You are viewing documentation for Kubernetes version: v1.32
Kubernetes v1.32 documentation is no longer actively maintained. The version you are currently viewing is a static snapshot. For up-to-date information, see the latest version.
Resource Quotas
When several users or teams share a cluster with a fixed number of nodes, there is a concern that one team could use more than its fair share of resources.
Resource quotas are a tool for administrators to address this concern.
A resource quota, defined by a ResourceQuota object, provides constraints that limit
aggregate resource consumption per namespace. It can limit the quantity of objects that can
be created in a namespace by type, as well as the total amount of compute resources that may
be consumed by resources in that namespace.
Resource quotas work like this:
Different teams work in different namespaces. This can be enforced with RBAC.
The administrator creates one ResourceQuota for each namespace.
Users create resources (pods, services, etc.) in the namespace, and the quota system tracks usage to ensure it does not exceed hard resource limits defined in a ResourceQuota.
If creating or updating a resource violates a quota constraint, the request will fail with HTTP status code
403 FORBIDDENwith a message explaining the constraint that would have been violated.If quotas are enabled in a namespace for compute resources like
cpuandmemory, users must specify requests or limits for those values; otherwise, the quota system may reject pod creation. Hint: Use theLimitRangeradmission controller to force defaults for pods that make no compute resource requirements.See the walkthrough for an example of how to avoid this problem.
Note:
- For
cpuandmemoryresources, ResourceQuotas enforce that every (new) pod in that namespace sets a limit for that resource. If you enforce a resource quota in a namespace for eithercpuormemory, you and other clients, must specify eitherrequestsorlimitsfor that resource, for every new Pod you submit. If you don't, the control plane may reject admission for that Pod. - For other resources: ResourceQuota works and will ignore pods in the namespace without setting a limit or request for that resource. It means that you can create a new pod without limit/request for ephemeral storage if the resource quota limits the ephemeral storage of this namespace.
You can use a LimitRange to automatically set a default request for these resources.
The name of a ResourceQuota object must be a valid DNS subdomain name.
Examples of policies that could be created using namespaces and quotas are:
- In a cluster with a capacity of 32 GiB RAM, and 16 cores, let team A use 20 GiB and 10 cores, let B use 10GiB and 4 cores, and hold 2GiB and 2 cores in reserve for future allocation.
- Limit the "testing" namespace to using 1 core and 1GiB RAM. Let the "production" namespace use any amount.
In the case where the total capacity of the cluster is less than the sum of the quotas of the namespaces, there may be contention for resources. This is handled on a first-come-first-served basis.
Neither contention nor changes to quota will affect already created resources.
Enabling Resource Quota
ResourceQuota support is enabled by default for many Kubernetes distributions. It is
enabled when the API server
--enable-admission-plugins= flag has ResourceQuota as
one of its arguments.
A resource quota is enforced in a particular namespace when there is a ResourceQuota in that namespace.
Compute Resource Quota
You can limit the total sum of compute resources that can be requested in a given namespace.
The following resource types are supported:
| Resource Name | Description |
|---|---|
limits.cpu | Across all pods in a non-terminal state, the sum of CPU limits cannot exceed this value. |
limits.memory | Across all pods in a non-terminal state, the sum of memory limits cannot exceed this value. |
requests.cpu | Across all pods in a non-terminal state, the sum of CPU requests cannot exceed this value. |
requests.memory | Across all pods in a non-terminal state, the sum of memory requests cannot exceed this value. |
hugepages-<size> | Across all pods in a non-terminal state, the number of huge page requests of the specified size cannot exceed this value. |
cpu | Same as requests.cpu |
memory | Same as requests.memory |
Resource Quota For Extended Resources
In addition to the resources mentioned above, in release 1.10, quota support for extended resources is added.
As overcommit is not allowed for extended resources, it makes no sense to specify both requests
and limits for the same extended resource in a quota. So for extended resources, only quota items
with prefix requests. are allowed.
Take the GPU resource as an example, if the resource name is nvidia.com/gpu, and you want to
limit the total number of GPUs requested in a namespace to 4, you can define a quota as follows:
requests.nvidia.com/gpu: 4
See Viewing and Setting Quotas for more details.
