feat: discover virtual network interface
44 KiB
title | layout | sort |
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Customization guide | default | 8 |
Customization guide
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Table of contents
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- TOC {:toc}
Overview
NFD provides multiple extension points for vendor and application specific labeling:
NodeFeature
objects can be used to communicate "raw" node features and node labeling requests to nfd-master.NodeFeatureRule
objects provide a way to deploy custom labeling rules via the Kubernetes API.local
feature source of nfd-worker creates labels by reading text files and executing hooks.custom
feature source of nfd-worker creates labels based on user-specified rules.
NodeFeature custom resource
NodeFeature objects provide a way for 3rd party extensions to advertise custom features, both as "raw" features that serve as input to NodeFeatureRule objects and as feature labels directly.
Note that RBAC rules must be created for each extension for them to be able to create and manipulate NodeFeature objects in their namespace.
The NodeFeature CRD API can be disabled with the
-enable-nodefeature-api=false
command line flag. This flag must be specified
for both nfd-master and nfd-worker as it will enable the gRPC communication
between them. Note that the gRPC API is DEPRECATED and will be removed in a
future release, at which point the NodeFeature API cannot be disabled.
A NodeFeature example
Consider the following referential example:
apiVersion: nfd.k8s-sigs.io/v1alpha1
kind: NodeFeature
metadata:
labels:
nfd.node.kubernetes.io/node-name: node-1
name: vendor-features-for-node-1
spec:
# Features for NodeFeatureRule matching
features:
flags:
vendor.flags:
elements:
feature-x: {}
feature-y: {}
attributes:
vendor.config:
elements:
setting-a: "auto"
knob-b: "123"
instances:
vendor.devices:
elements:
- attributes:
model: "dev-1000"
vendor: "acme"
- attributes:
model: "dev-2000"
vendor: "acme"
# Labels to be created
labels:
vendor.io/feature.enabled: "true"
The object targets node named node-1
. It lists two "flag type" features under
the vendor.flags
domain, two "attribute type" features and under the
vendor.config
domain and two "instance type" features under the
vendor.devices
domain. These features will not be directly affecting the node
labels but they will be used as input when the
NodeFeatureRule
objects are evaluated.
In addition, the example requests directly the
vendor.io/feature.enabled=true
node label to be created.
The nfd.node.kubernetes.io/node-name=<node-name>
must be in place for each
NodeFeature object as NFD uses it to determine the node which it is targeting.
Feature types
Features are divided into three different types:
- flag features: a set of names without any associated values, e.g. CPUID flags or loaded kernel modules
- attribute features: a set of names each of which has a single value associated with it (essentially a map of key-value pairs), e.g. kernel config flags or os release information
- instance features: a list of instances, each of which has multiple attributes (key-value pairs of their own) associated with it, e.g. PCI or USB devices
NodeFeatureRule custom resource
NodeFeatureRule
objects provide an easy way to create vendor or application
specific labels and taints. It uses a flexible rule-based mechanism for creating
labels and optionally taints based on node features.
A NodeFeatureRule example
Consider the following referential example:
apiVersion: nfd.k8s-sigs.io/v1alpha1
kind: NodeFeatureRule
metadata:
name: my-sample-rule-object
spec:
rules:
- name: "my sample rule"
labels:
"feature.node.kubernetes.io/my-sample-feature": "true"
matchFeatures:
- feature: kernel.loadedmodule
matchExpressions:
dummy: {op: Exists}
- feature: kernel.config
matchExpressions:
X86: {op: In, value: ["y"]}
It specifies one rule which creates node label
feature.node.kubernetes.io/my-sample-feature=true
if both of the following
conditions are true (matchFeatures
implements a logical AND over the
matchers):
- The
dummy
network driver module has been loaded - X86 option in kernel config is set to
=y
Create a NodeFeatureRule
with a yaml file:
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes-sigs/node-feature-discovery/{{ site.release }}/examples/nodefeaturerule.yaml
Now, on X86 platforms the feature label appears after doing modprobe dummy
on
a system and correspondingly the label is removed after rmmod dummy
. Note a
re-labeling delay up to the sleep-interval of nfd-worker (1 minute by default).
See Feature rule format for detailed description of available fields and how to write labeling rules.
Node tainting
This feature is experimental.
