1
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/node-feature-discovery.git synced 2024-12-14 11:57:51 +00:00
node-feature-discovery/deployment/components/worker-config
Markus Lehtonen e206f0b86b source/custom: implement generic feature matching
Implement generic feature matchers that cover all feature sources (that
implement the FeatureSource interface). The implementation relies on the
unified data model provided by the FeatureSource interface as well as
the generic expression-based rule processing framework that was added to
the source/custom/expression package.

With this patch any new features added will be automatically available
for custom rules, without any additional work. Rule hierarchy follows
the source/feature hierarchy by design.

This patch introduces a new format for custom rule specifications,
dropping the 'value' field and introducing new 'labels' field which
makes it possible to specify multiple labels per rule. Also, in the new
format the 'name' field is just for reference and no matching label is
created. The new generic rules are available in this new rule format
under a 'matchFeatures. MatchFeatures implements a logical AND over
an array of per-feature matchers - i.e. a match for all of the matchers
is required. The goal of the new rule format is to make it better follow
K8s API design guidelines and make it extensible for future enhancements
(e.g. addition of templating, taints, annotations, extended resources
etc).

The old rule format (with cpuID, kConfig, loadedKMod, nodename, pciID,
usbID rules) is still supported. The rule format (new vs. old) is
determined at config parsing time based on the existence of the
'matchOn' field.

The new rule format and the configuration format for the new
matchFeatures field is

  - name: <rule-name>
    labels:
      <key>: <value>
      ...
    matchFeatures:
      - feature: <domain>.<feature>
        matchExpressions:
          <attribute>:
            op: <operator>
            value:
              - <list-of-values>
      - feature: <domain>.<feature>
        ...

Currently, "cpu", "kernel", "pci", "system", "usb" and "local" sources
are covered by the matshers/feature selectors. Thus, the following
features are available for matching with this patch:

  - cpu.cpuid:
      <cpuid-flag>: <exists/does-not-exist>
  - cpu.cstate:
      enabled: <bool>
  - cpu.pstate:
      status: <string>
      turbo: <bool>
      scaling_governor: <string>
  - cpu.rdt:
      <rdt-feature>: <exists/does-not-exist>
  - cpu.sst:
      bf.enabled: <bool>
  - cpu.topology:
      hardware_multithreading: <bool>
  - kernel.config:
      <flag-name>: <string>
  - kernel.loadedmodule:
      <module-name>: <exists/does-not-exist>
  - kernel.selinux:
      enabled: <bool>
  - kernel.version:
      major: <int>
      minor: <int>
      revision: <int>
      full: <string>
  - system.osrelease:
      <key-name>: <string>
      VERSION_ID.major: <int>
      VERSION_ID.minor: <int>
  - system.name:
      nodename: <string>
  - pci.device:
      <device-instance>:
        class: <string>
        vendor: <string>
        device: <string>
        subsystem_vendor: <string>
        susbystem_device: <string>
        sriov_totalvfs: <int>
  - usb.device:
      <device-instance>:
        class: <string>
        vendor: <string>
        device: <string>
        serial: <string>
  - local.label:
      <label-name>: <string>

The configuration also supports some "shortforms" for convenience:

   matchExpressions: [<attr-1>, <attr-2>=<val-2>]
   ---
   matchExpressions:
     <attr-3>:
     <attr-4>: <val-4>

is equal to:

   matchExpressions:
     <attr-1>: {op: Exists}
     <attr-2>: {op: In, value: [<val-2>]}
   ---
   matchExpressions:
     <attr-3>: {op: Exists}
     <attr-4>: {op: In, value: [<val-4>]}

In other words:

  - feature: kernel.config
    matchExpressions: ["X86", "INIT_ENV_ARG_LIMIT=32"]
  - feature: pci.device
    matchExpressions:
      vendor: "8086"

is the same as:

  - feature: kernel.config
    matchExpressions:
      X86: {op: Exists}
      INIT_ENV_ARG_LIMIT: {op: In, values: ["32"]}
  - feature: pci.device
    matchExpressions:
      vendor: {op: In, value: ["8086"]

Some configuration examples below. In order to match a CPUID feature the
following snippet can be used:

  - name: cpu-test-1
    labels:
      cpu-custom-feature: "true"
    matchFeatures:
      - feature: cpu.cpuid
        matchExpressions:
          AESNI: {op: Exists}
          AVX: {op: Exists}

In order to match against a loaded kernel module and OS version:

  - name: kernel-test-1
    labels:
      kernel-custom-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"]}

In order to require a kernel module and both of two specific PCI devices:

  - name: multi-device-test
    labels:
      multi-device-feature: "true"
    matchFeatures:
      - feature: kernel.loadedmodule
        matchExpressions:
          driver-module: {op: Exists}
      - pci.device:
          vendor: "8086"
          device: "1234"
      - pci.device:
          vendor: "8086"
          device: "abcd"
2021-11-12 16:51:13 +02:00
..
kustomization.yaml deployment: add kustomize base 2021-08-18 14:05:57 +03:00
nfd-worker.conf.example source/custom: implement generic feature matching 2021-11-12 16:51:13 +02:00