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Chapter 13. Scheduling resources
13.1. Using node selectors to move logging resources
A node selector specifies a map of key/value pairs that are defined using custom labels on nodes and selectors specified in pods.
For the pod to be eligible to run on a node, the pod must have the same key/value node selector as the label on the node.
13.1.1. About node selectors
You can use node selectors on pods and labels on nodes to control where the pod is scheduled. With node selectors, Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS schedules the pods on nodes that contain matching labels.
You can use a node selector to place specific pods on specific nodes, cluster-wide node selectors to place new pods on specific nodes anywhere in the cluster, and project node selectors to place new pods in a project on specific nodes.
For example, as a cluster administrator, you can create an infrastructure where application developers can deploy pods only onto the nodes closest to their geographical location by including a node selector in every pod they create. In this example, the cluster consists of five data centers spread across two regions. In the U.S., label the nodes as us-east
, us-central
, or us-west
. In the Asia-Pacific region (APAC), label the nodes as apac-east
or apac-west
. The developers can add a node selector to the pods they create to ensure the pods get scheduled on those nodes.
A pod is not scheduled if the Pod
object contains a node selector, but no node has a matching label.
If you are using node selectors and node affinity in the same pod configuration, the following rules control pod placement onto nodes:
-
If you configure both
nodeSelector
andnodeAffinity
, both conditions must be satisfied for the pod to be scheduled onto a candidate node. -
If you specify multiple
nodeSelectorTerms
associated withnodeAffinity
types, then the pod can be scheduled onto a node if one of thenodeSelectorTerms
is satisfied. -
If you specify multiple
matchExpressions
associated withnodeSelectorTerms
, then the pod can be scheduled onto a node only if allmatchExpressions
are satisfied.
- Node selectors on specific pods and nodes
You can control which node a specific pod is scheduled on by using node selectors and labels.
To use node selectors and labels, first label the node to avoid pods being descheduled, then add the node selector to the pod.
NoteYou cannot add a node selector directly to an existing scheduled pod. You must label the object that controls the pod, such as deployment config.
For example, the following
Node
object has theregion: east
label:Sample
Node
object with a labelkind: Node apiVersion: v1 metadata: name: ip-10-0-131-14.ec2.internal selfLink: /api/v1/nodes/ip-10-0-131-14.ec2.internal uid: 7bc2580a-8b8e-11e9-8e01-021ab4174c74 resourceVersion: '478704' creationTimestamp: '2019-06-10T14:46:08Z' labels: kubernetes.io/os: linux topology.kubernetes.io/zone: us-east-1a node.openshift.io/os_version: '4.5' node-role.kubernetes.io/worker: '' topology.kubernetes.io/region: us-east-1 node.openshift.io/os_id: rhcos node.kubernetes.io/instance-type: m4.large kubernetes.io/hostname: ip-10-0-131-14 kubernetes.io/arch: amd64 region: east 1 type: user-node #...
- 1
- Labels to match the pod node selector.
A pod has the
type: user-node,region: east
node selector:Sample
Pod
object with node selectorsapiVersion: v1 kind: Pod metadata: name: s1 #... spec: nodeSelector: 1 region: east type: user-node #...
- 1
- Node selectors to match the node label. The node must have a label for each node selector.
When you create the pod using the example pod spec, it can be scheduled on the example node.
- Default cluster-wide node selectors
With default cluster-wide node selectors, when you create a pod in that cluster, Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS adds the default node selectors to the pod and schedules the pod on nodes with matching labels.
For example, the following
Scheduler
object has the default cluster-wideregion=east
andtype=user-node
node selectors:Example Scheduler Operator Custom Resource
apiVersion: config.openshift.io/v1 kind: Scheduler metadata: name: cluster #... spec: defaultNodeSelector: type=user-node,region=east #...
A node in that cluster has the
type=user-node,region=east
labels:Example
Node
objectapiVersion: v1 kind: Node metadata: name: ci-ln-qg1il3k-f76d1-hlmhl-worker-b-df2s4 #... labels: region: east type: user-node #...
Example
Pod
object with a node selectorapiVersion: v1 kind: Pod metadata: name: s1 #... spec: nodeSelector: region: east #...
