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PLEASE NOTE: This document applies to the HEAD of the source tree

If you are using a released version of Kubernetes, you should refer to the docs that go with that version. The latest release of this document can be found [here](http://releases.k8s.io/release-1.3/docs/proposals/kubelet-systemd.md). Documentation for other releases can be found at [releases.k8s.io](http://releases.k8s.io). -- # Kubelet and systemd interaction **Author**: Derek Carr (@derekwaynecarr) **Status**: Proposed ## Motivation Many Linux distributions have either adopted, or plan to adopt `systemd` as their init system. This document describes how the node should be configured, and a set of enhancements that should be made to the `kubelet` to better integrate with these distributions independent of container runtime. ## Scope of proposal This proposal does not account for running the `kubelet` in a container. ## Background on systemd To help understand this proposal, we first provide a brief summary of `systemd` behavior. ### systemd units `systemd` manages a hierarchy of `slice`, `scope`, and `service` units. * `service` - application on the server that is launched by `systemd`; how it should start/stop; when it should be started; under what circumstances it should be restarted; and any resource controls that should be applied to it. * `scope` - a process or group of processes which are not launched by `systemd` (i.e. fork), like a service, resource controls may be applied * `slice` - organizes a hierarchy in which `scope` and `service` units are placed. a `slice` may contain `slice`, `scope`, or `service` units; processes are attached to `service` and `scope` units only, not to `slices`. The hierarchy is intended to be unified, meaning a process may only belong to a single leaf node. ### cgroup hierarchy: split versus unified hierarchies Classical `cgroup` hierarchies were split per resource group controller, and a process could exist in different parts of the hierarchy. For example, a process `p1` could exist in each of the following at the same time: * `/sys/fs/cgroup/cpu/important/` * `/sys/fs/cgroup/memory/unimportant/` * `/sys/fs/cgroup/cpuacct/unimportant/` In addition, controllers for one resource group could depend on another in ways that were not always obvious. For example, the `cpu` controller depends on the `cpuacct` controller yet they were treated separately. Many found it confusing for a single process to belong to different nodes in the `cgroup` hierarchy across controllers. The Kernel direction for `cgroup` support is to move toward a unified `cgroup` hierarchy, where the per-controller hierarchies are eliminated in favor of hierarchies like the following: * `/sys/fs/cgroup/important/` * `/sys/fs/cgroup/unimportant/` In a unified hierarchy, a process may only belong to a single node in the `cgroup` tree. ### cgroupfs single writer The Kernel direction for `cgroup` management is to promote a single-writer model rather than allowing multiple processes to independently write to parts of the file-system. In distributions that run `systemd` as their init system, the cgroup tree is managed by `systemd` by default since it implicitly interacts with the cgroup tree when starting units. Manual changes made by other cgroup managers to the cgroup tree are not guaranteed to be preserved unless `systemd` is made aware. `systemd` can be told to ignore sections of the cgroup tree by configuring the unit to have the `Delegate=` option. See: http://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd.resource-control.html#Delegate= ### cgroup management with systemd and container runtimes A `slice` corresponds to an inner-node in the `cgroup` file-system hierarchy. For example, the `system.slice` is represented as follows: `/sys/fs/cgroup//system.slice` A `slice` is nested in the hierarchy by its naming convention. For example, the `system-foo.slice` is represented as follows: `/sys/fs/cgroup//system.slice/system-foo.slice/` A `service` or `scope` corresponds to leaf nodes in the `cgroup` file-system hierarchy managed by `systemd`. Services and scopes can have child nodes managed outside of `systemd` if they have been delegated with the `Delegate=` option. For example, if the `docker.service` is associated with the `system.slice`, it is represented as follows: `/sys/fs/cgroup//system.slice/docker.service/` To demonstrate the use of `scope` units using the `docker` container runtime, if a user launches a container via `docker run -m 100M busybox`, a `scope` will be created because the process was not launched by `systemd` itself. The `scope` is parented by the `slice` associated with the launching daemon. For example: `/sys/fs/cgroup//system.slice/docker-.scope` `systemd` defines a set of slices. By default, service and scope units are placed in `system.slice`, virtual machines and containers registered with `systemd-machined` are found in `machine.slice`, and user sessions handled by `systemd-logind` in `user.slice`. ## Node Configuration on systemd ### kubelet cgroup driver The `kubelet` reads and writes to the `cgroup` tree during bootstrapping of the node. In the future, it will write to the `cgroup` tree to satisfy other purposes around quality of service, etc. The `kubelet` must cooperate with `systemd` in order to ensure proper function of the system. The bootstrapping requirements for a `systemd` system are different than one without it. The `kubelet` will accept a new flag to control how it interacts with the `cgroup` tree. * `--cgroup-driver=` - cgroup driver used by the kubelet. `cgroupfs` or `systemd`. By default, the `kubelet` should default `--cgroup-driver` to `systemd` on `systemd` distributions. The `kubelet` should associate node bootstrapping semantics to the configured `cgroup driver`. ### Node allocatable The proposal makes no changes to the definition as presented here: https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/blob/master/docs/proposals/node-allocatable.md The node will report a set of allocatable compute resources defined as follows: `[Allocatable] = [Node Capacity] - [Kube-Reserved] - [System-Reserved]` ### Node capacity The `kubelet` will continue to interface with `cAdvisor` to determine node capacity. ### System reserved The node may set aside a set of designated resources for non-Kubernetes components. The `kubelet` accepts the followings flags that support this feature: * `--system-reserved=` - A set of `ResourceName`=`ResourceQuantity` pairs that describe resources reserved for host daemons. * `--system-container=` - Optional resource-only container in which to place all non-kernel processes that are not already in a container. Empty for no container. Rolling back the flag requires a reboot. (Default: ""). The current meaning of `system-container` is inadequate on `systemd` environments. The `kubelet` should use the flag to know the location that has the processes that are associated with `system-reserved`, but it should not modify the cgroups of existing processes on the system during bootstrapping of the node. This is because `systemd` is the `cgroup manager` on the host and it has not delegated authority to the `kubelet` to change how it manages `units`. The following describes the type of things that can happen if this does not change: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1202859 As a result, the `kubelet` needs to distinguish placement of non-kernel processes based on the cgroup driver, and only do its current behavior when not on `systemd`. The flag should be modified as follows: * `--system-container=` - Name of resource-only container that holds all non-kernel processes whose resource consumption is accounted under system-reserved. The default value is cgroup driver specific. systemd defaults to system, cgroupfs defines no default. Rolling back the flag requires a reboot. The `kubelet` will error if the defined `--system-container` does not exist on `systemd` environments. It will verify that the appropriate `cpu` and `memory` controllers are enabled. ### Kubernetes reserved The node may set aside a set of resources for Kubernetes components: * `--kube-reserved=:` - A set of `ResourceName`=`ResourceQuantity` pairs that describe resources reserved for host daemons. The `kubelet` does not enforce `--kube-reserved` at this time, but the ability to distinguish the static reservation from observed usage is important for node accounting. This proposal asserts that `kubernetes.slice` is the default slice associated with the `kubelet` and `kube-proxy` service units defined in the project. Keeping it separate from `system.slice` allows for accounting to be distinguished separately. The `kubelet` will detect its `cgroup` to track `kube-reserved` observed usage on `systemd`. If the `kubelet` detects that its a child of the `system-container` based on the observed `cgroup` hierarchy, it will warn. If the `kubelet` is launched directly from a terminal, it's most likely destination will be in a `scope` that is a child of `user.slice` as follows: `/sys/fs/cgroup//user.slice/user-1000.slice/session-1.scope` In this context, the parent `scope` is what will be used to facilitate local developer debugging scenarios for tracking `kube-reserved` usage. The `kubelet` has the following flag: * `--resource-container="/kubelet":` Absolute name of the resource-only container to create and run the Kubelet in (Default: /kubelet). This flag will not be supported on `systemd` environments since the init system has already spawned the process and placed it in the corresponding container associated with its unit. ### Kubernetes container runtime reserved This proposal asserts that the reservation of compute resources for any associated container runtime daemons is tracked by the operator under the `system-reserved` or `kubernetes-reserved` values and any enforced limits are set by the operator specific to the container runtime. **Docker** If the `kubelet` is configured with the `container-runtime` set to `docker`, the `kubelet` will detect the `cgroup` associated with the `docker` daemon and use that to do local node accounting. If an operator wants to impose runtime limits on the `docker` daemon to control resource usage, the operator should set those explicitly in the `service` unit that launches `docker`. The `kubelet` will not set any limits itself at this time and will assume whatever budget was set aside for `docker` was included in either `--kube-reserved` or `--system-reserved` reservations. Many OS distributions package `docker` by default, and it will often belong to the `system.slice` hierarchy, and therefore operators will need to budget it for there by default unless they explicitly move it. **rkt** rkt has no client/server daemon, and therefore has no explicit requirements on container-runtime reservation. ### kubelet cgroup enforcement The `kubelet` does not enforce the `system-reserved` or `kube-reserved` values by default. The `kubelet` should support an additional flag to turn on enforcement: * `--system-reserved-enforce=false` - Optional flag that if true tells the `kubelet` to enforce the `system-reserved` constraints defined (if any) * `--kube-reserved-enforce=false` - Optional flag that if true tells the `kubelet` to enforce the `kube-reserved` constraints defined (if any) Usage of this flag requires that end-user containers are launched in a separate part of cgroup