4.1 KiB
Nodes
Typhoon clusters consist of controller node(s) and a (default) set of worker nodes.
Overview
Typhoon nodes use the standard set of Kubernetes node labels.
Labels: kubernetes.io/arch=amd64
kubernetes.io/hostname=node-name
kubernetes.io/os=linux
Controller node(s) are labeled to allow node selection (for rare components that run on controllers) and tainted to prevent ordinary workloads running on controllers.
Labels: node.kubernetes.io/controller=true
Taints: node-role.kubernetes.io/controller:NoSchedule
Worker nodes are labeled to allow node selection and untainted. Workloads will schedule on worker nodes by default, baring any contraindications.
Labels: node.kubernetes.io/node=
Taints: <none>
On auto-scaling cloud platforms, you may add worker pools with different groups of nodes with their own labels and taints. On platforms like bare-metal, with heterogeneous machines, you may manage node labels and taints per node.
Node Labels
Add custom initial worker node labels to default workers or worker pool nodes to allow workloads to select among nodes that differ.
=== "Cluster"
```tf
module "yavin" {
source = "git::https://github.com/poseidon/typhoon//google-cloud/fedora-coreos/kubernetes?ref=v1.31.0"
# Google Cloud
cluster_name = "yavin"
region = "us-central1"
dns_zone = "example.com"
dns_zone_name = "example-zone"
# configuration
ssh_authorized_key = local.ssh_key
# optional
worker_count = 2
worker_node_labels = ["pool=default"]
}
```
=== "Worker Pool"
```tf
module "yavin-pool" {
source = "git::https://github.com/poseidon/typhoon//google-cloud/fedora-coreos/kubernetes/workers?ref=v1.31.0"
# Google Cloud
cluster_name = "yavin"
region = "europe-west2"
network = module.yavin.network_name
# configuration
name = "yavin-16x"
kubeconfig = module.yavin.kubeconfig
ssh_authorized_key = local.ssh_key
# optional
worker_count = 1
machine_type = "n1-standard-16"
node_labels = ["pool=big"]
}
```
In the example above, the two default workers would be labeled pool: default
and the additional worker would be labeled pool: big
.
Node Taints
Add custom initial taints on worker pool nodes to indicate a node is unique and should only schedule workloads that explicitly tolerate a given taint key.
!!! warning
Since taints prevent workloads scheduling onto a node, you must decide whether kube-system
DaemonSets (e.g. flannel, Calico, Cilium) should tolerate your custom taint by setting daemonset_tolerations
. If you don't list your custom taint(s), important components won't run on these nodes.
=== "Cluster"
```tf
module "yavin" {
source = "git::https://github.com/poseidon/typhoon//google-cloud/fedora-coreos/kubernetes?ref=v1.31.0"
# Google Cloud
cluster_name = "yavin"
region = "us-central1"
dns_zone = "example.com"
dns_zone_name = "example-zone"
# configuration
ssh_authorized_key = local.ssh_key
# optional
worker_count = 2
daemonset_tolerations = ["role"]
}
```
=== "Worker Pool"
```tf
module "yavin-pool" {
source = "git::https://github.com/poseidon/typhoon//google-cloud/fedora-coreos/kubernetes/workers?ref=v1.31.0"
# Google Cloud
cluster_name = "yavin"
region = "europe-west2"
network = module.yavin.network_name
# configuration
name = "yavin-16x"
kubeconfig = module.yavin.kubeconfig
ssh_authorized_key = local.ssh_key
# optional
worker_count = 1
accelerator_type = "nvidia-tesla-p100"
accelerator_count = 1
node_taints = ["role=gpu:NoSchedule"]
}
```
In the example above, the the additional worker would be tainted with role=gpu:NoSchedule
to prevent workloads scheduling, but kube-system
components like flannel, Calico, or Cilium would tolerate that custom taint to run there.