This document details a manual procedure for Google Distributed Cloud if you have issues with NFS mounts with a stuck volume or Pod and you created your cluster with DataPlane v2 enabled.
This issue has been fixed for the following versions:
- For minor version 1.16, version 1.16.4-gke.37 and higher.
- For minor version 1.28, version 1.28.200-gke.111 and higher.
We recommend that you upgrade to a version where this issue is fixed. If you're unable to upgrade, use the procedures outlined in the following sections.
If you're using a version where this issue isn't fixed, you might encounter
issues if you have workloads using ReadWriteMany volumes powered by storage
drivers that are susceptible to this issue, such as (but not limited to):
- Robin.io
- Portworx (
sharedv4service volumes) csi-nfs
NFS mounts on some storage architectures might become stuck when they're connected to an endpoint using a Kubernetes Service (ClusterIP) and DataPlane v2. This behavior is because of the limitations in how Linux kernel socket code interacts with Cillium's eBPF program. Containers might become blocked on I/O or even be unkillable, as the defunct NFS mount can't be unmounted.
You might experience this issue if you use RWX storage hosted on NFS servers
that run on a Kubernetes node, including software-defined or hyperconverged
storage solutions like as Ondat, Robin.io, or Portworx.
Review existing cluster configuration
Get some existing configuration values from your cluster. You use the values
from these steps to create a kube-proxy manifest in the next section.
Get the
ClusterCIDRfromcm/cilium-config:kubectl get cm -n kube-system cilium-config -o yaml | grep native-routing-cidrThe following example output shows that you would use
192.168.0.0/16as theClusterCIDR:ipv4-native-routing-cidr: 192.168.0.0/16 native-routing-cidr: 192.168.0.0/16Get the
APIServerAdvertiseAddressandAPIServerPortfrom theanetdDaemonSet:kubectl get ds -n kube-system anetd -o yaml | grep KUBERNETES -A 1The following example output show that you would use
21.1.4.119as theAPIServerAdvertiseAddressand443as theAPIServerPort:- name: KUBERNETES_SERVICE_HOST value: 21.1.4.119 - name: KUBERNETES_SERVICE_PORT value: "443"Get the
RegistryCredentialsSecretNamefrom theanetdDaemonSet:kubectl get ds -n kube-system anetd -o yaml | grep imagePullSecrets -A 1The following example output shows that you would use
private-registry-credsas theRegistryCredentialsSecretName:imagePullSecrets: - name: private-registry-credsGet the
Registryfrom theanetdDameonSet:kubectl get ds -n kube-system anetd -o yaml | grep imageThe following example output shows that you would use
gcr.io/gke-on-prem-releaseas theRegistry:image: gcr.io/gke-on-prem-release/cilium/cilium:v1.12.6-anthos1.15-gke4.2.7Get the
KubernetesVersionfrom the image tag forkube-apiserverin the cluster namespace of the admin cluster:KUBECONFIG=ADMIN_KUBECONFIG kubectl get sts -n CLUSTER_NAME kube-apiserver -o yaml | grep imageReplace
ADMIN_KUBECONFIGwith the kubeconfig file for your admin cluster andCLUSTER_NAMEwith the name of your user cluster.The following example output shows that you would use
v1.26.2-gke.1001as theKubernetesVersion:image: gcr.io/gke-on-prem-release/kube-apiserver-amd64:v1.26.2-gke.1001 imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
Prepare kube-proxy manifests
Use the values obtained in the previous section to create and apply a YAML
manifest that will deploy kube-proxy to your cluster.
