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Overview
The ClusterCIDRConfig is a custom CIDR allocator resource that enables you to
allocate more IP addresses ranges for Pods dynamically.
IP Address Management (IPAM) enables efficient use of IP subnets and avoids
having overlaps in address ranges, which prevents network conflicts and outages.
Kubernetes assigns Pod CIDRs per node, which are used as IP addresses for the Pods
running on that node.
Current Kubernetes NodeIPAM has following limitations:
All Pod CIDRs are allocated from one cluster CIDR. You have to specify the
entire IP address range accounting for the largest cluster at the time of
cluster creation. This limitation can waste IP addresses.
If you increase the cluster size, it is difficult to add more IP addresses.
The cluster CIDR is one large range. It may be difficult to find a
contiguous block of IP addresses that satisfy the needs of the cluster.
Each node gets a fixed-size IP range within a cluster. If nodes are of
different sizes and capacity, you can’t allocate a bigger Pod range to a
given node with larger capacity and a smaller range to nodes with lesser
capacity. This wastes a lot of IP addresses. For a large cluster with many
nodes, this waste gets compounded across all the nodes in the cluster.
With ClusterCIDRConfig functionality, you can avoid assigning a large CIDR block
to a cluster, map your cluster size to the scale of your Pods, and therefore
preserve IP addresses. You can save IP addresses by using ClusterCIDRConfigs
with different combinations of the CIDR and perNodeMaskSize. ClusterCIDRConfig
resource supports the following:
Multiple discontiguous IP CIDR blocks for cluster CIDR at a more granular
level
Node affinity of CIDR blocks
Different block sizes allocated to nodes
Google Distributed Cloud uses the ClusterCIDRConfig functionality in the following features:
Cluster.spec.clusterNetwork.pods.cidrBlocks is an optional field and isn't
defined by default. You must define it if any of the features from the preceding
list doesn't have it defined. For example, it is required when the clusters are
created in IPv4 island mode and must be specified as it is used as a native
routing CIDR.
The following table lists the use of ClusterCIDRConfig's
Cluster.spec.clusterNetwork.pods.cidrBlocks field behavior for different
network modes.
Cluster.spec.clusterNetwork.pods.cidrBlocks are completely ignored, and can be skipped. Users have to explicitly define ClusterCIDRConfigs (per-node, per-nodepool and/or per-cluster).
Dual-stack (IPv4 Island, IPv4 Flat )
Specify the IPv4 CIDR.
Do not specify IPv6 CIDR in
Cluster.spec.clusterNetwork.pods.cidrBlocks.
Specify ClusterCIDRConfigs with both IPv4 and IPv6 CIDRs. IPv4 CIDR configured in all the ClusterCIDRConfigs must be the same as the IPv4 CIDR from Cluster.spec.clusterNetwork.pods.cidrBlocks including the PerNodeMask value for IPv4. For more information on ClusterCIDRConfig and examples on using it, see Examples: Dualstack (IPv4 island, IPv6 Flat)
Dual-stack (Flat IPv4, Flat IPv6)
You can skip Cluster.spec.clusterNetwork.pods.cidrBlocks as these are completely ignored. You must explicitly define ClusterCIDRConfigs (per-node, per-nodepool, and/or per-cluster) with both IPv4 and IPv6 CIDRs.
Configuring the ClusterCIDRConfig custom CIDR allocator resource
ClusterCIDRConfig
When you configure the ClusterCIDRConfig custom CIDR allocator resource,
consider the following points:
Pod CIDR assignment from a particular ClusterCIDRConfig to a node is based
on label selectors. This is similar to the nodeSelector mechanism used for
scheduling Pods on a node.
You must configure the ClusterCIDRConfig during the cluster creation process
in the cluster configuration YAML file. Once you specify ClusterCIDRConfigs,
you cannot modify the values later.
You can specify multiple ClusterCIDRConfigs with overlapping CIDRs.
