$ oc describe mcp/worker-rt
Learn about the Performance Profile Creator (PPC) and how you can use it to create a performance profile.
The Performance Profile Creator (PPC) is a command-line tool, delivered with the Node Tuning Operator, used to create the performance profile.
The tool consumes must-gather
data from the cluster and several user-supplied profile arguments. The PPC generates a performance profile that is appropriate for your hardware and topology.
The tool is run by one of the following methods:
Invoking podman
Calling a wrapper script
The Performance Profile Creator (PPC) tool requires must-gather
data. As a cluster administrator, run the must-gather
command to capture information about your cluster.
In earlier versions of OKD, the Performance Addon Operator provided automatic, low latency performance tuning for applications. In OKD 4.11 and later, this functionality is part of the Node Tuning Operator. However, you must still use the |
Access to the cluster as a user with the cluster-admin
role.
Access to the Performance Addon Operator must gather
image.
The OpenShift CLI (oc
) installed.
Optional: Verify that a matching machine config pool exists with a label:
$ oc describe mcp/worker-rt
Name: worker-rt
Namespace:
Labels: machineconfiguration.openshift.io/role=worker-rt
If a matching label does not exist add a label for a machine config pool (MCP) that matches with the MCP name:
$ oc label mcp <mcp_name> <mcp_name>=""
Navigate to the directory where you want to store the must-gather
data.
Run must-gather
on your cluster:
$ oc adm must-gather --image=<PAO_must_gather_image> --dest-dir=<dir>
The |
$ oc adm must-gather --image=registry.redhat.io/openshift4/performance-addon-operator-must-gather-rhel8:v4.11 --dest-dir=<path_to_must-gather>/must-gather
Create a compressed file from the must-gather
directory:
$ tar cvaf must-gather.tar.gz must-gather/
As a cluster administrator, you can run podman
and the Performance Profile Creator to create a performance profile.
Access to the cluster as a user with the cluster-admin
role.
A cluster installed on bare-metal hardware.
A node with podman
and OpenShift CLI (oc
) installed.
Access to the Node Tuning Operator image.
Check the machine config pool:
$ oc get mcp
NAME CONFIG UPDATED UPDATING DEGRADED MACHINECOUNT READYMACHINECOUNT UPDATEDMACHINECOUNT DEGRADEDMACHINECOUNT AGE
master rendered-master-acd1358917e9f98cbdb599aea622d78b True False False 3 3 3 0 22h
worker-cnf rendered-worker-cnf-1d871ac76e1951d32b2fe92369879826 False True False 2 1 1 0 22h
Use Podman to authenticate to registry.redhat.io
:
$ podman login registry.redhat.io
username: <username>
Password: <password>
Optional: Display help for the PPC tool:
$ podman run --rm --entrypoint performance-profile-creator registry.redhat.io/openshift4/ose-cluster-node-tuning-operator:v4.11 -h
A tool that automates creation of Performance Profiles
Usage:
performance-profile-creator [flags]
Flags:
--disable-ht Disable Hyperthreading
-h, --help help for performance-profile-creator
--info string Show cluster information; requires --must-gather-dir-path, ignore the other arguments. [Valid values: log, json] (default "log")
--mcp-name string MCP name corresponding to the target machines (required)
--must-gather-dir-path string Must gather directory path (default "must-gather")
--offlined-cpu-count int Number of offlined CPUs
--power-consumption-mode string The power consumption mode. [Valid values: default, low-latency, ultra-low-latency] (default "default")
--profile-name string Name of the performance profile to be created (default "performance")
