--- title: "Deployment and Usage" layout: default sort: 3 --- # Deployment and Usage {: .no_toc } ## Table of Contents {: .no_toc .text-delta } 1. TOC {:toc} --- ## Requirements 1. Linux (x86_64/Arm64/Arm) 1. [kubectl](https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/tools/install-kubectl) (properly set up and configured to work with your Kubernetes cluster) ## Deployment options ### Operator Deployment using the [Node Feature Discovery Operator][nfd-operator] is recommended to be done via [operatorhub.io](https://operatorhub.io/operator/nfd-operator). 1. You need to have [OLM][OLM] installed. If you don't, take a look at the [latest release](https://github.com/operator-framework/operator-lifecycle-manager/releases/latest) for detailed instructions. 1. Install the operator: ```bash kubectl create -f https://operatorhub.io/install/nfd-operator.yaml ``` 1. Create NodeFeatureDiscovery resource (in `nfd` namespace here): ```bash cat << EOF | kubectl apply -f - apiVersion: v1 kind: Namespace metadata: name: nfd --- apiVersion: nfd.kubernetes.io/v1alpha1 kind: NodeFeatureDiscovery metadata: name: my-nfd-deployment namespace: nfd EOF ``` ### Deployment Templates The template specs provided in the repo can be used directly: ```bash kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes-sigs/node-feature-discovery/{{ site.release }}/nfd-master.yaml.template kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes-sigs/node-feature-discovery/{{ site.release }}/nfd-worker-daemonset.yaml.template ``` This will required RBAC rules and deploy nfd-master (as a deployment) and nfd-worker (as a daemonset) in the `node-feature-discovery` namespace. Alternatively you can download the templates and customize the deployment manually. #### Master-Worker Pod You can also run nfd-master and nfd-worker inside the same pod ```bash kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes-sigs/node-feature-discovery/{{ site.release }}/nfd-daemonset-combined.yaml.template ``` This creates a DaemonSet runs both nfd-worker and nfd-master in the same Pod. In this case no nfd-master is run on the master node(s), but, the worker nodes are able to label themselves which may be desirable e.g. in single-node setups. #### Worker One-shot Feature discovery can alternatively be configured as a one-shot job. The Job template may be used to achieve this: ```bash NUM_NODES=$(kubectl get no -o jsonpath='{.items[*].metadata.name}' | wc -w) curl -fs https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes-sigs/node-feature-discovery/{{ site.release }}/nfd-worker-job.yaml.template | \ sed s"/NUM_NODES/$NUM_NODES/" | \ kubectl apply -f - ``` The example above launces as many jobs as there are non-master nodes. Note that this approach does not guarantee running once on every node. For example, tainted, non-ready nodes or some other reasons in Job scheduling may cause some node(s) will run extra job instance(s) to satisfy the request. ### Deployment with Helm Node Feature Discovery Helm chart allow to easily deploy and manage NFD. #### Prerequisites [Helm package manager](https://helm.sh/) should be installed. #### Deployment with Helm To install the chart with the release name node-feature-discovery: ```bash git clone https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/node-feature-discovery/ cd node-feature-discovery/deployment export NFD_NS=node-feature-discovery helm install node-feature-discovery ./node-feature-discovery/ --namespace $NFD_NS --create-namespace ``` The command deploys Node Feature Discovery on the Kubernetes cluster in the default configuration. The Configuration section describes how it can be configured during installation. #### Configuration You can override values from `values.yaml` and provide a file with custom values: ```bash export NFD_NS=node-feature-discovery helm install node-feature-discovery ./node-feature-discovery/ -f --namespace $NFD_NS --create-namespace ``` To specify each parameter separately you can provide them to helm install command: ```bash export NFD_NS=node-feature-discovery helm install node-feature-discovery ./node-feature-discovery/ --set nameOverride=NFDinstance --set master.replicaCount=2 --namespace $NFD_NS --create-namespace ``` #### Uninstalling the Chart To uninstall the `node-feature-discovery` deployment: ```bash export NFD_NS=node-feature-discovery helm uninstall node-feature-discovery --namespace $NFD_NS ``` The command removes all the Kubernetes components associated with the chart and deletes the release. #### Chart Parameters In order to tailor the deployment of the Node Feature Discovery to your cluster needs We have introduced the following Chart parameters. ##### General parameters | Name | Type | Default | description | | ---- | ---- | ------- | ----------- | | `image.repository` | string | `gcr.io/k8s-staging-nfd/node-feature-discovery` | NFD image repository | | `image.pullPolicy` | string | `Always` | Image pull policy | | `imagePullSecrets` | list | [] | ImagePullSecrets is an optional list of references to secrets in the same namespace to use for pulling any of the images used by this PodSpec. If specified, these secrets will be passed to individual puller implementations for them to use. For example, in the case of docker, only DockerConfig type secrets are honored. [https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/containers/images#specifying-imagepullsecrets-on-a-pod](More info) | | `serviceAccount.create` | bool | true | Specifies whether a service account should be created | | `serviceAccount.annotations` | dict | {} | Annotations to add to the service account | | `serviceAccount.name` | string | | The name of the service account to use. If not set and create is true, a name is generated using the fullname template | | `rbac` | dict | | RBAC [parameteres](https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/access-authn-authz/rbac/) | | `nameOverride` | string | | Override the name of the chart | | `fullnameOverride` | string | | Override a default fully qualified app name | ##### Master pod parameters | `master.