In some circumstances, it is desirable to keep nodes with specialized hardware
away from running general workload and instead leave them for workloads that
need the specialized hardware. One way to achieve it is to taint the nodes with
the specialized hardware and add corresponding toleration to pods that require
the special hardware. NFD offers node tainting functionality which is disabled
by default. User can define one or more custom taints via the taints
field of
the NodeFeatureRule CR. The same rule-based mechanism is applied here and the
NFD taints only rule matching nodes.
To enable the tainting feature, --enable-taints
flag needs to be set to true
.
If the flag --enable-taints
is set to false
(i.e. disabled), taints defined in
the NodeFeatureRule CR have no effect and will be ignored by the NFD master.
See documentation of the taints field for detailed description how to specify taints in the NodeFeatureRule object.
NOTE: Before enabling any taints, make sure to edit nfd-worker daemonset to tolerate the taints to be created. Otherwise, already running pods that do not tolerate the taint are evicted immediately from the node including the nfd-worker pod.
Local feature source
NFD-Worker has a special feature source named local
which is an integration
point for external feature detectors. It provides a mechanism for pluggable
extensions, allowing the creation of new user-specific features and even
overriding built-in labels.
The local
feature source has two methods for detecting features, feature
files and hooks (deprecated). The features discovered by the local
source can
further be used in label rules specified in
NodeFeatureRule
objects and the
custom
feature source.
NOTE: Be careful when creating and/or updating hook or feature files while NFD is running. To avoid race conditions you should write into a temporary file, and atomically create/update the original file by doing a file rename operation. NFD ignores dot files, so temporary file can be written to the same directory and renamed (
.my.feature
->my.feature
) once file is complete. Both file names should (obviously) be unique for the given application.
An example
Consider a plaintext file
/etc/kubernetes/node-feature-discovery/features.d/my-features
having the following contents (or alternatively a shell script
/etc/kubernetes/node-feature-discovery/source.d/my-hook.sh
having the
following stdout output):
feature.node.kubernetes.io/my-feature.1
feature.node.kubernetes.io/my-feature.2=myvalue
vendor.io/my-feature.3=456
This will translate into the following node labels:
feature.node.kubernetes.io/my-feature.1: "true"
feature.node.kubernetes.io/my-feature.2: "myvalue"
vendor.io/my-feature.3: "456"
Feature files
The local
source reads files found in
/etc/kubernetes/node-feature-discovery/features.d/
. File content is parsed
and translated into node labels, see the input format below.
Hooks
DEPRECATED The local
source executes hooks found in
/etc/kubernetes/node-feature-discovery/source.d/
. The hook files must be
executable and they are supposed to print all discovered features in stdout
.
Since NFD v0.13 the default container image only supports statically linked ELF
binaries.
stderr
output of hooks is propagated to NFD log so it can be used for
debugging and logging.
NFD tries to execute any regular files found from the hooks directory.
Any additional data files the hook might need (e.g. a configuration file)
should be placed in a separate directory to avoid NFD unnecessarily
trying to execute them. A subdirectory under the hooks directory can be used,
for example /etc/kubernetes/node-feature-discovery/source.d/conf/
.
NOTE: Hooks are being DEPRECATED and will be removed in a future release. Starting from release v0.14 hooks are disabled by default and can be enabled via
sources.local.hooksEnabled
field in the worker configuration.
sources:
local:
hooksEnabled: true # true by default at this point
NOTE: NFD will blindly run any executables placed/mounted in the hooks directory. It is the user's responsibility to review the hooks for e.g. possible security implications.
NOTE: The full image variant provides backwards-compatibility with older NFD versions by including a more expanded environment, supporting bash and perl runtimes.
Input format
The hook stdout and feature files are expected to contain features in simple key-value pairs, separated by newlines:
# This is a comment
<key>[=<value>]
The label value defaults to true
, if not specified.
Label namespace must be specified with <namespace>/<name>[=<value>]
.
NOTE: The feature file size limit it 64kB. The feature file will be ignored if the size limit is exceeded.
Comment lines (starting with #
) are ignored.
Adding following line anywhere to feature file defines date when its content expires / is ignored:
# +expiry-time=2023-07-29T11:22:33Z
Also, the expiry-time value would stay the same during the processing of the feature file until another expiry-time directive is encountered. Considering the following file:
# +expiry-time=2012-07-28T11:22:33Z
vendor.io/feature1=featureValue
# +expiry-time=2080-07-28T11:22:33Z
vendor.io/feature2=featureValue2
# +expiry-time=2070-07-28T11:22:33Z
vendor.io/feature3=featureValue3
# +expiry-time=2002-07-28T11:22:33Z
vendor.io/feature4=featureValue4
After processing the above file, only vendor.io/feature2
and
vendor.io/feature3
would be included in the list of accepted features.
