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Chapter 6. Using CPU Manager
CPU Manager manages groups of CPUs and constrains workloads to specific CPUs.
CPU Manager is useful for workloads that have some of these attributes:
- Require as much CPU time as possible.
- Are sensitive to processor cache misses.
- Are low-latency network applications.
- Coordinate with other processes and benefit from sharing a single processor cache.
6.1. Setting up CPU Manager Copiar enlaceEnlace copiado en el portapapeles!
Procedure
Optional: Label a node:
# oc label node perf-node.example.com cpumanager=trueEdit the
of the nodes where CPU Manager should be enabled. In this example, all workers have CPU Manager enabled:MachineConfigPool# oc edit machineconfigpool workerAdd a label to the worker machine config pool:
metadata: creationTimestamp: 2020-xx-xxx generation: 3 labels: custom-kubelet: cpumanager-enabledCreate a
,KubeletConfig, custom resource (CR). Refer to the label created in the previous step to have the correct nodes updated with the new kubelet config. See thecpumanager-kubeletconfig.yamlsection:machineConfigPoolSelectorapiVersion: machineconfiguration.openshift.io/v1 kind: KubeletConfig metadata: name: cpumanager-enabled spec: machineConfigPoolSelector: matchLabels: custom-kubelet: cpumanager-enabled kubeletConfig: cpuManagerPolicy: static1 cpuManagerReconcilePeriod: 5s2 - 1
- Specify a policy:
-
. This policy explicitly enables the existing default CPU affinity scheme, providing no affinity beyond what the scheduler does automatically.
none -
. This policy allows pods with certain resource characteristics to be granted increased CPU affinity and exclusivity on the node.
static
-
- 2
- Optional. Specify the CPU Manager reconcile frequency. The default is
5s.
Create the dynamic kubelet config:
# oc create -f cpumanager-kubeletconfig.yamlThis adds the CPU Manager feature to the kubelet config and, if needed, the Machine Config Operator (MCO) reboots the node. To enable CPU Manager, a reboot is not needed.
Check for the merged kubelet config:
# oc get machineconfig 99-worker-XXXXXX-XXXXX-XXXX-XXXXX-kubelet -o json | grep ownerReference -A7Example output
"ownerReferences": [ { "apiVersion": "machineconfiguration.openshift.io/v1", "kind": "KubeletConfig", "name": "cpumanager-enabled", "uid": "7ed5616d-6b72-11e9-aae1-021e1ce18878" } ]Check the worker for the updated
:kubelet.conf# oc debug node/perf-node.example.com sh-4.2# cat /host/etc/kubernetes/kubelet.conf | grep cpuManagerExample output
cpuManagerPolicy: static1 cpuManagerReconcilePeriod: 5s2 Create a pod that requests a core or multiple cores. Both limits and requests must have their CPU value set to a whole integer. That is the number of cores that will be dedicated to this pod:
# cat cpumanager-pod.yamlExample output
apiVersion: v1 kind: Pod metadata: generateName: cpumanager- spec: containers: - name: cpumanager image: gcr.io/google_containers/pause-amd64:3.0 resources: requests: cpu: 1 memory: "1G" limits: cpu: 1 memory: "1G" nodeSelector: cpumanager: "true"Create the pod:
# oc create -f cpumanager-pod.yamlVerify that the pod is scheduled to the node that you labeled:
# oc describe pod cpumanagerExample output
Name: cpumanager-6cqz7 Namespace: default Priority: 0 PriorityClassName: <none> Node: perf-node.example.com/xxx.xx.xx.xxx ... Limits: cpu: 1 memory: 1G Requests: cpu: 1 memory: 1G ... QoS Class: Guaranteed Node-Selectors: cpumanager=trueVerify that the
are set up correctly. Get the process ID (PID) of thecgroupsprocess:pause# ├─init.scope │ └─1 /usr/lib/systemd/systemd --switched-root --system --deserialize 17 └─kubepods.slice ├─kubepods-pod69c01f8e_6b74_11e9_ac0f_0a2b62178a22.slice │ ├─crio-b5437308f1a574c542bdf08563b865c0345c8f8c0b0a655612c.scope │ └─32706 /pausePods of quality of service (QoS) tier
are placed within theGuaranteed. Pods of other QoS tiers end up in childkubepods.sliceofcgroups:kubepods# cd /sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset/kubepods.slice/kubepods-pod69c01f8e_6b74_11e9_ac0f_0a2b62178a22.slice/crio-b5437308f1ad1a7db0574c542bdf08563b865c0345c86e9585f8c0b0a655612c.scope # for i in `ls cpuset.cpus tasks` ; do echo -n "$i "; cat $i ; doneExample output
cpuset.cpus 1 tasks 32706Check the allowed CPU list for the task:
# grep ^Cpus_allowed_list /proc/32706/statusExample output
Cpus_allowed_list: 1Verify that another pod (in this case, the pod in the
QoS tier) on the system cannot run on the core allocated for theburstablepod:Guaranteed# cat /sys/fs/cgroup/cpuset/kubepods.slice/kubepods-besteffort.slice/kubepods-besteffort-podc494a073_6b77_11e9_98c0_06bba5c387ea.slice/crio-c56982f57b75a2420947f0afc6cafe7534c5734efc34157525fa9abbf99e3849.scope/cpuset.cpus 0 # oc describe node perf-node.example.comExample output
... Capacity: attachable-volumes-aws-ebs: 39 cpu: 2 ephemeral-storage: 124768236Ki hugepages-1Gi: 0 hugepages-2Mi: 0 memory: 8162900Ki pods: 250 Allocatable: attachable-volumes-aws-ebs: 39 cpu: 1500m ephemeral-storage: 124768236Ki hugepages-1Gi: 0 hugepages-2Mi: 0 memory: 7548500Ki pods: 250 ------- ---- ------------ ---------- --------------- ------------- --- default cpumanager-6cqz7 1 (66%) 1 (66%) 1G (12%) 1G (12%) 29m Allocated resources: (Total limits may be over 100 percent, i.e., overcommitted.) Resource Requests Limits -------- -------- ------ cpu 1440m (96%) 1 (66%)This VM has two CPU cores. The
setting reserves 500 millicores, meaning that half of one core is subtracted from the total capacity of the node to arrive at thesystem-reservedamount. You can see thatNode Allocatableis 1500 millicores. This means you can run one of the CPU Manager pods since each will take one whole core. A whole core is equivalent to 1000 millicores. If you try to schedule a second pod, the system will accept the pod, but it will never be scheduled:Allocatable CPUNAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE cpumanager-6cqz7 1/1 Running 0 33m cpumanager-7qc2t 0/1 Pending 0 11s