Setting Nodes with Nomad Agent
The Nomad agent is a long running process which runs on every machine that is part of the Nomad cluster. The behavior of the agent depends on if it is running in client or server mode. Clients are responsible for running tasks, while servers are responsible for managing the cluster.
Client mode agents are relatively simple. They make use of fingerprinting to determine the capabilities and resources of the host machine, as well as determining what drivers are available. Clients register with servers to provide the node information, heartbeat to provide liveness, and run any tasks assigned to them.
Servers take on the responsibility of being part of the consensus protocol and gossip protocol. The consensus protocol, powered by Raft, allows the servers to perform leader election and state replication. The gossip protocol allows for simple clustering of servers and multi-region federation. The higher burden on the server nodes means that usually they should be run on dedicated instances -- they are more resource intensive than a client node.
Client nodes make up the majority of the cluster, and are very lightweight as they interface with the server nodes and maintain very little state of their own. Each cluster has usually 3 or 5 server mode agents and potentially thousands of clients.
Running an Agent
The agent is started with the nomad agent
command. This
command blocks, running forever or until told to quit. The agent command takes a variety
of configuration options, but most have sane defaults.
When running nomad agent
, you should see output similar to this:
There are several important messages that nomad agent
outputs:
Client: This indicates whether the agent has enabled client mode. Client nodes fingerprint their host environment, register with servers, and run tasks.
Log Level: This indicates the configured log level. Only messages with an equal or higher severity will be logged. This can be tuned to increase verbosity for debugging, or reduced to avoid noisy logging.
Region: This is the region and datacenter in which the agent is configured to run. Nomad has first-class support for multi-datacenter and multi-region configurations. The
-region
and-dc
flags can be used to set the region and datacenter. The default is theglobal
region indc1
.Server: This indicates whether the agent has enabled server mode. Server nodes have the extra burden of participating in the consensus protocol, storing cluster state, and making scheduling decisions.
Stopping an Agent
An agent can be stopped in two ways: gracefully or forcefully. By default,
any signal to an agent (interrupt, terminate, kill) will cause the agent
to forcefully stop. Graceful termination can be configured by either
setting leave_on_interrupt
or leave_on_terminate
to respond to the
respective signals.
When gracefully exiting, clients will update their status to terminal on the servers so that tasks can be migrated to healthy agents. Servers will notify their intention to leave the cluster which allows them to leave the consensus peer set.
It is especially important that a server node be allowed to leave gracefully
so that there will be a minimal impact on availability as the server leaves
the consensus peer set. If a server does not gracefully leave, and will not
return into service, the server force-leave
command
should be used to eject it from the consensus peer set.
Lifecycle
Every agent in the Nomad cluster goes through a lifecycle. Understanding this lifecycle is useful for building a mental model of an agent's interactions with a cluster and how the cluster treats a node.
When a client agent is first started, it fingerprints the host machine to identify its attributes, capabilities, and task drivers. These are reported to the servers during an initial registration. The addresses of known servers are provided to the agent via configuration, potentially using DNS for resolution. Using Consul provides a way to avoid hard coding addresses and resolving them on demand.
While a client is running, it is performing heartbeating with servers to maintain liveness. If the heartbeats fail, the servers assume the client node has failed, and stop assigning new tasks while migrating existing tasks. It is impossible to distinguish between a network failure and an agent crash, so both cases are handled the same. Once the network recovers or a crashed agent restarts the node status will be updated and normal operation resumed.
To prevent an accumulation of nodes in a terminal state, Nomad does periodic garbage collection of nodes. By default, if a node is in a failed or 'down' state for over 24 hours it will be garbage collected from the system.
Servers are slightly more complex as they perform additional functions. They
participate in a gossip protocol both to cluster
within a region and to support multi-region configurations. When a server is
first started, it does not know the address of other servers in the cluster.
To discover its peers, it must join the cluster. This is done with the
server join
command or by providing the
proper configuration on start. Once a node joins, this information is gossiped
to the entire cluster, meaning all nodes will eventually be aware of each other.
When a server leaves, it specifies its intent to do so, and the cluster marks that node as having left. If the server has left, replication to it will stop and it is removed from the consensus peer set. If the server has failed, replication will attempt to make progress to recover from a software or network failure.
Permissions
Nomad servers should be run with the lowest possible permissions. Nomad clients
must be run as root due to the OS isolation mechanisms that require root
privileges. In all cases, it is recommended you create a nomad
user with the
minimal set of required privileges.