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seed_settings.md

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Settings for Seeds

The Seed resource offers a few settings that are used to control the behaviour of certain Gardener components. This document provides an overview over the available settings:

Dependency Watchdog

Gardenlet can deploy two instances of the dependency-watchdog into the garden namespace of the seed cluster. One instance only activates the endpoint controller while the second instance only activates the probe controller.

Endpoint Controller

The endpoint controller helps to alleviate the delay where control plane components remain unavailable by finding the respective pods in CrashLoopBackoff status and restarting them once their dependants become ready and available again. For example, if etcd goes down then also kube-apiserver goes down (and into a CrashLoopBackoff state). If etcd comes up again then (without the endpoint controller) it might take some time until kube-apiserver gets restarted as well.

It can be enabled/disabled via the .spec.settings.dependencyWatchdog.endpoint.enabled field. It defaults to true.

Probe Controller

The probe controller scales down the kube-controller-manager of shoot clusters in case their respective kube-apiserver is not reachable via its external ingress. This is in order to avoid melt-down situations since the kube-controller-manager uses in-cluster communication when talking to the kube-apiserver, i.e., it wouldn't be affected if the external access to the kube-apiserver is interrupted for whatever reason. The kubelets on the shoot worker nodes, however, would indeed be affected since they typically run in different networks and use the external ingress when talking to the kube-apiserver. Hence, without scaling down kube-controller-manager, the nodes might be marked as NotReady and eventually replaced (since the kubelets cannot report their status anymore). To prevent such unnecessary turbulences, kube-controller-manager is being scaled down until the external ingress becomes available again.

It can be enabled/disabled via the .spec.settings.dependencyWatchdog.probe.enabled field. It defaults to true.

Reserve Excess Capacity

If the excess capacity reservation is enabled then the Gardenlet will deploy a special Deployment into the garden namespace of the seed cluster. This Deployment's pod template has only one container, the pause container, which simply runs in an infinite loop. The priority of the deployment is very low, so any other pod will preempt these pause pods. This is especially useful if new shoot control planes are created in the seed. In case the seed cluster runs at its capacity then there is no waiting time required during the scale-up. Instead, the low-priority pause pods will be preempted and allow newly created shoot control plane pods to be scheduled fast. In the meantime, the cluster-autoscaler will trigger the scale-up because the preempted pause pods want to run again. However, this delay doesn't affect the important shoot control plane pods which will improve the user experience.

It can be enabled/disabled via the .spec.settings.excessCapacityReservation.enabled field. It defaults to true.

Scheduling

By default, the Gardener Scheduler will consider all seed clusters when a new shoot cluster shall be created. However, administrators/operators might want to exclude some of them from being considered by the scheduler. Therefore, seed clusters can be marked as "invisible". In this case, the scheduler simply ignores them as if they wouldn't exist. Shoots can still use the invisible seed but only by explicitly specifying the name in their .spec.seedName field.

Seed clusters can be marked visible/invisible via the .spec.settings.scheduling.visible field. It defaults to true.

Shoot DNS

Generally, the Gardenlet creates a few DNS records during the creation/reconciliation of a shoot cluster (see here). However, some infrastructures don't need/want this behaviour. Instead, they want to directly use the IP addresses/hostnames of load balancers. Another use-case is a local development setup where DNS is not needed for simplicity reasons.

By setting the .spec.settings.shootDNS.enabled field this behavior can be controlled.

ℹ️ In previous Gardener versions (< 1.5) these settings were controlled via taint keys (seed.gardener.cloud/{disable-capacity-reservation,disable-dns,invisible}). The taint keys are no longer supported and removed in version 1.12. The rationale behind it is the implementation of tolerations similar to Kubernetes tolerations. More information about it can be found in #2193.

Load Balancer Services

Gardener creates certain Kubernetes Service objects of type LoadBalancer in the seed cluster. Most prominently, they are used for exposing the shoot control planes, namely the kube-apiserver of the shoot clusters. In most cases, the cloud-controller-manager (responsible for managing these load balancers on the respective underlying infrastructure) supports certain customization and settings via annotations. This document provides a good overview and many examples.

By setting the .spec.settings.loadBalancerServices.annotations field the Gardener administrator can specify a list of annotations which will be injected into the Services of type LoadBalancer.

Vertical Pod Autoscaler

Gardener heavily relies on the Kubernetes vertical-pod-autoscaler component. By default, the seed controller deploys the VPA components into the garden namespace of the respective seed clusters. In case you want to manage the VPA deployment on your own or have a custom one then you might want to disable the automatic deployment of Gardener. Otherwise, you might end up with two VPAs which will cause erratic behaviour. By setting the .spec.settings.verticalPodAutoscaler.enabled=false you can disable the automatic deployment.

⚠️ In any case, there must be a VPA available for your seed cluster. Using a seed without VPA is not supported.

Owner Checks

When a shoot is scheduled to a seed and actually reconciled, Gardener appoints the seed as the current "owner" of the shoot by creating a special "owner DNS record" and checking against it if the seed still owns the shoot in order to guard against "split brain scenario" during control plane migration, as described in GEP-17 Shoot Control Plane Migration "Bad Case" Scenario. This mechanism relies on the DNS resolution of TXT DNS records being possible and highly reliable, since if the owner check fails the shoot will be effectively disabled for the duration of the failure. In environments where resolving TXT DNS records is either not possible or not considered reliable enough, it may be necessary to disable the owner check mechanism, in order to avoid shoots failing to reconcile or temporary outages due to transient DNS failures. By setting the .spec.settings.ownerChecks.enabled=false (default is true) the creation and checking of owner DNS records can be disabled for all shoots scheduled on this seed. Note that if owner checks are disabled, migrating shoots scheduled on this seed to other seeds should be considered unsafe, and in the future will be disabled as well.