Cloud Controller Manager Administration
Kubernetes v1.11 [beta]
Since cloud providers develop and release at a different pace compared to the Kubernetes project, abstracting the provider-specific code to the cloud-controller-manager
binary allows cloud vendors to evolve independently from the core Kubernetes code.
The Every cloud has their own set of requirements for running their own cloud provider integration, it should not be too different from the requirements when running Successfully running cloud-controller-manager requires some changes to your cluster configuration. Keep in mind that setting up your cluster to use cloud controller manager will change your cluster behaviour in a few ways: The cloud controller manager can implement: If you are using a cloud that is currently supported in Kubernetes core and would like to adopt cloud controller manager, see the . For cloud controller managers not in Kubernetes core, you can find the respective projects in repositories maintained by cloud vendors or by SIGs. For providers already in Kubernetes core, you can run the in-tree cloud controller manager as a DaemonSet in your cluster, use the following as a guideline: Running cloud controller manager comes with a few possible limitations. Although these limitations are being addressed in upcoming releases, it's important that you are aware of these limitations for production workloads. Cloud controller manager does not implement any of the volume controllers found in The cloud-controller-manager queries your cloud provider's APIs to retrieve information for all nodes. For very large clusters, consider possible bottlenecks such as resource requirements and API rate limiting. The goal of the cloud controller manager project is to decouple development of cloud features from the core Kubernetes project. Unfortunately, many aspects of the Kubernetes project has assumptions that cloud provider features are tightly integrated into the project. As a result, adopting this new architecture can create several situations where a request is being made for information from a cloud provider, but the cloud controller manager may not be able to return that information without the original request being complete. A good example of this is the TLS bootstrapping feature in the Kubelet. TLS bootstrapping assumes that the Kubelet has the ability to ask the cloud provider (or a local metadata service) for all its address types (private, public, etc) but cloud controller manager cannot set a node's address types without being initialized in the first place which requires that the kubelet has TLS certificates to communicate with the apiserver. As this initiative evolves, changes will be made to address these issues in upcoming releases. To build and develop your own cloud controller manager, read Developing Cloud Controller Manager.cloud-controller-manager
can be linked to any cloud provider that satisfies
Administration
Requirements
kube-controller-manager
. As a general rule of thumb you'll need:
Running cloud-controller-manager
kube-apiserver
and kube-controller-manager
MUST NOT specify the --cloud-provider
flag. This ensures that it does not run any cloud specific loops that would be run by cloud controller manager. In the future, this flag will be deprecated and removed.kubelet
must run with --cloud-provider=external
. This is to ensure that the kubelet is aware that it must be initialized by the cloud controller manager before it is scheduled any work.
--cloud-provider=external
will add a taint node.cloudprovider.kubernetes.io/uninitialized
with an effect NoSchedule
during initialization. This marks the node as needing a second initialization from an external controller before it can be scheduled work. Note that in the event that cloud controller manager is not available, new nodes in the cluster will be left unschedulable. The taint is important since the scheduler may require cloud specific information about nodes such as their region or type (high cpu, gpu, high memory, spot instance, etc).
Examples
# This is an example of how to setup cloud-controller-manager as a Daemonset in your cluster.
# It assumes that your masters can run pods and has the role node-role.kubernetes.io/master
# Note that this Daemonset will not work straight out of the box for your cloud, this is
# meant to be a guideline.
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: ServiceAccount
metadata:
name: cloud-controller-manager
namespace: kube-system
---
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: ClusterRoleBinding
metadata:
name: system:cloud-controller-manager
roleRef:
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
kind: ClusterRole
name: cluster-admin
subjects:
- kind: ServiceAccount
name: cloud-controller-manager
namespace: kube-system
---
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: DaemonSet
metadata:
labels:
k8s-app: cloud-controller-manager
name: cloud-controller-manager
namespace: kube-system
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
k8s-app: cloud-controller-manager
template:
metadata:
labels:
k8s-app: cloud-controller-manager
spec:
serviceAccountName: cloud-controller-manager
containers:
- name: cloud-controller-manager
# for in-tree providers we use k8s.gcr.io/cloud-controller-manager
# this can be replaced with any other image for out-of-tree providers
image: k8s.gcr.io/cloud-controller-manager:v1.8.0
command:
- /usr/local/bin/cloud-controller-manager
- --cloud-provider=[YOUR_CLOUD_PROVIDER] # Add your own cloud provider here!
- --leader-elect=true
- --use-service-account-credentials
# these flags will vary for every cloud provider
- --allocate-node-cidrs=true
- --configure-cloud-routes=true
- --cluster-cidr=172.17.0.0/16
tolerations:
# this is required so CCM can bootstrap itself
- key: node.cloudprovider.kubernetes.io/uninitialized
value: "true"
effect: NoSchedule
# this is to have the daemonset runnable on master nodes
# the taint may vary depending on your cluster setup
- key: node-role.kubernetes.io/master
effect: NoSchedule
# this is to restrict CCM to only run on master nodes
# the node selector may vary depending on your cluster setup
nodeSelector:
node-role.kubernetes.io/master: ""
Limitations
Support for Volumes
kube-controller-manager
as the volume integrations also require coordination with kubelets. As we evolve CSI (container storage interface) and add stronger support for flex volume plugins, necessary support will be added to cloud controller manager so that clouds can fully integrate with volumes. Learn more about out-of-tree CSI volume plugins
Scalability
Chicken and Egg
What's next