NOTE: The time format supported is RFC3339. Also, the
expiry-time
tag is only evaluated in each re-discovery period, and the expiration of node labels is not tracked.
To exclude specific features from the local.feature
Feature, you can use the
# +no-feature
directive. The # +no-label
directive causes the feature to
be excluded from the local.label
Feature and a node label not to be generated.
Considering the following file:
# +no-feature
vendor.io/label-only=value
vendor.io/my-feature=value
vendor.io/foo=bar
# +no-label
foo=baz
Processing the above file would result in the following Features:
local.features:
foo: baz
vendor.io/my-feature: value
local.labels:
vendor.io/label-only: value
vendor.io/my-feature: value
and the following labels added to the Node:
vendor.io/label-only=value
vendor.io/my-feature=value
NOTE: use of unprefixed label names (like
foo=bar
) should not be used. In NFD {{ site.version }} unprefixed names will be automatically prefixed withfeature.node.kubernetes.io/
but this will change in a future version (see autoDefaultNs config option. Unprefixed names for plain Features (tagged with# +no-label
) can be used without restrictions, however.
Mounts
The standard NFD deployments contain hostPath
mounts for
/etc/kubernetes/node-feature-discovery/source.d/
and
/etc/kubernetes/node-feature-discovery/features.d/
, making these directories
from the host available inside the nfd-worker container.
Injecting labels from other pods
One use case for the feature files and hooks is detecting features in other
Pods outside NFD, e.g. in Kubernetes device plugins. By using the same
hostPath
mounts for /etc/kubernetes/node-feature-discovery/source.d/
and
/etc/kubernetes/node-feature-discovery/features.d/
in the side-car (e.g.
device plugin) creates a shared area for deploying feature files and hooks to
NFD. NFD periodically scans the directories and reads any feature files and
runs any hooks it finds.
Custom feature source
The custom
feature source in nfd-worker provides a rule-based mechanism for
label creation, similar to the
NodeFeatureRule
objects. The difference is
that the rules are specified in the worker configuration instead of a
Kubernetes API object.
See worker configuration for instructions how to set-up and manage the worker configuration.
An example custom feature source configuration
Consider the following referential configuration for nfd-worker:
core:
labelSources: ["custom"]
sources:
custom:
- name: "my sample rule"
labels:
"feature.node.kubenernetes.io/my-sample-feature": "true"
matchFeatures:
- feature: kernel.loadedmodule
matchExpressions:
dummy: {op: Exists}
- feature: kernel.config
matchExpressions:
X86: {op: In, value: ["y"]}
It specifies one rule which creates node label
feature.node.kubenernetes.io/my-sample-feature=true
if both of the following
conditions are true (matchFeatures
implements a logical AND over the
matchers):
- The
dummy
network driver module has been loaded - X86 option in kernel config is set to
=y
In addition, the configuration only enables the custom
source, disabling all
built-in labels.
Now, on X86 platforms the feature label appears after doing modprobe dummy
on
a system and correspondingly the label is removed after rmmod dummy
. Note a
re-labeling delay up to the sleep-interval of nfd-worker (1 minute by default).
Additional configuration directory
In addition to the rules defined in the nfd-worker configuration file, the
custom
feature source can read more configuration files located in the
/etc/kubernetes/node-feature-discovery/custom.d/
directory. This makes more
dynamic and flexible configuration easier.
As an example, consider having file
/etc/kubernetes/node-feature-discovery/custom.d/my-rule.yaml
with the
following content:
- name: "my e1000 rule"
labels:
"feature.node.kubenernetes.io/e1000.present": "true"
matchFeatures:
- feature: kernel.loadedmodule
matchExpressions:
e1000: {op: Exists}
This simple rule will create feature.node.kubenernetes.io/e1000.present=true
label if the e1000
kernel module has been loaded.
The
samples/custom-rules
kustomize overlay sample contains an example for deploying a custom rule from a
ConfigMap.
Node labels
Feature labels have the following format:
<namespace>/<name> = <value>
The namespace part (i.e. prefix) of the labels is controlled by nfd:
- All built-in labels use
feature.node.kubernetes.io
. - Namespaces may be excluded with the
-deny-label-ns
command line flag of nfd-master- To allow specific namespaces that were denied, you can use
-extra-label-ns
command line flag of nfd-master. e.g:nfd-master -deny-label-ns="*" -extra-label-ns=example.com
- Built-in default namespaces
feature.node.kubernetes.io
andprofile.node.kubernetes.io
(and their sub-namespaces) are always allowed and cannot be denied.