--reserved-cpu-count int Number of reserved CPUs (required)
--rt-kernel Enable Real Time Kernel (required)
--split-reserved-cpus-across-numa Split the Reserved CPUs across NUMA nodes
--topology-manager-policy string Kubelet Topology Manager Policy of the performance profile to be created. [Valid values: single-numa-node, best-effort, restricted] (default "restricted")
--user-level-networking Run with user level Networking(DPDK) enabled
Run the Performance Profile Creator tool in discovery mode:
Discovery mode inspects your cluster using the output from
Using this information you can set appropriate values for some of the arguments supplied to the Performance Profile Creator tool. |
$ podman run --entrypoint performance-profile-creator -v <path_to_must-gather>/must-gather:/must-gather:z registry.redhat.io/openshift4/ose-cluster-node-tuning-operator:v4.11 --info log --must-gather-dir-path /must-gather
This command uses the performance profile creator as a new entry point to The
The |
Run podman
:
$ podman run --entrypoint performance-profile-creator -v /must-gather:/must-gather:z registry.redhat.io/openshift4/ose-cluster-node-tuning-operator:v4.11 --mcp-name=worker-cnf --reserved-cpu-count=4 --rt-kernel=true --split-reserved-cpus-across-numa=false --must-gather-dir-path /must-gather --power-consumption-mode=ultra-low-latency --offlined-cpu-count=6 > my-performance-profile.yaml
The Performance Profile Creator arguments are shown in the Performance Profile Creator arguments table. The following arguments are required:
The |
Review the created YAML file:
$ cat my-performance-profile.yaml
apiVersion: performance.openshift.io/v2
kind: PerformanceProfile
metadata:
name: performance
spec:
cpu:
isolated: 2-39,48-79
offlined: 42-47
reserved: 0-1,40-41
machineConfigPoolSelector:
machineconfiguration.openshift.io/role: worker-cnf
nodeSelector:
node-role.kubernetes.io/worker-cnf: ""
numa:
topologyPolicy: restricted
realTimeKernel:
enabled: true
workloadHints:
highPowerConsumption: true
realTime: true
Apply the generated profile:
$ oc apply -f my-performance-profile.yaml
podman
to create a performance profileThe following example illustrates how to run podman
to create a performance profile with 20 reserved CPUs that are to be split across the NUMA nodes.
Node hardware configuration:
80 CPUs
Hyperthreading enabled
Two NUMA nodes
Even numbered CPUs run on NUMA node 0 and odd numbered CPUs run on NUMA node 1
Run podman
to create the performance profile:
$ podman run --entrypoint performance-profile-creator -v /must-gather:/must-gather:z registry.redhat.io/openshift4/ose-cluster-node-tuning-operator:v4.11 --mcp-name=worker-cnf --reserved-cpu-count=20 --rt-kernel=true --split-reserved-cpus-across-numa=true --must-gather-dir-path /must-gather > my-performance-profile.yaml
The created profile is described in the following YAML:
apiVersion: performance.openshift.io/v2
kind: PerformanceProfile
metadata:
name: performance
spec:
cpu:
isolated: 10-39,50-79
reserved: 0-9,40-49
nodeSelector:
node-role.kubernetes.io/worker-cnf: ""
numa:
topologyPolicy: restricted
realTimeKernel:
enabled: true
In this case, 10 CPUs are reserved on NUMA node 0 and 10 are reserved on NUMA node 1. |
The performance profile wrapper script simplifies the running of the Performance Profile Creator (PPC) tool. It hides the complexities associated with running podman
and specifying the mapping directories and it enables the creation of the performance profile.
Access to the Node Tuning Operator image.
Access to the must-gather
tarball.
