virtual-kubelet/virtual-kubelet
Virtual Kubelet is an open source Kubernetes kubelet implementation.
repo name | virtual-kubelet/virtual-kubelet |
repo link | https://github.com/virtual-kubelet/virtual-kubelet |
homepage | https://virtual-kubelet.io |
language | Go |
size (curr.) | 59593 kB |
stars (curr.) | 2466 |
created | 2017-12-04 |
license | Apache License 2.0 |
Virtual Kubelet
Virtual Kubelet is an open source Kubernetes kubelet implementation that masquerades as a kubelet for the purposes of connecting Kubernetes to other APIs. This allows the nodes to be backed by other services like ACI, AWS Fargate, IoT Edge etc. The primary scenario for VK is enabling the extension of the Kubernetes API into serverless container platforms like ACI and Fargate, though we are open to others. However, it should be noted that VK is explicitly not intended to be an alternative to Kubernetes federation.
Virtual Kubelet features a pluggable architecture and direct use of Kubernetes primitives, making it much easier to build on.
We invite the Kubernetes ecosystem to join us in empowering developers to build upon our base. Join our slack channel named, virtual-kubelet, within the Kubernetes slack group.
The best description is “Kubernetes API on top, programmable back.”
Table of Contents
How It Works
The diagram below illustrates how Virtual-Kubelet works.
Usage
Virtual Kubelet is focused on providing a library that you can consume in your project to build a custom Kubernetes node agent.
See godoc for up to date instructions on consuming this project: https://godoc.org/github.com/virtual-kubelet/virtual-kubelet
There are implementations available for several provides (listed above), see those repos for details on how to deploy.
Current Features
- create, delete and update pods
- container logs, exec, and metrics
- get pod, pods and pod status
- capacity
- node addresses, node capacity, node daemon endpoints
- operating system
- bring your own virtual network
Providers
This project features a pluggable provider interface developers can implement that defines the actions of a typical kubelet.
This enables on-demand and nearly instantaneous container compute, orchestrated by Kubernetes, without having VM infrastructure to manage and while still leveraging the portable Kubernetes API.
Each provider may have its own configuration file, and required environmental variables.
Providers must provide the following functionality to be considered a supported integration with Virtual Kubelet.
- Provides the back-end plumbing necessary to support the lifecycle management of pods, containers and supporting resources in the context of Kubernetes.
- Conforms to the current API provided by Virtual Kubelet.
- Does not have access to the Kubernetes API Server and has a well-defined callback mechanism for getting data like secrets or configmaps.
Admiralty Multi-Cluster Scheduler
Admiralty Multi-Cluster Scheduler mutates annotated pods into “proxy pods” scheduled on a virtual-kubelet node and creates corresponding “delegate pods” in remote clusters (actually running the containers). A feedback loop updates the statuses and annotations of the proxy pods to reflect the statuses and annotations of the delegate pods. You can find more details in the Admiralty Multi-Cluster Scheduler documentation.
Alibaba Cloud ECI Provider
Alibaba Cloud ECI(Elastic Container Instance) is a service that allow you run containers without having to manage servers or clusters.
You can find more details in the Alibaba Cloud ECI provider documentation.
Configuration File
The alibaba ECI provider will read configuration file specified by the --provider-config
flag.
The example configure file is in the ECI provider repository.
Azure Container Instances Provider
The Azure Container Instances Provider allows you to utilize both typical pods on VMs and Azure Container instances simultaneously in the same Kubernetes cluster.
You can find detailed instructions on how to set it up and how to test it in the Azure Container Instances Provider documentation.
Configuration File
The Azure connector can use a configuration file specified by the --provider-config
flag.
The config file is in TOML format, and an example lives in providers/azure/example.toml
.
AWS Fargate Provider
AWS Fargate is a technology that allows you to run containers without having to manage servers or clusters.
The AWS Fargate provider allows you to deploy pods to AWS Fargate. Your pods on AWS Fargate have access to VPC networking with dedicated ENIs in your subnets, public IP addresses to connect to the internet, private IP addresses to connect to your Kubernetes cluster, security groups, IAM roles, CloudWatch Logs and many other AWS services. Pods on Fargate can co-exist with pods on regular worker nodes in the same Kubernetes cluster.
Easy instructions and a sample configuration file is available in the AWS Fargate provider documentation. Please note that this provider is not currently supported.
HashiCorp Nomad Provider
HashiCorp Nomad provider for Virtual Kubelet connects your Kubernetes cluster with Nomad cluster by exposing the Nomad cluster as a node in Kubernetes. By using the provider, pods that are scheduled on the virtual Nomad node registered on Kubernetes will run as jobs on Nomad clients as they would on a Kubernetes node.
For detailed instructions, follow the guide here.