*` | dict | | NFD master deployment configuration | | `master.replicaCount` | integer | 1 | Number of desired pods. This is a pointer to distinguish between explicit zero and not specified | | `master.podSecurityContext` | dict | {} | SecurityContext holds pod-level security attributes and common container settings | | `master.service.type` | string | ClusterIP | NFD master service type | | `master.service.port` | integer | port | NFD master service port | | `master.resources` | dict | {} | NFD master pod [resources management](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/manage-resources-containers/) | | `master.nodeSelector` | dict | {} | NFD master pod [node selector](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/scheduling-eviction/assign-pod-node/#nodeselector) | | `master.tolerations` | dict | _Scheduling to master node is disabled_ | NFD master pod [tolerations](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/scheduling-eviction/taint-and-toleration/) | | `master.annotations` | dict | {} | NFD master pod [metadata](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/annotations/) | | `master.affinity` | dict | | NFD master pod required [node affinity](https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/assign-pods-nodes-using-node-affinity/) | ##### Worker pod parameters | `worker.*` | dict | | NFD master daemonset configuration | | `worker.configmapName` | string | `nfd-worker-conf` | NFD worker pod ConfigMap name | | `worker.config` | string | `` | NFD worker service configuration | | `worker.podSecurityContext` | dict | {} | SecurityContext holds pod-level security attributes and common container settings | | `worker.securityContext` | dict | {} | Container [security settings](https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/security-context/#set-the-security-context-for-a-pod) | | `worker.resources` | dict | {} | NFD worker pod [resources management](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/manage-resources-containers/) | | `worker.nodeSelector` | dict | {} | NFD worker pod [node selector](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/scheduling-eviction/assign-pod-node/#nodeselector) | | `worker.tolerations` | dict | {} | NFD worker pod [node tolerations](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/scheduling-eviction/taint-and-toleration/) | | `worker.annotations` | dict | {} | NFD worker pod [metadata](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/annotations/) | ### Build Your Own If you want to use the latest development version (master branch) you need to build your own custom image. See the [Developer Guide](../advanced/developer-guide) for instructions how to build images and deploy them on your cluster. ## Usage ### NFD-Master NFD-Master runs as a deployment (with a replica count of 1), by default it prefers running on the cluster's master nodes but will run on worker nodes if no master nodes are found. For High Availability, you should simply increase the replica count of the deployment object. You should also look into adding [inter-pod](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/assign-pod-node/#affinity-and-anti-affinity) affinity to prevent masters from running on the same node. However note that inter-pod affinity is costly and is not recommended in bigger clusters. NFD-Master listens for connections from nfd-worker(s) and connects to the Kubernetes API server to add node labels advertised by them. If you have RBAC authorization enabled (as is the default e.g. with clusters initialized with kubeadm) you need to configure the appropriate ClusterRoles, ClusterRoleBindings and a ServiceAccount in order for NFD to create node labels. The provided template will configure these for you. ### NFD-Worker NFD-Worker is preferably run as a Kubernetes DaemonSet. This assures re-labeling on regular intervals capturing changes in the system configuration and mames sure that new nodes are labeled as they are added to the cluster. Worker connects to the nfd-master service to advertise hardware features. When run as a daemonset, nodes are re-labeled at an interval specified using the `--sleep-interval` option. In the [template](https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/node-feature-discovery/blob/{{ site.release }}/nfd-worker-daemonset.yaml.template#L26) the default interval is set to 60s which is also the default when no `--sleep-interval` is specified. Also, the configuration file is re-read on each iteration providing a simple mechanism of run-time