: '10.0.17763'
tolerations:
- key: "os"
operator: "Equal"
value: "windows"
effect: "NoSchedule"
Handling multiple Windows versions in the same cluster
The Windows Server version used by each pod must match that of the node. If you want to use multiple Windows
Server versions in the same cluster, then you should set additional node labels and nodeSelector
fields.
Kubernetes automatically adds a label,
node.kubernetes.io/windows-build
to simplify this.
This label reflects the Windows major, minor, and build number that need to match for compatibility. Here are values used for each Windows Server version:
Product Name | Version |
---|---|
Windows Server 2019 | 10.0.17763 |
Windows Server 2022 | 10.0.20348 |
Simplifying with RuntimeClass
RuntimeClass can be used to simplify the process of using taints and tolerations.
A cluster administrator can create a RuntimeClass
object which is used to encapsulate these taints and tolerations.
-
Save this file to
runtimeClasses.yml
. It includes the appropriatenodeSelector
for the Windows OS, architecture, and version.--- apiVersion: node.k8s.io/v1 kind: RuntimeClass metadata: name: windows-2019 handler: example-container-runtime-handler scheduling: nodeSelector: kubernetes.io/os: 'windows' kubernetes.io/arch: 'amd64' node.kubernetes.io/windows-build: '10.0.17763' tolerations: - effect: NoSchedule key: os operator: Equal value: "windows"
-
Run
kubectl create -f runtimeClasses.yml
using as a cluster administrator -
Add
runtimeClassName: windows-2019
as appropriate to Pod specsFor example:
--- apiVersion: apps/v1 kind: Deployment metadata: name: iis-2019 labels: app: iis-2019 spec: replicas: 1 template: metadata: name: iis-2019 labels: app: iis-2019 spec: runtimeClassName: windows-2019 containers: - name: iis image: mcr.microsoft.com/windows/servercore/iis:windowsservercore-ltsc2019 resources: limits: cpu: 1 memory: 800Mi requests: cpu: .1 memory: 300Mi ports: - containerPort: 80 selector: matchLabels: app: iis-2019 --- apiVersion: v1 kind: Service metadata: name: iis spec: type: LoadBalancer ports: - protocol: TCP port: 80 selector: app: iis-2019
13 - Extending Kubernetes
Kubernetes is highly configurable and extensible. As a result, there is rarely a need to fork or submit patches to the Kubernetes project code.
This guide describes the options for customizing a Kubernetes cluster. It is aimed at cluster operators who want to understand how to adapt their Kubernetes cluster to the needs of their work environment. Developers who are prospective Platform Developers or Kubernetes Project Contributors will also find it useful as an introduction to what extension points and patterns exist, and their trade-offs and limitations.
Customization approaches can be broadly divided into configuration, which only involves changing command line arguments, local configuration files, or API resources; and extensions, which involve running additional programs, additional network services, or both. This document is primarily about extensions.
Configuration
Configuration files and command arguments are documented in the Reference section of the online documentation, with a page for each binary:
Command arguments and configuration files may not always be changeable in a hosted Kubernetes service or a distribution with managed installation. When they are changeable, they are usually only changeable by the cluster operator. Also, they are subject to change in future Kubernetes versions, and setting them may require restarting processes. For those reasons, they should be used only when there are no other options.
Built-in policy APIs, such as ResourceQuota, NetworkPolicy and Role-based Access Control (RBAC), are built-in Kubernetes APIs that provide declaratively configured policy settings. APIs are typically usable even with hosted Kubernetes services and with managed Kubernetes installations. The built-in policy APIs follow the same conventions as other Kubernetes resources such as Pods. When you use a policy APIs that is stable, you benefit from a defined support policy like other Kubernetes APIs. For these reasons, policy APIs are recommended over configuration files and command arguments where suitable.
Extensions
Extensions are software components that extend and deeply integrate with Kubernetes. They adapt it to support new types and new kinds of hardware.
Many cluster administrators use a hosted or distribution instance of Kubernetes. These clusters come with extensions pre-installed. As a result, most Kubernetes users will not need to install extensions and even fewer users will need to author new ones.
Extension patterns
Kubernetes is designed to be automated by writing client programs. Any program that reads and/or writes to the Kubernetes API can provide useful automation. Automation can run on the cluster or off it. By following the guidance in this doc you can write highly available and robust automation. Automation generally works with any Kubernetes cluster, including hosted clusters and managed installations.
There is a specific pattern for writing client programs that work well with
Kubernetes called the controller
pattern. Controllers typically read an object's .spec
, possibly do things, and then
update the object's .status
.
A controller is a client of the Kubernetes API. When Kubernetes is the client and calls out to a remote service, Kubernetes calls this a webhook. The remote service is called a webhook backend. As with custom controllers, webhooks do add a point of failure.
In the webhook model, Kubernetes makes a network request to a remote service. With the alternative binary Plugin model, Kubernetes executes a binary (program). Binary plugins are used by the kubelet (for example, CSI storage plugins and CNI network plugins), and by kubectl (see Extend kubectl with plugins).
Extension points
This diagram shows the extension points in a Kubernetes cluster and the clients that access it.
Key to the figure
-
Users often interact with the Kubernetes API using
kubectl
. Plugins customise the behaviour of clients. There are generic extensions that can apply to different clients, as well as specific ways to extendkubectl
. -
The API server handles all requests. Several types of extension points in the API server allow authenticating requests, or blocking them based on their content, editing content, and handling deletion. These are described in the API Access Extensions section.
-
The API server serves various kinds of resources. Built-in resource kinds, such as
pods
, are defined by the Kubernetes project and can't be changed. Read API extensions to learn about extending the Kubernetes API. -
The Kubernetes scheduler decides which nodes to place pods on. There are several ways to extend scheduling, which are described in the Scheduling extensions section.
-
Much of the behavior of Kubernetes is implemented by programs called controllers, that are clients of the API server. Controllers are often used in conjunction with custom resources. Read combining new APIs with automation and Changing built-in resources to learn more.
-
The kubelet runs on servers (nodes), and helps pods appear like virtual servers with their own IPs on the cluster network. Network Plugins allow for different implementations of pod networking.
-
You can use Device Plugins to integrate custom hardware or other special node-local facilities, and make these available to Pods running in your cluster. The kubelet includes support for working with device plugins.
The kubelet also mounts and unmounts volume for pods and their containers. You can use Storage Plugins to add support for new kinds of storage and other volume types.
Extension point choice flowchart
If you are unsure where to start, this flowchart can help. Note that some solutions may involve several types of extensions.
