Litcius/Paper detail

Rearchitecting Kubernetes for the Edge

Andrew Jeffery, Heidi Howard, Richard Mortier

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Abstract

Recent years have seen Kubernetes emerge as a primary choice for container orchestration. Kubernetes largely targets the cloud environment but new use cases require performant, available and scalable orchestration at the edge. Kubernetes stores all cluster state in etcd, a strongly consistent key-value store. We find that at larger etcd cluster sizes, offering higher availability, write request latency significantly increases and throughput decreases similarly. Coupled with approximately 30% of Kubernetes requests being writes, this directly impacts the request latency and availability of Kubernetes, reducing its suitability for the edge. We revisit the requirement of strong consistency and propose an eventually consistent approach instead. This enables higher performance, availability and scalability whilst still supporting the broad needs of Kubernetes. This aims to make Kubernetes much more suitable for performance-critical, dynamically-scaled edge solutions.

Topics & Concepts

ScalabilityComputer scienceCloud computingHigh availabilityLatency (audio)Distributed computingCluster (spacecraft)Enhanced Data Rates for GSM EvolutionThroughputContainer (type theory)OrchestrationConsistency (knowledge bases)Strong consistencyComputer networkLow latency (capital markets)State (computer science)Cluster analysisReliability (semiconductor)Edge computingCloud Computing and Resource ManagementDistributed systems and fault toleranceIoT and Edge/Fog Computing