Storage Resource Quota
You can limit the total sum of storage resources that can be requested in a given namespace.
In addition, you can limit consumption of storage resources based on associated storage-class.
| Resource Name | Description |
|---|---|
requests.storage | Across all persistent volume claims, the sum of storage requests cannot exceed this value. |
persistentvolumeclaims | The total number of PersistentVolumeClaims that can exist in the namespace. |
<storage-class-name>.storageclass.storage.k8s.io/requests.storage | Across all persistent volume claims associated with the <storage-class-name>, the sum of storage requests cannot exceed this value. |
<storage-class-name>.storageclass.storage.k8s.io/persistentvolumeclaims | Across all persistent volume claims associated with the <storage-class-name>, the total number of persistent volume claims that can exist in the namespace. |
For example, if you want to quota storage with gold StorageClass separate from
a bronze StorageClass, you can define a quota as follows:
gold.storageclass.storage.k8s.io/requests.storage: 500Gibronze.storageclass.storage.k8s.io/requests.storage: 100Gi
In release 1.8, quota support for local ephemeral storage is added as an alpha feature:
| Resource Name | Description |
|---|---|
requests.ephemeral-storage | Across all pods in the namespace, the sum of local ephemeral storage requests cannot exceed this value. |
limits.ephemeral-storage | Across all pods in the namespace, the sum of local ephemeral storage limits cannot exceed this value. |
ephemeral-storage | Same as requests.ephemeral-storage. |
Note:
When using a CRI container runtime, container logs will count against the ephemeral storage quota. This can result in the unexpected eviction of pods that have exhausted their storage quotas. Refer to Logging Architecture for details.Object Count Quota
You can set quota for the total number of one particular resource kind in the Kubernetes API, using the following syntax:
count/<resource>.<group>for resources from non-core groupscount/<resource>for resources from the core group
Here is an example set of resources users may want to put under object count quota:
count/persistentvolumeclaimscount/servicescount/secretscount/configmapscount/replicationcontrollerscount/deployments.appscount/replicasets.appscount/statefulsets.appscount/jobs.batchcount/cronjobs.batch
If you define a quota this way, it applies to Kubernetes' APIs that are part of the API server, and
to any custom resources backed by a CustomResourceDefinition. If you use
API aggregation to
add additional, custom APIs that are not defined as CustomResourceDefinitions, the core Kubernetes
control plane does not enforce quota for the aggregated API. The extension API server is expected to
provide quota enforcement if that's appropriate for the custom API.
For example, to create a quota on a widgets custom resource in the example.com API group, use count/widgets.example.com.
When using such a resource quota (nearly for all object kinds), an object is charged against the quota if the object kind exists (is defined) in the control plane. These types of quotas are useful to protect against exhaustion of storage resources. For example, you may want to limit the number of Secrets in a server given their large size. Too many Secrets in a cluster can actually prevent servers and controllers from starting. You can set a quota for Jobs to protect against a poorly configured CronJob. CronJobs that create too many Jobs in a namespace can lead to a denial of service.
There is another syntax only to set the same type of quota for certain resources. The following types are supported:
| Resource Name | Description |
|---|---|
configmaps | The total number of ConfigMaps that can exist in the namespace. |
persistentvolumeclaims | The total number of PersistentVolumeClaims that can exist in the namespace. |
pods | The total number of Pods in a non-terminal state that can exist in the namespace. A pod is in a terminal state if .status.phase in (Failed, Succeeded) is true. |
replicationcontrollers | The total number of ReplicationControllers that can exist in the namespace. |
resourcequotas | The total number of ResourceQuotas that can exist in the namespace. |
services | The total number of Services that can exist in the namespace. |
services.loadbalancers | The total number of Services of type LoadBalancer that can exist in the namespace. |
services.nodeports | The total number of NodePorts allocated to Services of type NodePort or LoadBalancer that can exist in the namespace. |
secrets | The total number of Secrets that can exist in the namespace. |
For example, pods quota counts and enforces a maximum on the number of pods
created in a single namespace that are not terminal. You might want to set a pods
quota on a namespace to avoid the case where a user creates many small pods and
exhausts the cluster's supply of Pod IPs.