Client extensions
Plugins for kubectl are separate binaries that add or replace the behavior of specific subcommands.
The kubectl
tool can also integrate with credential plugins
These extensions only affect a individual user's local environment, and so cannot enforce site-wide policies.
If you want to extend the kubectl
tool, read Extend kubectl with plugins.
API extensions
Custom resource definitions
Consider adding a Custom Resource to Kubernetes if you want to define new controllers, application
configuration objects or other declarative APIs, and to manage them using Kubernetes tools, such
as kubectl
.
For more about Custom Resources, see the Custom Resources concept guide.
API aggregation layer
You can use Kubernetes' API Aggregation Layer to integrate the Kubernetes API with additional services such as for metrics.
Combining new APIs with automation
A combination of a custom resource API and a control loop is called the controllers pattern. If your controller takes the place of a human operator deploying infrastructure based on a desired state, then the controller may also be following the operator pattern. The Operator pattern is used to manage specific applications; usually, these are applications that maintain state and require care in how they are managed.
You can also make your own custom APIs and control loops that manage other resources, such as storage, or to define policies (such as an access control restriction).
Changing built-in resources
When you extend the Kubernetes API by adding custom resources, the added resources always fall into a new API Groups. You cannot replace or change existing API groups. Adding an API does not directly let you affect the behavior of existing APIs (such as Pods), whereas API Access Extensions do.
API access extensions
When a request reaches the Kubernetes API Server, it is first authenticated, then authorized, and is then subject to various types of admission control (some requests are in fact not authenticated, and get special treatment). See Controlling Access to the Kubernetes API for more on this flow.
Each of the steps in the Kubernetes authentication / authorization flow offers extension points.
Authentication
Authentication maps headers or certificates in all requests to a username for the client making the request.
Kubernetes has several built-in authentication methods that it supports. It can also sit behind an
authenticating proxy, and it can send a token from an Authorization:
header to a remote service for
verification (an authentication webhook)
if those don't meet your needs.
Authorization
Authorization determines whether specific users can read, write, and do other operations on API resources. It works at the level of whole resources -- it doesn't discriminate based on arbitrary object fields.
If the built-in authorization options don't meet your needs, an authorization webhook allows calling out to custom code that makes an authorization decision.
Dynamic admission control
After a request is authorized, if it is a write operation, it also goes through Admission Control steps. In addition to the built-in steps, there are several extensions:
- The Image Policy webhook restricts what images can be run in containers.
- To make arbitrary admission control decisions, a general Admission webhook can be used. Admission webhooks can reject creations or updates. Some admission webhooks modify the incoming request data before it is handled further by Kubernetes.
Infrastructure extensions
Device plugins
Device plugins allow a node to discover new Node resources (in addition to the builtin ones like cpu and memory) via a Device Plugin.
Storage plugins
Container Storage Interface (CSI) plugins provide a way to extend Kubernetes with supports for new kinds of volumes. The volumes can be backed by durable external storage, or provide ephemeral storage, or they might offer a read-only interface to information using a filesystem paradigm.
Kubernetes also includes support for FlexVolume plugins, which are deprecated since Kubernetes v1.23 (in favour of CSI).
FlexVolume plugins allow users to mount volume types that aren't natively supported by Kubernetes. When you run a Pod that relies on FlexVolume storage, the kubelet calls a binary plugin to mount the volume. The archived FlexVolume design proposal has more detail on this approach.
The Kubernetes Volume Plugin FAQ for Storage Vendors includes general information on storage plugins.
Network plugins
Your Kubernetes cluster needs a network plugin in order to have a working Pod network and to support other aspects of the Kubernetes network model.
Network Plugins allow Kubernetes to work with different networking topologies and technologies.
Kubelet image credential provider plugins
Kubernetes v1.26 [stable]
The plugins can communicate with external services or use local files to obtain credentials. This way, the kubelet does not need to have static credentials for each registry, and can support various authentication methods and protocols.
For plugin configuration details, see Configure a kubelet image credential provider.
Scheduling extensions
The scheduler is a special type of controller that watches pods, and assigns pods to nodes. The default scheduler can be replaced entirely, while continuing to use other Kubernetes components, or multiple schedulers can run at the same time.
This is a significant undertaking, and almost all Kubernetes users find they do not need to modify the scheduler.
You can control which scheduling plugins are active, or associate sets of plugins with different named scheduler profiles. You can also write your own plugin that integrates with one or more of the kube-scheduler's extension points.
Finally, the built in kube-scheduler
component supports a
webhook
that permits a remote HTTP backend (scheduler extension) to filter and / or prioritize
the nodes that the kube-scheduler chooses for a pod.
What's next
- Learn more about infrastructure extensions
- Learn about kubectl plugins
- Learn more about Custom Resources
- Learn more about Extension API Servers
- Learn about Dynamic admission control
- Learn about the Operator pattern
13.1 - Compute, Storage, and Networking Extensions
This section covers extensions to your cluster that do not come as part as Kubernetes itself. You can use these extensions to enhance the nodes in your cluster, or to provide the network fabric that links Pods together.
-
CSI and FlexVolume storage plugins
Container Storage Interface (CSI) plugins provide a way to extend Kubernetes with supports for new kinds of volumes. The volumes can be backed by durable external storage, or provide ephemeral storage, or they might offer a read-only interface to information using a filesystem paradigm.
Kubernetes also includes support for FlexVolume plugins, which are deprecated since Kubernetes v1.23 (in favour of CSI).
FlexVolume plugins allow users to mount volume types that aren't natively supported by Kubernetes. When you run a Pod that relies on FlexVolume storage, the kubelet calls a binary plugin to mount the volume. The archived FlexVolume design proposal has more detail on this approach.
The Kubernetes Volume Plugin FAQ for Storage Vendors includes general information on storage plugins.
-
Device plugins allow a node to discover new Node facilities (in addition to the built-in node resources such as
cpu
andmemory
), and provide these custom node-local facilities to Pods that request them. -
A network plugin allow Kubernetes to work with different networking topologies and technologies. Your Kubernetes cluster needs a network plugin in order to have a working Pod network and to support other aspects of the Kubernetes network model.
Kubernetes 1.29 is compatible with CNI network plugins.
13.1.1 - Network Plugins
Kubernetes 1.29 supports Container Network Interface (CNI) plugins for cluster networking. You must use a CNI plugin that is compatible with your cluster and that suits your needs. Different plugins are available (both open- and closed- source) in the wider Kubernetes ecosystem.
A CNI plugin is required to implement the Kubernetes network model.
