Container Linux Update Operator is a node reboot controller for Kubernetes running Container Linux images. When a reboot is needed after updating the system via update_engine, the operator will drain the node before rebooting it.
Container Linux Update Operator fulfills the same purpose as locksmith, but has better integration with Kubernetes by explicitly marking a node as unschedulable and deleting pods on the node before rebooting.
Container Linux Update Operator is divided into two parts: update-operator
and update-agent
.
update-agent
runs as a DaemonSet on each node, waiting for a UPDATE_STATUS_UPDATED_NEED_REBOOT
signal via D-Bus from update_engine
.
It will indicate via node annotations that it needs a reboot.
update-operator
runs as a Deployment, watching changes to node annotations and reboots the nodes as needed.
It coordinates the reboots of multiple nodes in the cluster, ensuring that not too many are rebooting at once.
Currently, update-operator
only reboots one node at a time.
- A Kubernetes cluster (>= 1.6) running on Container Linux
- The
update-engine.service
systemd unit on each machine should be unmasked, enabled and started in systemd - The
locksmithd.service
systemd unit on each machine should be masked and stopped in systemd
To unmask a service, run systemctl unmask <name>
.
To enable a service, run systemctl enable <name>
.
To start/stop a service, run systemctl start <name>
or systemctl stop <name>
respectively.
Create the update-operator
deployment and update-agent
daemonset.
kubectl apply -f examples/deploy -R
To test that it is working, you can SSH to a node and trigger an update check by running update_engine_client -check_for_update
or simulate a reboot is needed by running locksmithctl send-need-reboot
.