Kubernetes Reliability Improvements
- Exclude kubelet CPU/RAM (kube-reserved) from cgroup. It decreases a chance of overcommitment - Add a possibility to modify Kubelet node-status-update-frequency - Add a posibility to configure node-monitor-grace-period, node-monitor-period, pod-eviction-timeout for Kubernetes controller manager - Add Kubernetes Relaibility Documentation with recomendations for various scenarios. Signed-off-by: Sergii Golovatiuk <sgolovatiuk@mirantis.com>
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docs/kubernetes-reliability.md
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docs/kubernetes-reliability.md
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# Overview
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Distributed system such as Kubernetes are designed to be resilient to the
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failures. More details about Kubernetes High-Availability (HA) may be found at
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[Building High-Availability Clusters](https://kubernetes.io/docs/admin/high-availability/)
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To have a simple view the most of parts of HA will be skipped to describe
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Kubelet<->Controller Manager communication only.
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By default the normal behavior looks like:
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1. Kubelet updates it status to apiserver periodically, as specified by
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`--node-status-update-frequency`. The default value is **10s**.
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2. Kubernetes controller manager checks the statuses of Kubelets every
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`–-node-monitor-period`. The default value is **5s**.
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3. In case the status is updated within `--node-monitor-grace-period` of time,
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Kubernetes controller manager considers healthy status of Kubelet. The
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default value is **40s**.
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> Kubernetes controller manager and Kubelets work asynchronously. It means that
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> the delay may include any network latency, API Server latency, etcd latency,
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> latency caused by load on one's master nodes and so on. So if
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> `--node-status-update-frequency` is set to 5s in reality it may appear in
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> etcd in 6-7 seconds or even longer when etcd cannot commit data to quorum
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> nodes.
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# Failure
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Kubelet will try to make `nodeStatusUpdateRetry` post attempts. Currently
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`nodeStatusUpdateRetry` is constantly set to 5 in
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[kubelet.go](https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/blob/release-1.5/pkg/kubelet/kubelet.go#L102).
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Kubelet will try to update the status in
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[tryUpdateNodeStatus](https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/blob/release-1.5/pkg/kubelet/kubelet_node_status.go#L345)
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function. Kubelet uses `http.Client()` Golang method, but has no specified
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timeout. Thus there may be some glitches when API Server is overloaded while
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TCP connection is established.
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So, there will be `nodeStatusUpdateRetry` * `--node-status-update-frequency`
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attempts to set a status of node.
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At the same time Kubernetes controller manager will try to check
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`nodeStatusUpdateRetry` times every `--node-monitor-period` of time. After
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`--node-monitor-grace-period` it will consider node unhealthy. It will remove
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its pods based on `--pod-eviction-timeout`
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Kube proxy has a watcher over API. Once pods are evicted, Kube proxy will
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notice and will update iptables of the node. It will remove endpoints from
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services so pods from failed node won't be accessible anymore.
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# Recommendations for different cases
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## Fast Update and Fast Reaction
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If `-–node-status-update-frequency` is set to **4s** (10s is default).
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`--node-monitor-period` to **2s** (5s is default).
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`--node-monitor-grace-period` to **20s** (40s is default).
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`--pod-eviction-timeout` is set to **30s** (5m is default)
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In such scenario, pods will be evicted in **50s** because the node will be
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considered as down after **20s**, and `--pod-eviction-timeout` occurs after
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**30s** more. However, this scenario creates an overhead on etcd as every node
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will try to update its status every 2 seconds.
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If the environment has 1000 nodes, there will be 15000 node updates per
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minute which may require large etcd containers or even dedicated nodes for etcd.
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> If we calculate the number of tries, the division will give 5, but in reality
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> it will be from 3 to 5 with `nodeStatusUpdateRetry` attempts of each try. The
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> total number of attemtps will vary from 15 to 25 due to latency of all
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> components.
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## Medium Update and Average Reaction
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Let's set `-–node-status-update-frequency` to **20s**
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`--node-monitor-grace-period` to **2m** and `--pod-eviction-timeout` to **1m**.
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In that case, Kubelet will try to update status every 20s. So, it will be 6 * 5
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= 30 attempts before Kubernetes controller manager will consider unhealthy
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status of node. After 1m it will evict all pods. The total time will be 3m
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before eviction process.
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Such scenario is good for medium environments as 1000 nodes will require 3000
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etcd updates per minute.
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> In reality, there will be from 4 to 6 node update tries. The total number of
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> of attempts will vary from 20 to 30.
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## Low Update and Slow reaction
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Let's set `-–node-status-update-frequency` to **1m**.
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`--node-monitor-grace-period` will set to **5m** and `--pod-eviction-timeout`
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to **1m**. In this scenario, every kubelet will try to update the status every
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minute. There will be 5 * 5 = 25 attempts before unhealty status. After 5m,
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Kubernetes controller manager will set unhealthy status. This means that pods
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will be evicted after 1m after being marked unhealthy. (6m in total).
