Creating a Windows MachineSet object on Azure

    • You installed the Windows Machine Config Operator (WMCO) using Operator Lifecycle Manager (OLM).

    • You are using a supported Windows Server as the operating system image with the Docker-formatted container runtime add-on enabled.

    The Machine API is a combination of primary resources that are based on the upstream Cluster API project and custom OKD resources.

    For OKD 4.8 clusters, the Machine API performs all node host provisioning management actions after the cluster installation finishes. Because of this system, OKD 4.8 offers an elastic, dynamic provisioning method on top of public or private cloud infrastructure.

    The two primary resources are:

    Machines

    A fundamental unit that describes the host for a node. A machine has a providerSpec specification, which describes the types of compute nodes that are offered for different cloud platforms. For example, a machine type for a worker node on Amazon Web Services (AWS) might define a specific machine type and required metadata.

    Machine sets

    MachineSet resources are groups of machines. Machine sets are to machines as replica sets are to pods. If you need more machines or must scale them down, you change the replicas field on the machine set to meet your compute need.

    The following custom resources add more capabilities to your cluster:

    The MachineAutoscaler resource automatically scales machines in a cloud. You can set the minimum and maximum scaling boundaries for nodes in a specified machine set, and the machine autoscaler maintains that range of nodes. The MachineAutoscaler object takes effect after a ClusterAutoscaler object exists. Both ClusterAutoscaler and MachineAutoscaler resources are made available by the ClusterAutoscalerOperator object.

    Cluster autoscaler

    This resource is based on the upstream cluster autoscaler project. In the OKD implementation, it is integrated with the Machine API by extending the machine set API. You can set cluster-wide scaling limits for resources such as cores, nodes, memory, GPU, and so on. You can set the priority so that the cluster prioritizes pods so that new nodes are not brought online for less important pods. You can also set the scaling policy so that you can scale up nodes but not scale them down.

    Machine health check

    The MachineHealthCheck resource detects when a machine is unhealthy, deletes it, and, on supported platforms, makes a new machine.

    In OKD version 3.11, you could not roll out a multi-zone architecture easily because the cluster did not manage machine provisioning. Beginning with OKD version 4.1, this process is easier. Each machine set is scoped to a single zone, so the installation program sends out machine sets across availability zones on your behalf. And then because your compute is dynamic, and in the face of a zone failure, you always have a zone for when you must rebalance your machines. The autoscaler provides best-effort balancing over the life of a cluster.

    This sample YAML defines a Windows MachineSet object running on Microsoft Azure that the Windows Machine Config Operator (WMCO) can react upon.

    1Specify the infrastructure ID that is based on the cluster ID that you set when you provisioned the cluster. You can obtain the infrastructure ID by running the following command:
    1. $ oc get -o jsonpath=’{.status.infrastructureName}{“\n”}’ infrastructure cluster
    2Specify the Windows machine set name. Windows machine names on Azure cannot be more than 15 characters long. Therefore, the machine set name cannot be more than 9 characters long, due to the way machine names are generated from it.
    3Configure the machine set as a Windows machine.
    4Configure the Windows node as a compute machine.
    5Specify a WindowsServer image offering that defines the SKU.
    6Specify the Azure region, like centralus.
    7Created by the WMCO when it is configuring the first Windows machine. After that, the windows-user-data is available for all subsequent machine sets to consume.
    8Specify the zone within your region to place machines on. Be sure that your region supports the zone that you specify.

    In addition to the ones created by the installation program, you can create your own machine sets to dynamically manage the machine compute resources for specific workloads of your choice.

    Prerequisites

    • Deploy an OKD cluster.

    • Install the OpenShift CLI (oc).

    Procedure

    1. Create the new MachineSet CR:

    2. View the list of machine sets:

      1. $ oc get machineset -n openshift-machine-api

      Example output

      1. NAME DESIRED CURRENT READY AVAILABLE AGE
      2. agl030519-vplxk-windows-worker-us-east-1a 1 1 1 1 11m
      3. agl030519-vplxk-worker-us-east-1a 1 1 1 1 55m
      4. agl030519-vplxk-worker-us-east-1b 1 1 1 1 55m
      5. agl030519-vplxk-worker-us-east-1c 1 1 1 1 55m
      6. agl030519-vplxk-worker-us-east-1d 0 0 55m
      7. agl030519-vplxk-worker-us-east-1e 0 0 55m

      When the new machine set is available, the and CURRENT values match. If the machine set is not available, wait a few minutes and run the command again.

    • For more information on managing machine sets, see the Machine management section.