- To allow specific namespaces that were denied, you can use
Feature rule format
This section describes the rule format used in
NodeFeatureRule
objects and in the
configuration of the custom
feature source.
It is based on a generic feature matcher that covers all features discovered by nfd-worker. The rules rely on a unified data model of the available features and a generic expression-based format. Features that can be used in the rules are described in detail in available features below.
Take this rule as a referential example:
- name: "my feature rule"
labels:
"feature.node.kubernetes.io/my-special-feature": "my-value"
matchFeatures:
- feature: cpu.cpuid
matchExpressions:
AVX512F: {op: Exists}
- feature: kernel.version
matchExpressions:
major: {op: In, value: ["5"]}
minor: {op: Gt, value: ["1"]}
- feature: pci.device
matchExpressions:
vendor: {op: In, value: ["8086"]}
class: {op: In, value: ["0200"]}
This will yield feature.node.kubernetes.io/my-special-feature=my-value
node
label if all of these are true (matchFeatures
implements a logical AND over
the matchers):
- the CPU has AVX512F capability
- kernel version is 5.2 or later (must be v5.x)
- an Intel network controller is present
Fields
name
The .name
field is required and used as an identifier of the rule.
labels
The .labels
is a map of the node labels to create if the rule matches.
Take this rule as a referential example:
apiVersion: nfd.k8s-sigs.io/v1alpha1
kind: NodeFeatureRule
metadata:
name: my-sample-rule-object
spec:
rules:
- name: "my dynamic label value rule"
labels:
feature.node.kubernetes.io/linux-lsm-enabled: "@kernel.config.LSM"
feature.node.kubernetes.io/custom-label: "customlabel"
Label linux-lsm-enabled
uses the @
notation for dynamic values.
The value of the label will be the value of the attribute LSM
of the feature kernel.config
.
The @<feature-name>.<element-name>
format can be used to inject values of
detected features to the label. See
available features for possible values to use.
This will yield into the following node label:
labels:
...
feature.node.kubernetes.io/linux-lsm-enabled: apparmor
feature.node.kubernetes.io/custom-label: "customlabel"
labelsTemplate
The .labelsTemplate
field specifies a text template for dynamically creating
labels based on the matched features. See templating for
details.
NOTE: The
labels
field has priority overlabelsTemplate
, i.e. labels specified in thelabels
field will override anything originating fromlabelsTemplate
.
annotations
The .annotations
field is a list of features to be advertised as node
annotations.
Take this rule as a referential example:
apiVersion: nfd.k8s-sigs.io/v1alpha1
kind: NodeFeatureRule
metadata:
name: feature-annotations-example
spec:
rules:
- name: "annotation-example"
annotations:
feature.node.kubernetes.io/defaul-ns-annotation: "foo"
custom.vendor.io/feature: "baz"
matchFeatures:
- feature: kernel.version
matchExpressions:
major: {op: Exists}
This will yield into the following node annotations:
annotations:
...
feature.node.kubernetes.io/defaul-ns-annotation: "foo"
custom.vendor.io/feature: "baz"
...
NFD enforces some limitations to the namespace (or prefix)/ of the annotations:
kubernetes.io/
and its sub-namespaces (likesub.ns.kubernetes.io/
) cannot generally be used- the only exception is
feature.node.kubernetes.io/
and its sub-namespaces (likesub.ns.feature.node.kubernetes.io
) - unprefixed names (like
my-annotation
) should not be used. In NFD {{ site.version }} unprefixed names will be automatically prefixed withfeature.node.kubernetes.io/
but this will change in a future version (see autoDefaultNs config option.
NOTE: The
annotations
field has will only advertise features via node annotations the features won't be advertised as node labels unless they are specified in thelabels
field.
taints
taints is a list of taint entries and each entry can have key
, value
and effect
,
where the value
is optional. Effect could be NoSchedule
, PreferNoSchedule
or NoExecute
. To learn more about the meaning of these effects, check out k8s documentation.
