Assign CPU Resources to Containers and Pods
This page shows how to assign a CPU request and a CPU limit to a container. Containers cannot use more CPU than the configured limit. Provided the system has CPU time free, a container is guaranteed to be allocated as much CPU as it requests.
- Before you begin
- Create a namespace
- Specify a CPU request and a CPU limit
- CPU units
- Specify a CPU request that is too big for your Nodes
- If you do not specify a CPU limit
- Motivation for CPU requests and limits
- Clean up
- What's next
Before you begin
You need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl command-line tool must be configured to communicate with your cluster. If you do not already have a cluster, you can create one by using Minikube, or you can use one of these Kubernetes playgrounds:
To check the version, enter kubectl version
.
Each node in your cluster must have at least 1 CPU.
A few of the steps on this page require you to run the metrics-server service in your cluster. If you have the metrics-server running, you can skip those steps.
If you are running MinikubeA tool for running Kubernetes locally. , run the following command to enable metrics-server:
minikube addons enable metrics-server
To see whether metrics-server (or another provider of the resource metrics
API, metrics.k8s.io
) is running, type the following command:
kubectl get apiservices
If the resource metrics API is available, the output will include a
reference to metrics.k8s.io
.
NAME
v1beta1.metrics.k8s.io
Create a namespace
Create a NamespaceAn abstraction used by Kubernetes to support multiple virtual clusters on the same physical cluster. so that the resources you create in this exercise are isolated from the rest of your cluster.
kubectl create namespace cpu-example
Specify a CPU request and a CPU limit
To specify a CPU request for a container, include the resources:requests
field
in the Container resource manifest. To specify a CPU limit, include resources:limits
.
In this exercise, you create a Pod that has one container. The container has a request of 0.5 CPU and a limit of 1 CPU. Here is the configuration file for the Pod:
pods/resource/cpu-request-limit.yaml
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The args
section of the configuration file provides arguments for the container when it starts.
The -cpus "2"
argument tells the Container to attempt to use 2 CPUs.
Create the Pod:
kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/pods/resource/cpu-request-limit.yaml --namespace=cpu-example
Verify that the Pod is running:
kubectl get pod cpu-demo --namespace=cpu-example
View detailed information about the Pod:
kubectl get pod cpu-demo --output=yaml --namespace=cpu-example
The output shows that the one container in the Pod has a CPU request of 500 milliCPU and a CPU limit of 1 CPU.
resources:
limits:
cpu: "1"
requests:
cpu: 500m
Use kubectl top
to fetch the metrics for the pod:
kubectl top pod cpu-demo --namespace=cpu-example
This example output shows that the Pod is using 974 milliCPU, which is just a bit less than the limit of 1 CPU specified in the Pod configuration.
NAME CPU(cores) MEMORY(bytes)
cpu-demo 974m <something>
Recall that by setting -cpu "2"
, you configured the Container to attempt to use 2 CPUs, but the Container is only being allowed to use about 1 CPU. The container’s CPU use is being throttled, because the container is attempting to use more CPU resources than its limit.
Note: Another possible explanation for the CPU use being below 1.0 is that the Node might not have enough CPU resources available. Recall that the prerequisites for this exercise require each of your Nodes to have at least 1 CPU. If your Container runs on a Node that has only 1 CPU, the Container cannot use more than 1 CPU regardless of the CPU limit specified for the Container.
CPU units
The CPU resource is measured in CPU units. One CPU, in Kubernetes, is equivalent to:
- 1 AWS vCPU
- 1 GCP Core
- 1 Azure vCore
- 1 Hyperthread on a bare-metal Intel processor with Hyperthreading
Fractional values are allowed. A Container that requests 0.5 CPU is guaranteed half as much CPU as a Container that requests 1 CPU. You can use the suffix m to mean milli. For example 100m CPU, 100 milliCPU, and 0.1 CPU are all the same. Precision finer than 1m is not allowed.
CPU is always requested as an absolute quantity, never as a relative quantity; 0.1 is the same amount of CPU on a single-core, dual-core, or 48-core machine.
Delete your Pod:
kubectl delete pod cpu-demo --namespace=cpu-example
Specify a CPU request that is too big for your Nodes
CPU requests and limits are associated with Containers, but it is useful to think of a Pod as having a CPU request and limit. The CPU request for a Pod is the sum of the CPU requests for all the Containers in the Pod. Likewise, the CPU limit for a Pod is the sum of the CPU limits for all the Containers in the Pod.
Pod scheduling is based on requests. A Pod is scheduled to run on a Node only if the Node has enough CPU resources available to satisfy the Pod CPU request.
In this exercise, you create a Pod that has a CPU request so big that it exceeds the capacity of any Node in your cluster. Here is the configuration file for a Pod that has one Container. The Container requests 100 CPU, which is likely to exceed the capacity of any Node in your cluster.
pods/resource/cpu-request-limit-2.yaml
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Create the Pod:
kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/pods/resource/cpu-request-limit-2.yaml --namespace=cpu-example
View the Pod status:
kubectl get pod cpu-demo-2 --namespace=cpu-example
The output shows that the Pod status is Pending. That is, the Pod has not been scheduled to run on any Node, and it will remain in the Pending state indefinitely:
kubectl get pod cpu-demo-2 --namespace=cpu-example
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
cpu-demo-2 0/1 Pending 0 7m
View detailed information about the Pod, including events:
kubectl describe pod cpu-demo-2 --namespace=cpu-example
The output shows that the Container cannot be scheduled because of insufficient CPU resources on the Nodes:
Events:
Reason Message
------ -------
FailedScheduling No nodes are available that match all of the following predicates:: Insufficient cpu (3).
Delete your Pod:
kubectl delete pod cpu-demo-2 --namespace=cpu-example
If you do not specify a CPU limit
If you do not specify a CPU limit for a Container, then one of these situations applies:
The Container has no upper bound on the CPU resources it can use. The Container could use all of the CPU resources available on the Node where it is running.
The Container is running in a namespace that has a default CPU limit, and the Container is automatically assigned the default limit. Cluster administrators can use a LimitRange to specify a default value for the CPU limit.
Motivation for CPU requests and limits
By configuring the CPU requests and limits of the Containers that run in your cluster, you can make efficient use of the CPU resources available on your cluster Nodes. By keeping a Pod CPU request low, you give the Pod a good chance of being scheduled. By having a CPU limit that is greater than the CPU request, you accomplish two things:
- The Pod can have bursts of activity where it makes use of CPU resources that happen to be available.
- The amount of CPU resources a Pod can use during a burst is limited to some reasonable amount.
Clean up
Delete your namespace:
kubectl delete namespace cpu-example
What's next
For app developers
For cluster administrators
Configure Default Memory Requests and Limits for a Namespace
Configure Minimum and Maximum Memory Constraints for a Namespace
Configure Minimum and Maximum CPU Constraints for a Namespace
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