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installation.md

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Installation

The following guidance assumes Azure Kubernetes Service(AKS) is used to host the Kubernetes cluster.

Before you begin, ensure you have the following tools installed:

  • Azure CLI to provision Azure resources
  • Helm to install this operator
  • kubectl to view Kubernetes resources
  • git to clone this repo locally
  • jq to process JSON files

Important Note: Ensure you use a release branch of the repository for a stable version of the installation.

If you do not already have an AKS cluster, run the following Azure CLI commands to create one:

export RESOURCE_GROUP="myResourceGroup"
export MY_CLUSTER="myCluster"
export LOCATION="eastus"
az group create --name $RESOURCE_GROUP --location $LOCATION
az aks create --resource-group $RESOURCE_GROUP --name $MY_CLUSTER --enable-oidc-issuer --enable-workload-identity --enable-managed-identity --generate-ssh-keys

Connect to the AKS cluster.

az aks get-credentials --resource-group $RESOURCE_GROUP --name $MY_CLUSTER

If you do not have kubectl installed locally, you can install using the following Azure CLI command.

az aks install-cli

Install workspace controller

Be sure you've cloned this repo and connected to your AKS cluster before attempting to install the Helm charts.

Install the Workspace controller.

helm install workspace ./charts/kaito/workspace --namespace kaito-workspace --create-namespace

Note that if you have installed another node provisioning controller that supports Karpenter-core APIs, the following steps for installing gpu-provisioner can be skipped.

Install gpu-provisioner controller

Enable Workload Identity and OIDC Issuer features

The gpu-provisioner controller requires the workload identity feature to acquire the access token to the AKS cluster.

Run the following commands only if your AKS cluster does not already have the Workload Identity and OIDC issuer features enabled.

export RESOURCE_GROUP="myResourceGroup"
export MY_CLUSTER="myCluster"
az aks update -g $RESOURCE_GROUP -n $MY_CLUSTER --enable-oidc-issuer --enable-workload-identity --enable-managed-identity

Create an identity and assign permissions

The identity kaitoprovisioner is created for the gpu-provisioner controller. It is assigned Contributor role for the managed cluster resource to allow changing $MY_CLUSTER (e.g., provisioning new nodes in it).

export SUBSCRIPTION=$(az account show --query id -o tsv)
export IDENTITY_NAME="kaitoprovisioner"
az identity create --name $IDENTITY_NAME -g $RESOURCE_GROUP
export IDENTITY_PRINCIPAL_ID=$(az identity show --name $IDENTITY_NAME -g $RESOURCE_GROUP --subscription $SUBSCRIPTION --query 'principalId' -o tsv)
export IDENTITY_CLIENT_ID=$(az identity show --name $IDENTITY_NAME -g $RESOURCE_GROUP --subscription $SUBSCRIPTION --query 'clientId' -o tsv)
az role assignment create --assignee $IDENTITY_PRINCIPAL_ID --scope /subscriptions/$SUBSCRIPTION/resourceGroups/$RESOURCE_GROUP/providers/Microsoft.ContainerService/managedClusters/$MY_CLUSTER  --role "Contributor"

Install helm charts

Install the Node provisioner controller.

# get additional values for helm chart install
export GPU_PROVISIONER_VERSION=0.2.0

curl -sO https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Azure/gpu-provisioner/main/hack/deploy/configure-helm-values.sh
chmod +x ./configure-helm-values.sh && ./configure-helm-values.sh $MY_CLUSTER $RESOURCE_GROUP $IDENTITY_NAME

helm install gpu-provisioner --values gpu-provisioner-values.yaml --set settings.azure.clusterName=$MY_CLUSTER --wait \
https://github.com/Azure/gpu-provisioner/raw/gh-pages/charts/gpu-provisioner-$GPU_PROVISIONER_VERSION.tgz

Create the federated credential

The federated identity credential between the managed identity kaitoprovisioner and the service account used by the gpu-provisioner controller is created.

export AKS_OIDC_ISSUER=$(az aks show -n $MY_CLUSTER -g $RESOURCE_GROUP --subscription $SUBSCRIPTION --query "oidcIssuerProfile.issuerUrl" -o tsv)
az identity federated-credential create --name kaito-federatedcredential --identity-name $IDENTITY_NAME -g $RESOURCE_GROUP --issuer $AKS_OIDC_ISSUER --subject system:serviceaccount:"gpu-provisioner:gpu-provisioner" --audience api://AzureADTokenExchange --subscription $SUBSCRIPTION

Then the gpu-provisioner can access the managed cluster using a trust token with the same permissions of the kaitoprovisioner identity. Note that before finishing this step, the gpu-provisioner controller pod will constantly fail with the following message in the log:

panic: Configure azure client fails. Please ensure federatedcredential has been created for identity XXXX.

The pod will reach running state once the federated credential is created.

Verify installation

You can run the following commands to verify the installation of the controllers were successful.

Check status of the Helm chart installations.

helm list -n default

Check status of the workspace.

kubectl describe deploy workspace -n kaito-workspace

Check status of the gpu-provisioner.

kubectl describe deploy gpu-provisioner -n gpu-provisioner

Troubleshooting

If you see that the gpu-provisioner deployment is not running after some time, it's possible that some values incorrect in your values.ovveride.yaml.

Run the following command to check gpu-provisioner pod logs for additional details.

kubectl logs --selector=app.kubernetes.io\/name=gpu-provisioner -n gpu-provisioner

Clean up

helm uninstall gpu-provisioner
helm uninstall workspace