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> In reality, there will be from 3 to 5 tries. The total number of attempt will
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> vary from 15 to 25.
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There can be different combinations such as Fast Update with Slow reaction to
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satisfy specific cases.
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@ -3,7 +3,8 @@ Large deployments of K8s
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For a large scaled deployments, consider the following configuration changes:
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* Tune [ansible settings](http://docs.ansible.com/ansible/intro_configuration.html)
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* Tune [ansible settings]
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(http://docs.ansible.com/ansible/intro_configuration.html)
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for `forks` and `timeout` vars to fit large numbers of nodes being deployed.
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* Override containers' `foo_image_repo` vars to point to intranet registry.
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@ -23,9 +24,15 @@ For a large scaled deployments, consider the following configuration changes:
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* Tune CPU/memory limits and requests. Those are located in roles' defaults
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and named like ``foo_memory_limit``, ``foo_memory_requests`` and
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``foo_cpu_limit``, ``foo_cpu_requests``. Note that 'Mi' memory units for K8s
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will be submitted as 'M', if applied for ``docker run``, and cpu K8s units will
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end up with the 'm' skipped for docker as well. This is required as docker does not
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understand k8s units well.
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will be submitted as 'M', if applied for ``docker run``, and cpu K8s units
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will end up with the 'm' skipped for docker as well. This is required as
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docker does not understand k8s units well.
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* Tune ``kubelet_status_update_frequency`` to increase reliability of kubelet.
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``kube_controller_node_monitor_grace_period``,
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``kube_controller_node_monitor_period``,
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``kube_controller_pod_eviction_timeout`` for better Kubernetes reliability.
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Check out [Kubernetes Reliability](kubernetes-reliability.md)
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* Add calico-rr nodes if you are deploying with Calico or Canal. Nodes recover
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from host/network interruption much quicker with calico-rr. Note that
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@ -33,7 +40,7 @@ For a large scaled deployments, consider the following configuration changes:
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etcd role is okay).
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* Check out the
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[Inventory](https://github.com/kubernetes-incubator/kargo/blob/master/docs/getting-started.md#building-your-own-inventory)
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[Inventory](getting-started.md#building-your-own-inventory)
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section of the Getting started guide for tips on creating a large scale
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Ansible inventory.
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@ -18,6 +18,9 @@ kube_controller_memory_limit: 512M
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kube_controller_cpu_limit: 250m
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kube_controller_memory_requests: 170M
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kube_controller_cpu_requests: 100m
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kube_controller_node_monitor_grace_period: 40s
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kube_controller_node_monitor_period: 5s
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kube_controller_pod_eviction_timeout: 5m0s
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kube_scheduler_memory_limit: 512M
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kube_scheduler_cpu_limit: 250m
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kube_scheduler_memory_requests: 170M
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@ -28,6 +28,9 @@ spec:
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- --cluster-signing-cert-file={{ kube_cert_dir }}/ca.pem
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- --cluster-signing-key-file={{ kube_cert_dir }}/ca-key.pem
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- --enable-hostpath-provisioner={{ kube_hostpath_dynamic_provisioner }}
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- --node-monitor-grace-period={{ kube_controller_node_monitor_grace_period }}
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- --node-monitor-period={{ kube_controller_node_monitor_period }}
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- --pod-eviction-timeout={{ kube_controller_pod_eviction_timeout }}
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- --v={{ kube_log_level }}
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{% if cloud_provider is defined and cloud_provider in ["openstack", "azure"] %}
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- --cloud-provider={{cloud_provider}}
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@ -12,6 +12,7 @@ kube_proxy_masquerade_all: true
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# Limits for kube components and nginx load balancer app
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kubelet_memory_limit: 512M
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kubelet_cpu_limit: 100m
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kubelet_status_update_frequency: 10s
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kube_proxy_memory_limit: 2000M
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kube_proxy_cpu_limit: 500m
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kube_proxy_memory_requests: 256M
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@ -9,7 +9,10 @@ KUBELET_ADDRESS="--address={{ ip | default("0.0.0.0") }}"
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KUBELET_HOSTNAME="--hostname-override={{ ansible_hostname }}"
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{# Base kubelet args #}
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{% set kubelet_args_base %}--pod-manifest-path={{ kube_manifest_dir }} --pod-infra-container-image={{ pod_infra_image_repo }}:{{ pod_infra_image_tag }}{% endset %}
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{% set kubelet_args_base %}--pod-manifest-path={{ kube_manifest_dir }} \
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--pod-infra-container-image={{ pod_infra_image_repo }}:{{ pod_infra_image_tag }} \
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--kube-reserved cpu={{ kubelet_cpu_limit }},memory={{ kubelet_memory_limit|regex_replace('Mi', 'M') }} \
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--node-status-update-frequency={{ kubelet_status_update_frequency }}{% endset %}
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{# DNS settings for kubelet #}
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{% if dns_mode == 'kubedns' %}
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