You can find more examples on Viewing and Setting Quotas.
Quota Scopes
Each quota can have an associated set of scopes. A quota will only measure usage for a resource if it matches
the intersection of enumerated scopes.
When a scope is added to the quota, it limits the number of resources it supports to those that pertain to the scope. Resources specified on the quota outside of the allowed set results in a validation error.
| Scope | Description |
|---|---|
Terminating | Match pods where .spec.activeDeadlineSeconds >= 0 |
NotTerminating | Match pods where .spec.activeDeadlineSeconds is nil |
BestEffort | Match pods that have best effort quality of service. |
NotBestEffort | Match pods that do not have best effort quality of service. |
PriorityClass | Match pods that references the specified priority class. |
CrossNamespacePodAffinity | Match pods that have cross-namespace pod (anti)affinity terms. |
The BestEffort scope restricts a quota to tracking the following resource:
pods
The Terminating, NotTerminating, NotBestEffort and PriorityClass
scopes restrict a quota to tracking the following resources:
podscpumemoryrequests.cpurequests.memorylimits.cpulimits.memory
Note that you cannot specify both the Terminating and the NotTerminating
scopes in the same quota, and you cannot specify both the BestEffort and
NotBestEffort scopes in the same quota either.
The scopeSelector supports the following values in the operator field:
InNotInExistsDoesNotExist
When using one of the following values as the scopeName when defining the
scopeSelector, the operator must be Exists.
TerminatingNotTerminatingBestEffortNotBestEffort
If the operator is In or NotIn, the values field must have at least
one value. For example:
scopeSelector:
matchExpressions:
- scopeName: PriorityClass
operator: In
values:
- middle
If the operator is Exists or DoesNotExist, the values field must NOT be
specified.
Resource Quota Per PriorityClass
Kubernetes v1.17 [stable]Pods can be created at a specific priority.
You can control a pod's consumption of system resources based on a pod's priority, by using the scopeSelector
field in the quota spec.
A quota is matched and consumed only if scopeSelector in the quota spec selects the pod.
When quota is scoped for priority class using scopeSelector field, quota object
is restricted to track only following resources:
podscpumemoryephemeral-storagelimits.cpulimits.memorylimits.ephemeral-storagerequests.cpurequests.memoryrequests.ephemeral-storage
This example creates a quota object and matches it with pods at specific priorities. The example works as follows:
- Pods in the cluster have one of the three priority classes, "low", "medium", "high".
- One quota object is created for each priority.
Save the following YAML to a file quota.yaml.
apiVersion: v1
kind: List
items:
- apiVersion: v1
kind: ResourceQuota
metadata:
name: pods-high
spec:
hard:
cpu: "1000"
memory: "200Gi"
pods: "10"
scopeSelector:
matchExpressions:
- operator: In
scopeName: PriorityClass
values: ["high"]
- apiVersion: v1
kind: ResourceQuota
metadata:
name: pods-medium
spec:
hard:
cpu: "10"
memory: "20Gi"
pods: "10"
scopeSelector:
matchExpressions:
- operator: In
scopeName: PriorityClass
values: ["medium"]
- apiVersion: v1
kind: ResourceQuota
metadata:
name: pods-low
spec:
hard:
cpu: "5"
memory: "10Gi"
pods: "10"
scopeSelector:
matchExpressions:
- operator: In
scopeName: PriorityClass
values: ["low"]
Apply the YAML using kubectl create.
kubectl create -f ./quota.yaml
resourcequota/pods-high created
resourcequota/pods-medium created
resourcequota/pods-low created
Verify that Used quota is 0 using kubectl describe quota.
