Node affinity allows a pod to specify an affinity towards a group of nodes it can be placed on. The node does not have control over the placement.
For example, you could configure a pod to only run on a node with a specific CPU or in a specific availability zone.
There are two types of node affinity rules: required and preferred.
Required rules must be met before a pod can be scheduled on a node. Preferred rules specify that, if the rule is met, the scheduler tries to enforce the rules, but does not guarantee enforcement.
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If labels on a node change at runtime that results in an node affinity rule on a pod no longer being met, the pod continues to run on the node.
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You configure node affinity through the pod specification file. You can specify a required rule, a preferred rule, or both. If you specify both, the node must first meet the required rule, then attempts to meet the preferred rule.
The following example is a pod specification with a rule that requires the pod be placed on a node with a label whose key is e2e-az-NorthSouth
and whose value is either e2e-az-North
or e2e-az-South
:
Sample pod configuration file with a node affinity required rule
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: with-node-affinity
spec:
affinity:
nodeAffinity: (1)
requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution: (2)
nodeSelectorTerms:
- matchExpressions:
- key: e2e-az-NorthSouth (3)
operator: In (4)
values:
- e2e-az-North (3)
- e2e-az-South (3)
containers:
- name: with-node-affinity
image: docker.io/ocpqe/hello-pod
1 |
The stanza to configure node affinity. |
2 |
Defines a required rule. |
3 |
The key/value pair (label) that must be matched to apply the rule. |
4 |
The operator represents the relationship between the label on the node and the set of values in the matchExpression parameters in the pod specification. This value can be In , NotIn , Exists , or DoesNotExist , Lt , or Gt . |
The following example is a node specification with a preferred rule that a node with a label whose key is e2e-az-EastWest
and whose value is either e2e-az-East
or e2e-az-West
is preferred for the pod:
Sample pod configuration file with a node affinity preferred rule
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: with-node-affinity
spec:
affinity:
nodeAffinity: (1)
preferredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution: (2)
- weight: 1 (3)
preference:
matchExpressions:
- key: e2e-az-EastWest (4)
operator: In (5)
values:
- e2e-az-East (4)
- e2e-az-West (4)
containers:
- name: with-node-affinity
image: docker.io/ocpqe/hello-pod
1 |
The stanza to configure node affinity. |
2 |
Defines a preferred rule. |
3 |
Specifies a weight for a preferred rule. The node with highest weight is preferred. |
4 |
The key/value pair (label) that must be matched to apply the rule. |
5 |
The operator represents the relationship between the label on the node and
the set of values in the matchExpression parameters in the pod specification.
This value can be In , NotIn , Exists , or DoesNotExist , Lt , or Gt . |
There is no explicit node anti-affinity concept, but using the NotIn
or DoesNotExist
operator replicates that behavior.
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If you are using node affinity and node selectors in the same pod configuration, note the following:
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If you configure both nodeSelector and nodeAffinity , both conditions must be satisfied for the pod to be scheduled onto a candidate node.
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If you specify multiple nodeSelectorTerms associated with nodeAffinity types, then the pod can be scheduled onto a node if one of the nodeSelectorTerms is satisfied.
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If you specify multiple matchExpressions associated with nodeSelectorTerms , then the pod can be scheduled onto a node only if all matchExpressions are satisfied.
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