kubernetes.core.k8s_taint module – Taint a node in a Kubernetes/OpenShift cluster
Note
This module is part of the kubernetes.core collection (version 2.4.0).
You might already have this collection installed if you are using the ansible
package.
It is not included in ansible-core
.
To check whether it is installed, run ansible-galaxy collection list
.
To install it, use: ansible-galaxy collection install kubernetes.core
.
You need further requirements to be able to use this module,
see Requirements for details.
To use it in a playbook, specify: kubernetes.core.k8s_taint
.
New in kubernetes.core 2.3.0
Synopsis
Taint allows a node to refuse Pod to be scheduled unless that Pod has a matching toleration.
Untaint will remove taints from nodes as needed.
Requirements
The below requirements are needed on the host that executes this module.
python >= 3.6
kubernetes >= 12.0.0
Parameters
Parameter |
Comments |
---|---|
Token used to authenticate with the API. Can also be specified via K8S_AUTH_API_KEY environment variable. |
|
Path to a CA certificate used to authenticate with the API. The full certificate chain must be provided to avoid certificate validation errors. Can also be specified via K8S_AUTH_SSL_CA_CERT environment variable. |
|
Path to a certificate used to authenticate with the API. Can also be specified via K8S_AUTH_CERT_FILE environment variable. |
|
Path to a key file used to authenticate with the API. Can also be specified via K8S_AUTH_KEY_FILE environment variable. |
|
The name of a context found in the config file. Can also be specified via K8S_AUTH_CONTEXT environment variable. |
|
Provide a URL for accessing the API. Can also be specified via K8S_AUTH_HOST environment variable. |
|
Group(s) to impersonate for the operation. Can also be specified via K8S_AUTH_IMPERSONATE_GROUPS environment. Example: Group1,Group2 |
|
Username to impersonate for the operation. Can also be specified via K8S_AUTH_IMPERSONATE_USER environment. |
|
Path to an existing Kubernetes config file. If not provided, and no other connection options are provided, the Kubernetes client will attempt to load the default configuration file from ~/.kube/config. Can also be specified via K8S_AUTH_KUBECONFIG environment variable. Multiple Kubernetes config file can be provided using separator ‘;’ for Windows platform or ‘:’ for others platforms. The kubernetes configuration can be provided as dictionary. This feature requires a python kubernetes client version >= 17.17.0. Added in version 2.2.0. |
|
The name of the node. |
|
The comma separated list of hosts/domains/IP/CIDR that shouldn’t go through proxy. Can also be specified via K8S_AUTH_NO_PROXY environment variable. Please note that this module does not pick up typical proxy settings from the environment (e.g. NO_PROXY). This feature requires kubernetes>=19.15.0. When kubernetes library is less than 19.15.0, it fails even no_proxy set in correct. example value is “localhost,.local,.example.com,127.0.0.1,127.0.0.0/8,10.0.0.0/8,172.16.0.0/12,192.168.0.0/16” |
|
Provide a password for authenticating with the API. Can also be specified via K8S_AUTH_PASSWORD environment variable. Please read the description of the |
|
Whether or not to save the kube config refresh tokens. Can also be specified via K8S_AUTH_PERSIST_CONFIG environment variable. When the k8s context is using a user credentials with refresh tokens (like oidc or gke/gcloud auth), the token is refreshed by the k8s python client library but not saved by default. So the old refresh token can expire and the next auth might fail. Setting this flag to true will tell the k8s python client to save the new refresh token to the kube config file. Default to false. Please note that the current version of the k8s python client library does not support setting this flag to True yet. The fix for this k8s python library is here: https://github.com/kubernetes-client/python-base/pull/169 Choices:
|
|
The URL of an HTTP proxy to use for the connection. Can also be specified via K8S_AUTH_PROXY environment variable. Please note that this module does not pick up typical proxy settings from the environment (e.g. HTTP_PROXY). |
|
The Header used for the HTTP proxy. Documentation can be found here https://urllib3.readthedocs.io/en/latest/reference/urllib3.util.html?highlight%3Dproxy_headers#urllib3.util.make_headers. |
|
Colon-separated username:password for basic authentication header. Can also be specified via K8S_AUTH_PROXY_HEADERS_BASIC_AUTH environment. |
|
Colon-separated username:password for proxy basic authentication header. Can also be specified via K8S_AUTH_PROXY_HEADERS_PROXY_BASIC_AUTH environment. |
|
String representing the user-agent you want, such as foo/1.0. Can also be specified via K8S_AUTH_PROXY_HEADERS_USER_AGENT environment. |
|
If Choices:
|
|
Determines whether to add or remove taints. Choices:
|
|
List containing the taints. |
|
The effect of the taint on Pods that do not tolerate the taint. Required when state=present. Choices:
|
|
The taint key to be applied to a node. |
|
The taint value corresponding to the taint key. |
|
Provide a username for authenticating with the API. Can also be specified via K8S_AUTH_USERNAME environment variable. Please note that this only works with clusters configured to use HTTP Basic Auth. If your cluster has a different form of authentication (e.g. OAuth2 in OpenShift), this option will not work as expected and you should look into the community.okd.k8s_auth module, as that might do what you need. |
|
Whether or not to verify the API server’s SSL certificates. Can also be specified via K8S_AUTH_VERIFY_SSL environment variable. Choices:
|
Notes
Note
To avoid SSL certificate validation errors when
validate_certs
is True, the full certificate chain for the API server must be provided viaca_cert
or in the kubeconfig file.
Examples
- name: Taint node "foo"
kubernetes.core.k8s_taint:
state: present
name: foo
taints:
- effect: NoExecute
key: "key1"
- name: Taint node "foo"
kubernetes.core.k8s_taint:
state: present
name: foo
taints:
- effect: NoExecute
key: "key1"
value: "value1"
- effect: NoSchedule
key: "key1"
value: "value1"
- name: Remove taint from "foo".
kubernetes.core.k8s_taint:
state: absent
name: foo
taints:
- effect: NoExecute
key: "key1"
value: "value1"
Return Values
Common return values are documented here, the following are the fields unique to this module:
Key |
Description |
---|---|
The tainted Node object. Will be empty in the case of a deletion. Returned: success |
|
The versioned schema of this representation of an object. Returned: success |
|
Represents the REST resource this object represents. Returned: success |
|
Standard object metadata. Includes name, namespace, annotations, labels, etc. Returned: success |
|
Specific attributes of the object. Will vary based on the api_version and kind. Returned: success |
|
Current status details for the object. Returned: success |