README ¶
Intel DSA device plugin for Kubernetes
Table of Contents
Introduction
The DSA device plugin for Kubernetes supports acceleration using the Intel Data Streaming accelerator(DSA).
The DSA plugin discovers DSA work queues and presents them as a node resources.
Installation
The following sections detail how to obtain, build, deploy and test the DSA device plugin.
Examples are provided showing how to deploy the plugin either using a DaemonSet or by hand on a per-node basis.
Deploy with pre-built container image
Pre-built images of this component are available on the Docker hub. These images are automatically built and uploaded to the hub from the latest main branch of this repository.
Release tagged images of the components are also available on the Docker hub, tagged with their
release version numbers in the format x.y.z
, corresponding to the branches and releases in this
repository. Thus the easiest way to deploy the plugin in your cluster is to run this command
$ kubectl apply -k https://github.com/intel/intel-device-plugins-for-kubernetes/deployments/dsa_plugin?ref=<REF>
daemonset.apps/intel-dsa-plugin created
Where <REF>
needs to be substituted with the desired git ref, e.g. main
.
Nothing else is needed. But if you want to deploy a customized version of the plugin read further.
Getting the source code
$ export INTEL_DEVICE_PLUGINS_SRC=/path/to/intel-device-plugins-for-kubernetes
$ git clone https://github.com/intel/intel-device-plugins-for-kubernetes ${INTEL_DEVICE_PLUGINS_SRC}
Deploying as a DaemonSet
To deploy the dsa plugin as a daemonset, you first need to build a container image for the plugin and ensure that is visible to your nodes.
Build the plugin image
The following will use docker
to build a local container image called
intel/intel-dsa-plugin
with the tag devel
.
The image build tool can be changed from the default docker
by setting the BUILDER
argument
to the Makefile
.
$ cd ${INTEL_DEVICE_PLUGINS_SRC}
$ make intel-dsa-plugin
...
Successfully tagged intel/intel-dsa-plugin:devel
Deploy plugin DaemonSet
You can then use the example DaemonSet YAML file provided to deploy the plugin. The default kustomization that deploys the YAML as is:
$ kubectl apply -k deployments/dsa_plugin
daemonset.apps/intel-dsa-plugin created
Deploy by hand
For development purposes, it is sometimes convenient to deploy the plugin 'by hand' on a node. In this case, you do not need to build the complete container image, and can build just the plugin.
Build the plugin
First we build the plugin:
$ cd ${INTEL_DEVICE_PLUGINS_SRC}
$ make dsa_plugin
Run the plugin as administrator
Now we can run the plugin directly on the node:
$ sudo -E ${INTEL_DEVICE_PLUGINS_SRC}/cmd/dsa_plugin/dsa_plugin
device-plugin registered
Verify plugin registration
You can verify the plugin has been registered with the expected nodes by searching for the relevant resource allocation status on the nodes:
$ kubectl get nodes -o go-template='{{range .items}}{{.metadata.name}}{{"\n"}}{{range $k,$v:=.status.allocatable}}{{" "}}{{$k}}{{": "}}{{$v}}{{"\n"}}{{end}}{{end}}' | grep '^\([^ ]\)\|\( dsa\)'
master
dsa.intel.com/wq-user-dedicated: 2
dsa.intel.com/wq-user-shared: 8
node1
dsa.intel.com/wq-user-dedicated: 4
dsa.intel.com/wq-user-shared: 20
Testing the plugin
We can test the plugin is working by deploying the provided example accel-config test image.
-
Build a Docker image with an accel-config tests:
$ make dsa-accel-config-demo ... Successfully tagged dsa-accel-config-demo:devel
-
Create a pod running unit tests off the local Docker image:
$ kubectl apply -f ${INTEL_DEVICE_PLUGINS_SRC}/demo/dsa-accel-config-demo-pod.yaml pod/dsa-accel-config-demo created
-
Wait until pod is completed:
$ kubectl get pods |grep dsa-accel-config-demo dsa-accel-config-demo 0/1 Completed 0 31m
-
Review the job's logs:
$ kubectl logs dsa-accel-config-demo | tail [debug] PF in sub-task[6], consider as passed [debug] PF in sub-task[7], consider as passed [debug] PF in sub-task[8], consider as passed [debug] PF in sub-task[9], consider as passed [debug] PF in sub-task[10], consider as passed [debug] PF in sub-task[11], consider as passed [debug] PF in sub-task[12], consider as passed [debug] PF in sub-task[13], consider as passed [debug] PF in sub-task[14], consider as passed [debug] PF in sub-task[15], consider as passed
If the pod did not successfully launch, possibly because it could not obtain the DSA resource, it will be stuck in the
Pending
status:$ kubectl get pods NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE dsa-accel-config-demo 0/1 Pending 0 7s
This can be verified by checking the Events of the pod:
$ kubectl describe pod dsa-accel-config-demo | grep -A3 Events: Events: Type Reason Age From Message ---- ------ ---- ---- ------- Warning FailedScheduling 2m26s default-scheduler 0/1 nodes are available: 1 Insufficient dsa.intel.com/wq-user-dedicated, 1 Insufficient dsa.intel.com/wq-user-shared.
Documentation ¶
There is no documentation for this package.