Create a manifest named
kube-proxy.yamlin the editor of your choice:nano kube-proxy.yamlCopy and paste the following YAML definition:
apiVersion: apps/v1 kind: DaemonSet metadata: labels: k8s-app: kube-proxy name: kube-proxy namespace: kube-system spec: selector: matchLabels: k8s-app: kube-proxy template: metadata: annotations: scheduler.alpha.kubernetes.io/critical-pod: "" labels: k8s-app: kube-proxy spec: containers: - command: - kube-proxy - --v=2 - --profiling=false - --iptables-min-sync-period=10s - --iptables-sync-period=1m - --oom-score-adj=-998 - --ipvs-sync-period=1m - --ipvs-min-sync-period=10s - --cluster-cidr=ClusterCIDR env: - name: KUBERNETES_SERVICE_HOST value:APIServerAdvertiseAddress - name: KUBERNETES_SERVICE_PORT value: "APIServerPort" image: Registry/kube-proxy-amd64:KubernetesVersion imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent name: kube-proxy resources: requests: cpu: 100m memory: 15Mi securityContext: privileged: true volumeMounts: - mountPath: /run/xtables.lock name: xtables-lock - mountPath: /lib/modules name: lib-modules imagePullSecrets: - name: RegistryCredentialsSecretName nodeSelector: kubernetes.io/os: linux hostNetwork: true priorityClassName: system-node-critical serviceAccount: kube-proxy serviceAccountName: kube-proxy tolerations: - effect: NoExecute operator: Exists - effect: NoSchedule operator: Exists volumes: - hostPath: path: /run/xtables.lock type: FileOrCreate name: xtables-lock - hostPath: path: /lib/modules type: DirectoryOrCreate name: lib-modules --- apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1 kind: ClusterRoleBinding metadata: name: system:kube-proxy roleRef: apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io kind: ClusterRole name: system:node-proxier subjects: - kind: ServiceAccount name: kube-proxy namespace: kube-system --- apiVersion: v1 kind: ServiceAccount metadata: name: kube-proxy namespace: kube-systemIn this YAML manifest, set the following values:
APIServerAdvertiseAddress: the value ofKUBERNETES_SERVICE_HOST, such as21.1.4.119.APIServerPort: the value ofKUBERNETES_SERVICE_PORT, such as443.Registry: the prefix of the Cilium image, such asgcr.io/gke-on-prem-release.RegistryCredentialsSecretName: the image pull secret name, such asprivate-registry-creds.
Save and close the manifest file in your editor.
Prepare anetd patch
Create and prepare an update for anetd:
Create a manifest named
cilium-config-patch.yamlin the editor of your choice:nano cilium-config-patch.yamlCopy and paste the following YAML definition:
data: kube-proxy-replacement: "disabled" kube-proxy-replacement-healthz-bind-address: "" retry-kube-proxy-healthz-binding: "false" enable-host-reachable-services: "false"Save and close the manifest file in your editor.
Deploy kube-proxy and reconfigure anetd
Apply your configuration changes to your cluster. Create backups of your existing configuration before you apply the changes.
Back up your current
anetdandcilium-configconfiguration:kubectl get ds -n kube-system anetd > anetd-original.yaml kubectl get cm -n kube-system cilium-config > cilium-config-original.yamlApply
kube-proxy.yamlusingkubectl:kubectl apply -f kube-proxy.yamlCheck that the Pods are
Running:kubectl get pods -n kube-system -o wide | grep kube-proxyThe following example condensed output shows that the Pods are running correctly:
kube-proxy-f8mp9 1/1 Running 1 (4m ago) [...] kube-proxy-kndhv 1/1 Running 1 (5m ago) [...] kube-proxy-sjnwl 1/1 Running 1 (4m ago) [...]Patch the
cilium-configConfigMap usingkubectl:kubectl patch cm -n kube-system cilium-config --patch-file cilium-config-patch.yamlEdit
anetdusingkubectl:kubectl edit ds -n kube-system anetdIn the editor that opens up, edit the spec of
anetd. Insert the following as the first item underinitContainers:- name: check-kube-proxy-rules image: Image imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent command: - sh - -ec - | if [ "$KUBE_PROXY_REPLACEMENT" != "strict" ]; then kube_proxy_forward() { iptables -L KUBE-FORWARD; } until kube_proxy_forward; do sleep 2; done fi; env: - name: KUBE_PROXY_REPLACEMENT valueFrom: configMapKeyRef: key: kube-proxy-replacement name: cilium-config optional: true securityContext: privileged: trueReplace
Imagewith the same image used in the other Cilium containers in theanetdDaemonSet, such asgcr.io/gke-on-prem-release/cilium/cilium:v1.12.6-anthos1.15-gke4.2.7.Save and close the manifest file in your editor.
To apply these changes, reboot of all nodes in your cluster. To minimize disruption, you can attempt to drain each node prior to the reboot. However, Pods using RWX volumes may be stuck in a
Terminatingstate due to broken NFS mounts that block the drain process.You can force delete blocked Pods and allow the Node to correctly drain:
kubectl delete pods -โforce -โgrace-period=0 --namespace POD_NAMESPACE POD_NAMEReplace
POD_NAMEwith the Pod you are trying to delete andPOD_NAMESPACEwith its namespace.
What's next
If you need additional assistance, reach out to Cloud Customer Care.
You can also see Getting support for more information about support resources, including the following:
- Requirements for opening a support case.
- Tools to help you troubleshoot, such as logs and metrics.
- Supported components, versions, and features of Google Distributed Cloud for VMware (software only).