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Project-HAMi: Heterogeneous AI Computing Virtualization Middleware

Introduction

HAMi, formerly known as 'k8s-vGPU-scheduler', is a Heterogeneous device management middleware for Kubernetes. It can manage different types of heterogeneous devices (like GPU, NPU, etc.), share heterogeneous devices among pods, make better scheduling decisions based on topology of devices and scheduling policies.

It aims to remove the gap between different Heterogeneous devices, and provide a unified interface for users to manage with no changes to their applications. As of December 2024, HAMi has been widely used not only in Internet, public cloud and private cloud, but also broadly adopted in various vertical industries including finance, securities, energy, telecommunications, education, and manufacturing. More than 50 companies or institutions are not only end users but also active contributors.

cncf_logo

HAMi is a sandbox and landscape project of
Cloud Native Computing Foundation(CNCF), CNAI Landscape project.

Device virtualization

HAMi provides device virtualization for several heterogeneous devices including GPU, by supporting device sharing and device resource isolation. For the list of devices supporting device virtualization, see supported devices

Device sharing

  • Allows partial device allocation by specifying device core usage.
  • Allows partial device allocation by specifying device memory.
  • Imposes a hard limit on streaming multiprocessors.
  • Requires zero changes to existing programs.

Device Resources Isolation

A simple demonstration of device isolation: A task with the following resources:

      resources:
        limits:
          nvidia.com/gpu: 1 # requesting 1 vGPU
          nvidia.com/gpumem: 3000 # Each vGPU contains 3000m device memory

will see 3G device memory inside container

img

Supported devices

nvidia GPU cambricon MLU hygon DCU iluvatar GPU mthreads GPU ascend NPU metax GPU

Architect

HAMi consists of several components, including a unified mutatingwebhook, a unified scheduler extender, different device-plugins and different in-container virtualization technics for each heterogeneous AI devices.

Quick Start

Choose your orchestrator

kube-scheduler volcano-scheduler

Prerequisites

The list of prerequisites for running the NVIDIA device plugin is described below:

  • NVIDIA drivers >= 440
  • nvidia-docker version > 2.0
  • default runtime configured as nvidia for containerd/docker/cri-o container runtime
  • Kubernetes version >= 1.16
  • glibc >= 2.17 & glibc < 2.3.0
  • kernel version >= 3.10
  • helm > 3.0

Install

First, Label your GPU nodes for scheduling with HAMi by adding the label "gpu=on". Without this label, the nodes cannot be managed by our scheduler.

kubectl label nodes {nodeid} gpu=on

Add our repo in helm

helm repo add hami-charts https://project-hami.github.io/HAMi/

Use the following command for deployment:

helm install hami hami-charts/hami  -n kube-system

Customize your installation by adjusting the configs.

Verify your installation using the following command:

kubectl get pods -n kube-system

If both vgpu-device-plugin and vgpu-scheduler pods are in the Running state, your installation is successful. You can try examples here

WebUI

HAMi-WebUI is available after HAMi v2.4

For installation guide, click here

Monitor

Monitoring is automatically enabled after installation. Obtain an overview of cluster information by visiting the following URL:

http://{scheduler ip}:{monitorPort}/metrics

The default monitorPort is 31993; other values can be set using --set devicePlugin.service.httpPort during installation.

Grafana dashboard example

Note The status of a node won't be collected before you submit a task

Notes

  • If you don't request vGPUs when using the device plugin with NVIDIA images all the GPUs on the machine may be exposed inside your container
  • Currently, A100 MIG can be supported in only "none" and "mixed" modes.
  • Tasks with the "nodeName" field cannot be scheduled at the moment; please use "nodeSelector" instead.

RoadMap, Governance & Contributing

The project is governed by a group of Maintainers and Committers. How they are selected and govern is outlined in our Governance Document.

If you're interested in being a contributor and want to get involved in developing the HAMi code, please see CONTRIBUTING for details on submitting patches and the contribution workflow.

See RoadMap to see anything you interested.

Meeting & Contact

The HAMi community is committed to fostering an open and welcoming environment, with several ways to engage with other users and developers.

If you have any questions, please feel free to reach out to us through the following channels:

Talks and References

Link
CHINA CLOUD COMPUTING INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPER CONFERENCE (Beijing 2024) Unlocking heterogeneous AI infrastructure on k8s clusters Starting from 03:06:15
KubeDay(Japan 2024) Unlocking Heterogeneous AI Infrastructure K8s Cluster:Leveraging the Power of HAMi
KubeCon & AI_dev Open Source GenAI & ML Summit(China 2024) Is Your GPU Really Working Efficiently in the Data Center?N Ways to Improve GPU Usage
KubeCon & AI_dev Open Source GenAI & ML Summit(China 2024) Unlocking Heterogeneous AI Infrastructure K8s Cluster
KubeCon(EU 2024) Cloud Native Batch Computing with Volcano: Updates and Future

License

HAMi is under the Apache 2.0 license. See the LICENSE file for details.