You must use a CNI plugin that is compatible with the v0.4.0 or later releases of the CNI specification. The Kubernetes project recommends using a plugin that is compatible with the v1.0.0 CNI specification (plugins can be compatible with multiple spec versions).
Installation
A Container Runtime, in the networking context, is a daemon on a node configured to provide CRI Services for kubelet. In particular, the Container Runtime must be configured to load the CNI plugins required to implement the Kubernetes network model.
Prior to Kubernetes 1.24, the CNI plugins could also be managed by the kubelet using the
cni-bin-dir
and network-plugin
command-line parameters.
These command-line parameters were removed in Kubernetes 1.24, with management of the CNI no
longer in scope for kubelet.
See Troubleshooting CNI plugin-related errors if you are facing issues following the removal of dockershim.
For specific information about how a Container Runtime manages the CNI plugins, see the documentation for that Container Runtime, for example:
For specific information about how to install and manage a CNI plugin, see the documentation for that plugin or networking provider.
Network Plugin Requirements
For plugin developers and users who regularly build or deploy Kubernetes, the plugin may also need
specific configuration to support kube-proxy. The iptables proxy depends on iptables, and the
plugin may need to ensure that container traffic is made available to iptables. For example, if
the plugin connects containers to a Linux bridge, the plugin must set the
net/bridge/bridge-nf-call-iptables
sysctl to 1
to ensure that the iptables proxy functions
correctly. If the plugin does not use a Linux bridge, but uses something like Open vSwitch or
some other mechanism instead, it should ensure container traffic is appropriately routed for the
proxy.
By default, if no kubelet network plugin is specified, the noop
plugin is used, which sets
net/bridge/bridge-nf-call-iptables=1
to ensure simple configurations (like Docker with a bridge)
work correctly with the iptables proxy.
Loopback CNI
In addition to the CNI plugin installed on the nodes for implementing the Kubernetes network
model, Kubernetes also requires the container runtimes to provide a loopback interface lo
, which
is used for each sandbox (pod sandboxes, vm sandboxes, ...).
Implementing the loopback interface can be accomplished by re-using the
CNI loopback plugin.
or by developing your own code to achieve this (see
this example from CRI-O).
Support hostPort
The CNI networking plugin supports hostPort
. You can use the official
portmap
plugin offered by the CNI plugin team or use your own plugin with portMapping functionality.
If you want to enable hostPort
support, you must specify portMappings capability
in your
cni-conf-dir
. For example:
{
"name": "k8s-pod-network",
"cniVersion": "0.4.0",
"plugins": [
{
"type": "calico",
"log_level": "info",
"datastore_type": "kubernetes",
"nodename": "127.0.0.1",
"ipam": {
"type": "host-local",
"subnet": "usePodCidr"
},
"policy": {
"type": "k8s"
},
"kubernetes": {
"kubeconfig": "/etc/cni/net.d/calico-kubeconfig"
}
},
{
"type": "portmap",
"capabilities": {"portMappings": true},
"externalSetMarkChain": "KUBE-MARK-MASQ"
}
]
}
Support traffic shaping
Experimental Feature
The CNI networking plugin also supports pod ingress and egress traffic shaping. You can use the official bandwidth plugin offered by the CNI plugin team or use your own plugin with bandwidth control functionality.
If you want to enable traffic shaping support, you must add the bandwidth
plugin to your CNI
configuration file (default /etc/cni/net.d
) and ensure that the binary is included in your CNI
bin dir (default /opt/cni/bin
).
{
"name": "k8s-pod-network",
"cniVersion": "0.4.0",
"plugins": [
{
"type": "calico",
"log_level": "info",
"datastore_type": "kubernetes",
"nodename": "127.0.0.1",
"ipam": {
"type": "host-local",
"subnet": "usePodCidr"
},
"policy": {
"type": "k8s"
},
"kubernetes": {
"kubeconfig": "/etc/cni/net.d/calico-kubeconfig"
}
},
{
"type": "bandwidth",
"capabilities": {"bandwidth": true}
}
]
}
Now you can add the kubernetes.io/ingress-bandwidth
and kubernetes.io/egress-bandwidth
annotations to your Pod. For example:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
annotations:
kubernetes.io/ingress-bandwidth: 1M
kubernetes.io/egress-bandwidth: 1M
...
What's next
- Learn more about Cluster Networking
- Learn more about Network Policies
- Learn about the Troubleshooting CNI plugin-related errors
13.1.2 - Device Plugins
Kubernetes v1.26 [stable]
Kubernetes provides a device plugin framework that you can use to advertise system hardware resources to the Kubelet.
Instead of customizing the code for Kubernetes itself, vendors can implement a device plugin that you deploy either manually or as a DaemonSet. The targeted devices include GPUs, high-performance NICs, FPGAs, InfiniBand adapters, and other similar computing resources that may require vendor specific initialization and setup.
Device plugin registration
The kubelet exports a Registration
gRPC service:
service Registration {
rpc Register(RegisterRequest) returns (Empty) {}
}
A device plugin can register itself with the kubelet through this gRPC service. During the registration, the device plugin needs to send:
- The name of its Unix socket.
- The Device Plugin API version against which it was built.
- The
ResourceName
it wants to advertise. HereResourceName
needs to follow the extended resource naming scheme asvendor-domain/resourcetype
. (For example, an NVIDIA GPU is advertised asnvidia.com/gpu
.)
Following a successful registration, the device plugin sends the kubelet the
list of devices it manages, and the kubelet is then in charge of advertising those
resources to the API server as part of the kubelet node status update.
For example, after a device plugin registers hardware-vendor.example/foo
with the kubelet
and reports two healthy devices on a node, the node status is updated
to advertise that the node has 2 "Foo" devices installed and available.
Then, users can request devices as part of a Pod specification
(see container
).
Requesting extended resources is similar to how you manage requests and limits for
other resources, with the following differences:
- Extended resources are only supported as integer resources and cannot be overcommitted.
- Devices cannot be shared between containers.
Example
Suppose a Kubernetes cluster is running a device plugin that advertises resource hardware-vendor.example/foo
on certain nodes. Here is an example of a pod requesting this resource to run a demo workload:
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: demo-pod
spec:
containers:
- name: demo-container-1
image: registry.k8s.io/pause:2.0
resources:
limits:
hardware-vendor.example/foo: 2
#
# This Pod needs 2 of the hardware-vendor.example/foo devices
# and can only schedule onto a Node that's able to satisfy
# that need.
#
# If the Node has more than 2 of those devices available, the
# remainder would be available for other Pods to use.
Device plugin implementation
The general workflow of a device plugin includes the following steps:
-
Initialization. During this phase, the device plugin performs vendor-specific initialization and setup to make sure the devices are in a ready state.
