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kured - Kubernetes Reboot Daemon

Introduction

Kured (KUbernetes REboot Daemon) is a Kubernetes daemonset that performs safe automatic node reboots when the need to do so is indicated by the package management system of the underlying OS.

  • Watches for the presence of a reboot sentinel file e.g. /var/run/reboot-required or the successful run of a sentinel command.
  • Utilises a lock in the API server to ensure only one node reboots at a time
  • Optionally defers reboots in the presence of active Prometheus alerts or selected pods
  • Cordons & drains worker nodes before reboot, uncordoning them after

Kubernetes & OS Compatibility

The daemon image contains versions of k8s.io/client-go and k8s.io/kubectl (the binary of kubectl in older releases) for the purposes of maintaining the lock and draining worker nodes. Kubernetes aims to provide forwards and backwards compatibility of one minor version between client and server:

kured kubectl k8s.io/client-go k8s.io/apimachinery expected kubernetes compatibility
main 1.23.6 v0.23.6 v0.23.6 1.22.x, 1.23.x, 1.24.x
1.10.0 1.23.6 v0.23.6 v0.23.6 1.22.x, 1.23.x, 1.24.x
1.9.2 1.22.4 v0.22.4 v0.22.4 1.21.x, 1.22.x, 1.23.x
1.8.1 1.21.4 v0.21.4 v0.21.4 1.20.x, 1.21.x, 1.22.x
1.7.0 1.20.5 v0.20.5 v0.20.5 1.19.x, 1.20.x, 1.21.x
1.6.1 1.19.4 v0.19.4 v0.19.4 1.18.x, 1.19.x, 1.20.x
1.5.1 1.18.8 v0.18.8 v0.18.8 1.17.x, 1.18.x, 1.19.x
1.4.4 1.17.7 v0.17.0 v0.17.0 1.16.x, 1.17.x, 1.18.x
1.3.0 1.15.10 v12.0.0 release-1.15 1.15.x, 1.16.x, 1.17.x
1.2.0 1.13.6 v10.0.0 release-1.13 1.12.x, 1.13.x, 1.14.x
1.1.0 1.12.1 v9.0.0 release-1.12 1.11.x, 1.12.x, 1.13.x
1.0.0 1.7.6 v4.0.0 release-1.7 1.6.x, 1.7.x, 1.8.x

See the release notes for specific version compatibility information, including which combination have been formally tested.

Versions >=1.1.0 enter the host mount namespace to invoke systemctl reboot, so should work on any systemd distribution.

Installation

To obtain a default installation without Prometheus alerting interlock or Slack notifications:

latest=$(curl -s https://api.github.com/repos/weaveworks/kured/releases | jq -r .[0].tag_name)
kubectl apply -f "https://github.com/weaveworks/kured/releases/download/$latest/kured-$latest-dockerhub.yaml"

If you want to customise the installation, download the manifest and edit it in accordance with the following section before application.

Configuration

The following arguments can be passed to kured via the daemonset pod template:

Flags:
      --alert-filter-regexp regexp.Regexp   alert names to ignore when checking for active alerts
      --alert-firing-only bool              only consider firing alerts when checking for active alerts
      --blocking-pod-selector stringArray   label selector identifying pods whose presence should prevent reboots
      --drain-grace-period int              time in seconds given to each pod to terminate gracefully, if negative, the default value specified in the pod will be used (default: -1)
      --skip-wait-for-delete-timeout int    when seconds is greater than zero, skip waiting for the pods whose deletion timestamp is older than N seconds while draining a node (default: 0)
      --ds-name string                      name of daemonset on which to place lock (default "kured")
      --ds-namespace string                 namespace containing daemonset on which to place lock (default "kube-system")
      --end-time string                     schedule reboot only before this time of day (default "23:59:59")
      --force-reboot bool                   force a reboot even if the drain is still running (default: false)
      --drain-timeout duration              timeout after which the drain is aborted (default: 0, infinite time)
  -h, --help                                help for kured
      --lock-annotation string              annotation in which to record locking node (default "weave.works/kured-node-lock")
      --lock-release-delay duration         hold lock after reboot by this duration (default: 0, disabled)
      --lock-ttl duration                   expire lock annotation after this duration (default: 0, disabled)
      --message-template-uncordon string    message template used to notify about a node being successfully uncordoned (default "Node %s rebooted & uncordoned successfully!")
      --message-template-drain string       message template used to notify about a node being drained (default "Draining node %s")
      --message-template-reboot string      message template used to notify about a node being rebooted (default "Rebooting node %s")
      --notify-url                          url for reboot notifications (cannot use with --slack-hook-url flags)
      --period duration                     reboot check period (default 1h0m0s)
      --prefer-no-schedule-taint string     Taint name applied during pending node reboot (to prevent receiving additional pods from other rebooting nodes). Disabled by default. Set e.g. to "weave.works/kured-node-reboot" to enable tainting.
      --prometheus-url string               Prometheus instance to probe for active alerts
      --reboot-command string               command to run when a reboot is required by the sentinel (default "/sbin/systemctl reboot")
      --reboot-days strings                 schedule reboot on these days (default [su,mo,tu,we,th,fr,sa])
      --reboot-delay duration               add a delay after drain finishes but before the reboot command is issued (default 0, no time)
      --reboot-sentinel string              path to file whose existence signals need to reboot (default "/var/run/reboot-required")
      --reboot-sentinel-command string      command for which a successful run signals need to reboot (default ""). If non-empty, sentinel file will be ignored.
      --slack-channel string                slack channel for reboot notfications
      --slack-hook-url string               slack hook URL for reboot notfications [deprecated in favor of --notify-url]
      --slack-username string               slack username for reboot notfications (default "kured")
      --start-time string                   schedule reboot only after this time of day (default "0:00")
      --time-zone string                    use this timezone for schedule inputs (default "UTC")
      --log-format string                   log format specified as text or json, defaults to "text"

