Manage compute resources

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To help the Kubernetes scheduler correctly place Pods in available Kubernetes nodes and ensure quality of service (QoS), it is recommended to specify the CPU and memory requirements for objects managed by the operator (Elasticsearch, Kibana, APM Server, Enterprise Search, Beats, Elastic Agent, and Elastic Maps Server). In Kubernetes, requests defines the minimum amount of resources that must be available for a Pod to be scheduled; limits defines the maximum amount of resources that a Pod is allowed to consume. For more information about how Kubernetes uses these concepts, see: Managing Compute Resources for Containers.

Set compute resources

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You can set compute resource constraints in the podTemplate of objects managed by the operator.

Set compute resources for Elasticsearch

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Staring with Elasticsearch 7.11, unless manually overridden, heap size is automatically calculated based on the node roles and the available memory. In Kubernetes, the amount of memory available to an Elasticsearch node is determined by the limits defined for that container. See JVM heap size for more information.

To minimize disruption caused by Pod evictions due to resource contention, you can run Elasticsearch pods at the "Guaranteed" QoS level by setting both requests and limits to the same value.

The value set for cpu requests directly impacts Elasticsearch node.processors setting. For example, with resources.requests.cpu: 1, Elasticsearch effectively relies on a single core, which may significantly limit performance. Consider setting a higher value that matches the desired number of cores Elasticsearch can use. You can also set your own value for node.processors in the Elasticsearch config.

Consider also that Kubernetes throttles containers exceeding the CPU limit defined in the limits section. Do not set this value too low or it would affect the performance of Elasticsearch, even if you have enough resources available in the Kubernetes cluster.

A known Kubernetes issue may lead to over-aggressive CPU limits throttling. If the host Linux Kernel does not include this CFS quota fix, you may want to:

apiVersion: elasticsearch.k8s.elastic.co/v1
kind: Elasticsearch
metadata:
  name: quickstart
spec:
  version: 8.15.3
  nodeSets:
  - name: default
    count: 1
    podTemplate:
      spec:
        containers:
        - name: elasticsearch
          env:
          - name: ES_JAVA_OPTS
            value: -Xms2g -Xmx2g
          resources:
            requests:
              memory: 4Gi
              cpu: 8
            limits:
              memory: 4Gi

Set compute resources for Kibana, Enterprise Search, Elastic Maps Server and APM Server

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Kibana.

apiVersion: kibana.k8s.elastic.co/v1
kind: Kibana
metadata:
  name: quickstart
spec:
  version: 8.15.3
  podTemplate:
    spec:
      containers:
      - name: kibana
        env:
          - name: NODE_OPTIONS
            value: "--max-old-space-size=2048"
        resources:
          requests:
            memory: 1Gi
            cpu: 0.5
          limits:
            memory: 2.5Gi
            cpu: 2

Elastic Maps Server.

apiVersion: maps.k8s.elastic.co/v1alpha1
kind: ElasticMapsServer
metadata:
  name: quickstart
spec:
  version: 8.15.3
  podTemplate:
    spec:
      containers:
      - name: maps
        env:
          - name: NODE_OPTIONS
            value: "--max-old-space-size=980"
        resources:
          requests:
            memory: 1Gi
            cpu: 1
          limits:
            memory: 1Gi
            cpu: 1

APM Server.

apiVersion: apm.k8s.elastic.co/v1
kind: ApmServer
metadata:
  name: quickstart
spec:
  version: 8.15.3
  podTemplate:
    spec:
      containers:
      - name: apm-server
        resources:
          requests:
            memory: 1Gi
            cpu: 0.5
          limits:
            memory: 2Gi
            cpu: 2

Enterprise Search.

apiVersion: enterprisesearch.k8s.elastic.co/v1
kind: EnterpriseSearch
metadata:
  name: enterprise-search-quickstart
spec:
  version: 8.15.3
  podTemplate:
    spec:
      containers:
      - name: enterprise-search
        resources:
          requests:
            memory: 4Gi
            cpu: 1
          limits:
            memory: 4Gi
            cpu: 2
        env:
        - name: JAVA_OPTS
          value: -Xms3500m -Xmx3500m

For the container name, use apm-server, maps, kibana or enterprise-search, respectively.

Set compute resources for Beats and Elastic Agent

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For Beats or Elastic Agent objects, the podTemplate can be configured as follows, depending on the chosen deployment model.

When deploying as a Kubernetes Deployment:

apiVersion: beat.k8s.elastic.co/v1beta1
kind: Beat
metadata:
  name: quickstart
spec:
  type: filebeat
  version: 8.15.3
  deployment:
    podTemplate:
      spec:
        containers:
        - name: filebeat
          resources:
            requests:
              memory: 300Mi
              cpu: 0.5
            limits:
              memory: 500Mi
              cpu: 0.5

When deploying as a Kubernetes DaemonSet:

apiVersion: agent.k8s.elastic.co/v1alpha1
kind: Agent
metadata:
  name: elastic-agent
spec:
  version: 8.15.3
  daemonSet:
    podTemplate:
      spec:
        containers:
        - name: agent
          resources:
            requests:
              memory: 300Mi
              cpu: 0.5
            limits:
              memory: 300Mi
              cpu: 0.5

For the container name, use the name of the Beat in lower case. For example filebeat, metricbeat, or heartbeat. In case of Elastic Agent, use agent.

Default behavior

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If resources is not defined in the specification of an object, then the operator applies a default memory limit to ensure that Pods have enough resources to start correctly. This memory limit will also be applied to any user-defined init containers that do not have explict resource requirements set. As the operator cannot make assumptions about the available CPU resources in the cluster, no CPU limits will be set — resulting in the Pods having the "Burstable" QoS class. Check if this is acceptable for your use case and follow the instructions in Set compute resources to configure appropriate limits.

Table 1. Default limits applied by the operator

Type Requests Limits

APM Server

512Mi

512Mi

Elasticsearch

2Gi

2Gi

Kibana

1Gi

1Gi

Beat

200Mi

200Mi

Elastic Agent

350Mi

350Mi

Elastic Maps Sever

200Mi

200Mi

Enterprise Search

4Gi

4Gi

If the Kubernetes cluster is configured with LimitRanges that enforce a minimum memory constraint, they could interfere with the operator defaults and cause object creation to fail.

For example, you might have a LimitRange that enforces a default and minimum memory limit on containers as follows:

apiVersion: v1
kind: LimitRange
metadata:
  name: default-mem-per-container
spec:
  limits:
  - min:
      memory: "3Gi"
    defaultRequest:
      memory: "3Gi"
    type: Container

With the above restriction in place, if you create an Elasticsearch object without defining the resources section, you will get the following error:

Cannot create pod elasticsearch-sample-es-ldbgj48c7r: pods "elasticsearch-sample-es-ldbgj48c7r" is forbidden: minimum memory usage per Container is 3Gi, but request is 2Gi

To avoid this, explicitly define the requests and limits mandated by your environment in the resource specification. It will prevent the operator from applying the built-in defaults.