-
The plugin starts a gRPC service, with a Unix socket under the host path
/var/lib/kubelet/device-plugins/
, that implements the following interfaces:service DevicePlugin { // GetDevicePluginOptions returns options to be communicated with Device Manager. rpc GetDevicePluginOptions(Empty) returns (DevicePluginOptions) {} // ListAndWatch returns a stream of List of Devices // Whenever a Device state change or a Device disappears, ListAndWatch // returns the new list rpc ListAndWatch(Empty) returns (stream ListAndWatchResponse) {} // Allocate is called during container creation so that the Device // Plugin can run device specific operations and instruct Kubelet // of the steps to make the Device available in the container rpc Allocate(AllocateRequest) returns (AllocateResponse) {} // GetPreferredAllocation returns a preferred set of devices to allocate // from a list of available ones. The resulting preferred allocation is not // guaranteed to be the allocation ultimately performed by the // devicemanager. It is only designed to help the devicemanager make a more // informed allocation decision when possible. rpc GetPreferredAllocation(PreferredAllocationRequest) returns (PreferredAllocationResponse) {} // PreStartContainer is called, if indicated by Device Plugin during registration phase, // before each container start. Device plugin can run device specific operations // such as resetting the device before making devices available to the container. rpc PreStartContainer(PreStartContainerRequest) returns (PreStartContainerResponse) {} }
Note: Plugins are not required to provide useful implementations forGetPreferredAllocation()
orPreStartContainer()
. Flags indicating the availability of these calls, if any, should be set in theDevicePluginOptions
message sent back by a call toGetDevicePluginOptions()
. Thekubelet
will always callGetDevicePluginOptions()
to see which optional functions are available, before calling any of them directly. -
The plugin registers itself with the kubelet through the Unix socket at host path
/var/lib/kubelet/device-plugins/kubelet.sock
.Note: The ordering of the workflow is important. A plugin MUST start serving gRPC service before registering itself with kubelet for successful registration. -
After successfully registering itself, the device plugin runs in serving mode, during which it keeps monitoring device health and reports back to the kubelet upon any device state changes. It is also responsible for serving
Allocate
gRPC requests. DuringAllocate
, the device plugin may do device-specific preparation; for example, GPU cleanup or QRNG initialization. If the operations succeed, the device plugin returns anAllocateResponse
that contains container runtime configurations for accessing the allocated devices. The kubelet passes this information to the container runtime.An
AllocateResponse
contains zero or moreContainerAllocateResponse
objects. In these, the device plugin defines modifications that must be made to a container's definition to provide access to the device. These modifications include:- Annotations
- device nodes
- environment variables
- mounts
- fully-qualified CDI device names
Note: The processing of the fully-qualified CDI device names by the Device Manager requires that theDevicePluginCDIDevices
feature gate is enabled for both the kubelet and the kube-apiserver. This was added as an alpha feature in Kubernetes v1.28 and graduated to beta in v1.29.
Handling kubelet restarts
A device plugin is expected to detect kubelet restarts and re-register itself with the new
kubelet instance. A new kubelet instance deletes all the existing Unix sockets under
/var/lib/kubelet/device-plugins
when it starts. A device plugin can monitor the deletion
of its Unix socket and re-register itself upon such an event.
Device plugin deployment
You can deploy a device plugin as a DaemonSet, as a package for your node's operating system, or manually.
The canonical directory /var/lib/kubelet/device-plugins
requires privileged access,
so a device plugin must run in a privileged security context.
If you're deploying a device plugin as a DaemonSet, /var/lib/kubelet/device-plugins
must be mounted as a Volume
in the plugin's PodSpec.
If you choose the DaemonSet approach you can rely on Kubernetes to: place the device plugin's Pod onto Nodes, to restart the daemon Pod after failure, and to help automate upgrades.
API compatibility
Previously, the versioning scheme required the Device Plugin's API version to match exactly the Kubelet's version. Since the graduation of this feature to Beta in v1.12 this is no longer a hard requirement. The API is versioned and has been stable since Beta graduation of this feature. Because of this, kubelet upgrades should be seamless but there still may be changes in the API before stabilization making upgrades not guaranteed to be non-breaking.
As a project, Kubernetes recommends that device plugin developers:
- Watch for Device Plugin API changes in the future releases.
- Support multiple versions of the device plugin API for backward/forward compatibility.
To run device plugins on nodes that need to be upgraded to a Kubernetes release with a newer device plugin API version, upgrade your device plugins to support both versions before upgrading these nodes. Taking that approach will ensure the continuous functioning of the device allocations during the upgrade.
Monitoring device plugin resources
Kubernetes v1.28 [stable]
In order to monitor resources provided by device plugins, monitoring agents need to be able to
discover the set of devices that are in-use on the node and obtain metadata to describe which
container the metric should be associated with. Prometheus metrics
exposed by device monitoring agents should follow the
Kubernetes Instrumentation Guidelines,
identifying containers using pod
, namespace
, and container
prometheus labels.
The kubelet provides a gRPC service to enable discovery of in-use devices, and to provide metadata for these devices:
// PodResourcesLister is a service provided by the kubelet that provides information about the
// node resources consumed by pods and containers on the node
service PodResourcesLister {
rpc List(ListPodResourcesRequest) returns (ListPodResourcesResponse) {}
rpc GetAllocatableResources(AllocatableResourcesRequest) returns (AllocatableResourcesResponse) {}
rpc Get(GetPodResourcesRequest) returns (GetPodResourcesResponse) {}
}
List
gRPC endpoint
The List
endpoint provides information on resources of running pods, with details such as the
id of exclusively allocated CPUs, device id as it was reported by device plugins and id of
the NUMA node where these devices are allocated. Also, for NUMA-based machines, it contains the
information about memory and hugepages reserved for a container.
