Pod Scheduling Readiness
Kubernetes v1.30 [stable]
Pods were considered ready for scheduling once created. Kubernetes scheduler does its due diligence to find nodes to place all pending Pods. However, in a real-world case, some Pods may stay in a "miss-essential-resources" state for a long period. These Pods actually churn the scheduler (and downstream integrators like Cluster AutoScaler) in an unnecessary manner.
By specifying/removing a Pod's .spec.schedulingGates, you can control when a Pod is ready
to be considered for scheduling.
Configuring Pod schedulingGates
The schedulingGates field contains a list of strings, and each string literal is perceived as a
criteria that Pod should be satisfied before considered schedulable. This field can be initialized
only when a Pod is created (either by the client, or mutated during admission). After creation,
each schedulingGate can be removed in arbitrary order, but addition of a new scheduling gate is disallowed.
Figure. Pod SchedulingGates
Usage example
To mark a Pod not-ready for scheduling, you can create it with one or more scheduling gates like this:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: test-pod
spec:
schedulingGates:
- name: example.com/foo
- name: example.com/bar
containers:
- name: pause
image: registry.k8s.io/pause:3.6
After the Pod's creation, you can check its state using:
kubectl get pod test-pod
The output reveals it's in SchedulingGated state:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
test-pod 0/1 SchedulingGated 0 7s
You can also check its schedulingGates field by running:
kubectl get pod test-pod -o jsonpath='{.spec.schedulingGates}'
The output is:
[{"name":"example.com/foo"},{"name":"example.com/bar"}]
To inform scheduler this Pod is ready for scheduling, you can remove its schedulingGates entirely
by reapplying a modified manifest:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: test-pod
spec:
containers:
- name: pause
image: registry.k8s.io/pause:3.6
You can check if the schedulingGates is cleared by running:
kubectl get pod test-pod -o jsonpath='{.spec.schedulingGates}'
The output is expected to be empty. And you can check its latest status by running:
kubectl get pod test-pod -o wide
Given the test-pod doesn't request any CPU/memory resources, it's expected that this Pod's state get
transited from previous SchedulingGated to Running:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE IP NODE
test-pod 1/1 Running 0 15s 10.0.0.4 node-2
Observability
The metric scheduler_pending_pods comes with a new label "gated" to distinguish whether a Pod
has been tried scheduling but claimed as unschedulable, or explicitly marked as not ready for
scheduling. You can use scheduler_pending_pods{queue="gated"} to check the metric result.
Mutable Pod scheduling directives
You can mutate scheduling directives of Pods while they have scheduling gates, with certain constraints. At a high level, you can only tighten the scheduling directives of a Pod. In other words, the updated directives would cause the Pods to only be able to be scheduled on a subset of the nodes that it would previously match. More concretely, the rules for updating a Pod's scheduling directives are as follows:
-
For
.spec.nodeSelector, only additions are allowed. If absent, it will be allowed to be set. -
For
spec.affinity.nodeAffinity, if nil, then setting anything is allowed. -
If
NodeSelectorTermswas empty, it will be allowed to be set. If not empty, then only additions ofNodeSelectorRequirementstomatchExpressionsorfieldExpressionsare allowed, and no changes to existingmatchExpressionsandfieldExpressionswill be allowed. This is because the terms in.requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution.NodeSelectorTerms, are ORed while the expressions innodeSelectorTerms[].matchExpressionsandnodeSelectorTerms[].fieldExpressionsare ANDed. -
For
.preferredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution, all updates are allowed. This is because preferred terms are not authoritative, and so policy controllers don't validate those terms.
What's next
- Read the PodSchedulingReadiness KEP for more details