hierarchy via `cgroup-root`. If this flag is enabled, the `kubelet` will continually validate that the configured resource constraints are applied on the associated `cgroup`. ### kubelet cgroup-root behavior under systemd The `kubelet` supports a `cgroup-root` flag which is the optional root `cgroup` to use for pods. This flag should be treated as a pass-through to the underlying configured container runtime. If `--cgroup-enforce=true`, this flag warrants special consideration by the operator depending on how the node was configured. For example, if the container runtime is `docker` and its using the `systemd` cgroup driver, then `docker` will take the daemon wide default and launch containers in the same slice associated with the `docker.service`. By default, this would mean `system.slice` which could cause end-user pods to be launched in the same part of the cgroup hierarchy as system daemons. In those environments, it is recommended that `cgroup-root` is configured to be a subtree of `machine.slice`. ### Proposed cgroup hierarchy ``` $ROOT | +- system.slice | | | +- sshd.service | +- docker.service (optional) | +- ... | +- kubernetes.slice | | | +- kubelet.service | +- docker.service (optional) | +- machine.slice (container runtime specific) | | | +- docker-.scope | +- user.slice | +- ... ``` * `system.slice` corresponds to `--system-reserved`, and contains any services the operator brought to the node as normal configuration. * `kubernetes.slice` corresponds to the `--kube-reserved`, and contains kube specific daemons. * `machine.slice` should parent all end-user containers on the system and serve as the root of the end-user cluster workloads run on the system. * `user.slice` is not explicitly tracked by the `kubelet`, but it is possible that `ssh` sessions to the node where the user launches actions directly. Any resource accounting reserved for those actions should be part of `system-reserved`. The container runtime daemon, `docker` in this outline, must be accounted for in either `system.slice` or `kubernetes.slice`. In the future, the depth of the container hierarchy is not recommended to be rooted more than 2 layers below the root as it historically has caused issues with node performance in other `cgroup` aware systems (https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=850718). It is anticipated that the `kubelet` will parent containers based on quality of service in the future. In that environment, those changes will be relative to the configured `cgroup-root`. ### Linux Kernel Parameters The `kubelet` will set the following: * `sysctl -w vm.overcommit_memory=1` * `sysctl -w vm.panic_on_oom=0` * `sysctl -w kernel/panic=10` * `sysctl -w kernel/panic_on_oops=1` ### OOM Score Adjustment The `kubelet` at bootstrapping will set the `oom_score_adj` value for Kubernetes daemons, and any dependent container-runtime daemons. If `container-runtime` is set to `docker`, then set its `oom_score_adj=-900` ## Implementation concerns ### kubelet block-level architecture ``` +----------+ +----------+ +----------+ | | | | | Pod | | Node <-------+ Container<----+ Lifecycle| | Manager | | Manager | | Manager | | +-------> | | | +---+------+ +-----+----+ +----------+ | | | | | +-----------------+ | | | | | | +---v--v--+ +-----v----+ | cgroups | | container| | library | | runtimes | +---+-----+ +-----+----+ | | | | +---------+----------+ | | +-----------v-----------+ | Linux Kernel | +-----------------------+ ``` The `kubelet` should move to an architecture that resembles the above diagram: * The `kubelet` should not interface directly with the `cgroup` file-system, but instead should use a common `cgroups library` that has the proper abstraction in place to work with either `cgroupfs` or `systemd`. The `kubelet` should just use `libcontainer` abstractions to facilitate this requirement. The `libcontainer` abstractions as currently defined only support an `Apply(pid)` pattern, and we need to separate that abstraction to allow cgroup to be created and then later joined. * The existing `ContainerManager` should separate node bootstrapping into a separate `NodeManager` that is dependent on the configured `cgroup-driver`. * The `kubelet` flags for cgroup paths will convert internally as part of cgroup library, i.e. `/foo/bar` will just convert to `foo-bar.slice` ### kubelet accounting for end-user pods This proposal re-enforces that it is inappropriate at this time to depend on `--cgroup-root` as the primary mechanism to distinguish and account for end-user pod compute resource usage. Instead, the `kubelet` can and should sum the usage of each running `pod` on the node to account for end-user pod usage separate from system-reserved and kubernetes-reserved accounting via `cAdvisor`. ## Known issues ### Docker runtime support for --cgroup-parent Docker versions <= 1.0.9 did not have proper support for `-cgroup-parent` flag on `systemd`. This was fixed in this PR (https://github.com/docker/docker/pull/18612). As result, it's expected that containers launched by the `docker` daemon may continue to go in the default `system.slice` and appear to be counted under system-reserved node usage accounting. If operators run with later versions of `docker`, they can avoid this issue via the use of `cgroup-root` flag on the `kubelet`, but this proposal makes no requirement on operators to do that at this time, and this can be revisited if/when the project adopts docker 1.10. Some OS distributions will fix this bug in versions of docker <= 1.0.9, so operators should be aware of how their version of `docker` was packaged when using this feature. [![Analytics](https://kubernetes-site.appspot.com/UA-36037335-10/GitHub/docs/proposals/kubelet-systemd.md?pixel)]()