Starting from Kubernetes v1.27, the List
endpoint can provide information on resources
of running pods allocated in ResourceClaims
by the DynamicResourceAllocation
API. To enable
this feature kubelet
must be started with the following flags:
--feature-gates=DynamicResourceAllocation=true,KubeletPodResourcesDynamicResources=true
// ListPodResourcesResponse is the response returned by List function
message ListPodResourcesResponse {
repeated PodResources pod_resources = 1;
}
// PodResources contains information about the node resources assigned to a pod
message PodResources {
string name = 1;
string namespace = 2;
repeated ContainerResources containers = 3;
}
// ContainerResources contains information about the resources assigned to a container
message ContainerResources {
string name = 1;
repeated ContainerDevices devices = 2;
repeated int64 cpu_ids = 3;
repeated ContainerMemory memory = 4;
repeated DynamicResource dynamic_resources = 5;
}
// ContainerMemory contains information about memory and hugepages assigned to a container
message ContainerMemory {
string memory_type = 1;
uint64 size = 2;
TopologyInfo topology = 3;
}
// Topology describes hardware topology of the resource
message TopologyInfo {
repeated NUMANode nodes = 1;
}
// NUMA representation of NUMA node
message NUMANode {
int64 ID = 1;
}
// ContainerDevices contains information about the devices assigned to a container
message ContainerDevices {
string resource_name = 1;
repeated string device_ids = 2;
TopologyInfo topology = 3;
}
// DynamicResource contains information about the devices assigned to a container by Dynamic Resource Allocation
message DynamicResource {
string class_name = 1;
string claim_name = 2;
string claim_namespace = 3;
repeated ClaimResource claim_resources = 4;
}
// ClaimResource contains per-plugin resource information
message ClaimResource {
repeated CDIDevice cdi_devices = 1 [(gogoproto.customname) = "CDIDevices"];
}
// CDIDevice specifies a CDI device information
message CDIDevice {
// Fully qualified CDI device name
// for example: vendor.com/gpu=gpudevice1
// see more details in the CDI specification:
// https://github.com/container-orchestrated-devices/container-device-interface/blob/main/SPEC.md
string name = 1;
}
cpu_ids in the ContainerResources
in the List
endpoint correspond to exclusive CPUs allocated
to a particular container. If the goal is to evaluate CPUs that belong to the shared pool, the List
endpoint needs to be used in conjunction with the GetAllocatableResources
endpoint as explained
below:
- Call
GetAllocatableResources
to get a list of all the allocatable CPUs - Call
GetCpuIds
on allContainerResources
in the system - Subtract out all of the CPUs from the
GetCpuIds
calls from theGetAllocatableResources
call
GetAllocatableResources
gRPC endpoint
Kubernetes v1.28 [stable]
GetAllocatableResources provides information on resources initially available on the worker node. It provides more information than kubelet exports to APIServer.
GetAllocatableResources
should only be used to evaluate allocatable
resources on a node. If the goal is to evaluate free/unallocated resources it should be used in
conjunction with the List() endpoint. The result obtained by GetAllocatableResources
would remain
the same unless the underlying resources exposed to kubelet change. This happens rarely but when
it does (for example: hotplug/hotunplug, device health changes), client is expected to call
GetAlloctableResources
endpoint.
However, calling GetAllocatableResources
endpoint is not sufficient in case of cpu and/or memory
update and Kubelet needs to be restarted to reflect the correct resource capacity and allocatable.
// AllocatableResourcesResponses contains information about all the devices known by the kubelet
message AllocatableResourcesResponse {
repeated ContainerDevices devices = 1;
repeated int64 cpu_ids = 2;
repeated ContainerMemory memory = 3;
}
ContainerDevices
do expose the topology information declaring to which NUMA cells the device is
affine. The NUMA cells are identified using a opaque integer ID, which value is consistent to
what device plugins report
when they register themselves to the kubelet.
The gRPC service is served over a unix socket at /var/lib/kubelet/pod-resources/kubelet.sock
.
Monitoring agents for device plugin resources can be deployed as a daemon, or as a DaemonSet.
The canonical directory /var/lib/kubelet/pod-resources
requires privileged access, so monitoring
agents must run in a privileged security context. If a device monitoring agent is running as a
DaemonSet, /var/lib/kubelet/pod-resources
must be mounted as a
Volume in the device monitoring agent's
PodSpec.
When accessing the /var/lib/kubelet/pod-resources/kubelet.sock
from DaemonSet
or any other app deployed as a container on the host, which is mounting socket as
a volume, it is a good practice to mount directory /var/lib/kubelet/pod-resources/
instead of the /var/lib/kubelet/pod-resources/kubelet.sock
. This will ensure
that after kubelet restart, container will be able to re-connect to this socket.
Container mounts are managed by inode referencing the socket or directory, depending on what was mounted. When kubelet restarts, socket is deleted and a new socket is created, while directory stays untouched. So the original inode for the socket become unusable. Inode to directory will continue working.
Get
gRPC endpoint
Kubernetes v1.27 [alpha]
The Get
endpoint provides information on resources of a running Pod. It exposes information
similar to those described in the List
endpoint. The Get
endpoint requires PodName
and PodNamespace
of the running Pod.
// GetPodResourcesRequest contains information about the pod
message GetPodResourcesRequest {
string pod_name = 1;
string pod_namespace = 2;
}
To enable this feature, you must start your kubelet services with the following flag:
--feature-gates=KubeletPodResourcesGet=true
The Get
endpoint can provide Pod information related to dynamic resources
allocated by the dynamic resource allocation API. To enable this feature, you must
ensure your kubelet services are started with the following flags:
--feature-gates=KubeletPodResourcesGet=true,DynamicResourceAllocation=true,KubeletPodResourcesDynamicResources=true
Device plugin integration with the Topology Manager
Kubernetes v1.27 [stable]
The Topology Manager is a Kubelet component that allows resources to be co-ordinated in a Topology
aligned manner. In order to do this, the Device Plugin API was extended to include a
TopologyInfo
struct.
message TopologyInfo {
repeated NUMANode nodes = 1;
}
message NUMANode {
int64 ID = 1;
}
Device Plugins that wish to leverage the Topology Manager can send back a populated TopologyInfo struct as part of the device registration, along with the device IDs and the health of the device. The device manager will then use this information to consult with the Topology Manager and make resource assignment decisions.
TopologyInfo
supports setting a nodes
field to either nil
or a list of NUMA nodes. This
allows the Device Plugin to advertise a device that spans multiple NUMA nodes.
Setting TopologyInfo
to nil
or providing an empty list of NUMA nodes for a given device
indicates that the Device Plugin does not have a NUMA affinity preference for that device.
