Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
executable file
·
85 lines (67 loc) · 4.41 KB

scheduler.md

File metadata and controls

executable file
·
85 lines (67 loc) · 4.41 KB

WARNING WARNING WARNING WARNING WARNING

PLEASE NOTE: This document applies to the HEAD of the source tree

If you are using a released version of Kubernetes, you should refer to the docs that go with that version.

The latest release of this document can be found [here](http://releases.k8s.io/release-1.2/docs/devel/scheduler.md).

Documentation for other releases can be found at releases.k8s.io.

The Kubernetes Scheduler

The Kubernetes scheduler runs as a process alongside the other master components such as the API server. Its interface to the API server is to watch for Pods with an empty PodSpec.NodeName, and for each Pod, it posts a Binding indicating where the Pod should be scheduled.

The scheduling process

The scheduler tries to find a node for each Pod, one at a time, as it notices these Pods via watch. There are three steps. First it applies a set of "predicates" that filter out inappropriate nodes. For example, if the PodSpec specifies resource requests, then the scheduler will filter out nodes that don't have at least that much resources available (computed as the capacity of the node minus the sum of the resource requests of the containers that are already running on the node). Second, it applies a set of "priority functions" that rank the nodes that weren't filtered out by the predicate check. For example, it tries to spread Pods across nodes and zones while at the same time favoring the least-loaded nodes (where "load" here is sum of the resource requests of the containers running on the node, divided by the node's capacity). Finally, the node with the highest priority is chosen (or, if there are multiple such nodes, then one of them is chosen at random). The code for this main scheduling loop is in the function Schedule() in plugin/pkg/scheduler/generic_scheduler.go

Scheduler extensibility

The scheduler is extensible: the cluster administrator can choose which of the pre-defined scheduling policies to apply, and can add new ones. The built-in predicates and priorities are defined in plugin/pkg/scheduler/algorithm/predicates/predicates.go and plugin/pkg/scheduler/algorithm/priorities/priorities.go, respectively. The policies that are applied when scheduling can be chosen in one of two ways. Normally, the policies used are selected by the functions defaultPredicates() and defaultPriorities() in plugin/pkg/scheduler/algorithmprovider/defaults/defaults.go. However, the choice of policies can be overridden by passing the command-line flag --policy-config-file to the scheduler, pointing to a JSON file specifying which scheduling policies to use. See examples/scheduler-policy-config.json for an example config file. (Note that the config file format is versioned; the API is defined in plugin/pkg/scheduler/api). Thus to add a new scheduling policy, you should modify predicates.go or priorities.go, and either register the policy in defaultPredicates() or defaultPriorities(), or use a policy config file.

Exploring the code

If you want to get a global picture of how the scheduler works, you can start in plugin/cmd/kube-scheduler/app/server.go

Analytics