reconfiguration. ### TLS authentication NFD supports mutual TLS authentication between the nfd-master and nfd-worker instances. That is, nfd-worker and nfd-master both verify that the other end presents a valid certificate. TLS authentication is enabled by specifying `--ca-file`, `--key-file` and `--cert-file` args, on both the nfd-master and nfd-worker instances. The template specs provided with NFD contain (commented out) example configuration for enabling TLS authentication. The Common Name (CN) of the nfd-master certificate must match the DNS name of the nfd-master Service of the cluster. By default, nfd-master only check that the nfd-worker has been signed by the specified root certificate (--ca-file). Additional hardening can be enabled by specifying --verify-node-name in nfd-master args, in which case nfd-master verifies that the NodeName presented by nfd-worker matches the Common Name (CN) of its certificate. This means that each nfd-worker requires a individual node-specific TLS certificate. ## Configuration NFD-Worker supports dynamic configuration through a configuration file. The default location is `/etc/kubernetes/node-feature-discovery/nfd-worker.conf`, but, this can be changed by specifying the`--config` command line flag. Configuration file is re-read whenever it is modified which makes run-time re-configuration of nfd-worker straightforward. Worker configuration file is read inside the container, and thus, Volumes and VolumeMounts are needed to make your configuration available for NFD. The preferred method is to use a ConfigMap which provides easy deployment and re-configurability. The provided nfd-worker deployment templates create an empty configmap and mount it inside the nfd-worker containers. Configuration can be edited with: ``` kubectl -n ${NFD_NS} edit configmap nfd-worker-conf ``` See [nfd-worker configuration file reference](../advanced/worker-configuration-reference.md) for more details. The (empty-by-default) [example config](https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/node-feature-discovery/blob/{{ site.release }}/nfd-worker.conf.example) contains all available configuration options and can be used as a reference for creating creating a configuration. Configuration options can also be specified via the `--options` command line flag, in which case no mounts need to be used. The same format as in the config file must be used, i.e. JSON (or YAML). For example: ``` --options='{"sources": { "pci": { "deviceClassWhitelist": ["12"] } } }' ``` Configuration options specified from the command line will override those read from the config file. ## Using Node Labels Nodes with specific features can be targeted using the `nodeSelector` field. The following example shows how to target nodes with Intel TurboBoost enabled. ```yaml apiVersion: v1 kind: Pod metadata: labels: env: test name: golang-test spec: containers: - image: golang name: go1 nodeSelector: feature.node.kubernetes.io/cpu-pstate.turbo: 'true' ``` For more details on targeting nodes, see [node selection](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/scheduling-eviction/assign-pod-node/). ## Uninstallation ### Operator Was Used for Deployment If you followed the deployment instructions above you can simply do: ```bash kubectl -n nfd delete NodeFeatureDiscovery my-nfd-deployment ``` Optionally, you can also remove the namespace: ```bash kubectl delete ns nfd ``` See the [node-feature-discovery-operator][nfd-operator] and [OLM][OLM] project documentation for instructions for uninstalling the operator and operator lifecycle manager, respectively. ### Manual Simplest way is to invoke `kubectl delete` on the deployment files you used. Beware that this will also delete the namespace that NFD is running in. For example: ```bash kubectl delete -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes-sigs/node-feature-discovery/{{ site.release }}/nfd-worker-daemonset.yaml.template kubectl delete -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes-sigs/node-feature-discovery/{{ site.release }}/nfd-master.yaml.template ``` Alternatively you can delete create objects one-by-one, depending on the type of deployment, for example: ```bash NFD_NS=node-feature-discovery kubectl -n $NFD_NS delete ds nfd-worker kubectl -n $NFD_NS delete deploy nfd-master kubectl -n $NFD_NS delete svc nfd-master kubectl -n $NFD_NS delete sa nfd-master kubectl delete clusterrole nfd-master kubectl delete clusterrolebinding nfd-master ``` ### Removing Feature Labels NFD-Master has a special `--prune` command line flag for removing all nfd-related node labels, annotations and extended resources from the cluster. ```bash kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes-sigs/node-feature-discovery/{{ site.release }}/nfd-prune.yaml.template kubectl -n node-feature-discovery wait job.batch/nfd-prune --for=condition=complete && \ kubectl delete -f kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes-sigs/node-feature-discovery/{{ site.release }}/nfd-prune.yaml.template ``` **NOTE:** You must run prune before removing the RBAC rules (serviceaccount, clusterrole and clusterrolebinding). [nfd-operator]: https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/node-feature-discovery-operator [OLM]: https://github.com/operator-framework/operator-lifecycle-manager