kubectl describe quota
Name: pods-high
Namespace: default
Resource Used Hard
-------- ---- ----
cpu 0 1k
memory 0 200Gi
pods 0 10
Name: pods-low
Namespace: default
Resource Used Hard
-------- ---- ----
cpu 0 5
memory 0 10Gi
pods 0 10
Name: pods-medium
Namespace: default
Resource Used Hard
-------- ---- ----
cpu 0 10
memory 0 20Gi
pods 0 10
Create a pod with priority "high". Save the following YAML to a
file high-priority-pod.yaml.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: high-priority
spec:
containers:
- name: high-priority
image: ubuntu
command: ["/bin/sh"]
args: ["-c", "while true; do echo hello; sleep 10;done"]
resources:
requests:
memory: "10Gi"
cpu: "500m"
limits:
memory: "10Gi"
cpu: "500m"
priorityClassName: high
Apply it with kubectl create.
kubectl create -f ./high-priority-pod.yaml
Verify that "Used" stats for "high" priority quota, pods-high, has changed and that
the other two quotas are unchanged.
kubectl describe quota
Name: pods-high
Namespace: default
Resource Used Hard
-------- ---- ----
cpu 500m 1k
memory 10Gi 200Gi
pods 1 10
Name: pods-low
Namespace: default
Resource Used Hard
-------- ---- ----
cpu 0 5
memory 0 10Gi
pods 0 10
Name: pods-medium
Namespace: default
Resource Used Hard
-------- ---- ----
cpu 0 10
memory 0 20Gi
pods 0 10
Cross-namespace Pod Affinity Quota
Kubernetes v1.24 [stable]Operators can use CrossNamespacePodAffinity quota scope to limit which namespaces are allowed to
have pods with affinity terms that cross namespaces. Specifically, it controls which pods are allowed
to set namespaces or namespaceSelector fields in pod affinity terms.
Preventing users from using cross-namespace affinity terms might be desired since a pod with anti-affinity constraints can block pods from all other namespaces from getting scheduled in a failure domain.
Using this scope operators can prevent certain namespaces (foo-ns in the example below)
from having pods that use cross-namespace pod affinity by creating a resource quota object in
that namespace with CrossNamespacePodAffinity scope and hard limit of 0:
apiVersion: v1
kind: ResourceQuota
metadata:
name: disable-cross-namespace-affinity
namespace: foo-ns
spec:
hard:
pods: "0"
scopeSelector:
matchExpressions:
- scopeName: CrossNamespacePodAffinity
operator: Exists
If operators want to disallow using namespaces and namespaceSelector by default, and
only allow it for specific namespaces, they could configure CrossNamespacePodAffinity
as a limited resource by setting the kube-apiserver flag --admission-control-config-file
to the path of the following configuration file:
apiVersion: apiserver.config.k8s.io/v1
kind: AdmissionConfiguration
plugins:
- name: "ResourceQuota"
configuration:
apiVersion: apiserver.config.k8s.io/v1
kind: ResourceQuotaConfiguration
limitedResources:
- resource: pods
matchScopes:
- scopeName: CrossNamespacePodAffinity
operator: Exists
With the above configuration, pods can use namespaces and namespaceSelector in pod affinity only
if the namespace where they are created have a resource quota object with
CrossNamespacePodAffinity scope and a hard limit greater than or equal to the number of pods using those fields.
Requests compared to Limits
When allocating compute resources, each container may specify a request and a limit value for either CPU or memory. The quota can be configured to quota either value.
If the quota has a value specified for requests.cpu or requests.memory, then it requires that every incoming
container makes an explicit request for those resources. If the quota has a value specified for limits.cpu or limits.memory,
then it requires that every incoming container specifies an explicit limit for those resources.
