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			298 lines
		
	
	
		
			14 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
<!-- BEGIN MUNGE: UNVERSIONED_WARNING -->
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<img src="http://kubernetes.io/img/warning.png" alt="WARNING"
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     width="25" height="25">
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<img src="http://kubernetes.io/img/warning.png" alt="WARNING"
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     width="25" height="25">
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<img src="http://kubernetes.io/img/warning.png" alt="WARNING"
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     width="25" height="25">
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<img src="http://kubernetes.io/img/warning.png" alt="WARNING"
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     width="25" height="25">
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<img src="http://kubernetes.io/img/warning.png" alt="WARNING"
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     width="25" height="25">
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<h2>PLEASE NOTE: This document applies to the HEAD of the source tree</h2>
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If you are using a released version of Kubernetes, you should
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refer to the docs that go with that version.
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<strong>
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The latest release of this document can be found
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[here](http://releases.k8s.io/release-1.1/docs/user-guide/compute-resources.md).
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Documentation for other releases can be found at
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[releases.k8s.io](http://releases.k8s.io).
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</strong>
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--
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# Compute Resources
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**Table of Contents**
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- [Compute Resources](#compute-resources)
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  - [Resource Requests and Limits of Pod and Container](#resource-requests-and-limits-of-pod-and-container)
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  - [How Pods with Resource Requests are Scheduled](#how-pods-with-resource-requests-are-scheduled)
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  - [How Pods with Resource Limits are Run](#how-pods-with-resource-limits-are-run)
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  - [Monitoring Compute Resource Usage](#monitoring-compute-resource-usage)
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  - [Troubleshooting](#troubleshooting)
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    - [My pods are pending with event message failedScheduling](#my-pods-are-pending-with-event-message-failedscheduling)
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    - [My container is terminated](#my-container-is-terminated)
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  - [Planned Improvements](#planned-improvements)
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<!-- END MUNGE: GENERATED_TOC -->
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When specifying a [pod](pods.md), you can optionally specify how much CPU and memory (RAM) each
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container needs.  When containers have their resource requests specified, the scheduler is
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able to make better decisions about which nodes to place pods on; and when containers have their
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limits specified, contention for resources on a node can be handled in a specified manner. For
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more details about the difference between requests and limits, please refer to
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[Resource QoS](../proposals/resource-qos.md).
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*CPU* and *memory* are each a *resource type*.  A resource type has a base unit.  CPU is specified
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in units of cores.  Memory is specified in units of bytes.
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CPU and RAM are collectively referred to as *compute resources*, or just *resources*.  Compute
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resources are measureable quantities which can be requested, allocated, and consumed.  They are
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distinct from [API resources](working-with-resources.md).  API resources, such as pods and
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[services](services.md) are objects that can be written to and retrieved from the Kubernetes API
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server.
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## Resource Requests and Limits of Pod and Container
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Each container of a Pod can optionally specify `spec.container[].resources.limits.cpu` and/or
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`spec.container[].resources.limits.memory` and/or `spec.container[].resources.requests.cpu`
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and/or `spec.container[].resources.requests.memory`.
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Specifying resource requests and/or limits is optional. In some clusters, unset limits or requests
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may be replaced with default values when a pod is created or updated. The default value depends on
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how the cluster is configured. If value of requests is not specified, they are set to be equal
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to limits by default. Please note that resource limits must be greater than or equal to resource
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requests.
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Although requests/limits can only be specified on individual containers, it is convenient to talk
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about pod resource requests/limits.  A *pod resource request/limit* for a particular resource
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type is the sum of the resource requests/limits of that type for each container in the pod, with
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unset values treated as zero (or equal to default values in some cluster configurations).
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The following pod has two containers.  Each has a request of 0.25 core of cpu and 64MiB
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(2<sup>20</sup> bytes) of memory and a limit of 0.5 core of cpu and 128MiB of memory. The pod can
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be said to have a request of 0.5 core and 128 MiB of memory and a limit of 1 core and 256MiB of
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memory.
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```yaml
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: Pod
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metadata:
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  name: frontend
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spec:
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  containers:
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  - name: db
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    image: mysql
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    resources:
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      requests:
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        memory: "64Mi"
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        cpu: "250m"
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      limits:
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        memory: "128Mi"
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        cpu: "500m"
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  - name: wp
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    image: wordpress
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    resources:
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      requests:
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        memory: "64Mi"
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        cpu: "250m"
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      limits:
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        memory: "128Mi"
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        cpu: "500m"
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```
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## How Pods with Resource Requests are Scheduled
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When a pod is created, the Kubernetes scheduler selects a node for the pod to
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run on.  Each node has a maximum capacity for each of the resource types: the
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amount of CPU and memory it can provide for pods.  The scheduler ensures that,
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for each resource type (CPU and memory), the sum of the resource requests of the
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containers scheduled to the node is less than the capacity of the node.  Note
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that although actual memory or CPU resource usage on nodes is very low, the
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scheduler will still refuse to place pods onto nodes if the capacity check
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fails.  This protects against a resource shortage on a node when resource usage
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later increases, such as due to a daily peak in request rate.