Example NodeFeatureRule with taints:
apiVersion: nfd.k8s-sigs.io/v1alpha1
kind: NodeFeatureRule
metadata:
name: my-sample-rule-object
spec:
rules:
- name: "my sample taint rule"
taints:
- effect: PreferNoSchedule
key: "feature.node.kubernetes.io/special-node"
value: "true"
- effect: NoExecute
key: "feature.node.kubernetes.io/dedicated-node"
matchFeatures:
- feature: kernel.loadedmodule
matchExpressions:
dummy: {op: Exists}
- feature: kernel.config
matchExpressions:
X86: {op: In, value: ["y"]}
In this example, if the my sample taint rule
rule is matched,
feature.node.kubernetes.io/pci-0300_1d0f.present=true:NoExecute
and feature.node.kubernetes.io/cpu-cpuid.ADX:NoExecute
taints are set on the node.
There are some limitations to the namespace part (i.e. prefix/) of the taint key:
kubernetes.io/
and its sub-namespaces (likesub.ns.kubernetes.io/
) cannot generally be used- the only exception is
feature.node.kubernetes.io/
and its sub-namespaces (likesub.ns.feature.node.kubernetes.io
) - unprefixed keys (like
foo
) keys are disallowed
NOTE: taints field is not available for the custom rules of nfd-worker and only for NodeFeatureRule objects.
vars
The .vars
field is a map of values (key-value pairs) to store for subsequent
rules to use. In other words, these are variables that are not advertised as
node labels. See backreferences for more details on the
usage of vars.
extendedResources
The .extendedResources
field is a list of extended resources to advertise.
See extended resources for more details.
Take this rule as a referential example:
apiVersion: nfd.k8s-sigs.io/v1alpha1
kind: NodeFeatureRule
metadata:
name: my-extended-resource-rule
spec:
rules:
- name: "my extended resource rule"
extendedResources:
vendor.io/dynamic: "@kernel.version.major"
vendor.io/static: "123"
matchFeatures:
- feature: kernel.version
matchExpressions:
major: {op: Exists}
The extended resource vendor.io/dynamic
is defined in the form @feature.attribute
.
The value of the extended resource will be the value of the attribute major
of the feature kernel.version
.
The @<feature-name>.<element-name>
format can be used to inject values of
detected features to the extended resource. See
available features for possible values to use. Note that
the value must be eligible as a
Kubernetes resource quantity.
This will yield into the following node status:
allocatable:
...
vendor.io/dynamic: "5"
vendor.io/static: "123"
...
capacity:
...
vendor.io/dynamic: "5"
vendor.io/static: "123"
...
There are some limitations to the namespace part (i.e. prefix)/ of the Extended Resources names:
kubernetes.io/
and its sub-namespaces (likesub.ns.kubernetes.io/
) cannot generally be used- the only exception is
feature.node.kubernetes.io/
and its sub-namespaces (likesub.ns.feature.node.kubernetes.io
) - unprefixed names (like
my-er
) site.version }} unprefixed names will be automatically prefixed withfeature.node.kubernetes.io/
but this will change in a future version (see autoDefaultNs config option.
NOTE:
.extendedResources
is not supported by the custom feature source -- it can only be used in NodeFeatureRule objects.
varsTemplate
The .varsTemplate
field specifies a text template for dynamically creating
vars based on the matched features. See templating for details
on using templates and backreferences for more details on
the usage of vars.
NOTE: The
vars
field has priority overvarsTemplate
, i.e. vars specified in thevars
field will override anything originating fromvarsTemplate
.
matchFeatures
The .matchFeatures
field specifies a feature matcher, consisting of a list of
feature matcher terms. It implements a logical AND over the terms i.e. all
of them must match for the rule to trigger.
matchFeatures:
- feature: <feature-name>
matchExpressions:
<key>:
op: <op>
value:
- <value-1>
- ...
The .matchFeatures[].feature
field specifies the feature against which to
match.
The .matchFeatures[].matchExpressions
field specifies a map of expressions
which to evaluate against the elements of the feature.
In each MatchExpression op
specifies the operator to apply. Valid values are
described below.
Operator | Number of values | Matches when |
---|---|---|
In |
1 or greater | Input is equal to one of the values |
NotIn |
1 or greater | Input is not equal to any of the values |
InRegexp |
1 or greater | Values of the MatchExpression are treated as regexps and input matches one or more of them |
Exists |
0 | The key exists |
DoesNotExist |
0 | The key does not exists |
Gt |
1 | Input is greater than the value. Both the input and value must be integer numbers. |
Lt |
1 | Input is less than the value. Both the input and value must be integer numbers. |
GtLt |
2 | Input is between two values. Both the input and value must be integer numbers. |
IsTrue |
0 | Input is equal to "true" |
IsFalse |
0 | Input is equal "false" |
The value
field of MatchExpression is a list of string arguments to the
operator.
