Garbage Collection
Garbage collection is a collective term for the various mechanisms Kubernetes uses to clean up cluster resources. This allows the clean up of resources like the following:
- Terminated pods
- Completed Jobs
- Objects without owner references
- Unused containers and container images
- Dynamically provisioned PersistentVolumes with a StorageClass reclaim policy of Delete
- Stale or expired CertificateSigningRequests (CSRs)
- Nodes deleted in the following scenarios:
- On a cloud when the cluster uses a cloud controller manager
- On-premises when the cluster uses an addon similar to a cloud controller manager
- Node Lease objects
Owners and dependents
Many objects in Kubernetes link to each other through owner references. Owner references tell the control plane which objects are dependent on others. Kubernetes uses owner references to give the control plane, and other API clients, the opportunity to clean up related resources before deleting an object. In most cases, Kubernetes manages owner references automatically.
Ownership is different from the labels and selectors mechanism that some resources also use. For example, consider a Service that creates EndpointSlice
objects. The Service uses labels to allow the control plane to determine which EndpointSlice
objects are used for that Service. In addition to the labels, each EndpointSlice
that is managed on behalf of a Service has an owner reference. Owner references help different parts of Kubernetes avoid interfering with objects they don’t control.
Note:
Cross-namespace owner references are disallowed by design. Namespaced dependents can specify cluster-scoped or namespaced owners. A namespaced owner must exist in the same namespace as the dependent. If it does not, the owner reference is treated as absent, and the dependent is subject to deletion once all owners are verified absent.
Cluster-scoped dependents can only specify cluster-scoped owners. In v1.20+, if a cluster-scoped dependent specifies a namespaced kind as an owner, it is treated as having an unresolvable owner reference, and is not able to be garbage collected.
In v1.20+, if the garbage collector detects an invalid cross-namespace ownerReference
, or a cluster-scoped dependent with an ownerReference
referencing a namespaced kind, a warning Event with a reason of OwnerRefInvalidNamespace
and an involvedObject
of the invalid dependent is reported. You can check for that kind of Event by running kubectl get events -A --field-selector=reason=OwnerRefInvalidNamespace
.
Cascading deletion
Kubernetes checks for and deletes objects that no longer have owner references, like the pods left behind when you delete a ReplicaSet. When you delete an object, you can control whether Kubernetes deletes the object’s dependents automatically, in a process called cascading deletion. There are two types of cascading deletion, as follows:
- Foreground cascading deletion
- Background cascading deletion
You can also control how and when garbage collection deletes resources that have owner references using Kubernetes finalizers.
Foreground cascading deletion
In foreground cascading deletion, the owner object you’re deleting first enters a deletion in progress state. In this state, the following happens to the owner object:
- The Kubernetes API server sets the object’s
metadata.deletionTimestamp
field to the time the object was marked for deletion. - The Kubernetes API server also sets the
metadata.finalizers
field toforegroundDeletion
. - The object remains visible through the Kubernetes API until the deletion process is complete.
After the owner object enters the deletion in progress state, the controller deletes the dependents. After deleting all the dependent objects, the controller deletes the owner object. At this point, the object is no longer visible in the Kubernetes API.
During foreground cascading deletion, the only dependents that block owner deletion are those that have the ownerReference.blockOwnerDeletion=true
field. See Use foreground cascading deletion to learn more.
Background cascading deletion
In background cascading deletion, the Kubernetes API server deletes the owner object immediately and the controller cleans up the dependent objects in the background. By default, Kubernetes uses background cascading deletion unless you manually use foreground deletion or choose to orphan the dependent objects.
See Use background cascading deletion to learn more.
Orphaned dependents
When Kubernetes deletes an owner object, the dependents left behind are called orphan objects. By default, Kubernetes deletes dependent objects. To learn how to override this behaviour, see Delete owner objects and orphan dependents.
Garbage collection of unused containers and images
The kubelet performs garbage collection on unused images every two minutes and on unused containers every minute. You should avoid using external garbage collection tools, as these can break the kubelet behavior and remove containers that should exist.
To configure options for unused container and image garbage collection, tune the kubelet using a configuration file and change the parameters related to garbage collection using the KubeletConfiguration resource type.
Container image lifecycle
Kubernetes manages the lifecycle of all images through its image manager, which is part of the kubelet, with the cooperation of cadvisor. The kubelet considers the following disk usage limits when making garbage collection decisions:
HighThresholdPercent
LowThresholdPercent
Disk usage above the configured HighThresholdPercent
value triggers garbage collection, which deletes images in order based on the last time they were used, starting with the oldest first. The kubelet deletes images until disk usage reaches the LowThresholdPercent
value.
Garbage collection for unused container images
FEATURE STATE: Kubernetes v1.29 [alpha]
As an alpha feature, you can specify the maximum time a local image can be unused for, regardless of disk usage. This is a kubelet setting that you configure for each node.
To configure the setting, enable the ImageMaximumGCAge
feature gate for the kubelet, and also set a value for the ImageMaximumGCAge
field in the kubelet configuration file.
The value is specified as a Kubernetes duration; for example, you can set the configuration field to 3d12h
, which means 3 days and 12 hours.
Container garbage collection
The kubelet garbage collects unused containers based on the following variables, which you can define:
MinAge
: the minimum age at which the kubelet can garbage collect a container. Disable by setting to0
.MaxPerPodContainer
: the maximum number of dead containers each Pod can have. Disable by setting to less than0
.MaxContainers
: the maximum number of dead containers the cluster can have. Disable by setting to less than0
.
In addition to these variables, the kubelet garbage collects unidentified and deleted containers, typically starting with the oldest first.
MaxPerPodContainer
and MaxContainers
may potentially conflict with each other in situations where retaining the maximum number of containers per Pod (MaxPerPodContainer
) would go outside the allowable total of global dead containers (MaxContainers
). In this situation, the kubelet adjusts MaxPerPodContainer
to address the conflict. A worst-case scenario would be to downgrade MaxPerPodContainer
to 1
and evict the oldest containers. Additionally, containers owned by pods that have been deleted are removed once they are older than MinAge
.
Note: The kubelet only garbage collects the containers it manages.
Configuring garbage collection
You can tune garbage collection of resources by configuring options specific to the controllers managing those resources. The following pages show you how to configure garbage collection:
What’s next
- Learn more about ownership of Kubernetes objects.
- Learn more about Kubernetes finalizers.
- Learn about the TTL controller that cleans up finished Jobs.