Chapter 6. Managing unused rendered machine configs


The Machine Config Operator (MCO) does not perform any garbage collection activities. This means that all rendered machine configs remain in the cluster. Each time a user or controller applies a new machine config, the MCO creates new rendered configs for each affected machine config pool. Over time, this can lead to a large number of rendered machine configs, which can make working with machine configs confusing. Having too many rendered machine configs can also contribute to disk space issues and performance issues with etcd.

You can remove old, unused rendered machine configs by using the oc adm prune renderedmachineconfigs command with the --confirm flag. With this command, you can remove all unused rendered machine configs or only those in a specific machine config pool. You can also remove a specified number of unused rendered machine configs in order to keep some older machine configs, in case you want to check older configurations.

You can use the oc adm prune renderedmachineconfigs command without the --confirm flag to see which rendered machine configs would be removed.

Use the list subcommand to display all the rendered machine configs in the cluster or a specific machine config pool.

Note

The oc adm prune renderedmachineconfigs command deletes only rendered machine configs that are not in use. If a rendered machine configs are in use by a machine config pool, the rendered machine config is not deleted. In this case, the command output specifies the reason that the rendered machine config was not deleted.

6.1. Viewing rendered machine configs

You can view a list of rendered machine configs by using the oc adm prune renderedmachineconfigs command with the list subcommand.

For example, the command in the following procedure would list all rendered machine configs for the worker machine config pool.

Procedure

  • Optional: List the rendered machine configs by using the following command:

    $ oc adm prune renderedmachineconfigs list --in-use=false --pool-name=worker

    where:

    list
    Displays a list of rendered machine configs in your cluster.
    --in-use
    Optional: Specifies whether to display only the used machine configs or all machine configs from the specified pool. If true, the output lists the rendered machine configs that are being used by a machine config pool. If false, the output lists all rendered machine configs in the cluster. The default value is false.
    --pool-name
    Optional: Specifies the machine config pool from which to display the machine configs.

    Example output

    worker
    status: rendered-worker-ae115e2b5e6ae05e0e6e5d62c7d0dd81
    spec: rendered-worker-ae115e2b5e6ae05e0e6e5d62c7d0dd81

  • List the rendered machine configs that you can remove automatically by running the following command. Any rendered machine config marked with as it’s currently in use in the command output is not removed.

    $ oc adm prune renderedmachineconfigs --pool-name=worker

    The command runs in dry-run mode, and no machine configs are removed.

    where:

    --pool-name
    Optional: Displays the machine configs in the specified machine config pool.

    Example output

    Dry run enabled - no modifications will be made. Add --confirm to remove rendered machine configs.
    DRY RUN: Deleted rendered MachineConfig rendered-worker-23d7322831a57f02998e7e1600a0865f
    DRY RUN: Deleted rendered MachineConfig rendered-worker-fc94397dc7c43808c7014683c208956e
    DRY RUN: Skipping deletion of rendered MachineConfig rendered-worker-ad5a3cad36303c363cf458ab0524e7c0 as it's currently in use

6.2. Removing unused rendered machine configs

You can remove unused rendered machine configs by using the oc adm prune renderedmachineconfigs command with the --confirm command. If any rendered machine config is not deleted, the command output indicates which was not deleted and lists the reason for skipping the deletion.

Procedure

  1. Optional: List the rendered machine configs that you can remove automatically by running the following command. Any rendered machine config marked with as it’s currently in use in the command output is not removed.

    $ oc adm prune renderedmachineconfigs --pool-name=worker

    Example output

    Dry run enabled - no modifications will be made. Add --confirm to remove rendered machine configs.
    DRY RUN: Deleted rendered MachineConfig rendered-worker-23d7322831a57f02998e7e1600a0865f
    DRY RUN: Deleted rendered MachineConfig rendered-worker-fc94397dc7c43808c7014683c208956e
    DRY RUN: Skipping deletion of rendered MachineConfig rendered-worker-ad5a3cad36303c363cf458ab0524e7c0 as it's currently in use

    where:

    pool-name
    Optional: Specifies the machine config pool where you want to delete the machine configs from.
  2. Remove the unused rendered machine configs by running the following command. The command in the following procedure would delete the two oldest unused rendered machine configs in the worker machine config pool.

    $ oc adm prune renderedmachineconfigs --pool-name=worker --count=2 --confirm

    where:

    --count
    Optional: Specifies the maximum number of unused rendered machine configs you want to delete, starting with the oldest.
    --confirm
    Optional: Specifies the maximum number of unused rendered machine configs you want to delete, starting with the oldest.
    --pool-name
    Optional: Specifies the machine config pool from which you want to delete the machine. If not specified, all the pools are evaluated.
Red Hat logoGithubRedditYoutubeTwitter

Learn

Try, buy, & sell

Communities

About Red Hat Documentation

We help Red Hat users innovate and achieve their goals with our products and services with content they can trust.

Making open source more inclusive

Red Hat is committed to replacing problematic language in our code, documentation, and web properties. For more details, see the Red Hat Blog.

About Red Hat

We deliver hardened solutions that make it easier for enterprises to work across platforms and environments, from the core datacenter to the network edge.

© 2024 Red Hat, Inc.