OpenStack Zun Provider
OpenStack Zun provider for Virtual Kubelet connects your Kubernetes cluster with OpenStack in order to run Kubernetes pods on OpenStack Cloud. Your pods on OpenStack have access to OpenStack tenant networks because they have Neutron ports in your subnets. Each pod will have private IP addresses to connect to other OpenStack resources (i.e. VMs) within your tenant, optionally have floating IP addresses to connect to the internet, and bind-mount Cinder volumes into a path inside a pod’s container.
./bin/virtual-kubelet --provider="openstack"
For detailed instructions, follow the guide here.
Adding a New Provider via the Provider Interface
Providers consume this project as a library which implements the core logic of a Kubernetes node agent (Kubelet), and wire up their implementation for performing the neccessary actions.
There are 3 main interfaces:
PodLifecylceHandler
When pods are created, updated, or deleted from Kubernetes, these methods are called to handle those actions.
type PodLifecycleHandler interface {
// CreatePod takes a Kubernetes Pod and deploys it within the provider.
CreatePod(ctx context.Context, pod *corev1.Pod) error
// UpdatePod takes a Kubernetes Pod and updates it within the provider.
UpdatePod(ctx context.Context, pod *corev1.Pod) error
// DeletePod takes a Kubernetes Pod and deletes it from the provider.
DeletePod(ctx context.Context, pod *corev1.Pod) error
// GetPod retrieves a pod by name from the provider (can be cached).
GetPod(ctx context.Context, namespace, name string) (*corev1.Pod, error)
// GetPodStatus retrieves the status of a pod by name from the provider.
GetPodStatus(ctx context.Context, namespace, name string) (*corev1.PodStatus, error)
// GetPods retrieves a list of all pods running on the provider (can be cached).
GetPods(context.Context) ([]*corev1.Pod, error)
}
There is also an optional interface PodNotifier
which enables the provider to
asynchronously notify the virtual-kubelet about pod status changes. If this
interface is not implemented, virtual-kubelet will periodically check the status
of all pods.
It is highly recommended to implement PodNotifier
, especially if you plan
to run a large number of pods.
type PodNotifier interface {
// NotifyPods instructs the notifier to call the passed in function when
// the pod status changes.
//
// NotifyPods should not block callers.
NotifyPods(context.Context, func(*corev1.Pod))
}
PodLifecycleHandler
is consumed by the PodController
which is the core
logic for managing pods assigned to the node.
pc, _ := node.NewPodController(podControllerConfig) // <-- instatiates the pod controller
pc.Run(ctx) // <-- starts watching for pods to be scheduled on the node
NodeProvider
NodeProvider is responsible for notifying the virtual-kubelet about node status updates. Virtual-Kubelet will periodically check the status of the node and update Kubernetes accordingly.
type NodeProvider interface {
// Ping checks if the node is still active.
// This is intended to be lightweight as it will be called periodically as a
// heartbeat to keep the node marked as ready in Kubernetes.
Ping(context.Context) error
// NotifyNodeStatus is used to asynchronously monitor the node.
// The passed in callback should be called any time there is a change to the
// node's status.
// This will generally trigger a call to the Kubernetes API server to update
// the status.
//
// NotifyNodeStatus should not block callers.
NotifyNodeStatus(ctx context.Context, cb func(*corev1.Node))
}
Virtual Kubelet provides a NaiveNodeProvider
that you can use if you do not
plan to have custom node behavior.
NodeProvider
gets consumed by the NodeController
, which is core logic for
managing the node object in Kubernetes.
nc, _ := node.NewNodeController(nodeProvider, nodeSpec) // <-- instantiate a node controller from a node provider and a kubernetes node spec
nc.Run(ctx) // <-- creates the node in kubernetes and starts up he controller
API endpoints
One of the roles of a Kubelet is to accept requests from the API server for
things like kubectl logs
and kubectl exec
. Helpers for setting this up are
provided here
Testing
Unit tests
Running the unit tests locally is as simple as make test
.
End-to-end tests
Check out test/e2e
for more details.
Known quirks and workarounds
Missing Load Balancer IP addresses for services
Providers that do not support service discovery
Kubernetes 1.9 introduces a new flag, ServiceNodeExclusion
, for the control plane’s Controller Manager. Enabling this flag in the Controller Manager’s manifest allows Kubernetes to exclude Virtual Kubelet nodes from being added to Load Balancer pools, allowing you to create public facing services with external IPs without issue.
Workaround
Cluster requirements: Kubernetes 1.9 or above
Enable the ServiceNodeExclusion flag, by modifying the Controller Manager manifest and adding --feature-gates=ServiceNodeExclusion=true
to the command line arguments.
Contributing
Virtual Kubelet follows the CNCF Code of Conduct. Sign the CNCF CLA to be able to make Pull Requests to this repo.
Monthly Virtual Kubelet Office Hours are held at 10am PST on the last Thursday of every month in this zoom meeting room. Check out the calendar here.
Our google drive with design specifications and meeting notes are here.
We also have a community slack channel named virtual-kubelet in the Kubernetes slack.