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ceph-csi/docs/design/proposals/rbd-qos.md
Madhu Rajanna 7c0ce53eeb doc: add design doc for QoS
Add design doc for QoS for rbd
devices mapped with both krbd
and rbd-nbd

closes: 

Signed-off-by: Madhu Rajanna <madhupr007@gmail.com>
2023-09-07 13:28:18 +00:00

10 KiB

Design Doc for RBD QoS using cgroup v2

Introduction

The RBD QoS (Quality of Service) design aims to address the issue of IO noisy neighbor problems encountered in early Ceph deployments catering to OpenStack environments. These problems were effectively managed by implementing QEMU throttling at the virtio-blk/scsi level. To further enhance this, capacity-based IOPS were introduced, providing a more dynamic experience similar to public cloud environments.

The challenge arises in virtual environments, where a noisy neighbor can lead to performance degradation for other instances sharing the same resources. Although it's uncommon to observe noisy neighbor issues in Kubernetes environments backed by Ceph storage, the possibility exists. The existing QoS support with rbd-nbd doesn't apply to krbd, and as rbd-nbd isn't suitable for container production workloads, a solution is needed for krbd.

To mitigate resource starvation issues, setting QoS at the device level through cgroup v2 when enabled becomes crucial. This approach guarantees that I/O capacity isn't overcommitted and is fairly distributed among workloads.

Dependency

  • cgroup v2 must be enabled on the Node
  • We might have Kubernetes dependency as well
  • Container runtime dependency that supports cgroupv2

Manual steps for implementing RBD QoS in a Kubernetes Cluster

[$] ssh root@node1
sh-4.4# chroot /host
sh-5.1# cat /proc/partitions
major minor  #blocks  name

 259        0  125829120 nvme0n1
 259        1       1024 nvme0n1p1
 259        2     130048 nvme0n1p2
 259        3     393216 nvme0n1p3
 259        4  125303791 nvme0n1p4
 259        6   52428800 nvme2n1
   7        0  536870912 loop0
 259        5  536870912 nvme1n1
 252        0   52428800 rbd0
sh-5.1#

Once the rbd device is mapped on the node we get the device's major and minor number we need to set the io limit on the device but we need to find the right cgroup file where we need to set the limit

Kubernetes/Openshift creates a custom cgroup hierarchy for the pods it created but start is /sys/fs/cgroup folder

sh-5.1# cd /sys/fs/cgroup/
sh-5.1# ls
cgroup.controllers cgroup.subtree_control cpuset.mems.effective  io.stat   memory.reclaim   sys-kernel-debug.mount
cgroup.max.depth cgroup.threads  dev-hugepages.mount    kubepods.slice  memory.stat   sys-kernel-tracing.mount
cgroup.max.descendants cpu.pressure  dev-mqueue.mount       machine.slice  misc.capacity   system.slice
cgroup.procs  cpu.stat  init.scope        memory.numa_stat  sys-fs-fuse-connections.mount user.slice
cgroup.stat  cpuset.cpus.effective io.pressure        memory.pressure  sys-kernel-config.mount

kubepods.slice is the starting point and it contains multiple slices

sh-5.1# cd kubepods.slice
sh-5.1# ls
cgroup.controllers cpuset.cpus    hugetlb.2MB.rsvd.max       memory.pressure
cgroup.events  cpuset.cpus.effective   io.bfq.weight        memory.reclaim
cgroup.freeze  cpuset.cpus.partition   io.latency        memory.stat
cgroup.kill  cpuset.mems    io.max        memory.swap.current
cgroup.max.depth cpuset.mems.effective   io.pressure        memory.swap.events
cgroup.max.descendants hugetlb.1GB.current   io.stat        memory.swap.high
cgroup.procs  hugetlb.1GB.events   kubepods-besteffort.slice      memory.swap.max
cgroup.stat  hugetlb.1GB.events.local  kubepods-burstable.slice      memory.zswap.current
cgroup.subtree_control hugetlb.1GB.max    kubepods-pod2b38830b_c2d6_4528_8935_b1c08511b1e3.slice  memory.zswap.max
cgroup.threads  hugetlb.1GB.numa_stat   memory.current       misc.current
cgroup.type  hugetlb.1GB.rsvd.current  memory.events        misc.max
cpu.idle  hugetlb.1GB.rsvd.max   memory.events.local       pids.current
cpu.max   hugetlb.2MB.current   memory.high        pids.events
cpu.max.burst  hugetlb.2MB.events   memory.low        pids.max
cpu.pressure  hugetlb.2MB.events.local  memory.max        rdma.current
cpu.stat  hugetlb.2MB.max    memory.min        rdma.max
cpu.weight  hugetlb.2MB.numa_stat   memory.numa_stat
cpu.weight.nice  hugetlb.2MB.rsvd.current  memory.oom.group

Based on the QoS of the pod, either our application pod will end up in the above kubepods-besteffort.slice or kubepods-burstable.slice or kubepods.slice (Guaranteed QoS) cgroup. The 3 QoS classes are defined here

To identify the right cgroup file, we need pod UUID and container UUID from the pod yaml output

[$]kubectl get po csi-rbd-demo-pod -oyaml |grep uid
  uid: cdf7b785-4eb7-44f7-99cc-ef53890f4dfd
[$]kubectl get po csi-rbd-demo-pod -oyaml |grep -i containerID
  - containerID: cri-o://77e57fbbc0f0630f41f9f154f4b5fe368b6dcf7bef7dcd75a9c4b56676f10bc9
[$]kubectl get po csi-rbd-demo-pod -oyaml |grep -i qosClass
  qosClass: BestEffort