Create a file on your local machine named, for example, run-perf-profile-creator.sh
:
$ vi run-perf-profile-creator.sh
Paste the following code into the file:
#!/bin/bash
readonly CONTAINER_RUNTIME=${CONTAINER_RUNTIME:-podman}
readonly CURRENT_SCRIPT=$(basename "$0")
readonly CMD="${CONTAINER_RUNTIME} run --entrypoint performance-profile-creator"
readonly IMG_EXISTS_CMD="${CONTAINER_RUNTIME} image exists"
readonly IMG_PULL_CMD="${CONTAINER_RUNTIME} image pull"
readonly MUST_GATHER_VOL="/must-gather"
NTO_IMG="registry.redhat.io/openshift4/ose-cluster-node-tuning-operator:v4.11"
MG_TARBALL=""
DATA_DIR=""
usage() {
print "Wrapper usage:"
print " ${CURRENT_SCRIPT} [-h] [-p image][-t path] -- [performance-profile-creator flags]"
print ""
print "Options:"
print " -h help for ${CURRENT_SCRIPT}"
print " -p Node Tuning Operator image"
print " -t path to a must-gather tarball"
${IMG_EXISTS_CMD} "${NTO_IMG}" && ${CMD} "${NTO_IMG}" -h
}
function cleanup {
[ -d "${DATA_DIR}" ] && rm -rf "${DATA_DIR}"
}
trap cleanup EXIT
exit_error() {
print "error: $*"
usage
exit 1
}
print() {
echo "$*" >&2
}
check_requirements() {
${IMG_EXISTS_CMD} "${NTO_IMG}" || ${IMG_PULL_CMD} "${NTO_IMG}" || \
exit_error "Node Tuning Operator image not found"
[ -n "${MG_TARBALL}" ] || exit_error "Must-gather tarball file path is mandatory"
[ -f "${MG_TARBALL}" ] || exit_error "Must-gather tarball file not found"
DATA_DIR=$(mktemp -d -t "${CURRENT_SCRIPT}XXXX") || exit_error "Cannot create the data directory"
tar -zxf "${MG_TARBALL}" --directory "${DATA_DIR}" || exit_error "Cannot decompress the must-gather tarball"
chmod a+rx "${DATA_DIR}"
return 0
}
main() {
while getopts ':hp:t:' OPT; do
case "${OPT}" in
h)
usage
exit 0
;;
p)
NTO_IMG="${OPTARG}"
;;
t)
MG_TARBALL="${OPTARG}"
;;
?)
exit_error "invalid argument: ${OPTARG}"
;;
esac
done
shift $((OPTIND - 1))
check_requirements || exit 1
${CMD} -v "${DATA_DIR}:${MUST_GATHER_VOL}:z" "${NTO_IMG}" "$@" --must-gather-dir-path "${MUST_GATHER_VOL}"
echo "" 1>&2
}
main "$@"
Add execute permissions for everyone on this script:
$ chmod a+x run-perf-profile-creator.sh
Optional: Display the run-perf-profile-creator.sh
command usage:
$ ./run-perf-profile-creator.sh -h
Wrapper usage:
run-perf-profile-creator.sh [-h] [-p image][-t path] -- [performance-profile-creator flags]
Options:
-h help for run-perf-profile-creator.sh
-p Node Tuning Operator image (1)
-t path to a must-gather tarball (2)
A tool that automates creation of Performance Profiles
Usage:
performance-profile-creator [flags]
Flags:
--disable-ht Disable Hyperthreading
-h, --help help for performance-profile-creator
--info string Show cluster information; requires --must-gather-dir-path, ignore the other arguments. [Valid values: log, json] (default "log")
--mcp-name string MCP name corresponding to the target machines (required)
--must-gather-dir-path string Must gather directory path (default "must-gather")
--offlined-cpu-count int Number of offlined CPUs
--power-consumption-mode string The power consumption mode. [Valid values: default, low-latency, ultra-low-latency] (default "default")
--profile-name string Name of the performance profile to be created (default "performance")
--reserved-cpu-count int Number of reserved CPUs (required)
--rt-kernel Enable Real Time Kernel (required)
--split-reserved-cpus-across-numa Split the Reserved CPUs across NUMA nodes
--topology-manager-policy string Kubelet Topology Manager Policy of the performance profile to be created. [Valid values: single-numa-node, best-effort, restricted] (default "restricted")
--user-level-networking Run with user level Networking(DPDK) enabled
There two types of arguments:
|
1 | Optional: Specify the Node Tuning Operator image. If not set, the default upstream image is used: registry.redhat.io/openshift4/ose-cluster-node-tuning-operator:v4.11 . |