The behavior of MatchExpression depends on the feature type:
for flag and attribute features the MatchExpression operates on the feature
element whose name matches the <key>
. However, for instance features all
MatchExpressions are evaluated against the attributes of each instance
separately.
matchAny
The .matchAny
field is a list of of matchFeatures
matchers. A logical OR is applied over the matchers, i.e. at least one of them
must match for the rule to trigger.
Consider the following example:
matchAny:
- matchFeatures:
- feature: kernel.loadedmodule
matchExpressions:
kmod-1: {op: Exists}
- feature: pci.device
matchExpressions:
vendor: {op: In, value: ["0eee"]}
class: {op: In, value: ["0200"]}
- matchFeatures:
- feature: kernel.loadedmodule
matchExpressions:
kmod-2: {op: Exists}
- feature: pci.device
matchExpressions:
vendor: {op: In, value: ["0fff"]}
class: {op: In, value: ["0200"]}
This matches if kernel module kmod-1 is loaded and a network controller from vendor 0eee is present, OR, if kernel module kmod-2 has been loaded and a network controller from vendor 0fff is present (OR both of these conditions are true).
Available features
The following features are available for matching:
Feature | Feature type | Elements | Value type | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
cpu.cpuid |
flag | Supported CPU capabilities | ||
<cpuid-flag> |
CPUID flag is present | |||
cpu.cstate |
attribute | Status of cstates in the intel_idle cpuidle driver | ||
enabled |
bool | 'true' if cstates are set, otherwise 'false'. Does not exist of intel_idle driver is not active. | ||
cpu.model |
attribute | CPU model related attributes | ||
family |
int | CPU family | ||
vendor_id |
string | CPU vendor ID | ||
id |
int | CPU model ID | ||
cpu.pstate |
attribute | State of the Intel pstate driver. Does not exist if the driver is not enabled. | ||
status |
string | Status of the driver, possible values are 'active' and 'passive' | ||
turbo |
bool | 'true' if turbo frequencies are enabled, otherwise 'false' | ||
scaling |
string | Active scaling_governor, possible values are 'powersave' or 'performance'. | ||
cpu.rdt |
attribute | Intel RDT capabilities supported by the system | ||
<rdt-flag> |
RDT capability is supported, see RDT flags for details | |||
RDTL3CA_NUM_CLOSID |
int | The number or available CLOSID (Class of service ID) for Intel L3 Cache Allocation Technology | ||
cpu.security |
attribute | Features related to security and trusted execution environments | ||
sgx.enabled |
bool | true if Intel SGX (Software Guard Extensions) has been enabled, otherwise does not exist |
||
sgx.epc |
int | The total amount Intel SGX Encrypted Page Cache memory in bytes. It's only present if sgx.enabled is true . |
||
se.enabled |
bool | true if IBM Secure Execution for Linux is available and has been enabled, otherwise does not exist |
||
tdx.enabled |
bool | true if Intel TDX (Trusted Domain Extensions) is available on the host and has been enabled, otherwise does not exist |
||
tdx.total_keys |
int | The total amount of keys an Intel TDX (Trusted Domain Extensions) host can provide. It's only present if tdx.enabled is true . |
||
tdx.protected |
bool | true if a guest VM was started using Intel TDX (Trusted Domain Extensions), otherwise does not exist. |
||
sev.enabled |
bool | true if AMD SEV (Secure Encrypted Virtualization) is available on the host and has been enabled, otherwise does not exist |
||
sev.es.enabled |
bool | true if AMD SEV-ES (Encrypted State supported) is available on the host and has been enabled, otherwise does not exist |
||
sev.snp.enabled |
bool | true if AMD SEV-SNP (Secure Nested Paging supported) is available on the host and has been enabled, otherwise does not exist |
||
sev.asids |
int | The total amount of AMD SEV address-space identifiers (ASIDs), based on the /sys/fs/cgroup/misc.capacity information. |
||
sev.encrypted_state_ids |
int | The total amount of AMD SEV-ES and SEV-SNP supported, based on the /sys/fs/cgroup/misc.capacity information. |
||
cpu.sst |
attribute | Intel SST (Speed Select Technology) capabilities | ||
bf.enabled |
bool | true if Intel SST-BF (Intel Speed Select Technology - Base frequency) has been enabled, otherwise does not exist |
||
cpu.topology |
attribute | CPU topology related features | ||
hardware_multithreading |
bool | Hardware multithreading, such as Intel HTT, is enabled | ||
cpu.coprocessor |
