Resource management
The Stackable data platform and its operators deploy their products in Containers within Pods using StatefulSets or DaemonSets. In order for the Kubernetes scheduler to select a proper Node for a Pod, resource requests and limits for CPU and memory can be specified. The Kubernetes scheduler ensures that the sum of the CPU and memory requests does not exceed the capacity of a given Node.
Terminology
The most commonly defined resources are CPU and memory (RAM). Keep in mind that there are other resources as well. For more information have a look at the Kubernetes documentation on resources.
CPU
Memory
Storage
Some Stackable products require data storage. This is done using Persistent Volume Claims where the size of storage can be specified.
Kubernetes Resource Requests
In Kubernetes, you can specify resource requests and limits within Containers of Pods.
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: stackable
spec:
containers:
- name: stackable
image: stackable:0.1.0
resources:
requests:
memory: "64Mi"
cpu: "250m"
limits:
memory: "128Mi"
cpu: "500m"
This Pod/Container will be scheduled on a Node that has at least 64Mi
of free memory. It is allowed to use a maximum amount of 128Mi
of memory or will be restarted if this value is exceeded. It can not use more CPU resources than 500m
(which is half of a physical or virtual core), but has a guaranteed CPU resources of 250m
.
Stackable Resource Requests
CPU and Memory
Stackable operators handle resource requests in a sligtly different manner than Kubernetes. Resource requests are defined on role or group level. See Roles and role groups for details on these concepts. On a role level this means that e.g. all workers will use the same resource requests and limits. This can be further specified on role group level (which takes priority to the role level) to apply different resources.
This is an example on how to specify CPU and memory resources using the Stackable Custom Resources:
---
apiVersion: example.stackable.tech/v1alpha1
kind: ExampleCluster
metadata:
name: example
spec:
workers: # role-level
config:
resources:
cpu:
min: 300m
max: 600m
memory:
limit: 3Gi
roleGroups: # role-group-level
resources-from-role: # role-group 1
replicas: 1
resources-from-role-group: # role-group 2
replicas: 1
config:
resources:
cpu:
min: 400m
max: 800m
memory:
limit: 4Gi
In this case, the role group resources-from-role
will inherit the resources specified on the role level. Resulting in a maximum of 3Gi
memory and 600m
CPU resources.
The role group resources-from-role-group
has maximum of 4Gi
memory and 800m
CPU resources (which overrides the role CPU resources).
For Java products the actual used Heap memory is lower than the specified memory limit due to other processes in the Container requiring memory to run as well. Currently, 80% of the specified memory limits is passed to the JVM. |
For memory only a limit can be specified, which will be set as memory request and limit in the Container. This is to always guarantee a Container the full amount memory during Kubernetes scheduling.
Storage
This is an example on how to specify storage resources using the Stackable Custom Resources:
---
apiVersion: example.stackable.tech/v1alpha1
kind: ExampleCluster
metadata:
name: example
spec:
workers: # role-level
config:
resources:
storage:
data: # name of the storage
capacity: 3Gi
roleGroups: # role-group-level
resources-from-role: # role-group 1
replicas: 1
resources-from-role-group: # role-group 2
replicas: 1
config:
resources:
storage:
data: # name of the storage
capacity: 4Gi
In this case, the role group resources-from-role
will inherit the resources specified on the role level. Resulting in a 3Gi
storage space for data
.
The role group resources-from-role-group
has maximum of 4Gi
storage space for data
(which overrides the role resources).
Stackable operators use different names (data in this example) for their storage specification. This is documented in the operator specific documentation.
|
StorageClass
A StorageClass defines a type of storage with certain properties. The StorageClasses that are available on a Kubernetes cluster are configured by the cluster administrator. Different classes can be configured to provide different levels of reliability or speed, or be configured to be more suited for read or write heavy loads. This configuration is either done in the storage backend or Kubernetes settings (find more information in the Kubernetes documentation).
For Stackable resources, setting a StorageClass is not mandatory; if not StorageClass is set, the default StorageClass will be used. If you want to use a specific StorageClass for a particular storage, the StorageClass can be set on the resource:
...
resources:
storage:
data: # name of the storage
capacity: 4Gi
storageClass: my-storage-class