$ oc idle <service>
Cluster administrators can idle applications to reduce resource consumption. This is useful when the cluster is deployed on a public cloud where cost is related to resource consumption.
If any scalable resources are not in use, OKD discovers and idles them by scaling their replicas to 0
. The next time network traffic is directed to the resources, the resources are unidled by scaling up the replicas, and normal operation continues.
Applications are made of services, as well as other scalable resources, such as deployment configs. The action of idling an application involves idling all associated resources.
Idling an application involves finding the scalable resources (deployment configurations, replication controllers, and others) associated with a service. Idling an application finds the service and marks it as idled, scaling down the resources to zero replicas.
You can use the oc idle
command to idle a single service, or use the
--resource-names-file
option to idle multiple services.
Idling multiple services is helpful if an application spans across a set of services within a project, or when idling multiple services in conjunction with a script to idle multiple applications in bulk within the same project.
Create a file containing a list of the services, each on their own line.
Idle the services using the --resource-names-file
option:
$ oc idle --resource-names-file <filename>
The |
Application services become active again when they receive network traffic and are scaled back up their previous state. This includes both traffic to the services and traffic passing through routes.
Applications can also be manually unidled by scaling up the resources.
To scale up a DeploymentConfig, run:
$ oc scale --replicas=1 dc <dc_name>
Automatic unidling by a router is currently only supported by the default HAProxy router. |
services do not support automatic unidling if you configure Kuryr-Kubernetes as an SDN. |