When you create the pod using the example pod spec in the example cluster, the pod is created with the cluster-wide node selector and is scheduled on the labeled node:
Example pod list with the pod on the labeled node
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE IP NODE NOMINATED NODE READINESS GATES pod-s1 1/1 Running 0 20s 10.131.2.6 ci-ln-qg1il3k-f76d1-hlmhl-worker-b-df2s4 <none> <none>
NoteIf the project where you create the pod has a project node selector, that selector takes preference over a cluster-wide node selector. Your pod is not created or scheduled if the pod does not have the project node selector.
- Project node selectors
With project node selectors, when you create a pod in this project, Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS adds the node selectors to the pod and schedules the pods on a node with matching labels. If there is a cluster-wide default node selector, a project node selector takes preference.
For example, the following project has the
region=east
node selector:Example
Namespace
objectapiVersion: v1 kind: Namespace metadata: name: east-region annotations: openshift.io/node-selector: "region=east" #...
The following node has the
type=user-node,region=east
labels:Example
Node
objectapiVersion: v1 kind: Node metadata: name: ci-ln-qg1il3k-f76d1-hlmhl-worker-b-df2s4 #... labels: region: east type: user-node #...
When you create the pod using the example pod spec in this example project, the pod is created with the project node selectors and is scheduled on the labeled node:
Example
Pod
objectapiVersion: v1 kind: Pod metadata: namespace: east-region #... spec: nodeSelector: region: east type: user-node #...
Example pod list with the pod on the labeled node
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE IP NODE NOMINATED NODE READINESS GATES pod-s1 1/1 Running 0 20s 10.131.2.6 ci-ln-qg1il3k-f76d1-hlmhl-worker-b-df2s4 <none> <none>
A pod in the project is not created or scheduled if the pod contains different node selectors. For example, if you deploy the following pod into the example project, it is not created:
Example
Pod
object with an invalid node selectorapiVersion: v1 kind: Pod metadata: name: west-region #... spec: nodeSelector: region: west #...
13.1.2. Loki pod placement
You can control which nodes the Loki pods run on, and prevent other workloads from using those nodes, by using tolerations or node selectors on the pods.
You can apply tolerations to the log store pods with the LokiStack custom resource (CR) and apply taints to a node with the node specification. A taint on a node is a key:value
pair that instructs the node to repel all pods that do not allow the taint. Using a specific key:value
pair that is not on other pods ensures that only the log store pods can run on that node.
Example LokiStack with node selectors
apiVersion: loki.grafana.com/v1 kind: LokiStack metadata: name: logging-loki namespace: openshift-logging spec: # ... template: compactor: 1 nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" 2 distributor: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" gateway: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" indexGateway: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" ingester: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" querier: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" queryFrontend: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" ruler: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" # ...
In the previous example configuration, all Loki pods are moved to nodes containing the node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: ""
label.
Example LokiStack CR with node selectors and tolerations
apiVersion: loki.grafana.com/v1 kind: LokiStack metadata: name: logging-loki namespace: openshift-logging spec: # ... template: compactor: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" tolerations: - effect: NoSchedule key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved - effect: NoExecute key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved distributor: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" tolerations: - effect: NoSchedule key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved - effect: NoExecute key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" tolerations: - effect: NoSchedule key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved - effect: NoExecute key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved indexGateway: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" tolerations: - effect: NoSchedule key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved - effect: NoExecute key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved ingester: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" tolerations: - effect: NoSchedule key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved - effect: NoExecute key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved querier: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" tolerations: - effect: NoSchedule key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved - effect: NoExecute key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved queryFrontend: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" tolerations: - effect: NoSchedule key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved - effect: NoExecute key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved ruler: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" tolerations: - effect: NoSchedule key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved - effect: NoExecute key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved gateway: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" tolerations: - effect: NoSchedule key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved - effect: NoExecute key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved # ...
