$ oc describe pod router-default-66d5cf9464-7pwkc Name: router-default-66d5cf9464-7pwkc Namespace: openshift-ingress .... Controlled By: ReplicaSet/router-default-66d5cf9464
A node selector specifies a map of key-value pairs. The rules are defined using custom labels on nodes and selectors specified in pods. You can use specific node selectors to place specific pods on specific nodes, project node selectors to place new pods in a project on specific nodes in that project, or default cluster-wide node selectors to place new pods on specific nodes anywhere in the cluster.
For the pod to be eligible to run on a node, the pod must have the same key-value node selector as the label on the node.
If you are using node selectors and node affinity in the same pod configuration, the following rules control pod placement onto nodes:
|
You can use node selector labels on pods to control where the pod is scheduled.
With node selectors, OpenShift Container Platform schedules the pods on nodes that contain matching labels.
To add node selectors to an existing pod, add a node selector to the controlling object for that pod, such as a ReplicaSet
object, DaemonSet
object, StatefulSet
object, Deployment
object, or DeploymentConfig
object.
Any existing pods under that controlling object are recreated on a node with a matching label. If you are creating a new pod, you can add the node selector directly to the Pod
spec.
You can add labels to a node or machine config, but the labels will not persist if the node or machine goes down. Adding the label to the machine set ensures that new nodes or machines will have the label.
You cannot add a node selector directly to an existing scheduled pod. |
To add a node selector to existing pods, determine the controlling object for that pod.
For example, the router-default-66d5cf9464-m2g75
pod is controlled by the router-default-66d5cf9464
replica set:
$ oc describe pod router-default-66d5cf9464-7pwkc Name: router-default-66d5cf9464-7pwkc Namespace: openshift-ingress .... Controlled By: ReplicaSet/router-default-66d5cf9464
The web console lists the controlling object under ownerReferences
in the pod YAML:
ownerReferences: - apiVersion: apps/v1 kind: ReplicaSet name: router-default-66d5cf9464 uid: d81dd094-da26-11e9-a48a-128e7edf0312 controller: true blockOwnerDeletion: true
Add labels to a node by using a machine set or editing the node directly:
Use a MachineSet
object to add labels to nodes managed by the machine set when a node is created:
Run the following command to add a node selector to a MachineSet
object:
$ oc patch MachineSet <name> --type='json' -p='[{"op":"add","path":"/spec/template/spec/metadata/labels", "value":{"<key>"="<value>","<key>"="<value>"}}]' -n openshift-machine-api
For example:
$ oc patch MachineSet abc612-msrtw-worker-us-east-1c --type='json' -p='[{"op":"add","path":"/spec/template/spec/metadata/labels", "value":{"type":"user-node","region":"east"}}]' -n openshift-machine-api
Verify that the label is added to the MachineSet
object by using the oc edit
command:
For example:
$ oc edit MachineSet abc612-msrtw-worker-us-east-1c -n openshift-machine-api
MachineSet
objectapiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1beta1
kind: MachineSet
....
spec:
...
template:
metadata:
...
spec:
metadata:
labels:
region: east
type: user-node
....
Add labels directly to a node:
Edit the Node
object for the node:
$ oc label nodes <name> <key>=<value>
For example, to label a node:
$ oc label nodes ip-10-0-142-25.ec2.internal type=user-node region=east
Verify that the label is added to the node:
$ oc get nodes -l type=user-node,region=east
NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION
ip-10-0-142-25.ec2.internal Ready worker 17m v1.18.3+002a51f
Add the matching node selector a pod:
To add a node selector to existing and future pods, add a node selector to the controlling object for the pods:
ReplicaSet
objectkind: ReplicaSet
....
spec:
....
template:
metadata:
creationTimestamp: null
labels:
ingresscontroller.operator.openshift.io/deployment-ingresscontroller: default
pod-template-hash: 66d5cf9464
spec:
nodeSelector:
beta.kubernetes.io/os: linux
node-role.kubernetes.io/worker: ''
type: user-node (1)
1 | Add the node selector. |
To add a node selector to a specific pod, add the selector to the Pod
object directly:
Pod
objectapiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
...
spec:
nodeSelector:
<key>: <value>
...
For example:
Pod
object with a node selectorapiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
....
spec:
nodeSelector:
region: east
type: user-node
You can use default cluster-wide node selectors on pods together with labels on nodes to constrain all pods created in a cluster to specific nodes.
With cluster-wide node selectors, when you create a pod in that cluster, OpenShift Container Platform adds the default node selectors to the pod and schedules the pod on nodes with matching labels.
You configure cluster-wide node selectors by creating a Scheduler Operator custom resource (CR). You add labels to a node by editing a Node
object, a MachineSet
object, or a MachineConfig
object. Adding the label to the machine set ensures that if the node or machine goes down, new nodes have the label. Labels added to a node or machine config do not persist if the node or machine goes down.