attribute | CPU Coprocessor related features | ||
nx_gzip |
bool | Nest Accelerator GZIP support is enabled | ||
kernel.config |
attribute | Kernel configuration options | ||
<config-flag> |
string | Value of the kconfig option | ||
kernel.loadedmodule |
flag | Kernel modules loaded on the node as reported by /proc/modules |
||
kernel.enabledmodule |
flag | Kernel modules loaded on the node and available as built-ins as reported by modules.builtin |
||
mod-name |
Kernel module <mod-name> is loaded |
|||
kernel.selinux |
attribute | Kernel SELinux related features | ||
enabled |
bool | true if SELinux has been enabled and is in enforcing mode, otherwise false |
||
kernel.version |
attribute | Kernel version information | ||
full |
string | Full kernel version (e.g. ‘4.5.6-7-g123abcde') | ||
major |
int | First component of the kernel version (e.g. ‘4') | ||
minor |
int | Second component of the kernel version (e.g. ‘5') | ||
revision |
int | Third component of the kernel version (e.g. ‘6') | ||
local.label |
attribute | Labels from feature files and hooks, i.e. labels from the local feature source | ||
local.feature |
attribute | Features from feature files and hooks, i.e. features from the local feature source | ||
<label-name> |
string | Label <label-name> created by the local feature source, value equals the value of the label |
||
memory.nv |
instance | NVDIMM devices present in the system | ||
<sysfs-attribute> |
string | Value of the sysfs device attribute, available attributes: devtype , mode |
||
memory.numa |
attribute | NUMA nodes | ||
is_numa |
bool | true if NUMA architecture, false otherwise |
||
node_count |
int | Number of NUMA nodes | ||
network.device |
instance | Physical (non-virtual) network interfaces present in the system | ||
name |
string | Name of the network interface | ||
<sysfs-attribute> |
string | Sysfs network interface attribute, available attributes: operstate , speed , sriov_numvfs , sriov_totalvfs |
||
network.virtual |
instance | Virtual network interfaces present in the system | ||
name |
string | Name of the network interface | ||
<sysfs-attribute> |
string | Sysfs network interface attribute, available attributes: operstate |
||
pci.device |
instance | PCI devices present in the system | ||
<sysfs-attribute> |
string | Value of the sysfs device attribute, available attributes: class , vendor , device , subsystem_vendor , subsystem_device , sriov_totalvfs , iommu_group/type , iommu/intel-iommu/version |
||
storage.block |
instance | Block storage devices present in the system | ||
name |
string | Name of the block device | ||
<sysfs-attribute> |
string | Sysfs network interface attribute, available attributes: dax , rotational , nr_zones , zoned |
||
system.osrelease |
attribute | System identification data from /etc/os-release |
||
<parameter> |
string | One parameter from /etc/os-release |
||
system.name |
attribute | System name information | ||
nodename |
string | Name of the kubernetes node object | ||
usb.device |
instance | USB devices present in the system | ||
<sysfs-attribute> |
string | Value of the sysfs device attribute, available attributes: class , vendor , device , serial |
||
rule.matched |
attribute | Previously matched rules | ||
<label-or-var> |
string | Label or var from a preceding rule that matched |
Intel RDT flags
Flag | Description |
---|---|
RDTMON | Intel RDT Monitoring Technology |
RDTCMT | Intel Cache Monitoring (CMT) |
RDTMBM | Intel Memory Bandwidth Monitoring (MBM) |
RDTL3CA | Intel L3 Cache Allocation Technology |
RDTl2CA | Intel L2 Cache Allocation Technology |
RDTMBA | Intel Memory Bandwidth Allocation (MBA) Technology |
Templating
Rules support template-based creation of labels and vars with the
.labelsTemplate
and .varsTemplate
fields. These makes it possible to
dynamically generate labels and vars based on the features that matched.
The template must expand into a simple format with <key>=<value>
pairs
separated by newline.
Consider the following example:
labelsTemplate: |
{{ range .pci.device }}vendor-{{ .class }}-{{ .device }}.present=true
{{ end }}
matchFeatures:
- feature: pci.device
matchExpressions:
class: {op: InRegexp, value: ["^02"]}
vendor: ["0fff"]
The rule above will create individual labels
feature.node.kubernetes.io/vendor-<class-id>-<device-id>.present=true
for
each network controller device (device class starting with 02) from vendor
0fff.