Reboot Sentinel File & Period

By default kured checks for the existence of /var/run/reboot-required every sixty minutes; you can override these values with --reboot-sentinel and --period. Each replica of the daemon uses a random offset derived from the period on startup so that nodes don't all contend for the lock simultaneously.

Reboot Sentinel Command

Alternatively, a reboot sentinel command can be used. If a reboot sentinel command is used, the reboot sentinel file presence will be ignored. When the command exits with code 0, kured will assume that a reboot is required.

For example, if you're using RHEL or its derivatives, you can set the sentinel command to sh -c "! needs-restarting --reboothint" (by default the command will return 1 if a reboot is required, so we wrap it in sh -c and add ! to negate the return value).

configuration:
  rebootSentinelCommand: sh -c "! needs-restarting --reboothint"

Setting a schedule

By default, kured will reboot any time it detects the sentinel, but this may cause reboots during odd hours. While service disruption does not normally occur, anything is possible and operators may want to restrict reboots to predictable schedules. Use --reboot-days, --start-time, --end-time, and --time-zone to set a schedule. For example, business hours on the west coast USA can be specified with:

  --reboot-days=mon,tue,wed,thu,fri
  --start-time=9am
  --end-time=5pm
  --time-zone=America/Los_Angeles

Times can be formatted in numerous ways, including 5pm, 5:00pm 17:00, and 17. --time-zone represents a Go time.Location, and can be UTC, Local, or any entry in the standard Linux tz database.

Note that when using smaller time windows, you should consider shortening the sentinel check period (--period).

Blocking Reboots via Alerts

You may find it desirable to block automatic node reboots when there are active alerts - you can do so by providing the URL of your Prometheus server:

--prometheus-url=http://prometheus.monitoring.svc.cluster.local

By default the presence of any active (pending or firing) alerts will block reboots, however you can ignore specific alerts:

--alert-filter-regexp=^(RebootRequired|AnotherBenignAlert|...$

You can also only block reboots for firing alerts:

--alert-firing-only=true

See the section on Prometheus metrics for an important application of this filter.

Blocking Reboots via Pods

You can also block reboots of an individual node when specific pods are scheduled on it:

--blocking-pod-selector=runtime=long,cost=expensive

Since label selector strings use commas to express logical 'and', you can specify this parameter multiple times for 'or':

--blocking-pod-selector=runtime=long,cost=expensive
--blocking-pod-selector=name=temperamental

In this case, the presence of either an (appropriately labelled) expensive long running job or a known temperamental pod on a node will stop it rebooting.

Try not to abuse this mechanism - it's better to strive for restartability where possible. If you do use it, make sure you set up a RebootRequired alert as described in the next section so that you can intervene manually if reboots are blocked for too long.

Adding node labels before and after reboots

If you need to add node labels before and after the reboot process, you can use --pre-reboot-node-labels and --post-reboot-node-labels:

      --pre-reboot-node-labels=zalando=notready
      --post-reboot-node-labels=zalando=ready

Labels can be comma-delimited (e.g. --pre-reboot-node-labels=zalando=notready,thisnode=disabled) or you can supply the flags multiple times.

Note that label keys specified by these two flags should match. If they do not match, a warning will be generated.

