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runtime.md

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Runtime

k0s supports any container runtime that implements the CRI specification.

k0s comes bundled with containerd as the default Container Runtime Interface (CRI) and runc as the default low-level runtime. In most cases they don't require any configuration changes. However, if custom configuration is needed, this page provides some examples.

k0s_runtime

containerd configuration

By default k0s manages the full containerd configuration. User has the option of fully overriding, and thus also managing, the configuration themselves.

User managed containerd configuration

In the default k0s generated configuration there's a "magic" comment telling k0s it is k0s managed:

# k0s_managed=true

If you wish to take over the configuration management remove this line.

To make changes to containerd configuration you must first generate a default containerd configuration, with the default values set to /etc/k0s/containerd.toml:

containerd config default > /etc/k0s/containerd.toml

k0s runs containerd with the following default values:

/var/lib/k0s/bin/containerd \
    --root=/var/lib/k0s/containerd \
    --state=/run/k0s/containerd \
    --address=/run/k0s/containerd.sock \
    --config=/etc/k0s/containerd.toml

Next, add the following default values to the configuration file:

version = 2
root = "/var/lib/k0s/containerd"
state = "/run/k0s/containerd"
...

[grpc]
  address = "/run/k0s/containerd.sock"

k0s managed dynamic runtime configuration

From 1.27.1 onwards k0s enables dynamic configuration on containerd CRI runtimes. This works by k0s creating a special directory in /etc/k0s/containerd.d/ where user can drop-in partial containerd configuration snippets.

k0s will automatically pick up these files and adds these in containerd configuration imports list. If k0s sees the configuration drop-ins are CRI related configurations k0s will automatically collect all these into a single file and adds that as a single import file. This is to overcome some hard limitation on containerd 1.X versions. Read more at containerd#8056

Examples

Following chapters provide some examples how to configure different runtimes for containerd using k0s managed drop-in configurations.

Using gVisor

gVisor is an application kernel, written in Go, that implements a substantial portion of the Linux system call interface. It provides an additional layer of isolation between running applications and the host operating system.

  1. Install the needed gVisor binaries into the host.

    (
      set -e
      ARCH=$(uname -m)
      URL=https://storage.googleapis.com/gvisor/releases/release/latest/${ARCH}
      wget ${URL}/runsc ${URL}/runsc.sha512 \
        ${URL}/containerd-shim-runsc-v1 ${URL}/containerd-shim-runsc-v1.sha512
      sha512sum -c runsc.sha512 \
        -c containerd-shim-runsc-v1.sha512
      rm -f *.sha512
      chmod a+rx runsc containerd-shim-runsc-v1
      sudo mv runsc containerd-shim-runsc-v1 /usr/local/bin
    )

    Refer to the gVisor install docs for more information.

  2. Prepare the config for k0s managed containerD, to utilize gVisor as additional runtime:

    cat <<EOF | sudo tee /etc/k0s/containerd.d/gvisor.toml
    version = 2
    
    [plugins."io.containerd.grpc.v1.cri".containerd.runtimes.runsc]
      runtime_type = "io.containerd.runsc.v1"
    EOF
  3. Start and join the worker into the cluster, as normal:

    k0s worker $token
  4. Register containerd to the Kubernetes side to make gVisor runtime usable for workloads (by default, containerd uses normal runc as the runtime):

    cat <<EOF | kubectl apply -f -
    apiVersion: node.k8s.io/v1
    kind: RuntimeClass
    metadata:
      name: gvisor
    handler: runsc
    EOF

    At this point, you can use gVisor runtime for your workloads:

    apiVersion: v1
    kind: Pod
    metadata:
      name: nginx-gvisor
    spec:
      runtimeClassName: gvisor
      containers:
      - name: nginx
        image: nginx
  5. (Optional) Verify that the created nginx pod is running under gVisor runtime:

    # kubectl exec nginx-gvisor -- dmesg | grep -i gvisor
    [    0.000000] Starting gVisor...

Using nvidia-container-runtime

First, install the NVIDIA runtime components:

distribution=$(. /etc/os-release;echo $ID$VERSION_ID) \
   && curl -s -L https://nvidia.github.io/nvidia-docker/gpgkey | sudo apt-key add - \
   && curl -s -L https://nvidia.github.io/nvidia-docker/$distribution/nvidia-docker.list | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/nvidia-docker.list
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install -y nvidia-container-runtime

Next, drop in the containerd runtime configuration snippet into /etc/k0s/containerd.d/nvidia.toml

[plugins."io.containerd.grpc.v1.cri".containerd.runtimes.nvidia]
    privileged_without_host_devices = false
    runtime_engine = ""
    runtime_root = ""
    runtime_type = "io.containerd.runc.v1"
[plugins."io.containerd.grpc.v1.cri".containerd.runtimes.nvidia.options]
    BinaryName = "/usr/bin/nvidia-container-runtime"

Create the needed RuntimeClass:

cat <<EOF | kubectl apply -f -
apiVersion: node.k8s.io/v1
kind: RuntimeClass
metadata:
  name: nvidia
handler: nvidia
EOF

Note Detailed instruction on how to run nvidia-container-runtime on your node is available here.