Viewing and Setting Quotas
kubectl supports creating, updating, and viewing quotas:
kubectl create namespace myspace
cat <<EOF > compute-resources.yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: ResourceQuota
metadata:
name: compute-resources
spec:
hard:
requests.cpu: "1"
requests.memory: "1Gi"
limits.cpu: "2"
limits.memory: "2Gi"
requests.nvidia.com/gpu: 4
EOF
kubectl create -f ./compute-resources.yaml --namespace=myspace
cat <<EOF > object-counts.yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: ResourceQuota
metadata:
name: object-counts
spec:
hard:
configmaps: "10"
persistentvolumeclaims: "4"
pods: "4"
replicationcontrollers: "20"
secrets: "10"
services: "10"
services.loadbalancers: "2"
EOF
kubectl create -f ./object-counts.yaml --namespace=myspace
kubectl get quota --namespace=myspace
NAME AGE
compute-resources 30s
object-counts 32s
kubectl describe quota compute-resources --namespace=myspace
Name: compute-resources
Namespace: myspace
Resource Used Hard
-------- ---- ----
limits.cpu 0 2
limits.memory 0 2Gi
requests.cpu 0 1
requests.memory 0 1Gi
requests.nvidia.com/gpu 0 4
kubectl describe quota object-counts --namespace=myspace
Name: object-counts
Namespace: myspace
Resource Used Hard
-------- ---- ----
configmaps 0 10
persistentvolumeclaims 0 4
pods 0 4
replicationcontrollers 0 20
secrets 1 10
services 0 10
services.loadbalancers 0 2
kubectl also supports object count quota for all standard namespaced resources
using the syntax count/<resource>.<group>:
kubectl create namespace myspace
kubectl create quota test --hard=count/deployments.apps=2,count/replicasets.apps=4,count/pods=3,count/secrets=4 --namespace=myspace
kubectl create deployment nginx --image=nginx --namespace=myspace --replicas=2
kubectl describe quota --namespace=myspace
Name: test
Namespace: myspace
Resource Used Hard
-------- ---- ----
count/deployments.apps 1 2
count/pods 2 3
count/replicasets.apps 1 4
count/secrets 1 4
Quota and Cluster Capacity
ResourceQuotas are independent of the cluster capacity. They are expressed in absolute units. So, if you add nodes to your cluster, this does not automatically give each namespace the ability to consume more resources.
Sometimes more complex policies may be desired, such as:
- Proportionally divide total cluster resources among several teams.
- Allow each tenant to grow resource usage as needed, but have a generous limit to prevent accidental resource exhaustion.
- Detect demand from one namespace, add nodes, and increase quota.
Such policies could be implemented using ResourceQuotas as building blocks, by
writing a "controller" that watches the quota usage and adjusts the quota
hard limits of each namespace according to other signals.
Note that resource quota divides up aggregate cluster resources, but it creates no restrictions around nodes: pods from several namespaces may run on the same node.
Limit Priority Class consumption by default
It may be desired that pods at a particular priority, such as "cluster-services", should be allowed in a namespace, if and only if, a matching quota object exists.
With this mechanism, operators are able to restrict usage of certain high priority classes to a limited number of namespaces and not every namespace will be able to consume these priority classes by default.
To enforce this, kube-apiserver flag --admission-control-config-file should be
used to pass path to the following configuration file:
apiVersion: apiserver.config.k8s.io/v1
kind: AdmissionConfiguration
plugins:
- name: "ResourceQuota"
configuration:
apiVersion: apiserver.config.k8s.io/v1
kind: ResourceQuotaConfiguration
limitedResources:
- resource: pods
matchScopes:
- scopeName: PriorityClass
operator: In
values: ["cluster-services"]
Then, create a resource quota object in the kube-system namespace:
apiVersion: v1
kind: ResourceQuota
metadata:
name: pods-cluster-services
spec:
scopeSelector:
matchExpressions:
- operator : In
scopeName: PriorityClass
values: ["cluster-services"]kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/policy/priority-class-resourcequota.yaml -n kube-system
resourcequota/pods-cluster-services created
In this case, a pod creation will be allowed if:
- the Pod's
priorityClassNameis not specified. - the Pod's
priorityClassNameis specified to a value other thancluster-services. - the Pod's
priorityClassNameis set tocluster-services, it is to be created in thekube-systemnamespace, and it has passed the resource quota check.
A Pod creation request is rejected if its priorityClassName is set to cluster-services
and it is to be created in a namespace other than kube-system.
What's next
- See ResourceQuota design document for more information.
- See a detailed example for how to use resource quota.
- Read Quota support for priority class design document.
- See LimitedResources.