Device Plugins
Kubernetes v1.10
beta
- The version names contain beta (e.g. v2beta3).
- Code is well tested. Enabling the feature is considered safe. Enabled by default.
- Support for the overall feature will not be dropped, though details may change.
- The schema and/or semantics of objects may change in incompatible ways in a subsequent beta or stable release. When this happens, we will provide instructions for migrating to the next version. This may require deleting, editing, and re-creating API objects. The editing process may require some thought. This may require downtime for applications that rely on the feature.
- Recommended for only non-business-critical uses because of potential for incompatible changes in subsequent releases. If you have multiple clusters that can be upgraded independently, you may be able to relax this restriction.
- Please do try our beta features and give feedback on them! After they exit beta, it may not be practical for us to make more changes.
Kubernetes provides a device plugin framework that you can use to advertise system hardware resources to the KubeletAn agent that runs on each node in the cluster. It makes sure that containers are running in a pod. .
Instead of customizing the code for Kubernetes itself, vendors can implement a device plugin that you deploy either manually or as a DaemonSetEnsures a copy of a Pod is running across a set of nodes in a cluster. . The targeted devices include GPUs, high-performance NICs, FPGAs, InfiniBand adapters, and other similar computing resources that may require vendor specific initialization and setup.
- Device plugin registration
- Device plugin implementation
- Device plugin deployment
- API compatibility
- Monitoring Device Plugin Resources
- Device Plugin integration with the Topology Manager
- Device plugin examples
- What's next
Device plugin registration
The kubelet exports a Registration
gRPC service:
service Registration {
rpc Register(RegisterRequest) returns (Empty) {}
}
A device plugin can register itself with the kubelet through this gRPC service. During the registration, the device plugin needs to send:
- The name of its Unix socket.
- The Device Plugin API version against which it was built.
- The
ResourceName
it wants to advertise. HereResourceName
needs to follow the extended resource naming scheme asvendor-domain/resourcetype
. (For example, an NVIDIA GPU is advertised asnvidia.com/gpu
.)
Following a successful registration, the device plugin sends the kubelet the
list of devices it manages, and the kubelet is then in charge of advertising those
resources to the API server as part of the kubelet node status update.
For example, after a device plugin registers hardware-vendor.example/foo
with the kubelet
and reports two healthy devices on a node, the node status is updated
to advertise that the node has 2 “Foo” devices installed and available.
Then, users can request devices in a Container specification as they request other types of resources, with the following limitations:
- Extended resources are only supported as integer resources and cannot be overcommitted.
- Devices cannot be shared among Containers.
Suppose a Kubernetes cluster is running a device plugin that advertises resource hardware-vendor.example/foo
on certain nodes. Here is an example of a pod requesting this resource to run a demo workload:
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: demo-pod
spec:
containers:
- name: demo-container-1
image: k8s.gcr.io/pause:2.0
resources:
limits:
hardware-vendor.example/foo: 2
#
# This Pod needs 2 of the hardware-vendor.example/foo devices
# and can only schedule onto a Node that's able to satisfy
# that need.
#
# If the Node has more than 2 of those devices available, the
# remainder would be available for other Pods to use.
Device plugin implementation
The general workflow of a device plugin includes the following steps:
Initialization. During this phase, the device plugin performs vendor specific initialization and setup to make sure the devices are in a ready state.
The plugin starts a gRPC service, with a Unix socket under host path
/var/lib/kubelet/device-plugins/
, that implements the following interfaces:service DevicePlugin { // ListAndWatch returns a stream of List of Devices // Whenever a Device state change or a Device disappears, ListAndWatch // returns the new list rpc ListAndWatch(Empty) returns (stream ListAndWatchResponse) {} // Allocate is called during container creation so that the Device // Plugin can run device specific operations and instruct Kubelet // of the steps to make the Device available in the container rpc Allocate(AllocateRequest) returns (AllocateResponse) {} }
The plugin registers itself with the kubelet through the Unix socket at host path
/var/lib/kubelet/device-plugins/kubelet.sock
.After successfully registering itself, the device plugin runs in serving mode, during which it keeps monitoring device health and reports back to the kubelet upon any device state changes. It is also responsible for serving
Allocate
gRPC requests. DuringAllocate
, the device plugin may do device-specific preparation; for example, GPU cleanup or QRNG initialization. If the operations succeed, the device plugin returns anAllocateResponse
that contains container runtime configurations for accessing the allocated devices. The kubelet passes this information to the container runtime.
Handling kubelet restarts
A device plugin is expected to detect kubelet restarts and re-register itself with the new
kubelet instance. In the current implementation, a new kubelet instance deletes all the existing Unix sockets
under /var/lib/kubelet/device-plugins
when it starts. A device plugin can monitor the deletion
of its Unix socket and re-register itself upon such an event.
Device plugin deployment
You can deploy a device plugin as a DaemonSet, as a package for your node’s operating system, or manually.
The canonical directory /var/lib/kubelet/device-plugins
requires privileged access,
so a device plugin must run in a privileged security context.
If you’re deploying a device plugin as a DaemonSet, /var/lib/kubelet/device-plugins
must be mounted as a VolumeA directory containing data, accessible to the containers in a pod.
in the plugin’s
PodSpec.