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## How Pods with Resource Limits are Run
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When kubelet starts a container of a pod, it passes the CPU and memory limits to the container
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runner (Docker or rkt).
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When using Docker:
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- The `spec.container[].resources.limits.cpu` is multiplied by 1024, converted to an integer, and
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  used as the value of the [`--cpu-shares`](
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  https://docs.docker.com/reference/run/#runtime-constraints-on-resources) flag to the `docker run`
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  command.
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- The `spec.container[].resources.limits.memory` is converted to an integer, and used as the value
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  of the [`--memory`](https://docs.docker.com/reference/run/#runtime-constraints-on-resources) flag
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  to the `docker run` command.
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**TODO: document behavior for rkt**
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If a container exceeds its memory limit, it may be terminated.  If it is restartable, it will be
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restarted by kubelet, as will any other type of runtime failure.
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A container may or may not be allowed to exceed its CPU limit for extended periods of time.
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However, it will not be killed for excessive CPU usage.
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To determine if a container cannot be scheduled or is being killed due to resource limits, see the
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"Troubleshooting" section below.
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## Monitoring Compute Resource Usage
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The resource usage of a pod is reported as part of the Pod status.
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If [optional monitoring](http://releases.k8s.io/HEAD/cluster/addons/cluster-monitoring/README.md) is configured for your cluster,
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then pod resource usage can be retrieved from the monitoring system.
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## Troubleshooting
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### My pods are pending with event message failedScheduling
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If the scheduler cannot find any node where a pod can fit, then the pod will remain unscheduled
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until a place can be found.    An event will be produced each time the scheduler fails to find a
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place for the pod, like this:
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```console
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$ kubectl describe pod frontend | grep -A 3 Events
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Events:
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  FirstSeen	LastSeen	 Count	From          Subobject   PathReason			Message
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  36s		5s		 6	    {scheduler }              FailedScheduling	Failed for reason PodExceedsFreeCPU and possibly others
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```
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In the case shown above, the pod "frontend" fails to be scheduled due to insufficient
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CPU resource on the node. Similar error messages can also suggest failure due to insufficient
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memory (PodExceedsFreeMemory). In general, if a pod or pods are pending with this message and
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alike, then there are several things to try:
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- Add more nodes to the cluster.
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- Terminate unneeded pods to make room for pending pods.
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- Check that the pod is not larger than all the nodes.  For example, if all the nodes
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have a capacity of `cpu: 1`, then a pod with a limit of `cpu: 1.1` will never be scheduled.
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You can check node capacities and amounts allocated with the `kubectl describe nodes` command.
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For example:
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```console
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$ kubectl describe nodes gke-cluster-4-386701dd-node-ww4p
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Name:			gke-cluster-4-386701dd-node-ww4p
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[ ... lines removed for clarity ...]
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Capacity:
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 cpu:		1
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 memory:	464Mi
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 pods:		40
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Allocated resources (total requests):
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 cpu:		910m
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 memory:	2370Mi
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 pods:		4
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[ ... lines removed for clarity ...]
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Pods:				(4 in total)
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  Namespace			Name								CPU(milliCPU)			Memory(bytes)
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  frontend 			webserver-ffj8j							500 (50% of total)		2097152000 (50% of total)
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  kube-system			fluentd-cloud-logging-gke-cluster-4-386701dd-node-ww4p		100 (10% of total)		209715200 (5% of total)
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  kube-system			kube-dns-v8-qopgw						310 (31% of total)		178257920 (4% of total)
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TotalResourceLimits:
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  CPU(milliCPU):		910 (91% of total)
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  Memory(bytes):		2485125120 (59% of total)
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[ ... lines removed for clarity ...]
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```
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Here you can see from the `Allocated resources` section that that a pod which ask for more than
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90 millicpus or more than 1341MiB of memory will not be able to fit on this node.
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Looking at the `Pods` section, you can see which pods are taking up space on the node.
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The [resource quota](../admin/resource-quota.md) feature can be configured
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to limit the total amount of resources that can be consumed.  If used in conjunction
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with namespaces, it can prevent one team from hogging all the resources.