If no matching ClusterCIDRConfig is found for a node, the node remains in a
NotReady state, until a ClusterCIDRConfig with matching labels is created.
If the best match ClusterCIDRConfig does not have more CIDRs available for
allocation, the next best CIDR is chosen and the Pod CIDRs are allocated
from the available CIDRs.
In case of dual-stack model,
if you want to assign dual-stack Pod CIDRs to the nodes, do the following:
Configure both IPv4 and IPv6 CIDRs in the ClusterCIDRConfig.
Ensure that all ClusterCIDRConfig have DualStack CIDRs, if multiple
ClusterCIDRConfig are configured.
Ensure that both IPv4 and IPv6 CIDRs configured have an equal number of
allocatable IP addresses per node.
For example, 32 - spec.IPv4.PerNodeMaskSize == 128 -
spec.IPv6.PerNodeMaskSize
spec.IPv4.PerNodeMaskSize = 24
spec.IPv6.PerNodeMaskSize = 120
Thus, 32 - 24 == 128 - 120, as the difference is 8.
Multiple ClusterCIDRConfigs can match the labels from the nodeSelector to
node labels.
ClusterCIDRConfig assignment rules
To determine which ClusterCIDRConfig is used to assign Pod CIDRs to the current
node, use the following tie-breaking rules. Implement these rules in the given
order. Implement the next rule only if the tie is not broken by the preceding
rule.
Pick the ClusterCIDRConfig whose NodeSelector matches the most labels on the
Node. For example, {'node.kubernetes.io/instance-type':'medium', 'rack':
'rack1'} (Match Count: 2) is picked before
{'node.kubernetes.io/instance-type': 'medium'}. (Match Count: 1).
Pick the ClusterCIDRConfig with the fewest allocatable Pod CIDRs. For
example, {CIDR: "10.0.0.0/16", PerNodeMaskSize: "16"} (1 possible Pod
CIDR) is picked before {CIDR: "192.168.0.0/20", PerNodeMaskSize: "22"} (4
possible Pod CIDRs).
Pick the ClusterCIDRConfig whose PerNodeMaskSize has the fewest IP addresses.
For example, 27 (2^(32-27)= 32 IP addresses) picked before
25 (2^(32-25)=128 IP addresses).
Pick the ClusterCIDRConfig whose matching NodeSelector label has a lower
alphanumeric value. For example, {'kubernetes.io/hostname': 'node-1'} is
chosen over {'node.kubernetes.io/instance-type':'medium'}.
Pick the ClusterCIDRConfig whose CIDR IP has a lower value. Irrespective of
whether the config is an IPv4 config or a DualStack config, only the IPv4
CIDRs are compared. For example, {CIDR: "10.0.0.0/16"} is picked over
{CIDR: "192.168.0.0/16"}.
Configuration examples
This section lists configuration examples for Cluster and ClusterCIDRConfig for
all the networking modes.
Examples: IPv4 Island Mode (Default)
Cluster Config (Default)
apiVersion: baremetal.cluster.gke.io/v1
kind: Cluster
metadata:
name: bm-cluster
namespace: cluster-default
spec:
...
clusterNetwork:
# Pods specify the IP ranges from which pod networks are allocated.
pods:
cidrBlocks:
- 192.168.0.0/16
services:
cidrBlocks:
- 10.96.0.0/12
... (other cluster config omitted)
[[["Easy to understand","easyToUnderstand","thumb-up"],["Solved my problem","solvedMyProblem","thumb-up"],["Other","otherUp","thumb-up"]],[["Hard to understand","hardToUnderstand","thumb-down"],["Incorrect information or sample code","incorrectInformationOrSampleCode","thumb-down"],["Missing the information/samples I need","missingTheInformationSamplesINeed","thumb-down"],["Other","otherDown","thumb-down"]],["Last updated 2024-11-23 UTC."],[],[]]