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Shoot Status

This document provides an overview of the ShootStatus.

Conditions

The Shoot status consists of a set of conditions. A Condition has the following fields:

Field nameDescription
typeName of the condition.
statusIndicates whether the condition is applicable, with possible values True, False, Unknown or Progressing.
lastTransitionTimeTimestamp for when the condition last transitioned from one status to another.
lastUpdateTimeTimestamp for when the condition was updated. Usually changes when reason or message in condition is updated.
reasonMachine-readable, UpperCamelCase text indicating the reason for the condition’s last transition.
messageHuman-readable message indicating details about the last status transition.
codesWell-defined error codes in case the condition reports a problem.

Currently, the available Shoot condition types are:

  • APIServerAvailable
  • ControlPlaneHealthy
  • EveryNodeReady
  • ObservabilityComponentsHealthy
  • SystemComponentsHealthy

The Shoot conditions are maintained by the shoot care reconciler of the gardenlet. Find more information in the gardelent documentation.

Sync Period

The condition checks are executed periodically at an interval which is configurable in the GardenletConfiguration (.controllers.shootCare.syncPeriod, defaults to 1m).

Condition Thresholds

The GardenletConfiguration also allows configuring condition thresholds (controllers.shootCare.conditionThresholds). A condition threshold is the amount of time to consider a condition as Processing on condition status changes.

Let’s check the following example to get a better understanding. Let’s say that the APIServerAvailable condition of our Shoot is with status True. If the next condition check fails (for example kube-apiserver becomes unreachable), then the condition first goes to Processing state. Only if this state remains for condition threshold amount of time, then the condition is finally updated to False.

Constraints

Constraints represent conditions of a Shoot’s current state that constraint some operations on it. The current constraints are:

HibernationPossible:

This constraint indicates whether a Shoot is allowed to be hibernated. The rationale behind this constraint is that a Shoot can have ValidatingWebhookConfigurations or MutatingWebhookConfigurations acting on resources that are critical for waking up a cluster. For example, if a webhook has rules for CREATE/UPDATE Pods or Nodes and failurePolicy=Fail, the webhook will block joining Nodes and creating critical system component Pods and thus block the entire wakeup operation, because the server backing the webhook is not running.

Even if the failurePolicy is set to Ignore, high timeouts (>15s) can lead to blocking requests of control plane components. That’s because most control-plane API calls are made with a client-side timeout of 30s, so if a webhook has timeoutSeconds=30 the overall request might still fail as there is overhead in communication with the API server and potential other webhooks.

Generally, it’s best practice to specify low timeouts in WebhookConfigs.

As an effort to correct this common problem, the webhook remediator has been created. This is enabled by setting .controllers.shootCare.webhookRemediatorEnabled=true in the gardenlet’s configuration. This feature simply checks whether webhook configurations in shoot clusters match a set of rules described here. If at least one of the rules matches, it will change set status=False for the .status.constraints of type HibernationPossible and MaintenancePreconditionsSatisfied in the Shoot resource. In addition, the failurePolicy in the affected webhook configurations will be set from Fail to Ignore. Gardenlet will also add an annotation to make it visible to end-users that their webhook configurations were mutated and should be fixed/adapted according to the rules and best practices.

In most cases, you can avoid this by simply excluding the kube-system namespace from your webhook via the namespaceSelector:

apiVersion: admissionregistration.k8s.io/v1
kind: MutatingWebhookConfiguration
webhooks:
  - name: my-webhook.example.com
    namespaceSelector:
      matchExpressions:
      - key: gardener.cloud/purpose
        operator: NotIn
        values:
          - kube-system
    rules:
      - operations: ["*"]
        apiGroups: [""]
        apiVersions: ["v1"]
        resources: ["pods"]
        scope: "Namespaced"

However, some other resources (some of them cluster-scoped) might still trigger the remediator, namely:

  • endpoints
  • nodes
  • clusterroles
  • clusterrolebindings
  • customresourcedefinitions
  • apiservices
  • certificatesigningrequests
  • priorityclasses

If one of the above resources triggers the remediator, the preferred solution is to remove that particular resource from your webhook’s rules. You can also use the objectSelector to reduce the scope of webhook’s rules. However, in special cases where a webhook is absolutely needed for the workload, it is possible to add the remediation.webhook.shoot.gardener.cloud/exclude=true label to your webhook so that the remediator ignores it. This label should not be used to silence an alert, but rather to confirm that a webhook won’t cause problems. Note that all of this is no perfect solution and just done on a best effort basis, and only the owner of the webhook can know whether it indeed is problematic and configured correctly.

In a special case, if a webhook has a rule for CREATE/UPDATE lease resources in kube-system namespace, its timeoutSeconds is updated to 3 seconds. This is required to ensure the proper functioning of the leader election of essential control plane controllers.