To configure the nodeSelector
and tolerations
fields of the LokiStack (CR), you can use the oc explain
command to view the description and fields for a particular resource:
$ oc explain lokistack.spec.template
Example output
KIND: LokiStack VERSION: loki.grafana.com/v1 RESOURCE: template <Object> DESCRIPTION: Template defines the resource/limits/tolerations/nodeselectors per component FIELDS: compactor <Object> Compactor defines the compaction component spec. distributor <Object> Distributor defines the distributor component spec. ...
For more detailed information, you can add a specific field:
$ oc explain lokistack.spec.template.compactor
Example output
KIND: LokiStack VERSION: loki.grafana.com/v1 RESOURCE: compactor <Object> DESCRIPTION: Compactor defines the compaction component spec. FIELDS: nodeSelector <map[string]string> NodeSelector defines the labels required by a node to schedule the component onto it. ...
13.1.3. Configuring resources and scheduling for logging collectors
Administrators can modify the resources or scheduling of the collector by creating a ClusterLogging
custom resource (CR) that is in the same namespace and has the same name as the ClusterLogForwarder
CR that it supports.
The applicable stanzas for the ClusterLogging
CR when using multiple log forwarders in a deployment are managementState
and collection
. All other stanzas are ignored.
Prerequisites
- You have administrator permissions.
- You have installed the Red Hat OpenShift Logging Operator version 5.8 or newer.
-
You have created a
ClusterLogForwarder
CR.
Procedure
Create a
ClusterLogging
CR that supports your existingClusterLogForwarder
CR:Example
ClusterLogging
CR YAMLapiVersion: logging.openshift.io/v1 kind: ClusterLogging metadata: name: <name> 1 namespace: <namespace> 2 spec: managementState: "Managed" collection: type: "vector" tolerations: - key: "logging" operator: "Exists" effect: "NoExecute" tolerationSeconds: 6000 resources: limits: memory: 1Gi requests: cpu: 100m memory: 1Gi nodeSelector: collector: needed # ...
Apply the
ClusterLogging
CR by running the following command:$ oc apply -f <filename>.yaml
13.1.4. Viewing logging collector pods
You can view the logging collector pods and the corresponding nodes that they are running on.
Procedure
Run the following command in a project to view the logging collector pods and their details:
$ oc get pods --selector component=collector -o wide -n <project_name>
Example output
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE IP NODE NOMINATED NODE READINESS GATES collector-8d69v 1/1 Running 0 134m 10.130.2.30 master1.example.com <none> <none> collector-bd225 1/1 Running 0 134m 10.131.1.11 master2.example.com <none> <none> collector-cvrzs 1/1 Running 0 134m 10.130.0.21 master3.example.com <none> <none> collector-gpqg2 1/1 Running 0 134m 10.128.2.27 worker1.example.com <none> <none> collector-l9j7j 1/1 Running 0 134m 10.129.2.31 worker2.example.com <none> <none>
13.1.5. Additional resources
13.2. Using taints and tolerations to control logging pod placement
Taints and tolerations allow the node to control which pods should (or should not) be scheduled on them.
13.2.1. Understanding taints and tolerations
A taint allows a node to refuse a pod to be scheduled unless that pod has a matching toleration.
You apply taints to a node through the Node
specification (NodeSpec
) and apply tolerations to a pod through the Pod
specification (PodSpec
). When you apply a taint a node, the scheduler cannot place a pod on that node unless the pod can tolerate the taint.
Example taint in a node specification
apiVersion: v1 kind: Node metadata: name: my-node #... spec: taints: - effect: NoExecute key: key1 value: value1 #...
Example toleration in a Pod
spec
apiVersion: v1 kind: Pod metadata: name: my-pod #... spec: tolerations: - key: "key1" operator: "Equal" value: "value1" effect: "NoExecute" tolerationSeconds: 3600 #...
Taints and tolerations consist of a key, value, and effect.
Parameter | Description | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
The | ||||||
|
The | ||||||
| The effect is one of the following:
| ||||||
|
|
If you add a
NoSchedule
taint to a control plane node, the node must have thenode-role.kubernetes.io/master=:NoSchedule
taint, which is added by default.For example:
apiVersion: v1 kind: Node metadata: annotations: machine.openshift.io/machine: openshift-machine-api/ci-ln-62s7gtb-f76d1-v8jxv-master-0 machineconfiguration.openshift.io/currentConfig: rendered-master-cdc1ab7da414629332cc4c3926e6e59c name: my-node #... spec: taints: - effect: NoSchedule key: node-role.kubernetes.io/master #...