All the matched features of each feature matcher term under matchFeatures
fields are available for the template engine. Matched features can be
referenced with {%raw%}{{ .<feature-name> }}{%endraw%}
in the template, and
the available data could be described in yaml as follows:
.
<key-feature>:
- Name: <matched-key>
- ...
<value-feature>:
- Name: <matched-key>
Value: <matched-value>
- ...
<instance-feature>:
- <attribute-1-name>: <attribute-1-value>
<attribute-2-name>: <attribute-2-value>
...
- ...
That is, the per-feature data is a list of objects whose data fields depend on the type of the feature:
- for flag features only 'Name' is available
- for value features 'Name' and 'Value' are available
- for instance features all attributes of the matched instance are available
A simple example of a template utilizing name and value from an attribute feature:
labelsTemplate: |
{{ range .system.osrelease }}system-{{ .Name }}={{ .Value }}
{{ end }}
matchFeatures:
- feature: system.osRelease
matchExpressions:
ID: {op: Exists}
VERSION_ID.major: {op: Exists}
NOTE: In case of matchAny is specified, the template is executed separately against each individual
matchFeatures
field and the final set of labels will be superset of all these separate template expansions. E.g. consider the following:
- name: <name>
labelsTemplate: <template>
matchFeatures: <matcher#1>
matchAny:
- matchFeatures: <matcher#2>
- matchFeatures: <matcher#3>
In the example above (assuming the overall result is a match) the template would be executed on matcher#1 as well as on matcher#2 and/or matcher#3 (depending on whether both or only one of them match). All the labels from these separate expansions would be created, i.e. the end result would be a union of all the individual expansions.
Rule templates use the Golang text/template
package and all its built-in functionality (e.g. pipelines and functions) can
be used. An example template taking use of the built-in len
function,
advertising the number of PCI network controllers from a specific vendor:
labelsTemplate: |
num-intel-network-controllers={{ .pci.device | len }}
matchFeatures:
- feature: pci.device
matchExpressions:
vendor: {op: In, value: ["8086"]}
class: {op: In, value: ["0200"]}
Imaginative template pipelines are possible, but care must be taken to produce understandable and maintainable rule sets.
Backreferences
Rules support referencing the output of preceding rules. This enables
sophisticated scenarios where multiple rules are combined together
to for more complex heuristics than a single rule can provide. The labels and
vars created by the execution of preceding rules are available as a special
rule.matched
feature.
Consider the following configuration:
- name: "my kernel label rule"
labels:
kernel-feature: "true"
matchFeatures:
- feature: kernel.version
matchExpressions:
major: {op: Gt, value: ["4"]}
- name: "my var rule"
vars:
nolabel-feature: "true"
matchFeatures:
- feature: cpu.cpuid
matchExpressions:
AVX512F: {op: Exists}
- feature: pci.device
matchExpressions:
vendor: {op: In, value: ["0fff"]}
device: {op: In, value: ["1234", "1235"]}
- name: "my high level feature rule"
labels:
high-level-feature: "true"
matchFeatures:
- feature: rule.matched
matchExpressions:
kernel-feature: {op: IsTrue}
nolabel-feature: {op: IsTrue}
The feature.node.kubernetes.io/high-level-feature = true
label depends on the
two previous rules.
Note that when referencing rules across multiple
NodeFeatureRule
objects attention must be
paid to the ordering. NodeFeatureRule
objects are processed in alphabetical
order (based on their .metadata.name
).
Examples
Some more configuration examples below.
Match certain CPUID features:
- name: "example cpuid rule"
labels:
my-special-cpu-feature: "true"
matchFeatures:
- feature: cpu.cpuid
matchExpressions:
AESNI: {op: Exists}
AVX: {op: Exists}
Require a certain loaded kernel module and OS version:
- name: "my multi-feature rule"
labels:
my-special-multi-feature: "true"
matchFeatures:
- feature: kernel.loadedmodule
matchExpressions:
e1000: {op: Exists}
- feature: system.osrelease
matchExpressions:
NAME: {op: InRegexp, values: ["^openSUSE"]}
VERSION_ID.major: {op: Gt, values: ["14"]}
Require a loaded kernel module and two specific PCI devices (both of which must be present):
- name: "my multi-device rule"
labels:
my-multi-device-feature: "true"
matchFeatures:
- feature: kernel.loadedmodule
matchExpressions:
my-driver-module: {op: Exists}
- pci.device:
vendor: "0fff"
device: "1234"
- pci.device:
vendor: "0fff"
device: "abcd"