Skip to content

Common Pitfalls#

There are few common cases we've seen where k0s fails to run properly.

CoreDNS in crashloop#

The most common case we've encountered so far has been CoreDNS getting into crashloop on the node(s).

With kubectl you see something like this:

$ kubectl get pod --all-namespaces
NAMESPACE     NAME                                       READY   STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
kube-system   calico-kube-controllers-5f6546844f-25px6   1/1     Running   0          167m
kube-system   calico-node-fwjx5                          1/1     Running   0          164m
kube-system   calico-node-t4tx5                          1/1     Running   0          164m
kube-system   calico-node-whwsg                          1/1     Running   0          164m
kube-system   coredns-5c98d7d4d8-tfs4q                   1/1     Error     17         167m
kube-system   konnectivity-agent-9jkfd                   1/1     Running   0          164m
kube-system   konnectivity-agent-bvhdb                   1/1     Running   0          164m
kube-system   konnectivity-agent-r6mzj                   1/1     Running   0          164m
kube-system   kube-proxy-kr2r9                           1/1     Running   0          164m
kube-system   kube-proxy-tbljr                           1/1     Running   0          164m
kube-system   kube-proxy-xbw7p                           1/1     Running   0          164m
kube-system   metrics-server-7d4bcb75dd-pqkrs            1/1     Running   0          167m

When you check the logs, it'll show something like this:

kubectl -n kube-system logs coredns-5c98d7d4d8-tfs4q
plugin/loop: Loop (127.0.0.1:55953 -> :1053) detected for zone ".", see https://coredns.io/plugins/loop#troubleshooting. Query: "HINFO 4547991504243258144.3688648895315093531."

This is most often caused by systemd-resolved stub (or something similar) running locally and CoreDNS detects a possible loop with DNS queries.

The easiest but most crude way to workaround is to disable the systemd-resolved stub and revert the hosts /etc/resolv.conf to original

Read more at CoreDNS troubleshooting docs.

k0s controller fails on ARM boxes#

In the logs you probably see etcd not starting up properly.

Etcd is not fully supported on ARM architecture, thus you need to run k0s controller and thus also etcd process with env ETCD_UNSUPPORTED_ARCH=arm.

As etcd is not fully supported on ARM, it also means that the k0s control plane with etcd itself is not fully supported on ARM either.

k0s will not start on ZFS-based systems#

On ZFS-based systems k0s will fail to start because containerd runs by default in overlayfs mode to manage image layers. This is not compatible with ZFS and requires a custom config of containerd. The following steps should get k0s working on ZFS-based systems:

  • check with $ ctr -a /run/k0s/containerd.sock plugins ls that the containerd ZFS snapshotter plugin is in ok state (should be the case if ZFS kernel modules and ZFS userspace utils are correctly configured):
TYPE                            ID                       PLATFORMS      STATUS    
...
io.containerd.snapshotter.v1    zfs                      linux/amd64    ok
...
  • create a containerd config according to the documentation: $ containerd config default > /etc/k0s/containerd.toml
  • modify the line in /etc/k0s/containerd.toml:
...
    [plugins."io.containerd.grpc.v1.cri".containerd]
      snapshotter = "overlayfs"
...

to

...
    [plugins."io.containerd.grpc.v1.cri".containerd]
      snapshotter = "zfs"
...
  • create a ZFS dataset to be used as snapshot storage at your desired location, e.g. $ zfs create -o mountpoint=/var/lib/k0s/containerd/io.containerd.snapshotter.v1.zfs rpool/containerd
  • install k0s as usual, e.g $ k0s install controller --single -c /etc/k0s/k0s.yaml
  • containerd should be launched with ZFS support and k0s should initialize the cluster correctly

Pods pending when using cloud providers#

Once we enable cloud provider support on kubelet on worker nodes, kubelet will automatically add a taint node.cloudprovider.kubernetes.io/uninitialized for the node. This tain will prevent normal workloads to be scheduled on the node until the cloud provider controller actually runs second initialization on the node and removes the taint. This means that these nodes are not available for scheduling until the cloud provider controller is actually successfully running on the cluster.

For troubleshooting your specific cloud provider see its documentation.

k0s not working with read only /usr#

By default k0s does not run on nodes where /usr is read only.

This can be fixed by changing the default path for volumePluginDir in your k0s config. You will need to change to values, one for the kubelet itself, and one for Calico.

Here is a snippet of an example config with the default values changed:

spec:
  controllerManager:
    extraArgs:
      flex-volume-plugin-dir: "/etc/kubernetes/kubelet-plugins/volume/exec"
  network:
    calico:
      flexVolumeDriverPath: /etc/k0s/kubelet-plugins/volume/exec/nodeagent~uds
  workerProfiles:
    - name: coreos
      values:
        volumePluginDir: /etc/k0s/kubelet-plugins/volume/exec/

With this config you can start your controller as usual. Any workers will need to be started with

k0s worker --profile coreos [TOKEN]

Profiling#

We drop any debug related information and symbols from the compiled binary by utilzing -w -s linker flags.

To keep those symbols use DEBUG env variable:

DEBUG=true make k0s

Any value not equal to the "false" would work.

To add custom linker flags use LDFLAGS variable.

LD_FLAGS="--custom-flag=value" make k0s