A toleration matches a taint:
If the
operator
parameter is set toEqual
:-
the
key
parameters are the same; -
the
value
parameters are the same; -
the
effect
parameters are the same.
-
the
If the
operator
parameter is set toExists
:-
the
key
parameters are the same; -
the
effect
parameters are the same.
-
the
The following taints are built into Red Hat OpenShift Service on AWS:
-
node.kubernetes.io/not-ready
: The node is not ready. This corresponds to the node conditionReady=False
. -
node.kubernetes.io/unreachable
: The node is unreachable from the node controller. This corresponds to the node conditionReady=Unknown
. -
node.kubernetes.io/memory-pressure
: The node has memory pressure issues. This corresponds to the node conditionMemoryPressure=True
. -
node.kubernetes.io/disk-pressure
: The node has disk pressure issues. This corresponds to the node conditionDiskPressure=True
. -
node.kubernetes.io/network-unavailable
: The node network is unavailable. -
node.kubernetes.io/unschedulable
: The node is unschedulable. -
node.cloudprovider.kubernetes.io/uninitialized
: When the node controller 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. node.kubernetes.io/pid-pressure
: The node has pid pressure. This corresponds to the node conditionPIDPressure=True
.ImportantRed Hat OpenShift Service on AWS does not set a default pid.available
evictionHard
.
13.2.2. Loki pod placement
You can control which nodes the Loki pods run on, and prevent other workloads from using those nodes, by using tolerations or node selectors on the pods.
You can apply tolerations to the log store pods with the LokiStack custom resource (CR) and apply taints to a node with the node specification. A taint on a node is a key:value
pair that instructs the node to repel all pods that do not allow the taint. Using a specific key:value
pair that is not on other pods ensures that only the log store pods can run on that node.
Example LokiStack with node selectors
apiVersion: loki.grafana.com/v1 kind: LokiStack metadata: name: logging-loki namespace: openshift-logging spec: # ... template: compactor: 1 nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" 2 distributor: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" gateway: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" indexGateway: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" ingester: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" querier: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" queryFrontend: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" ruler: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" # ...
In the previous example configuration, all Loki pods are moved to nodes containing the node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: ""
label.
Example LokiStack CR with node selectors and tolerations
apiVersion: loki.grafana.com/v1 kind: LokiStack metadata: name: logging-loki namespace: openshift-logging spec: # ... template: compactor: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" tolerations: - effect: NoSchedule key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved - effect: NoExecute key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved distributor: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" tolerations: - effect: NoSchedule key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved - effect: NoExecute key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" tolerations: - effect: NoSchedule key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved - effect: NoExecute key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved indexGateway: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" tolerations: - effect: NoSchedule key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved - effect: NoExecute key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved ingester: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" tolerations: - effect: NoSchedule key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved - effect: NoExecute key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved querier: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" tolerations: - effect: NoSchedule key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved - effect: NoExecute key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved queryFrontend: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" tolerations: - effect: NoSchedule key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved - effect: NoExecute key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved ruler: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" tolerations: - effect: NoSchedule key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved - effect: NoExecute key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved gateway: nodeSelector: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra: "" tolerations: - effect: NoSchedule key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved - effect: NoExecute key: node-role.kubernetes.io/infra value: reserved # ...
To configure the nodeSelector
and tolerations
fields of the LokiStack (CR), you can use the oc explain
command to view the description and fields for a particular resource:
$ oc explain lokistack.spec.template
Example output
KIND: LokiStack VERSION: loki.grafana.com/v1 RESOURCE: template <Object> DESCRIPTION: Template defines the resource/limits/tolerations/nodeselectors per component FIELDS: compactor <Object> Compactor defines the compaction component spec. distributor <Object> Distributor defines the distributor component spec. ...
For more detailed information, you can add a specific field:
$ oc explain lokistack.spec.template.compactor
Example output
KIND: LokiStack VERSION: loki.grafana.com/v1 RESOURCE: compactor <Object> DESCRIPTION: Compactor defines the compaction component spec. FIELDS: nodeSelector <map[string]string> NodeSelector defines the labels required by a node to schedule the component onto it. ...
