Container runtimes
You need to install a container runtime into each node in the cluster so that Pods can run there. This page outlines what is involved and describes related tasks for setting up nodes.
Kubernetes 1.23 requires that you use a runtime that conforms with the Container Runtime Interface (CRI).
See CRI version support for more information.
This page lists details for using several common container runtimes with Kubernetes, on Linux:
Cgroup drivers
Control groups are used to constrain resources that are allocated to processes.
When systemd is chosen as the init
system for a Linux distribution, the init process generates and consumes a root control group
(cgroup
) and acts as a cgroup manager.
Systemd has a tight integration with cgroups and allocates a cgroup per systemd unit. It's possible
to configure your container runtime and the kubelet to use cgroupfs
. Using cgroupfs
alongside
systemd means that there will be two different cgroup managers.
A single cgroup manager simplifies the view of what resources are being allocated
and will by default have a more consistent view of the available and in-use resources.
When there are two cgroup managers on a system, you end up with two views of those resources.
In the field, people have reported cases where nodes that are configured to use cgroupfs
for the kubelet and Docker, but systemd
for the rest of the processes, become unstable under
resource pressure.
Changing the settings such that your container runtime and kubelet use systemd
as the cgroup driver
stabilized the system. To configure this for Docker, set native.cgroupdriver=systemd
.
Changing the cgroup driver of a Node that has joined a cluster is a sensitive operation. If the kubelet has created Pods using the semantics of one cgroup driver, changing the container runtime to another cgroup driver can cause errors when trying to re-create the Pod sandbox for such existing Pods. Restarting the kubelet may not solve such errors.
If you have automation that makes it feasible, replace the node with another using the updated configuration, or reinstall it using automation.
Cgroup v2
Cgroup v2 is the next version of the cgroup Linux API. Differently than cgroup v1, there is a single hierarchy instead of a different one for each controller.
The new version offers several improvements over cgroup v1, some of these improvements are:
- cleaner and easier to use API
- safe sub-tree delegation to containers
- newer features like Pressure Stall Information
Even if the kernel supports a hybrid configuration where some controllers are managed by cgroup v1 and some others by cgroup v2, Kubernetes supports only the same cgroup version to manage all the controllers.
If systemd doesn't use cgroup v2 by default, you can configure the system to use it by adding
systemd.unified_cgroup_hierarchy=1
to the kernel command line.
# dnf install -y grubby && \
sudo grubby \
--update-kernel=ALL \
--args="systemd.unified_cgroup_hierarchy=1"
To apply the configuration, it is necessary to reboot the node.
There should not be any noticeable difference in the user experience when switching to cgroup v2, unless users are accessing the cgroup file system directly, either on the node or from within the containers.
In order to use it, cgroup v2 must be supported by the CRI runtime as well.
Migrating to the systemd
driver in kubeadm managed clusters
Follow this Migration guide
if you wish to migrate to the systemd
cgroup driver in existing kubeadm managed clusters.
CRI version support
Your container runtime must support at least v1alpha2 of the container runtime interface.
Kubernetes 1.23 defaults to using v1 of the CRI API. If a container runtime does not support the v1 API, the kubelet falls back to using the (deprecated) v1alpha2 API instead.
Container runtimes
containerd
This section contains the necessary steps to use containerd as CRI runtime.
Use the following commands to install Containerd on your system:
Install and configure prerequisites:
