If a CRI error occurs during the terminating phase after a pod is
force deleted (API or static) then the housekeeping loop will not
deliver updates to the pod worker which prevents the pod's state
machine from progressing. The pod will remain in the terminating
phase but no further attempts to terminate or cleanup will occur
until the kubelet is restarted.
The pod worker now maintains a store of the pods state that it is
attempting to reconcile and uses that to resync unknown pods when
SyncKnownPods() is invoked, so that failures in sync methods for
unknown pods no longer hang forever.
The pod worker's store tracks desired updates and the last update
applied on podSyncStatuses. Each goroutine now synchronizes to
acquire the next work item, context, and whether the pod can start.
This synchronization moves the pending update to the stored last
update, which will ensure third parties accessing pod worker state
don't see updates before the pod worker begins synchronizing them.
As a consequence, the update channel becomes a simple notifier
(struct{}) so that SyncKnownPods can coordinate with the pod worker
to create a synthetic pending update for unknown pods (i.e. no one
besides the pod worker has data about those pods). Otherwise the
pending update info would be hidden inside the channel.
In order to properly track pending updates, we have to be very
careful not to mix RunningPods (which are calculated from the
container runtime and are missing all spec info) and config-
sourced pods. Update the pod worker to avoid using ToAPIPod()
and instead require the pod worker to directly use
update.Options.Pod or update.Options.RunningPod for the
correct methods. Add a new SyncTerminatingRuntimePod to prevent
accidental invocations of runtime only pod data.
Finally, fix SyncKnownPods to replay the last valid update for
undesired pods which drives the pod state machine towards
termination, and alter HandlePodCleanups to:
- terminate runtime pods that aren't known to the pod worker
- launch admitted pods that aren't known to the pod worker
Any started pods receive a replay until they reach the finished
state, and then are removed from the pod worker. When a desired
pod is detected as not being in the worker, the usual cause is
that the pod was deleted and recreated with the same UID (almost
always a static pod since API UID reuse is statistically
unlikely). This simplifies the previous restartable pod support.
We are careful to filter for active pods (those not already
terminal or those which have been previously rejected by
admission). We also force a refresh of the runtime cache to
ensure we don't see an older version of the state.
Future changes will allow other components that need to view the
pod worker's actual state (not the desired state the podManager
represents) to retrieve that info from the pod worker.
Several bugs in pod lifecycle have been undetectable at runtime
because the kubelet does not clearly describe the number of pods
in use. To better report, add the following metrics:
kubelet_desired_pods: Pods the pod manager sees
kubelet_active_pods: "Admitted" pods that gate new pods
kubelet_mirror_pods: Mirror pods the kubelet is tracking
kubelet_working_pods: Breakdown of pods from the last sync in
each phase, orphaned state, and static or not
kubelet_restarted_pods_total: A counter for pods that saw a
CREATE before the previous pod with the same UID was finished
kubelet_orphaned_runtime_pods_total: A counter for pods detected
at runtime that were not known to the kubelet. Will be
populated at Kubelet startup and should never be incremented
after.
Add a metric check to our e2e tests that verifies the values are
captured correctly during a serial test, and then verify them in
detail in unit tests.
Adds 23 series to the kubelet /metrics endpoint.
1. Core Kubelet changes to implement In-place Pod Vertical Scaling.
2. E2E tests for In-place Pod Vertical Scaling.
3. Refactor kubelet code and add missing tests (Derek's kubelet review)
4. Add a new hash over container fields without Resources field to allow feature gate toggling without restarting containers not using the feature.
5. Fix corner-case where resize A->B->A gets ignored
6. Add cgroup v2 support to pod resize E2E test.
KEP: /enhancements/keps/sig-node/1287-in-place-update-pod-resources
Co-authored-by: Chen Wang <Chen.Wang1@ibm.com>
* Add FeatureGate PodHostIPs
* Add HostIPs field and update PodIPs field
* Types conversion
* Add dropDisabledStatusFields
* Add HostIPs for kubelet
* Add fuzzer for PodStatus
* Add status.hostIPs in ConvertDownwardAPIFieldLabel
* Add status.hostIPs in validEnvDownwardAPIFieldPathExpressions
* Downward API support for status.hostIPs
* Add DownwardAPI validation for status.hostIPs
* Add e2e to check that hostIPs works
* Add e2e to check that Downward API works
* Regenerate
host-network pods IPs are obtained from the reported kubelet nodeIPs.
Historically, host-network podIPs are immutable once set, but when
we've added dual-stack support, we didn't consider that the secondary
IP address may not be present at the same time that the primary nodeIP.
If a secondary IP address is added to a node after the host-network pods
IPs are set, we can add the secondary host-network pod IP address
maintaining the current behavior of not updating the current podIPs on
host-network pods.
The feature gate gets locked to "true", with the goal to remove it in two
releases.
All code now can assume that the feature is enabled. Tests for "feature
disabled" are no longer needed and get removed.
Some code wasn't using the new helper functions yet. That gets changed while
touching those lines.
When adding the ephemeral volume feature, the special case for
PersistentVolumeClaim volume sources in kubelet's host path and node
limits checks was overlooked. An ephemeral volume source is another
way of referencing a claim and has to be treated the same way.
Remove the VolumeSubpath feature gate.
Feature gate convention has been updated since this was introduced to
indicate that they "are intended to be deprecated and removed after a
feature becomes GA or is dropped.".
The Kubelet always clears reason and message in generateAPIPodStatus
even when the phase is unchanged. It is reasonable that we preserve
the previous values when the phase does not change, and clear it
when the phase does change.
When a pod is evicted, this ensurse that the eviction message and
reason are propagated even in the face of subsequent updates. It also
preserves the message and reason if components beyond the Kubelet
choose to set that value.
To preserve the value we need to know the old phase, which requires
a change to convertStatusToAPIStatus so that both methods have
access to it.
runtimes may return an arbitrary number of Pod IPs, however, kubernetes
only takes into consideration the first one of each IP family.
The order of the IPs are the one defined by the Kubelet:
- default prefer IPv4
- if NodeIPs are defined, matching the first nodeIP family
PodIP is always the first IP of PodIPs.
The downward API must expose the same IPs and in the same order than
the pod.Status API object.
If Containerd is used on Windows, then we can also mount individual
files into containers (e.g.: /etc/hosts), which was not possible with Docker.
Checks if the container runtime is containerd, and if it is, then also
mount /etc/hosts file (to C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hosts).
add host file write for podIPs
update tests
remove import alias
update type check
update type check
remove import alias
update open api spec
add tests
update test
add tests
address review comments
update imports
remove todo and import alias
This patch moves the HostUtil functionality from the util/mount package
to the volume/util/hostutil package.
All `*NewHostUtil*` calls are changed to return concrete types instead
of interfaces.
All callers are changed to use the `*NewHostUtil*` methods instead of
directly instantiating the concrete types.
This patch refactors pkg/util/mount to be more usable outside of
Kubernetes. This is done by refactoring mount.Interface to only contain
methods that are not K8s specific. Methods that are not relevant to
basic mount activities but still have OS-specific implementations are
now found in a mount.HostUtils interface.