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### My container is terminated
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Your container may be terminated because it's resource-starved. To check if a container is being killed because it is hitting a resource limit, call `kubectl describe pod`
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on the pod you are interested in:
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```console
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[12:54:41] $ ./cluster/kubectl.sh describe pod simmemleak-hra99
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Name:                           simmemleak-hra99
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Namespace:                      default
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Image(s):                       saadali/simmemleak
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Node:                           kubernetes-minion-tf0f/10.240.216.66
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Labels:                         name=simmemleak
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Status:                         Running
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Reason:             
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Message:            
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IP:                             10.244.2.75
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Replication Controllers:        simmemleak (1/1 replicas created)
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Containers:
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  simmemleak:
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    Image:  saadali/simmemleak
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    Limits:
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      cpu:                      100m
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      memory:                   50Mi
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    State:                      Running
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      Started:                  Tue, 07 Jul 2015 12:54:41 -0700
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    Last Termination State:     Terminated
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      Exit Code:                1
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      Started:                  Fri, 07 Jul 2015 12:54:30 -0700
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      Finished:                 Fri, 07 Jul 2015 12:54:33 -0700
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    Ready:                      False
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    Restart Count:              5
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Conditions:
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  Type      Status
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  Ready     False 
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Events:
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  FirstSeen                         LastSeen                         Count  From                              SubobjectPath                       Reason      Message
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  Tue, 07 Jul 2015 12:53:51 -0700   Tue, 07 Jul 2015 12:53:51 -0700  1      {scheduler }                                                          scheduled   Successfully assigned simmemleak-hra99 to kubernetes-minion-tf0f
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  Tue, 07 Jul 2015 12:53:51 -0700   Tue, 07 Jul 2015 12:53:51 -0700  1      {kubelet kubernetes-minion-tf0f}  implicitly required container POD   pulled      Pod container image "gcr.io/google_containers/pause:0.8.0" already present on machine
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  Tue, 07 Jul 2015 12:53:51 -0700   Tue, 07 Jul 2015 12:53:51 -0700  1      {kubelet kubernetes-minion-tf0f}  implicitly required container POD   created     Created with docker id 6a41280f516d
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  Tue, 07 Jul 2015 12:53:51 -0700   Tue, 07 Jul 2015 12:53:51 -0700  1      {kubelet kubernetes-minion-tf0f}  implicitly required container POD   started     Started with docker id 6a41280f516d
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  Tue, 07 Jul 2015 12:53:51 -0700   Tue, 07 Jul 2015 12:53:51 -0700  1      {kubelet kubernetes-minion-tf0f}  spec.containers{simmemleak}         created     Created with docker id 87348f12526a
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```
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The `Restart Count:  5` indicates that the `simmemleak` container in this pod was terminated and restarted 5 times.
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You can call `get pod` with the `-o go-template=...` option to fetch the status of previously terminated containers:
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```console
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[13:59:01] $ ./cluster/kubectl.sh  get pod -o go-template='{{range.status.containerStatuses}}{{"Container Name: "}}{{.name}}{{"\r\nLastState: "}}{{.lastState}}{{end}}'  simmemleak-60xbc
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Container Name: simmemleak
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LastState: map[terminated:map[exitCode:137 reason:OOM Killed startedAt:2015-07-07T20:58:43Z finishedAt:2015-07-07T20:58:43Z containerID:docker://0e4095bba1feccdfe7ef9fb6ebffe972b4b14285d5acdec6f0d3ae8a22fad8b2]][13:59:03] clusterScaleDoc ~/go/src/github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes $ 
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```
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We can see that this container was terminated because `reason:OOM Killed`, where *OOM* stands for Out Of Memory.
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## Planned Improvements
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The current system only allows resource quantities to be specified on a container.
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It is planned to improve accounting for resources which are shared by all containers in a pod,
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such as [EmptyDir volumes](volumes.md#emptydir).
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The current system only supports container requests and limits for CPU and Memory.
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It is planned to add new resource types, including a node disk space
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resource, and a framework for adding custom [resource types](../design/resources.md#resource-types).
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Kubernetes supports overcommitment of resources by supporting multiple levels of [Quality of Service](http://issue.k8s.io/168).
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Currently, one unit of CPU means different things on different cloud providers, and on different
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machine types within the same cloud providers.  For example, on AWS, the capacity of a node
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is reported in [ECUs](http://aws.amazon.com/ec2/faqs/), while in GCE it is reported in logical
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cores.  We plan to revise the definition of the cpu resource to allow for more consistency
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across providers and platforms.
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