website/content/en/docs/tasks/administer-cluster/manage-resources/quota-memory-cpu-namespace.md

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Configure Memory and CPU Quotas for a Namespace task 50 Define overall memory and CPU resource limits for a namespace.

This page shows how to set quotas for the total amount memory and CPU that can be used by all Pods running in a {{< glossary_tooltip text="namespace" term_id="namespace" >}}. You specify quotas in a ResourceQuota object.

{{% heading "prerequisites" %}}

{{< include "task-tutorial-prereqs.md" >}}

You must have access to create namespaces in your cluster.

Each node in your cluster must have at least 1 GiB of memory.

Create a namespace

Create a namespace so that the resources you create in this exercise are isolated from the rest of your cluster.

kubectl create namespace quota-mem-cpu-example

Create a ResourceQuota

Here is a manifest for an example ResourceQuota:

{{< codenew file="admin/resource/quota-mem-cpu.yaml" >}}

Create the ResourceQuota:

kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/admin/resource/quota-mem-cpu.yaml --namespace=quota-mem-cpu-example

View detailed information about the ResourceQuota:

kubectl get resourcequota mem-cpu-demo --namespace=quota-mem-cpu-example --output=yaml

The ResourceQuota places these requirements on the quota-mem-cpu-example namespace:

  • For every Pod in the namespace, each container must have a memory request, memory limit, cpu request, and cpu limit.
  • The memory request total for all Pods in that namespace must not exceed 1 GiB.
  • The memory limit total for all Pods in that namespace must not exceed 2 GiB.
  • The CPU request total for all Pods in that namespace must not exceed 1 cpu.
  • The CPU limit total for all Pods in that namespace must not exceed 2 cpu.

See meaning of CPU to learn what Kubernetes means by “1 CPU”.

Create a Pod

Here is a manifest for an example Pod:

{{< codenew file="admin/resource/quota-mem-cpu-pod.yaml" >}}

Create the Pod:

kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/admin/resource/quota-mem-cpu-pod.yaml --namespace=quota-mem-cpu-example

Verify that the Pod is running and that its (only) container is healthy:

kubectl get pod quota-mem-cpu-demo --namespace=quota-mem-cpu-example

Once again, view detailed information about the ResourceQuota:

kubectl get resourcequota mem-cpu-demo --namespace=quota-mem-cpu-example --output=yaml

The output shows the quota along with how much of the quota has been used. You can see that the memory and CPU requests and limits for your Pod do not exceed the quota.

status:
  hard:
    limits.cpu: "2"
    limits.memory: 2Gi
    requests.cpu: "1"
    requests.memory: 1Gi
  used:
    limits.cpu: 800m
    limits.memory: 800Mi
    requests.cpu: 400m
    requests.memory: 600Mi

If you have the jq tool, you can also query (using JSONPath) for just the used values, and pretty-print that that of the output. For example:

kubectl get resourcequota mem-cpu-demo --namespace=quota-mem-cpu-example -o jsonpath='{ .status.used }' | jq .

Attempt to create a second Pod

Here is a manifest for a second Pod:

{{< codenew file="admin/resource/quota-mem-cpu-pod-2.yaml" >}}

In the manifest, you can see that the Pod has a memory request of 700 MiB. Notice that the sum of the used memory request and this new memory request exceeds the memory request quota: 600 MiB + 700 MiB > 1 GiB.

Attempt to create the Pod:

kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/admin/resource/quota-mem-cpu-pod-2.yaml --namespace=quota-mem-cpu-example

The second Pod does not get created. The output shows that creating the second Pod would cause the memory request total to exceed the memory request quota.

Error from server (Forbidden): error when creating "examples/admin/resource/quota-mem-cpu-pod-2.yaml":
pods "quota-mem-cpu-demo-2" is forbidden: exceeded quota: mem-cpu-demo,
requested: requests.memory=700Mi,used: requests.memory=600Mi, limited: requests.memory=1Gi

Discussion

As you have seen in this exercise, you can use a ResourceQuota to restrict the memory request total for all Pods running in a namespace. You can also restrict the totals for memory limit, cpu request, and cpu limit.

Instead of managing total resource use within a namespace, you might want to restrict individual Pods, or the containers in those Pods. To achieve that kind of limiting, use a LimitRange.

Clean up

Delete your namespace:

kubectl delete namespace quota-mem-cpu-example

{{% heading "whatsnext" %}}

For cluster administrators

For app developers