cat <<EOF | sudo tee /etc/modules-load.d/containerd.conf
overlay
br_netfilter
EOF
sudo modprobe overlay
sudo modprobe br_netfilter
# Setup required sysctl params, these persist across reboots.
cat <<EOF | sudo tee /etc/sysctl.d/99-kubernetes-cri.conf
net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-iptables = 1
net.ipv4.ip_forward = 1
net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-ip6tables = 1
EOF
# Apply sysctl params without reboot
sudo sysctl --system
Install containerd:
-
Install the
containerd.io
package from the official Docker repositories. Instructions for setting up the Docker repository for your respective Linux distribution and installing thecontainerd.io
package can be found at Install Docker Engine. -
Configure containerd:
sudo mkdir -p /etc/containerd containerd config default | sudo tee /etc/containerd/config.toml
-
Restart containerd:
sudo systemctl restart containerd
Start a Powershell session, set $Version
to the desired version (ex: $Version=1.4.3
),
and then run the following commands:
-
Download containerd:
curl.exe -L https://github.com/containerd/containerd/releases/download/v$Version/containerd-$Version-windows-amd64.tar.gz -o containerd-windows-amd64.tar.gz tar.exe xvf .\containerd-windows-amd64.tar.gz
-
Extract and configure:
Copy-Item -Path ".\bin\" -Destination "$Env:ProgramFiles\containerd" -Recurse -Force cd $Env:ProgramFiles\containerd\ .\containerd.exe config default | Out-File config.toml -Encoding ascii # Review the configuration. Depending on setup you may want to adjust: # - the sandbox_image (Kubernetes pause image) # - cni bin_dir and conf_dir locations Get-Content config.toml # (Optional - but highly recommended) Exclude containerd from Windows Defender Scans Add-MpPreference -ExclusionProcess "$Env:ProgramFiles\containerd\containerd.exe"
-
Start containerd:
.\containerd.exe --register-service Start-Service containerd
Using the systemd
cgroup driver
To use the systemd
cgroup driver in /etc/containerd/config.toml
with runc
, set
[plugins."io.containerd.grpc.v1.cri".containerd.runtimes.runc]
...
[plugins."io.containerd.grpc.v1.cri".containerd.runtimes.runc.options]
SystemdCgroup = true
If you apply this change make sure to restart containerd again:
sudo systemctl restart containerd
When using kubeadm, manually configure the cgroup driver for kubelet.
CRI-O
This section contains the necessary steps to install CRI-O as a container runtime.
Use the following commands to install CRI-O on your system:
Install and configure prerequisites:
# Create the .conf file to load the modules at bootup
cat <<EOF | sudo tee /etc/modules-load.d/crio.conf
overlay
br_netfilter
EOF
sudo modprobe overlay
sudo modprobe br_netfilter
# Set up required sysctl params, these persist across reboots.
cat <<EOF | sudo tee /etc/sysctl.d/99-kubernetes-cri.conf
net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-iptables = 1
net.ipv4.ip_forward = 1
net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-ip6tables = 1
EOF
sudo sysctl --system
To install CRI-O on the following operating systems, set the environment variable OS
to the appropriate value from the following table:
Operating system | $OS |
---|---|
Debian Unstable | Debian_Unstable |
Debian Testing | Debian_Testing |
Then, set $VERSION
to the CRI-O version that matches your Kubernetes version.
For instance, if you want to install CRI-O 1.20, set VERSION=1.20
.
You can pin your installation to a specific release.
To install version 1.20.0, set VERSION=1.20:1.20.0
.
Then run
cat <<EOF | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/devel:kubic:libcontainers:stable.list
deb https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/devel:/kubic:/libcontainers:/stable/$OS/ /
EOF
cat <<EOF | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/devel:kubic:libcontainers:stable:cri-o:$VERSION.list
deb http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/devel:/kubic:/libcontainers:/stable:/cri-o:/$VERSION/$OS/ /
EOF
curl -L https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/devel:kubic:libcontainers:stable:cri-o:$VERSION/$OS/Release.key | sudo apt-key --keyring /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d/libcontainers.gpg add -
curl -L https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/devel:/kubic:/libcontainers:/stable/$OS/Release.key | sudo apt-key --keyring /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d/libcontainers.gpg add -
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install cri-o cri-o-runc
To install on the following operating systems, set the environment variable OS
to the appropriate field in the following table:
Operating system | $OS |
---|---|
Ubuntu 20.04 | xUbuntu_20.04 |
Ubuntu 19.10 | xUbuntu_19.10 |
Ubuntu 19.04 | xUbuntu_19.04 |
Ubuntu 18.04 | xUbuntu_18.04 |
Then, set $VERSION
to the CRI-O version that matches your Kubernetes version.
For instance, if you want to install CRI-O 1.20, set VERSION=1.20
.
You can pin your installation to a specific release.