If you choose the DaemonSet approach you can rely on Kubernetes to: place the device plugin’s Pod onto Nodes, to restart the daemon Pod after failure, and to help automate upgrades.
API compatibility
Kubernetes device plugin support is in beta. The API may change before stabilization, in incompatible ways. As a project, Kubernetes recommends that device plugin developers:
- Watch for changes in future releases.
- Support multiple versions of the device plugin API for backward/forward compatibility.
If you enable the DevicePlugins feature and run device plugins on nodes that need to be upgraded to a Kubernetes release with a newer device plugin API version, upgrade your device plugins to support both versions before upgrading these nodes. Taking that approach will ensure the continuous functioning of the device allocations during the upgrade.
Monitoring Device Plugin Resources
Kubernetes v1.15
beta
- The version names contain beta (e.g. v2beta3).
- Code is well tested. Enabling the feature is considered safe. Enabled by default.
- Support for the overall feature will not be dropped, though details may change.
- The schema and/or semantics of objects may change in incompatible ways in a subsequent beta or stable release. When this happens, we will provide instructions for migrating to the next version. This may require deleting, editing, and re-creating API objects. The editing process may require some thought. This may require downtime for applications that rely on the feature.
- Recommended for only non-business-critical uses because of potential for incompatible changes in subsequent releases. If you have multiple clusters that can be upgraded independently, you may be able to relax this restriction.
- Please do try our beta features and give feedback on them! After they exit beta, it may not be practical for us to make more changes.
In order to monitor resources provided by device plugins, monitoring agents need to be able to
discover the set of devices that are in-use on the node and obtain metadata to describe which
container the metric should be associated with. Prometheus metrics
exposed by device monitoring agents should follow the
Kubernetes Instrumentation Guidelines,
identifying containers using pod
, namespace
, and container
prometheus labels.
The kubelet provides a gRPC service to enable discovery of in-use devices, and to provide metadata for these devices:
// PodResourcesLister is a service provided by the kubelet that provides information about the
// node resources consumed by pods and containers on the node
service PodResourcesLister {
rpc List(ListPodResourcesRequest) returns (ListPodResourcesResponse) {}
}
The gRPC service is served over a unix socket at /var/lib/kubelet/pod-resources/kubelet.sock
.
Monitoring agents for device plugin resources can be deployed as a daemon, or as a DaemonSet.
The canonical directory /var/lib/kubelet/pod-resources
requires privileged access, so monitoring
agents must run in a privileged security context. If a device monitoring agent is running as a
DaemonSet, /var/lib/kubelet/pod-resources
must be mounted as a
VolumeA directory containing data, accessible to the containers in a pod.
in the plugin’s
PodSpec.
Support for the “PodResources service” requires KubeletPodResources
feature gate to be enabled. It is enabled by default starting with Kubernetes 1.15.
Device Plugin integration with the Topology Manager
Kubernetes v1.17
alpha
- The version names contain alpha (e.g. v1alpha1).
- Might be buggy. Enabling the feature may expose bugs. Disabled by default.
- Support for feature may be dropped at any time without notice.
- The API may change in incompatible ways in a later software release without notice.
- Recommended for use only in short-lived testing clusters, due to increased risk of bugs and lack of long-term support.
The Topology Manager is a Kubelet component that allows resources to be co-ordintated in a Topology aligned manner. In order to do this, the Device Plugin API was extended to include a TopologyInfo
struct.
message TopologyInfo {
repeated NUMANode nodes = 1;
}
message NUMANode {
int64 ID = 1;
}
Device Plugins that wish to leverage the Topology Manager can send back a populated TopologyInfo struct as part of the device registration, along with the device IDs and the health of the device. The device manager will then use this information to consult with the Topology Manager and make resource assignment decisions.
TopologyInfo
supports a nodes
field that is either nil
(the default) or a list of NUMA nodes. This lets the Device Plugin publish that can span NUMA nodes.
An example TopologyInfo
struct populated for a device by a Device Plugin:
pluginapi.Device{ID: "25102017", Health: pluginapi.Healthy, Topology:&pluginapi.TopologyInfo{Nodes: []*pluginapi.NUMANode{&pluginapi.NUMANode{ID: 0,},}}}
Device plugin examples
Here are some examples of device plugin implementations:
- The AMD GPU device plugin
- The Intel device plugins for Intel GPU, FPGA and QuickAssist devices
- The KubeVirt device plugins for hardware-assisted virtualization
- The NVIDIA GPU device plugin
- Requires nvidia-docker 2.0, which allows you to run GPU-enabled Docker containers.
- The NVIDIA GPU device plugin for Container-Optimized OS
- The RDMA device plugin
- The Solarflare device plugin
- The SR-IOV Network device plugin
- The Xilinx FPGA device plugins for Xilinx FPGA devices
What's next
- Learn about scheduling GPU resources using device plugins
- Learn about advertising extended resources on a node
- Read about using hardware acceleration for TLS ingress with Kubernetes
- Learn about the Topology Manager
Feedback
Was this page helpful?
Thanks for the feedback. If you have a specific, answerable question about how to use Kubernetes, ask it on Stack Overflow. Open an issue in the GitHub repo if you want to report a problem or suggest an improvement.