2 | -t is a required wrapper script argument and specifies the path to a must-gather tarball. |
Run the performance profile creator tool in discovery mode:
Discovery mode inspects your cluster using the output from
Using this information you can set appropriate values for some of the arguments supplied to the Performance Profile Creator tool. |
$ ./run-perf-profile-creator.sh -t /must-gather/must-gather.tar.gz -- --info=log
The |
Check the machine config pool:
$ oc get mcp
NAME CONFIG UPDATED UPDATING DEGRADED MACHINECOUNT READYMACHINECOUNT UPDATEDMACHINECOUNT DEGRADEDMACHINECOUNT AGE
master rendered-master-acd1358917e9f98cbdb599aea622d78b True False False 3 3 3 0 22h
worker-cnf rendered-worker-cnf-1d871ac76e1951d32b2fe92369879826 False True False 2 1 1 0 22h
Create a performance profile:
$ ./run-perf-profile-creator.sh -t /must-gather/must-gather.tar.gz -- --mcp-name=worker-cnf --reserved-cpu-count=2 --rt-kernel=true > my-performance-profile.yaml
The Performance Profile Creator arguments are shown in the Performance Profile Creator arguments table. The following arguments are required:
The |
Review the created YAML file:
$ cat my-performance-profile.yaml
apiVersion: performance.openshift.io/v2
kind: PerformanceProfile
metadata:
name: performance
spec:
cpu:
isolated: 1-39,41-79
reserved: 0,40
nodeSelector:
node-role.kubernetes.io/worker-cnf: ""
numa:
topologyPolicy: restricted
realTimeKernel:
enabled: false
Apply the generated profile:
Install the Node Tuning Operator before applying the profile. |
$ oc apply -f my-performance-profile.yaml
Argument | Description | ||
---|---|---|---|
|
Disable hyperthreading. Possible values: Default:
|
||
|
This captures cluster information and is used in discovery mode only. Discovery mode also requires the Possible values:
Default: |
||
|
MCP name for example |
||
|
Must gather directory path. This parameter is required. When the user runs the tool with the wrapper script |
||
|
Number of offlined CPUs.
|
||
|
The power consumption mode. Possible values:
Default: |
||
|
Name of the performance profile to create.
Default: |
||
|
Number of reserved CPUs. This parameter is required.
|
||
|
Enable real-time kernel. This parameter is required. Possible values: |
||
|
Split the reserved CPUs across NUMA nodes. Possible values: Default: |
||
|
Kubelet Topology Manager policy of the performance profile to be created. Possible values:
Default: |
||
|
Run with user level networking (DPDK) enabled. Possible values: Default: |
To maximize machine performance in a cluster that uses Open vSwitch with the Data Plane Development Kit (OVS-DPDK) on OpenStack, you can use a performance profile.
You can use the following performance profile template to create a profile for your deployment.
apiVersion: performance.openshift.io/v2
kind: PerformanceProfile
metadata:
name: cnf-performanceprofile
spec:
additionalKernelArgs:
- nmi_watchdog=0
- audit=0
- mce=off
- processor.max_cstate=1
- idle=poll
- intel_idle.max_cstate=0
- default_hugepagesz=1GB
- hugepagesz=1G
- intel_iommu=on
cpu:
isolated: <CPU_ISOLATED>
reserved: <CPU_RESERVED>
hugepages:
defaultHugepagesSize: 1G
pages:
- count: <HUGEPAGES_COUNT>
node: 0
size: 1G
nodeSelector:
node-role.kubernetes.io/worker: ''
realTimeKernel:
enabled: false
globallyDisableIrqLoadBalancing: true
Insert values that are appropriate for your configuration for the CPU_ISOLATED
, CPU_RESERVED
, and HUGEPAGES_COUNT
keys.
To learn how to create and use performance profiles, see the "Creating a performance profile" page in the "Scalability and performance" section of the OKD documentation.
For more information about the must-gather
tool,
see Gathering data about your cluster.