Now check in the kubepods-besteffort.slice and identify the right path using pod UID and container UID

Before that check io.max on the application pod and see if there is any limit

[$]kubectl exec -it csi-rbd-demo-pod -- sh
sh-4.4# cat /sys/fs/cgroup/io.max
sh-4.4#

Come back to the Node and find the right cgroup scope

sh-5.1# cd kubepods-besteffort.slice/kubepods-besteffort-podcdf7b785_4eb7_44f7_99cc_ef53890f4dfd.slice/crio-77e57fbbc0f0630f41f9f154f4b5fe368b6dcf7bef7dcd75a9c4b56676f10bc9.scope/


sh-5.1# echo "252:0 wbps=1048576" > io.max
sh-5.1# cat io.max
252:0 rbps=max wbps=1048576 riops=max wiops=max

Now go back to the application pod and check if we have the right limit set

[$]kubectl exec -it csi-rbd-demo-pod -- sh
sh-4.4# cat /sys/fs/cgroup/io.max
252:0 rbps=max wbps=1048576 riops=max wiops=max
sh-4.4#

Note:- We can only support the QoS that cgroup v2 io controller supports, this means that cumulative read+write QoS limits won't be supported.

Below are the configurations that will be supported

Parameter Description
MaxReadIOPS Max read IO operations per second
MaxWriteIOPS Max write IO operations per second
MaxReadBytesPerSecond Max read bytes per second
MaxWriteBytesPerSecond Max write bytes per second

Different approaches

The above solution can be implemented using 3 different approaches.

1. QoS using new parameters in RBD StorageClass

---
apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: StorageClass
metadata:
   name: csi-rbd-sc
provisioner: rbd.csi.ceph.com
parameters:
  MaxReadIOPS: ""
  MaxWriteIOPS: ""
  MaxReadBytesPerSecond: ""
  MaxWriteBytesPerSecond: ""

Implementation for StorageClass QoS

  1. Create new storageClass with new parameters for QoS
  2. Modify CSIDriver object to pass pod details to the NodePublishVolume CSI procedure
  3. During NodePublishVolume CSI procedure
    • Retrieve the QoS configuration from the volumeContext in NodePublishRequest
    • Identify the rbd device using the NodeStageVolumePath
    • Get the pod UUID from the NodeStageVolume
    • Set io.max file in all the containers in the pod

Drawbacks of StorageClass QoS

  1. No way to update the QoS at runtime
  2. Need to take a backup and restore to New QoS StorageClass
  3. Delete and Recreate the PV object

2. QoS using parameters in VolumeAttributeClass

apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1alpha1
kind: VolumeAttributesClass
metadata:
  name: silver
parameters:
  MaxReadIOPS: ""
  MaxWriteIOPS: ""
  MaxReadBytesPerSecond: ""
  MaxWriteBytesPerSecond: ""

VolumeAttributesClassName is a new parameter in the PVC object the user can choose from and this can also be updated or removed later.

This new VolumeAttributeClass is designed to keep storage that supports setting QoS at the storage level which means setting some configuration at the storage (like QoS for nbd)

Implementation of VolumeAttributeClass QoS

  1. Modify CSIDriver object to pass pod details to the NodePublishVolume CSI procedure
  2. Add support in Ceph-CSI to expose ModifyVolume CSI procedure
  3. Ceph-CSI will store QoS in the rbd image metadata
  4. During NodeStage operation retrieve the image metadata and store it in stagingPath
  5. Whenever a new pod comes in apply the QoS

Drawbacks of VolumeAttributeClass QoS

One problem with above is all application need to be scaled downed and scaled up to get the new QoS value even though its changed in the PVC object, this is sometime impossible as it will have downtime.

3. QoS using parameters in VolumeAttributeClass with NodePublish Secret

  1. Modify CSIDriver object to pass pod details to the NodePublishVolume CSI procedure
  2. Add support in Ceph-CSI to expose ModifyVolume CSI procedure
  3. Ceph-CSI will store QoS in the rbd image metadata
  4. During NodePublishVolume operation retrieve the QoS from image metadata
  5. Whenever a new pod comes in apply the QoS

This solution addresses the aforementioned issue, but it requires a secret to communicate with the ceph cluster. Therefore, we must create a new PublishSecret for the storageClass, which may be beneficial when Kubernetes eventually enables Node operations.

Both options 2 and 3 are contingent upon changes to the CSI spec and Kubernetes support. Additionally, VolumeAttributeClass is currently being developed within the Kubernetes realm and will initially be in the Alpha stage. Consequently, it will be disabled by default.

Advantages of QoS using VolumeAttributeClass

  1. No Restore/Clone operation is required to change the QoS
  2. Easily QoS can be changed for existing PVC only with second approach not with third as it needs new secret.

Hybrid Approach

Considering the advantages and drawbacks, we can use StorageClass and VolumeAttributeClass to support QoS, with VolumeAttributeClass taking precedence over StorageClass. This approach offers a flexible solution that accounts for dynamic changes while addressing the challenges of existing approaches.

References

Some of the useful links that helped me to understand cgroup v2 and how to set QoS on the device.