An example TopologyInfo
struct populated for a device by a Device Plugin:
pluginapi.Device{ID: "25102017", Health: pluginapi.Healthy, Topology:&pluginapi.TopologyInfo{Nodes: []*pluginapi.NUMANode{&pluginapi.NUMANode{ID: 0,},}}}
Device plugin examples
Here are some examples of device plugin implementations:
- The AMD GPU device plugin
- The generic device plugin for generic Linux devices and USB devices
- The Intel device plugins for Intel GPU, FPGA, QAT, VPU, SGX, DSA, DLB and IAA devices
- The KubeVirt device plugins for hardware-assisted virtualization
- The NVIDIA GPU device plugin for Container-Optimized OS
- The RDMA device plugin
- The SocketCAN device plugin
- The Solarflare device plugin
- The SR-IOV Network device plugin
- The Xilinx FPGA device plugins for Xilinx FPGA devices
What's next
- Learn about scheduling GPU resources using device plugins
- Learn about advertising extended resources on a node
- Learn about the Topology Manager
- Read about using hardware acceleration for TLS ingress with Kubernetes
13.2 - Extending the Kubernetes API
Custom resources are extensions of the Kubernetes API. Kubernetes provides two ways to add custom resources to your cluster:
- The CustomResourceDefinition (CRD) mechanism allows you to declaratively define a new custom API with an API group, kind, and schema that you specify. The Kubernetes control plane serves and handles the storage of your custom resource. CRDs allow you to create new types of resources for your cluster without writing and running a custom API server.
- The aggregation layer sits behind the primary API server, which acts as a proxy. This arrangement is called API Aggregation (AA), which allows you to provide specialized implementations for your custom resources by writing and deploying your own API server. The main API server delegates requests to your API server for the custom APIs that you specify, making them available to all of its clients.
13.2.1 - Custom Resources
Custom resources are extensions of the Kubernetes API. This page discusses when to add a custom resource to your Kubernetes cluster and when to use a standalone service. It describes the two methods for adding custom resources and how to choose between them.
Custom resources
A resource is an endpoint in the Kubernetes API that stores a collection of API objects of a certain kind; for example, the built-in pods resource contains a collection of Pod objects.
A custom resource is an extension of the Kubernetes API that is not necessarily available in a default Kubernetes installation. It represents a customization of a particular Kubernetes installation. However, many core Kubernetes functions are now built using custom resources, making Kubernetes more modular.
Custom resources can appear and disappear in a running cluster through dynamic registration, and cluster admins can update custom resources independently of the cluster itself. Once a custom resource is installed, users can create and access its objects using kubectl, just as they do for built-in resources like Pods.
Custom controllers
On their own, custom resources let you store and retrieve structured data. When you combine a custom resource with a custom controller, custom resources provide a true declarative API.
The Kubernetes declarative API enforces a separation of responsibilities. You declare the desired state of your resource. The Kubernetes controller keeps the current state of Kubernetes objects in sync with your declared desired state. This is in contrast to an imperative API, where you instruct a server what to do.
You can deploy and update a custom controller on a running cluster, independently of the cluster's lifecycle. Custom controllers can work with any kind of resource, but they are especially effective when combined with custom resources. The Operator pattern combines custom resources and custom controllers. You can use custom controllers to encode domain knowledge for specific applications into an extension of the Kubernetes API.
Should I add a custom resource to my Kubernetes cluster?
When creating a new API, consider whether to aggregate your API with the Kubernetes cluster APIs or let your API stand alone.
Consider API aggregation if: | Prefer a stand-alone API if: |
---|---|
Your API is Declarative. | Your API does not fit the Declarative model. |
You want your new types to be readable and writable using kubectl . |
kubectl support is not required |
You want to view your new types in a Kubernetes UI, such as dashboard, alongside built-in types. | Kubernetes UI support is not required. |
You are developing a new API. | You already have a program that serves your API and works well. |
You are willing to accept the format restriction that Kubernetes puts on REST resource paths, such as API Groups and Namespaces. (See the API Overview.) | You need to have specific REST paths to be compatible with an already defined REST API. |
Your resources are naturally scoped to a cluster or namespaces of a cluster. | Cluster or namespace scoped resources are a poor fit; you need control over the specifics of resource paths. |
You want to reuse Kubernetes API support features. | You don't need those features. |
Declarative APIs
In a Declarative API, typically:
- Your API consists of a relatively small number of relatively small objects (resources).
- The objects define configuration of applications or infrastructure.
- The objects are updated relatively infrequently.
- Humans often need to read and write the objects.
- The main operations on the objects are CRUD-y (creating, reading, updating and deleting).
- Transactions across objects are not required: the API represents a desired state, not an exact state.
Imperative APIs are not declarative. Signs that your API might not be declarative include:
- The client says "do this", and then gets a synchronous response back when it is done.
- The client says "do this", and then gets an operation ID back, and has to check a separate Operation object to determine completion of the request.
- You talk about Remote Procedure Calls (RPCs).
- Directly storing large amounts of data; for example, > a few kB per object, or > 1000s of objects.
- High bandwidth access (10s of requests per second sustained) needed.
- Store end-user data (such as images, PII, etc.) or other large-scale data processed by applications.
- The natural operations on the objects are not CRUD-y.
- The API is not easily modeled as objects.
- You chose to represent pending operations with an operation ID or an operation object.
Should I use a ConfigMap or a custom resource?
Use a ConfigMap if any of the following apply:
- There is an existing, well-documented configuration file format, such as a
mysql.cnf
orpom.xml
. - You want to put the entire configuration into one key of a ConfigMap.
- The main use of the configuration file is for a program running in a Pod on your cluster to consume the file to configure itself.
- Consumers of the file prefer to consume via file in a Pod or environment variable in a pod, rather than the Kubernetes API.
- You want to perform rolling updates via Deployment, etc., when the file is updated.
Use a custom resource (CRD or Aggregated API) if most of the following apply:
- You want to use Kubernetes client libraries and CLIs to create and update the new resource.
- You want top-level support from
kubectl
; for example,kubectl get my-object object-name
. - You want to build new automation that watches for updates on the new object, and then CRUD other objects, or vice versa.
- You want to write automation that handles updates to the object.
- You want to use Kubernetes API conventions like
.spec
,.status
, and.metadata
. - You want the object to be an abstraction over a collection of controlled resources, or a summarization of other resources.
Adding custom resources
Kubernetes provides two ways to add custom resources to your cluster:
- CRDs are simple and can be created without any programming.
- API Aggregation requires programming, but allows more control over API behaviors like how data is stored and conversion between API versions.
Kubernetes provides these two options to meet the needs of different users, so that neither ease of use nor flexibility is compromised.
Aggregated APIs are subordinate API servers that sit behind the primary API server, which acts as a proxy. This arrangement is called API Aggregation(AA). To users, the Kubernetes API appears extended.
CRDs allow users to create new types of resources without adding another API server. You do not need to understand API Aggregation to use CRDs.
