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instance_groups.md

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Instance Groups

kops has the concept of "instance groups", which are a group of similar machines. On AWS, they map to an AutoScalingGroup.

By default, a cluster has:

  • An instance group called nodes spanning all the zones; these instances are your workers.
  • One instance group for each master zone, called master-<zone> (e.g. master-us-east-1c). These normally have minimum size and maximum size = 1, so they will run a single instance. We do this so that the cloud will always relaunch masters, even if everything is terminated at once. We have an instance group per zone because we need to force the cloud to run an instance in every zone, so we can mount the master volumes - we can't do that across zones.

Listing instance groups

kops get instancegroups

NAME                    ROLE    MACHINETYPE     MIN     MAX     ZONES
master-us-east-1c       Master                  1       1       us-east-1c
nodes                   Node    t2.medium       2       2

You can also use the kops get ig alias.

Change the instance type in an instance group

First you edit the instance group spec, using kops edit ig nodes. Change the machine type to t2.large, for example. Now if you kops get ig, you will see the large instance size. Note though that these changes have not yet been applied (this may change soon though!).

To preview the change:

kops update cluster <clustername>

...
Will modify resources:
  *awstasks.LaunchConfiguration launchConfiguration/mycluster.mydomain.com
    InstanceType t2.medium -> t2.large

Presuming you're happy with the change, go ahead and apply it: kops update cluster <clustername> --yes

This change will apply to new instances only; if you'd like to roll it out immediately to all the instances you have to perform a rolling update.

See a preview with: kops rolling-update cluster

Then restart the machines with: kops rolling-update cluster --yes

NOTE: rolling-update does not yet perform a real rolling update - it just shuts down machines in sequence with a delay; there will be downtime Issue #37 We have implemented a new feature that does drain and validate nodes. This feature is experimental, and you can use the new feature by setting export KOPS_FEATURE_FLAGS="+DrainAndValidateRollingUpdate".

Resize an instance group

The procedure to resize an instance group works the same way:

  • Edit the instance group, set minSize and maxSize to the desired size: kops edit ig nodes
  • Preview changes: kops update cluster <clustername>
  • Apply changes: kops update cluster <clustername> --yes
  • (you do not need a rolling-update when changing instancegroup sizes)

Changing the root volume size or type

The procedure to resize the root volume works the same way:

  • Edit the instance group, set rootVolumeSize and/or rootVolumeType to the desired values: kops edit ig nodes
  • Preview changes: kops update cluster <clustername>
  • Apply changes: kops update cluster <clustername> --yes
  • Rolling update to update existing instances: kops rolling-update cluster --yes

For example, to set up a 100GB gp2 root volume, your InstanceGroup spec might look like:

metadata:
  creationTimestamp: "2016-07-11T04:14:00Z"
  name: nodes
spec:
  machineType: t2.medium
  maxSize: 2
  minSize: 2
  role: Node
  rootVolumeSize: 100
  rootVolumeType: gp2

Creating a new instance group

Suppose you want to add a new group of nodes, perhaps with a different instance type. You do this using kops create ig <InstanceGroupName>. Currently it opens an editor with a skeleton configuration, allowing you to edit it before creation.

So the procedure is:

  • kops create ig morenodes, edit and save
  • Preview: kops update cluster <clustername>
  • Apply: kops update cluster <clustername> --yes
  • (no instances need to be relaunched, so no rolling-update is needed)

Converting an instance group to use spot instances

Follow the normal procedure for reconfiguring an InstanceGroup, but set the maxPrice property to your bid. For example, "0.10" represents a spot-price bid of $0.10 (10 cents) per hour.

Warning: the t2 family is not currently supported with spot pricing. You'll need to choose a different instance type.

An example spec looks like this:

metadata:
  creationTimestamp: "2016-07-10T15:47:14Z"
  name: nodes
spec:
  machineType: m3.medium
  maxPrice: "0.1"
  maxSize: 3
  minSize: 3
  role: Node

($0.10 per hour is a huge over-bid for an m3.medium - this is only an example!)

So the procedure is:

  • Edit: kops edit ig nodes
  • Preview: kops update cluster <clustername>
  • Apply: kops update cluster <clustername> --yes
  • Rolling-update, only if you want to apply changes immediately: kops rolling-update cluster

Adding Taints to an Instance Group

If you're running Kubernetes 1.6.0 or later, you can also control taints in the InstanceGroup. The taints property takes a list of strings. The following example would add two taints to an IG, using the same edit -> update -> rolling-update process as above.

metadata:
  creationTimestamp: "2016-07-10T15:47:14Z"
  name: nodes
spec:
  machineType: m3.medium
  maxSize: 3
  minSize: 3
  role: Node
  taints:
  - dedicated=gpu:NoSchedule
  - team=search:PreferNoSchedule

Resizing the master

(This procedure should be pretty familiar by now!)

Your master instance group will probably be called master-us-west-1c or something similar.

kops edit ig master-us-west-1c

Add or set the machineType:

spec:
  machineType: m3.large
  • Preview changes: kops update cluster <clustername>

  • Apply changes: kops update cluster <clustername> --yes

  • Rolling-update, only if you want to apply changes immediately: kops rolling-update cluster

If you want to minimize downtime, scale the master ASG up to size 2, then wait for that new master to be Ready in kubectl get nodes, then delete the old master instance, and scale the ASG back down to size 1. (A future of rolling-update will probably do this automatically)

Deleting an instance group

If you decide you don't need an InstanceGroup any more, you delete it using: kops delete ig <name>

Example: kops delete ig morenodes

No rolling-update is needed (and note this is not currently graceful, so there may be interruptions to workloads where the pods are running on those nodes).

EBS Volume Optimization

EBS-Optimized instances can be created by setting the following field:

spec:
  rootVolumeOptimization: true