This section will guide you through the process of submitting jobs to the EKS Cluster by modifying the workload configuration files.
Pre-Submission Requirements:
Submitting a Single Job
Step 1: Modifying the Workload Pod YAML File
To ensure that your workload runs on Exostellar nodes scheduled by the Exostellar Karpenter and block Karpenter from voluntarily disrupting your workload, you need to set affinity settings and annotations in your workload YAML file. Below is an example of how to modify your YAML file to include these settings:
apiVersion: v1 kind: Pod metadata: name: my-nginx annotations: karpenter.sh/do-not-disrupt: "true" spec: affinity: nodeAffinity: requiredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution: nodeSelectorTerms: - matchExpressions: - key: karpenter.sh/nodepool operator: In values: - pool-a containers: - name: nginx image: nginx:1.14.2 ports: - containerPort: 80 resources: requests: cpu: 1
Step 2: Adding Node Labels in Exostellar Karpenter NodePool (optional)
If your workload requires scheduling on nodes with specific labels, it is required to configure Exostellar Karpenter NodePool so nodes are created with needed labels in autoscaling process. To ensure that Exostellar Karpenter provisions nodes with the appropriate labels, you need to update the NodePool configuration with the following command:
kubectl edit nodepool pool-a
An example NodePool configuration shown below creates nodes that has jobtype
of batch
and nodeFamily
of c5
:
apiVersion: karpenter.sh/v1beta1 kind: NodePool metadata: name: pool-a spec: limits: cpu: "400" template: metadata: labels: jobtype: batch nodeFamily: c5 spec: nodeClassRef: name: pool-a requirements: - key: topology.kubernetes.io/zone operator: In values: - us-east-1a resources: {} status: {}
Step 3: Submitting the Job
After modifying the pod YAML file, submit the job to the EKS Cluster just like you would run a regular pod:
kubectl apply -f my-nginx.yaml
Post-Submission Results
Exostellar Karpenter will automatically bring up the node that is suitable for your request, to check the new node that has been added:
kubectl get nodes -A
The created node has x-compute
as part of the name.
NAME STATUS ROLES AGE VERSION ip-192-0-128-xxx.us-east-2.x-compute.internal Ready <none> 40s v1.29.3-eks-ae9a62a