Regardless of how they are installed, the new resources are referred to as Custom Resources to distinguish them from built-in Kubernetes resources (like pods).
Avoid using a Custom Resource as data storage for application, end user, or monitoring data: architecture designs that store application data within the Kubernetes API typically represent a design that is too closely coupled.
Architecturally, cloud native application architectures favor loose coupling between components. If part of your workload requires a backing service for its routine operation, run that backing service as a component or consume it as an external service. This way, your workload does not rely on the Kubernetes API for its normal operation.
CustomResourceDefinitions
The CustomResourceDefinition API resource allows you to define custom resources. Defining a CRD object creates a new custom resource with a name and schema that you specify. The Kubernetes API serves and handles the storage of your custom resource. The name of a CRD object must be a valid DNS subdomain name.
This frees you from writing your own API server to handle the custom resource, but the generic nature of the implementation means you have less flexibility than with API server aggregation.
Refer to the custom controller example for an example of how to register a new custom resource, work with instances of your new resource type, and use a controller to handle events.
API server aggregation
Usually, each resource in the Kubernetes API requires code that handles REST requests and manages persistent storage of objects. The main Kubernetes API server handles built-in resources like pods and services, and can also generically handle custom resources through CRDs.
The aggregation layer allows you to provide specialized implementations for your custom resources by writing and deploying your own API server. The main API server delegates requests to your API server for the custom resources that you handle, making them available to all of its clients.
Choosing a method for adding custom resources
CRDs are easier to use. Aggregated APIs are more flexible. Choose the method that best meets your needs.
Typically, CRDs are a good fit if:
- You have a handful of fields
- You are using the resource within your company, or as part of a small open-source project (as opposed to a commercial product)
Comparing ease of use
CRDs are easier to create than Aggregated APIs.
CRDs | Aggregated API |
---|---|
Do not require programming. Users can choose any language for a CRD controller. | Requires programming and building binary and image. |
No additional service to run; CRDs are handled by API server. | An additional service to create and that could fail. |
No ongoing support once the CRD is created. Any bug fixes are picked up as part of normal Kubernetes Master upgrades. | May need to periodically pickup bug fixes from upstream and rebuild and update the Aggregated API server. |
No need to handle multiple versions of your API; for example, when you control the client for this resource, you can upgrade it in sync with the API. | You need to handle multiple versions of your API; for example, when developing an extension to share with the world. |
Advanced features and flexibility
Aggregated APIs offer more advanced API features and customization of other features; for example, the storage layer.
Feature | Description | CRDs | Aggregated API |
---|---|---|---|
Validation | Help users prevent errors and allow you to evolve your API independently of your clients. These features are most useful when there are many clients who can't all update at the same time. | Yes. Most validation can be specified in the CRD using OpenAPI v3.0 validation. CRDValidationRatcheting feature gate allows failing validations specified using OpenAPI also can be ignored if the failing part of the resource was unchanged. Any other validations supported by addition of a Validating Webhook. | Yes, arbitrary validation checks |
Defaulting | See above | Yes, either via OpenAPI v3.0 validation default keyword (GA in 1.17), or via a Mutating Webhook (though this will not be run when reading from etcd for old objects). |
Yes |
Multi-versioning | Allows serving the same object through two API versions. Can help ease API changes like renaming fields. Less important if you control your client versions. | Yes | Yes |
Custom Storage | If you need storage with a different performance mode (for example, a time-series database instead of key-value store) or isolation for security (for example, encryption of sensitive information, etc.) | No | Yes |
Custom Business Logic | Perform arbitrary checks or actions when creating, reading, updating or deleting an object | Yes, using Webhooks. | Yes |
Scale Subresource | Allows systems like HorizontalPodAutoscaler and PodDisruptionBudget interact with your new resource | Yes | Yes |
Status Subresource | Allows fine-grained access control where user writes the spec section and the controller writes the status section. Allows incrementing object Generation on custom resource data mutation (requires separate spec and status sections in the resource) | Yes | Yes |
Other Subresources | Add operations other than CRUD, such as "logs" or "exec". | No | Yes |
strategic-merge-patch | The new endpoints support PATCH with Content-Type: application/strategic-merge-patch+json . Useful for updating objects that may be modified both locally, and by the server. For more information, see "Update API Objects in Place Using kubectl patch" |
No | Yes |
Protocol Buffers | The new resource supports clients that want to use Protocol Buffers | No | Yes |
OpenAPI Schema | Is there an OpenAPI (swagger) schema for the types that can be dynamically fetched from the server? Is the user protected from misspelling field names by ensuring only allowed fields are set? Are types enforced (in other words, don't put an int in a string field?) |
Yes, based on the OpenAPI v3.0 validation schema (GA in 1.16). | Yes |
Common Features
When you create a custom resource, either via a CRD or an AA, you get many features for your API, compared to implementing it outside the Kubernetes platform:
Feature | What it does |
---|---|
CRUD | The new endpoints support CRUD basic operations via HTTP and kubectl |
Watch | The new endpoints support Kubernetes Watch operations via HTTP |
Discovery | Clients like kubectl and dashboard automatically offer list, display, and field edit operations on your resources |
json-patch | The new endpoints support PATCH with Content-Type: application/json-patch+json |
merge-patch | The new endpoints support PATCH with Content-Type: application/merge-patch+json |
HTTPS | The new endpoints uses HTTPS |
Built-in Authentication | Access to the extension uses the core API server (aggregation layer) for authentication |
Built-in Authorization | Access to the extension can reuse the authorization used by the core API server; for example, RBAC. |
Finalizers | Block deletion of extension resources until external cleanup happens. |
Admission Webhooks | Set default values and validate extension resources during any create/update/delete operation. |
UI/CLI Display | Kubectl, dashboard can display extension resources. |
Unset versus Empty | Clients can distinguish unset fields from zero-valued fields. |
Client Libraries Generation | Kubernetes provides generic client libraries, as well as tools to generate type-specific client libraries. |
Labels and annotations | Common metadata across objects that tools know how to edit for core and custom resources. |
Preparing to install a custom resource
There are several points to be aware of before adding a custom resource to your cluster.
Third party code and new points of failure
While creating a CRD does not automatically add any new points of failure (for example, by causing third party code to run on your API server), packages (for example, Charts) or other installation bundles often include CRDs as well as a Deployment of third-party code that implements the business logic for a new custom resource.
Installing an Aggregated API server always involves running a new Deployment.
Storage
Custom resources consume storage space in the same way that ConfigMaps do. Creating too many custom resources may overload your API server's storage space.