Using custom CRI runtimes

Warning: You can use your own CRI runtime with k0s (for example, docker). However, k0s will not start or manage the runtime, and configuration is solely your responsibility.

Use the option --cri-socket to run a k0s worker with a custom CRI runtime. the option takes input in the form of <type>:<socket_path> (for type, use docker for a pure Docker setup and remote for anything else).

Using Docker as the container runtime

As of Kubernetes 1.24, the use of Docker as a container runtime is no longer supported out of the box. However, Mirantis provides cri-dockerd, a shim that allows Docker to be controlled via CRI. It's based on the dockershim that was previously part of upstream Kubernetes.

Configuration

In order to use Docker as the container runtime for k0s, the following steps need to be taken:

  1. Manually install required components.
    On each k0s worker and k0s controller --enable-worker node, both Docker Engine and cri-dockerd need to be installed manually. Follow the official Docker Engine installation guide and cri-dockerd installation instructions.

  2. Configure and restart affected k0s nodes.
    Once installations are complete, the nodes needs to be restarted with the --cri-socket flag pointing to cri-dockerd's socket, which is typically located at /var/run/cri-dockerd.sock. For instance, the commands to start a node would be as follows:

    k0s worker --cri-socket=docker:unix:///var/run/cri-dockerd.sock

or, respectively

k0s controller --enable-worker --cri-socket=docker:unix:///var/run/cri-dockerd.sock

When running k0s as a service, consider reinstalling the service with the appropriate flags:

sudo k0s install --force worker --cri-socket=docker:unix:///var/run/cri-dockerd.sock

or, respectively

sudo k0s install --force controller --enable-worker --cri-socket=docker:unix:///var/run/cri-dockerd.sock

In scenarios where Docker is managed via systemd, it is crucial that the cgroupDriver: systemd setting is included in the Kubelet configuration. It can be added to the workerProfiles section of the k0s configuration. An example of how the k0s configuration might look:

apiVersion: k0s.k0sproject.io/v1beta1
kind: ClusterConfig
metadata:
  name: k0s
spec:
  workerProfiles:
    - name: systemd-docker-cri
      values:
        cgroupDriver: systemd

Note that this is a cluster-wide configuration setting that must be added to the k0s controller's configuration rather than directly to the workers, or to the cluster configuration if using dynamic configuration. See the worker profiles section of the documentation for more details. When starting workers, both the --profile=systemd-docker-cri and --cri-socket flags are required. The profile name, such as systemd-docker-cri, is flexible. Alternatively, this setting can be applied to the default profile, which will apply to all nodes started without a specific profile. In this case, the --profile flag is not needed.

Please note that there are currently some pitfalls around container metrics when using cri-dockerd.

Verification

The successful configuration can be verified by executing the following command:

$ kubectl get nodes -o wide
NAME              STATUS   ROLES    AGE   VERSION       INTERNAL-IP     EXTERNAL-IP   OS-IMAGE             KERNEL-VERSION      CONTAINER-RUNTIME
docker-worker-0   Ready    <none>   15m   v{{{ extra.k8s_version }}}+k0s   172.27.77.155   <none>        Ubuntu 22.04.3 LTS   5.15.0-82-generic   docker://24.0.7

On the worker nodes, the Kubernetes containers should be listed as regular Docker containers:

$ docker ps --format "table {{.ID}}\t{{.Names}}\t{{.State}}\t{{.Status}}"
CONTAINER ID   NAMES                                                                                                   STATE     STATUS
9167a937af28   k8s_konnectivity-agent_konnectivity-agent-9rnj7_kube-system_430027b4-75c3-487c-b94d-efeb7204616d_1      running   Up 14 minutes
b6978162a05d   k8s_metrics-server_metrics-server-7556957bb7-wfg8k_kube-system_5f642105-78c8-450a-bfd2-2021b680b932_1   running   Up 14 minutes
d576abe86c92   k8s_coredns_coredns-85df575cdb-vmdq5_kube-system_6f26626e-d241-4f15-889a-bcae20d04e2c_1                 running   Up 14 minutes
8f268b180c59   k8s_kube-proxy_kube-proxy-2x6jz_kube-system_34a7a8ba-e15d-4968-8a02-f5c0cb3c8361_1                      running   Up 14 minutes
ed0a665ec28e   k8s_POD_konnectivity-agent-9rnj7_kube-system_430027b4-75c3-487c-b94d-efeb7204616d_0                     running   Up 14 minutes
a9861a7beab5   k8s_POD_metrics-server-7556957bb7-wfg8k_kube-system_5f642105-78c8-450a-bfd2-2021b680b932_0              running   Up 14 minutes
898befa4840e   k8s_POD_kube-router-fftkt_kube-system_940ad783-055e-4fce-8ce1-093ca01625b9_0                            running   Up 14 minutes
e80dabc23ce7   k8s_POD_kube-proxy-2x6jz_kube-system_34a7a8ba-e15d-4968-8a02-f5c0cb3c8361_0                             running   Up 14 minutes
430a784b1bdd   k8s_POD_coredns-85df575cdb-vmdq5_kube-system_6f26626e-d241-4f15-889a-bcae20d04e2c_0                     running   Up 14 minutes