13.2.3. Using tolerations to control log collector pod placement
By default, log collector pods have the following tolerations
configuration:
apiVersion: v1 kind: Pod metadata: name: collector-example namespace: openshift-logging spec: # ... collection: type: vector tolerations: - effect: NoSchedule key: node-role.kubernetes.io/master operator: Exists - effect: NoSchedule key: node.kubernetes.io/disk-pressure operator: Exists - effect: NoExecute key: node.kubernetes.io/not-ready operator: Exists - effect: NoExecute key: node.kubernetes.io/unreachable operator: Exists - effect: NoSchedule key: node.kubernetes.io/memory-pressure operator: Exists - effect: NoSchedule key: node.kubernetes.io/pid-pressure operator: Exists - effect: NoSchedule key: node.kubernetes.io/unschedulable operator: Exists # ...
Prerequisites
-
You have installed the Red Hat OpenShift Logging Operator and OpenShift CLI (
oc
).
Procedure
Add a taint to a node where you want logging collector pods to schedule logging collector pods by running the following command:
$ oc adm taint nodes <node_name> <key>=<value>:<effect>
Example command
$ oc adm taint nodes node1 collector=node:NoExecute
This example places a taint on
node1
that has keycollector
, valuenode
, and taint effectNoExecute
. You must use theNoExecute
taint effect.NoExecute
schedules only pods that match the taint and removes existing pods that do not match.Edit the
collection
stanza of theClusterLogging
custom resource (CR) to configure a toleration for the logging collector pods:apiVersion: logging.openshift.io/v1 kind: ClusterLogging metadata: # ... spec: # ... collection: type: vector tolerations: - key: collector 1 operator: Exists 2 effect: NoExecute 3 tolerationSeconds: 6000 4 resources: limits: memory: 2Gi requests: cpu: 100m memory: 1Gi # ...
This toleration matches the taint created by the oc adm taint
command. A pod with this toleration can be scheduled onto node1
.
13.2.4. Configuring resources and scheduling for logging collectors
Administrators can modify the resources or scheduling of the collector by creating a ClusterLogging
custom resource (CR) that is in the same namespace and has the same name as the ClusterLogForwarder
CR that it supports.
The applicable stanzas for the ClusterLogging
CR when using multiple log forwarders in a deployment are managementState
and collection
. All other stanzas are ignored.
Prerequisites
- You have administrator permissions.
- You have installed the Red Hat OpenShift Logging Operator version 5.8 or newer.
-
You have created a
ClusterLogForwarder
CR.
Procedure
Create a
ClusterLogging
CR that supports your existingClusterLogForwarder
CR:Example
ClusterLogging
CR YAMLapiVersion: logging.openshift.io/v1 kind: ClusterLogging metadata: name: <name> 1 namespace: <namespace> 2 spec: managementState: "Managed" collection: type: "vector" tolerations: - key: "logging" operator: "Exists" effect: "NoExecute" tolerationSeconds: 6000 resources: limits: memory: 1Gi requests: cpu: 100m memory: 1Gi nodeSelector: collector: needed # ...
Apply the
ClusterLogging
CR by running the following command:$ oc apply -f <filename>.yaml
13.2.5. Viewing logging collector pods
You can view the logging collector pods and the corresponding nodes that they are running on.
Procedure
Run the following command in a project to view the logging collector pods and their details:
$ oc get pods --selector component=collector -o wide -n <project_name>
Example output
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE IP NODE NOMINATED NODE READINESS GATES collector-8d69v 1/1 Running 0 134m 10.130.2.30 master1.example.com <none> <none> collector-bd225 1/1 Running 0 134m 10.131.1.11 master2.example.com <none> <none> collector-cvrzs 1/1 Running 0 134m 10.130.0.21 master3.example.com <none> <none> collector-gpqg2 1/1 Running 0 134m 10.128.2.27 worker1.example.com <none> <none> collector-l9j7j 1/1 Running 0 134m 10.129.2.31 worker2.example.com <none> <none>