You can also find more help from the Kubernetes documentation

MaintenancePreconditionsSatisfied:

This constraint indicates whether all preconditions for a safe maintenance operation are satisfied (see Shoot Maintenance for more information about what happens during a shoot maintenance). As of today, the same checks as in the HibernationPossible constraint are being performed (user-deployed webhooks that might interfere with potential rolling updates of shoot worker nodes). There is no further action being performed on this constraint’s status (maintenance is still being performed). It is meant to make the user aware of potential problems that might occur due to his configurations.

CACertificateValiditiesAcceptable:

This constraint indicates that there is at least one CA certificate which expires in less than 1y. It will not be added to the .status.constraints if there is no such CA certificate. However, if it’s visible, then a credentials rotation operation should be considered.

CRDsWithProblematicConversionWebhooks:

This constraint indicates that there is at least one CustomResourceDefinition in the cluster which has multiple stored versions and a conversion webhook configured. This could break the reconciliation flow of a Shoot cluster in some cases. See https://github.com/gardener/gardener/issues/7471 for more details. It will not be added to the .status.constraints if there is no such CRD. However, if it’s visible, then you should consider upgrading the existing objects to the current stored version. See Upgrade existing objects to a new stored version for detailed steps.

Last Operation

The Shoot status holds information about the last operation that is performed on the Shoot. The last operation field reflects overall progress and the tasks that are currently being executed. Allowed operation types are Create, Reconcile, Delete, Migrate, and Restore. Allowed operation states are Processing, Succeeded, Error, Failed, Pending, and Aborted. An operation in Error state is an operation that will be retried for a configurable amount of time (controllers.shoot.retryDuration field in GardenletConfiguration, defaults to 12h). If the operation cannot complete successfully for the configured retry duration, it will be marked as Failed. An operation in Failed state is an operation that won’t be retried automatically (to retry such an operation, see Retry failed operation).

Last Errors

The Shoot status also contains information about the last occurred error(s) (if any) during an operation. A LastError consists of identifier of the task returned error, human-readable message of the error and error codes (if any) associated with the error.

Error Codes

Known error codes and their classification are:

Error codeUser errorDescription
ERR_INFRA_UNAUTHENTICATEDtrueIndicates that the last error occurred due to the client request not being completed because it lacks valid authentication credentials for the requested resource. It is classified as a non-retryable error code.
ERR_INFRA_UNAUTHORIZEDtrueIndicates that the last error occurred due to the server understanding the request but refusing to authorize it. It is classified as a non-retryable error code.
ERR_INFRA_QUOTA_EXCEEDEDtrueIndicates that the last error occurred due to infrastructure quota limits. It is classified as a non-retryable error code.
ERR_INFRA_RATE_LIMITS_EXCEEDEDfalseIndicates that the last error occurred due to exceeded infrastructure request rate limits.
ERR_INFRA_DEPENDENCIEStrueIndicates that the last error occurred due to dependent objects on the infrastructure level. It is classified as a non-retryable error code.
ERR_RETRYABLE_INFRA_DEPENDENCIESfalseIndicates that the last error occurred due to dependent objects on the infrastructure level, but the operation should be retried.
ERR_INFRA_RESOURCES_DEPLETEDtrueIndicates that the last error occurred due to depleted resource in the infrastructure.
ERR_CLEANUP_CLUSTER_RESOURCEStrueIndicates that the last error occurred due to resources in the cluster that are stuck in deletion.
ERR_CONFIGURATION_PROBLEMtrueIndicates that the last error occurred due to a configuration problem. It is classified as a non-retryable error code.
ERR_RETRYABLE_CONFIGURATION_PROBLEMtrueIndicates that the last error occurred due to a retryable configuration problem. “Retryable” means that the occurred error is likely to be resolved in a ungraceful manner after given period of time.
ERR_PROBLEMATIC_WEBHOOKtrueIndicates that the last error occurred due to a webhook not following the Kubernetes best practices.

Please note: Errors classified as User error: true do not require a Gardener operator to resolve but can be remediated by the user (e.g. by refreshing expired infrastructure credentials). Even though ERR_INFRA_RATE_LIMITS_EXCEEDED and ERR_RETRYABLE_INFRA_DEPENDENCIES is mentioned as User error: false` operator can’t provide any resolution because it is related to cloud provider issue.

Status Label

Shoots will be automatically labeled with the shoot.gardener.cloud/status label. Its value might either be healthy, progressing, unhealthy or unknown depending on the .status.conditions, .status.lastOperation, and status.lastErrors of the Shoot. This can be used as an easy filter method to find shoots based on their “health” status.