For example, the Scheduler configures the cluster-wide region=east
node selector:
apiVersion: config.openshift.io/v1
kind: Scheduler
metadata:
name: cluster
...
spec:
defaultNodeSelector: type=user-node,region=east (1)
...
A node in that cluster has the type=user-node,region=east
labels:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Node
metadata:
name: ci-ln-qg1il3k-f76d1-hlmhl-worker-b-df2s4
...
labels:
region: east
type: user-node
...
If you create a pod in that cluster, the pod is created with the cluster-wide node selector and is scheduled on the labeled node:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
...
spec:
nodeSelector:
region: east
...
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE IP NODE NOMINATED NODE READINESS GATES
pod-s1 1/1 Running 0 20s 10.131.2.6 ci-ln-qg1il3k-f76d1-hlmhl-worker-b-df2s4 <none> <none>
If the project where you create the pod has a project node selector, that selector takes preference over a cluster-wide node selector. Your pod is not created or scheduled if the node selector in the |
A pod is not created or scheduled if the Pod
object contains a node selector that is not the cluster-wide node selector or not a project node selector. For example, if you deploy the following pod into the example project, it will not be created:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
....
spec:
nodeSelector:
region: west
When you create a pod from that spec, you receive an error similar to the following message:
Error from server (Forbidden): error when creating "pod.yaml": pods "pod-4" is forbidden: pod node label selector conflicts with its project node label selector
You can add additional key/value pairs to a pod. But you cannot add a different value for a default project key. |
To add a default cluster-wide node selector:
Edit the Scheduler Operator custom resource to add the cluster node selectors:
$ oc edit scheduler cluster
apiVersion: config.openshift.io/v1 kind: Scheduler metadata: name: cluster ... spec: defaultNodeSelector: type=user-node,region=east (1) mastersSchedulable: false policy: name: ""
1 | Add a node selector with the appropriate <key>:<value> pairs. |
After making this change, wait for the pods in the openshift-kube-apiserver
project to redeploy. This can take several minutes. The default cluster node selector does not take effect until the pods redeploy.
Add labels to a node by using a machine set or editing the node directly:
Use a MachineSet
object to add labels to nodes managed by the machine set when a node is created:
Run the following command to add a node selector to a MachineSet
object:
$ oc patch MachineSet <name> --type='json' -p='[{"op":"add","path":"/spec/template/spec/metadata/labels", "value":{"<key>"="<value>","<key>"="<value>"}}]' -n openshift-machine-api (1)
1 | Add a <key>/<value> pair for each node selector. |
For example:
$ oc patch MachineSet ci-ln-l8nry52-f76d1-hl7m7-worker-c --type='json' -p='[{"op":"add","path":"/spec/template/spec/metadata/labels", "value":{"type":"user-node","region":"east"}}]' -n openshift-machine-api
Verify that the label is added to the MachineSet
object by using the oc edit
command:
For example:
$ oc edit MachineSet ci-ln-l8nry52-f76d1-hl7m7-worker-c -n openshift-machine-api
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1beta1
kind: MachineSet
metadata:
...
spec:
...
template:
metadata:
...
spec:
metadata:
labels:
region: east
type: user-node
Redeploy the nodes associated with that machine set by scaling down to 0
and scaling up the nodes:
For example:
$ oc scale --replicas=0 MachineSet ci-ln-l8nry52-f76d1-hl7m7-worker-c -n openshift-machine-api
$ oc scale --replicas=1 MachineSet ci-ln-l8nry52-f76d1-hl7m7-worker-c -n openshift-machine-api
When the node is ready and available, verify that the label is added to the node by using the oc get
command:
$ oc get nodes -l <key>=<value>
For example:
$ oc get nodes -l type=user-node
NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION
ci-ln-l8nry52-f76d1-hl7m7-worker-c-vmqzp Ready worker 61s v1.18.3+002a51f
Add labels directly to a node:
Edit the Node
object for the node:
$ oc label nodes <name> <key>=<value>
For example, to label a node:
$ oc label nodes ci-ln-l8nry52-f76d1-hl7m7-worker-b-tgq49 type=user-node region=east
Verify that the label is added to the node using the oc get
command:
$ oc get nodes -l <key>=<value>,<key>=<value>
For example:
$ oc get nodes -l type=user-node,region=east
NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION
ci-ln-l8nry52-f76d1-hl7m7-worker-b-tgq49 Ready worker 17m v1.18.3+002a51f
You can use node selectors in a project together with labels on nodes to constrain all pods created in that project to the labeled nodes.
When you create a pod in this project, OpenShift Container Platform adds the node selectors to the pods in the project and schedules the pods on a node with matching labels in the project. If there is a cluster-wide default node selector, a project node selector takes preference.