Aggregated API servers may use the same storage as the main API server, in which case the same warning applies.
Authentication, authorization, and auditing
CRDs always use the same authentication, authorization, and audit logging as the built-in resources of your API server.
If you use RBAC for authorization, most RBAC roles will not grant access to the new resources (except the cluster-admin role or any role created with wildcard rules). You'll need to explicitly grant access to the new resources. CRDs and Aggregated APIs often come bundled with new role definitions for the types they add.
Aggregated API servers may or may not use the same authentication, authorization, and auditing as the primary API server.
Accessing a custom resource
Kubernetes client libraries can be used to access custom resources. Not all client libraries support custom resources. The Go and Python client libraries do.
When you add a custom resource, you can access it using:
kubectl
- The Kubernetes dynamic client.
- A REST client that you write.
- A client generated using Kubernetes client generation tools (generating one is an advanced undertaking, but some projects may provide a client along with the CRD or AA).
What's next
- Learn how to Extend the Kubernetes API with the aggregation layer.
- Learn how to Extend the Kubernetes API with CustomResourceDefinition.
13.2.2 - Kubernetes API Aggregation Layer
The aggregation layer allows Kubernetes to be extended with additional APIs, beyond what is offered by the core Kubernetes APIs. The additional APIs can either be ready-made solutions such as a metrics server, or APIs that you develop yourself.
The aggregation layer is different from Custom Resources, which are a way to make the kube-apiserver recognise new kinds of object.
Aggregation layer
The aggregation layer runs in-process with the kube-apiserver. Until an extension resource is
registered, the aggregation layer will do nothing. To register an API, you add an APIService
object, which "claims" the URL path in the Kubernetes API. At that point, the aggregation layer
will proxy anything sent to that API path (e.g. /apis/myextension.mycompany.io/v1/…
) to the
registered APIService.
The most common way to implement the APIService is to run an extension API server in Pod(s) that run in your cluster. If you're using the extension API server to manage resources in your cluster, the extension API server (also written as "extension-apiserver") is typically paired with one or more controllers. The apiserver-builder library provides a skeleton for both extension API servers and the associated controller(s).
Response latency
Extension API servers should have low latency networking to and from the kube-apiserver. Discovery requests are required to round-trip from the kube-apiserver in five seconds or less.
If your extension API server cannot achieve that latency requirement, consider making changes that let you meet it.
What's next
- To get the aggregator working in your environment, configure the aggregation layer.
- Then, setup an extension api-server to work with the aggregation layer.
- Read about APIService in the API reference
Alternatively: learn how to extend the Kubernetes API using Custom Resource Definitions.
13.3 - Operator pattern
Operators are software extensions to Kubernetes that make use of custom resources to manage applications and their components. Operators follow Kubernetes principles, notably the control loop.
Motivation
The operator pattern aims to capture the key aim of a human operator who is managing a service or set of services. Human operators who look after specific applications and services have deep knowledge of how the system ought to behave, how to deploy it, and how to react if there are problems.
People who run workloads on Kubernetes often like to use automation to take care of repeatable tasks. The operator pattern captures how you can write code to automate a task beyond what Kubernetes itself provides.
Operators in Kubernetes
Kubernetes is designed for automation. Out of the box, you get lots of built-in automation from the core of Kubernetes. You can use Kubernetes to automate deploying and running workloads, and you can automate how Kubernetes does that.
Kubernetes' operator pattern concept lets you extend the cluster's behaviour without modifying the code of Kubernetes itself by linking controllers to one or more custom resources. Operators are clients of the Kubernetes API that act as controllers for a Custom Resource.
An example operator
Some of the things that you can use an operator to automate include:
- deploying an application on demand
- taking and restoring backups of that application's state
- handling upgrades of the application code alongside related changes such as database schemas or extra configuration settings
- publishing a Service to applications that don't support Kubernetes APIs to discover them
- simulating failure in all or part of your cluster to test its resilience
- choosing a leader for a distributed application without an internal member election process
What might an operator look like in more detail? Here's an example:
- A custom resource named SampleDB, that you can configure into the cluster.
- A Deployment that makes sure a Pod is running that contains the controller part of the operator.
- A container image of the operator code.
- Controller code that queries the control plane to find out what SampleDB resources are configured.
- The core of the operator is code to tell the API server how to make
reality match the configured resources.
- If you add a new SampleDB, the operator sets up PersistentVolumeClaims to provide durable database storage, a StatefulSet to run SampleDB and a Job to handle initial configuration.
- If you delete it, the operator takes a snapshot, then makes sure that the StatefulSet and Volumes are also removed.
- The operator also manages regular database backups. For each SampleDB resource, the operator determines when to create a Pod that can connect to the database and take backups. These Pods would rely on a ConfigMap and / or a Secret that has database connection details and credentials.
- Because the operator aims to provide robust automation for the resource it manages, there would be additional supporting code. For this example, code checks to see if the database is running an old version and, if so, creates Job objects that upgrade it for you.
Deploying operators
The most common way to deploy an operator is to add the Custom Resource Definition and its associated Controller to your cluster. The Controller will normally run outside of the control plane, much as you would run any containerized application. For example, you can run the controller in your cluster as a Deployment.
Using an operator
Once you have an operator deployed, you'd use it by adding, modifying or deleting the kind of resource that the operator uses. Following the above example, you would set up a Deployment for the operator itself, and then:
kubectl get SampleDB # find configured databases
kubectl edit SampleDB/example-database # manually change some settings
…and that's it! The operator will take care of applying the changes as well as keeping the existing service in good shape.
Writing your own operator
If there isn't an operator in the ecosystem that implements the behavior you want, you can code your own.
You also implement an operator (that is, a Controller) using any language / runtime that can act as a client for the Kubernetes API.
Following are a few libraries and tools you can use to write your own cloud native operator.
- Charmed Operator Framework
- Java Operator SDK
- Kopf (Kubernetes Operator Pythonic Framework)
- kube-rs (Rust)
- kubebuilder
- KubeOps (.NET operator SDK)
- KUDO (Kubernetes Universal Declarative Operator)
- Mast
- Metacontroller along with WebHooks that you implement yourself
- Operator Framework
- shell-operator
What's next
- Read the CNCF Operator White Paper.
- Learn more about Custom Resources
- Find ready-made operators on OperatorHub.io to suit your use case
- Publish your operator for other people to use
- Read CoreOS' original article that introduced the operator pattern (this is an archived version of the original article).
- Read an article from Google Cloud about best practices for building operators