Prometheus Metrics

Each kured pod exposes a single gauge metric (:8080/metrics) that indicates the presence of the sentinel file:

# HELP kured_reboot_required OS requires reboot due to software updates.
# TYPE kured_reboot_required gauge
kured_reboot_required{node="ip-xxx-xxx-xxx-xxx.ec2.internal"} 0

The purpose of this metric is to power an alert which will summon an operator if the cluster cannot reboot itself automatically for a prolonged period:

# Alert if a reboot is required for any machines. Acts as a failsafe for the
# reboot daemon, which will not reboot nodes if there are pending alerts save
# this one.
ALERT RebootRequired
  IF          max(kured_reboot_required) != 0
  FOR         24h
  LABELS      { severity="warning" }
  ANNOTATIONS {
    summary = "Machine(s) require being rebooted, and the reboot daemon has failed to do so for 24 hours",
    impact = "Cluster nodes more vulnerable to security exploits. Eventually, no disk space left.",
    description = "Machine(s) require being rebooted, probably due to kernel update.",
  }

If you choose to employ such an alert and have configured kured to probe for active alerts before rebooting, be sure to specify --alert-filter-regexp=^RebootRequired$ to avoid deadlock!

Notifications

When you specify a formatted URL using --notify-url, kured will notify about draining and rebooting nodes across a list of technologies.

Notification

Alternatively you can use the --message-template-drain, --message-template-reboot and --message-template-uncordon to customize the text of the message, e.g.

--message-template-drain="Draining node %s part of *my-cluster* in region *xyz*"

Here is the syntax:

  • slack: slack://tokenA/tokenB/tokenC

    (slack://<USERNAME>@tokenA/tokenB/tokenC - in case you want to respect username)

    (--slack-hook-url is deprecated but possible to use)

    For the new slack App integration, use:
    slack://xoxb:123456789012-1234567890123-4mt0t4l1YL3g1T5L4cK70k3N@<CHANNEL_NAME>?botname=<BOTNAME>
    for more information, look here

  • rocketchat: rocketchat://[username@]rocketchat-host/token[/channel|@recipient]

  • teams: teams://group@tenant/altId/groupOwner?host=organization.webhook.office.com

  • Email: smtp://username:password@host:port/?fromAddress=fromAddress&toAddresses=recipient1[,recipient2,...]

More details here: containrrr.dev/shoutrrr/v0.5/services/overview

Overriding Lock Configuration

The --ds-name and --ds-namespace arguments should match the name and namespace of the daemonset used to deploy the reboot daemon - the locking is implemented by means of an annotation on this resource. The defaults match the daemonset YAML provided in the repository.

Similarly --lock-annotation can be used to change the name of the annotation kured will use to store the lock, but the default is almost certainly safe.

Operation

The example commands in this section assume that you have not overriden the default lock annotation, daemonset name or namespace; if you have, you will have to adjust the commands accordingly.

Testing

You can test your configuration by provoking a reboot on a node:

sudo touch /var/run/reboot-required

Disabling Reboots

If you need to temporarily stop kured from rebooting any nodes, you can take the lock manually:

kubectl -n kube-system annotate ds kured weave.works/kured-node-lock='{"nodeID":"manual"}'

Don't forget to release it afterwards!

Manual Unlock

In exceptional circumstances, such as a node experiencing a permanent failure whilst rebooting, manual intervention may be required to remove the cluster lock:

kubectl -n kube-system annotate ds kured weave.works/kured-node-lock-

NB the - at the end of the command is important - it instructs kubectl to remove that annotation entirely.

Automatic Unlock

In exceptional circumstances (especially when used with cluster-autoscaler) a node which holds lock might be killed thus annotation will stay there for ever.

Using --lock-ttl=30m will allow other nodes to take over if TTL has expired (in this case 30min) and continue reboot process.

Delaying Lock Release

Using --lock-release-delay=30m will cause nodes to hold the lock for the specified time frame (in this case 30min) before it is released and the reboot process continues. This can be used to throttle reboots across the cluster.

Building

Kured now uses Go Modules, so build instructions vary depending on where you have checked out the repository:

Building outside $GOPATH:

make

Building inside $GOPATH:

GO111MODULE=on make

You can find the current preferred version of Golang in the go.mod file.

If you are interested in contributing code to kured, please take a look at our development docs.

Frequently Asked/Anticipated Questions

Why is there no latest tag on Docker Hub?

Use of latest for production deployments is bad practice - see here for details. The manifest on main refers to latest for local development testing with minikube only; for production use choose a versioned manifest from the release page.

Getting Help

If you have any questions about, feedback for or problems with kured:

We follow the CNCF Code of Conduct.

Your feedback is always welcome!