YuniKorn Concepts: Difference between revisions
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* [[YuniKorn#Subjects| YuniKorn]] | * [[YuniKorn#Subjects| YuniKorn]] | ||
= | =YuniKorn Core= | ||
{{Internal|YuniKorn Core Concepts|YuniKorn Core Concepts}} | |||
= | =Kuberentes Implementation= | ||
* A namespace can have a "queue" if annotated with "yunikorn.apache.org/queue". A namespace can have a "parent queue" is annotated with "yunikorn.apache.org/parentqueue". | |||
* An allocation can be in one of two states ("Pending" and "In-Progress"). A pending allocation is one which has been decided upon by YuniKorn but has not yet been communicated to the default scheduler via PreFilter()/Filter(). Once PreFilter()/Filter() pass, the allocation transitions to "In-Progress" to signify that the default scheduler is responsible for fulfilling the allocation. Once PostBind() is called in the plugin to signify completion of the allocation, it is removed. | |||
* When a new pod annotated with <code>schedulerName: yunikorn</code> needs scheduling, the API server (admission controller (?)) calls the "admission-webhook.yunikorn.mutate-pods" webhook with a POST https://yunikorn-admission-controller-service.yunikorn.svc:443/mutate?timeout=10s. Service "yunikorn-admission-controller-service". When running locally, the service does not get deployed, yet the pods get scheduled. This is how: there's a Kubernetes mechanism involving "informers" that periodically updates the state of the resources is interested in. There are "update", "add" and "delete" notifications. When a new pod shows up, <code>general.Manager.AddPod()</code> is invoked, which creates and Application and Task using the pod metadata → <code>PodEventHandler.addPod()</code> → <code>cache.Context.AddApplication()</code>. At the same time, there's the main KubernetesShim scheduling loop that finds the new application and so the scheduling process begins. | |||
Latest revision as of 22:06, 18 January 2024
Internal
YuniKorn Core
Kuberentes Implementation
- A namespace can have a "queue" if annotated with "yunikorn.apache.org/queue". A namespace can have a "parent queue" is annotated with "yunikorn.apache.org/parentqueue".
- An allocation can be in one of two states ("Pending" and "In-Progress"). A pending allocation is one which has been decided upon by YuniKorn but has not yet been communicated to the default scheduler via PreFilter()/Filter(). Once PreFilter()/Filter() pass, the allocation transitions to "In-Progress" to signify that the default scheduler is responsible for fulfilling the allocation. Once PostBind() is called in the plugin to signify completion of the allocation, it is removed.
- When a new pod annotated with
schedulerName: yunikorn
needs scheduling, the API server (admission controller (?)) calls the "admission-webhook.yunikorn.mutate-pods" webhook with a POST https://yunikorn-admission-controller-service.yunikorn.svc:443/mutate?timeout=10s. Service "yunikorn-admission-controller-service". When running locally, the service does not get deployed, yet the pods get scheduled. This is how: there's a Kubernetes mechanism involving "informers" that periodically updates the state of the resources is interested in. There are "update", "add" and "delete" notifications. When a new pod shows up,general.Manager.AddPod()
is invoked, which creates and Application and Task using the pod metadata →PodEventHandler.addPod()
→cache.Context.AddApplication()
. At the same time, there's the main KubernetesShim scheduling loop that finds the new application and so the scheduling process begins.