Help Center> Cloud Container Engine> User Guide (Paris Regions)> Best Practices> Disaster Recovery> Implementing High Availability for Applications in CCE
Updated on 2023-12-07 GMT+08:00

Implementing High Availability for Applications in CCE

Basic Principles

To achieve high availability for your CCE containers, you can do as follows:

  1. Deploy three master nodes for the cluster.
  2. Create nodes in different AZs. When nodes are deployed across AZs, you can customize scheduling policies based on your requirements to maximize resource utilization.
  3. Create multiple node pools in different AZs and use them for node scaling.
  4. Set the number of pods to be greater than 2 when creating a workload.
  5. Set pod affinity rules to distribute pods to different AZs and nodes.

Procedure

Assume that there are four nodes in a cluster distributed in different AZs.

$ kubectl get node -L topology.kubernetes.io/zone,kubernetes.io/hostname
NAME            STATUS   ROLES    AGE   VERSION                      ZONE     HOSTNAME
192.168.5.112   Ready    <none>   42m   v1.21.7-r0-CCE21.11.1.B007   zone01   192.168.5.112
192.168.5.179   Ready    <none>   42m   v1.21.7-r0-CCE21.11.1.B007   zone01   192.168.5.179
192.168.5.252   Ready    <none>   37m   v1.21.7-r0-CCE21.11.1.B007   zone02   192.168.5.252
192.168.5.8     Ready    <none>   33h   v1.21.7-r0-CCE21.11.1.B007   zone03   192.168.5.8

Create workloads according to the following podAntiAffinity rules:

  • Pod anti-affinity in an AZ. Configure the parameters as follows:
    • weight: A larger weight value indicates a higher priority of scheduling. In this example, set it to 50.
    • topologyKey: includes a default or custom key for the node label that the system uses to denote a topology domain. A topology key determines the scope where the pod should be scheduled to. In this example, set this parameter to topology.kubernetes.io/zone, which is the label for identifying the AZ where the node is located.
    • labelSelector: Select the label of the workload to realize the anti-affinity between this container and the workload.
  • The second one is the pod anti-affinity in the node hostname. Configure the parameters as follows:
    • weight: Set it to 50.
    • topologyKey: Set it to kubernetes.io/hostname.
    • labelSelector: Select the label of the pod, which is anti-affinity with the pod.
kind: Deployment
apiVersion: apps/v1
metadata:
  name: nginx
  namespace: default
spec:
  replicas: 2
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: nginx
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: nginx
    spec:
      containers:
        - name: container-0
          image: nginx:alpine
          resources:
            limits:
              cpu: 250m
              memory: 512Mi
            requests:
              cpu: 250m
              memory: 512Mi
      affinity:
        podAntiAffinity:
          preferredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
            - weight: 50
              podAffinityTerm:
                labelSelector:                       # Select the label of the workload to realize the anti-affinity between this container and the workload.
                  matchExpressions:
                    - key: app
                      operator: In
                      values:
                        - nginx
                namespaces:
                  - default
                topologyKey: topology.kubernetes.io/zone   # It takes effect in the same AZ.
            - weight: 50
              podAffinityTerm:
                labelSelector:                       # Select the label of the workload to realize the anti-affinity between this container and the workload.
                  matchExpressions:
                    - key: app
                      operator: In
                      values:
                        - nginx
                namespaces:
                  - default
                topologyKey: kubernetes.io/hostname     # It takes effect on the node.
      imagePullSecrets:
        - name: default-secret

Create a workload and view the node where the pod is located.

$ kubectl get pod -owide
NAME                     READY   STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE   IP           NODE
nginx-6fffd8d664-dpwbk   1/1     Running   0          17s   10.0.0.132   192.168.5.112
nginx-6fffd8d664-qhclc   1/1     Running   0          17s   10.0.1.133   192.168.5.252

Increase the number of pods to 3. The pod is scheduled to another node, and the three nodes are in three different AZs.

$ kubectl scale --replicas=3 deploy/nginx
deployment.apps/nginx scaled
$ kubectl get pod -owide
NAME                     READY   STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE     IP           NODE
nginx-6fffd8d664-8t7rv   1/1     Running   0          3s      10.0.0.9     192.168.5.8
nginx-6fffd8d664-dpwbk   1/1     Running   0          2m45s   10.0.0.132   192.168.5.112
nginx-6fffd8d664-qhclc   1/1     Running   0          2m45s   10.0.1.133   192.168.5.252

Increase the number of pods to 4. The pod is scheduled to the last node. With podAntiAffinity rules, pods can be evenly distributed to AZs and nodes.

$ kubectl scale --replicas=4 deploy/nginx
deployment.apps/nginx scaled
$ kubectl get pod -owide
NAME                     READY   STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE     IP           NODE
nginx-6fffd8d664-8t7rv   1/1     Running   0          2m30s   10.0.0.9     192.168.5.8
nginx-6fffd8d664-dpwbk   1/1     Running   0          5m12s   10.0.0.132   192.168.5.112
nginx-6fffd8d664-h796b   1/1     Running   0          78s     10.0.1.5     192.168.5.179
nginx-6fffd8d664-qhclc   1/1     Running   0          5m12s   10.0.1.133   192.168.5.252