To install version 1.20.0, set VERSION=1.20:1.20.0
.
Then run
cat <<EOF | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/devel:kubic:libcontainers:stable.list
deb https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/devel:/kubic:/libcontainers:/stable/$OS/ /
EOF
cat <<EOF | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/devel:kubic:libcontainers:stable:cri-o:$VERSION.list
deb http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/devel:/kubic:/libcontainers:/stable:/cri-o:/$VERSION/$OS/ /
EOF
curl -L https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/devel:/kubic:/libcontainers:/stable/$OS/Release.key | sudo apt-key --keyring /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d/libcontainers.gpg add -
curl -L https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/devel:kubic:libcontainers:stable:cri-o:$VERSION/$OS/Release.key | sudo apt-key --keyring /etc/apt/trusted.gpg.d/libcontainers-cri-o.gpg add -
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install cri-o cri-o-runc
To install on the following operating systems, set the environment variable OS
to the appropriate field in the following table:
Operating system | $OS |
---|---|
Centos 8 | CentOS_8 |
Centos 8 Stream | CentOS_8_Stream |
Centos 7 | CentOS_7 |
Then, set $VERSION
to the CRI-O version that matches your Kubernetes version.
For instance, if you want to install CRI-O 1.20, set VERSION=1.20
.
You can pin your installation to a specific release.
To install version 1.20.0, set VERSION=1.20:1.20.0
.
Then run
sudo curl -L -o /etc/yum.repos.d/devel:kubic:libcontainers:stable.repo https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/devel:/kubic:/libcontainers:/stable/$OS/devel:kubic:libcontainers:stable.repo
sudo curl -L -o /etc/yum.repos.d/devel:kubic:libcontainers:stable:cri-o:$VERSION.repo https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/devel:kubic:libcontainers:stable:cri-o:$VERSION/$OS/devel:kubic:libcontainers:stable:cri-o:$VERSION.repo
sudo yum install cri-o
sudo zypper install cri-o
Set $VERSION
to the CRI-O version that matches your Kubernetes version.
For instance, if you want to install CRI-O 1.20, VERSION=1.20
.
You can find available versions with:
sudo dnf module list cri-o
CRI-O does not support pinning to specific releases on Fedora.
Then run
sudo dnf module enable cri-o:$VERSION
sudo dnf install cri-o
Start CRI-O:
sudo systemctl daemon-reload
sudo systemctl enable crio --now
Refer to the CRI-O installation guide for more information.
cgroup driver
CRI-O uses the systemd cgroup driver per default. To switch to the cgroupfs
cgroup driver, either edit /etc/crio/crio.conf
or place a drop-in
configuration in /etc/crio/crio.conf.d/02-cgroup-manager.conf
, for example:
[crio.runtime]
conmon_cgroup = "pod"
cgroup_manager = "cgroupfs"
Please also note the changed conmon_cgroup
, which has to be set to the value
pod
when using CRI-O with cgroupfs
. It is generally necessary to keep the
cgroup driver configuration of the kubelet (usually done via kubeadm) and CRI-O
in sync.
Docker Engine
Docker Engine is the container runtime that started it all. Formerly known just as Docker, this container runtime is available in various forms. Install Docker Engine explains your options for installing this runtime.
Docker Engine is directly compatible with Kubernetes 1.23, using the deprecated dockershim
component. For more information
and context, see the Dockershim deprecation FAQ.
You can also find third-party adapters that let you use Docker Engine with Kubernetes through the supported Container Runtime Interface (CRI).
The following CRI adaptors are designed to work with Docker Engine:
cri-dockerd
from Mirantis
Mirantis Container Runtime
Mirantis Container Runtime (MCR) is a commercially available container runtime that was formerly known as Docker Enterprise Edition.
You can use Mirantis Container Runtime with Kubernetes using the open source
cri-dockerd
component, included with MCR.
Items on this page refer to third party products or projects that provide functionality required by Kubernetes. The Kubernetes project authors aren't responsible for those third-party products or projects. See the CNCF website guidelines for more details.
You should read the content guide before proposing a change that adds an extra third-party link.