You add labels to a project by editing the Namespace
object to add the openshift.io/node-selector
parameter, which contains the label definitions. You add labels to a node by editing the Node
object, a MachineSet
object, or a MachineConfig
object. Adding the label to the machine set ensures that if the node or machine goes down, new nodes have the label. Labels added to a node or machine config do not persist if the node or machine goes down.
You can add additional key/value pairs to a pod. But you cannot add a different value for a default project key. |
For example, the following project has the region=east
node selector:
Namespace
objectapiVersion: v1
kind: Namespace
metadata:
annotations:
openshift.io/node-selector: "region=east"
...
The following node has the type=user-node,region=east
labels:
Node
objectapiVersion: v1
kind: Node
metadata:
name: ci-ln-qg1il3k-f76d1-hlmhl-worker-b-df2s4
...
labels:
region: east
type: user-node
...
If you create a pod in this example project, the pod is created with the project node selector and is scheduled on the labeled node:
Pod
objectapiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
...
spec:
nodeSelector:
region: east
type: user-node
...
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE IP NODE NOMINATED NODE READINESS GATES
pod-s1 1/1 Running 0 20s 10.131.2.6 ci-ln-qg1il3k-f76d1-hlmhl-worker-b-df2s4 <none> <none>
A pod in the project is not created or scheduled if the pod contains different node selectors. For example, if you deploy the following pod into the example project, it will not be created:
Pod
object with an invalid node selectorapiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
...
spec:
nodeSelector:
region: west
....
When you create the pod, you receive an error similar to the following message:
Error from server (Forbidden): error when creating "pod.yaml": pods "pod-4" is forbidden: pod node label selector conflicts with its project node label selector
To add a default project node selector:
Create a project or edit an existing project to add the openshift.io/node-selector
parameter:
$ oc edit project <name>
apiVersion: v1
kind: Project
metadata:
annotations:
openshift.io/node-selector: "type=user-node,region=east" (1)
openshift.io/sa.scc.mcs: s0:c17,c14
openshift.io/sa.scc.supplemental-groups: 1000300000/10000
openshift.io/sa.scc.uid-range: 1000300000/10000
creationTimestamp: 2019-06-10T14:39:45Z
labels:
openshift.io/run-level: "0"
name: demo
resourceVersion: "401885"
selfLink: /api/v1/namespaces/openshift-kube-apiserver
uid: 96ecc54b-8b8d-11e9-9f54-0a9ae641edd0
spec:
finalizers:
- kubernetes
status:
phase: Active
1 | Add the openshift.io/node-selector with the appropriate <key>:<value> pairs. |
Add labels to a node by using a machine set or editing the node directly:
Use a MachineSet
object to add labels to nodes managed by the machine set when a node is created:
Run the following command to add a node selector to a MachineSet
object:
$ oc patch MachineSet <name> --type='json' -p='[{"op":"add","path":"/spec/template/spec/metadata/labels", "value":{"<key>"="<value>","<key>"="<value>"}}]' -n openshift-machine-api
For example:
$ oc patch MachineSet ci-ln-l8nry52-f76d1-hl7m7-worker-c --type='json' -p='[{"op":"add","path":"/spec/template/spec/metadata/labels", "value":{"type":"user-node","region":"east"}}]' -n openshift-machine-api
Verify that the label is added to the MachineSet
object by using the oc edit
command:
For example:
$ oc edit MachineSet ci-ln-l8nry52-f76d1-hl7m7-worker-c -n openshift-machine-api
apiVersion: machine.openshift.io/v1beta1
kind: MachineSet
metadata:
...
spec:
...
template:
metadata:
...
spec:
metadata:
labels:
region: east
type: user-node
Redeploy the nodes associated with that machine set:
For example:
$ oc scale --replicas=0 MachineSet ci-ln-l8nry52-f76d1-hl7m7-worker-c -n openshift-machine-api
$ oc scale --replicas=1 MachineSet ci-ln-l8nry52-f76d1-hl7m7-worker-c -n openshift-machine-api
Verify that the label is added to the Node
object, when the node is ready and available, using the oc get
command:
$ oc label MachineSet abc612-msrtw-worker-us-east-1c type=user-node region=east
For example:
$ oc get nodes -l type=user-node
NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION
ci-ln-l8nry52-f76d1-hl7m7-worker-c-vmqzp Ready worker 61s v1.18.3+002a51f
Add labels directly to a node:
Edit the Node
object to add labels:
$ oc label <resource> <name> <key>=<value>
For example, to label a node:
$ oc label nodes ci-ln-l8nry52-f76d1-hl7m7-worker-c-tgq49 type=user-node region=east
Verify that the label is added to the Node
object using the oc get
command:
$ oc get nodes -l <key>=<value>
For example:
$ oc get nodes -l type=user-node,region=east
NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION
ci-ln-l8nry52-f76d1-hl7m7-worker-b-tgq49 Ready worker 17m v1.18.3+002a51f