Install Milvus Standalone with Kubernetes (GPU)
This topic describes how to install Milvus stanalone with GPU support enabled using Kubernetes.
Prerequisites
-
The compute capability of your GPU device is 6.1, 7.0, 7.5, or 8.0. To check whether your GPU device suffices the requirement, check Your GPU Compute Capability on the NVIDIA developer website.
-
You have installed the NVIDIA driver for your GPU device on one of the supported Linux distributions and then the NVIDIA Container Toolkit following this guide.
-
You have installed a Kubernetes cluster, and the
kubectl
command-line tool has been configured to communicate with your cluster. It is recommended to run this tutorial on a cluster with at least two nodes that are not acting as control plane hosts. -
Check the requirements for hardware and software prior to your installation.
Start a Kubernetes cluster with GPU worker nodes
We recommend installing Milvus on a Kubernetes cluster with GPU worker nodes and using the default storage class provisioned.
1. Prepare GPU worker nodes
See Prepare GPU worker nodes for more information.
2. Enable GPU support on Kubernetes
See install nvidia-device-plugin with helm for more information.
After setting up, run kubectl describe node <gpu-worker-node>
to view the GPU resources. The command output should be similar to the following:
Capacity:
...
nvidia.com/gpu: 4
...
Allocatable:
...
nvidia.com/gpu: 4
...
Note: In this example, we have set up a GPU worker node with 4 GPU cards.
3. Check the default storage class
Milvus relies on the default storage class to automatically provision volumes for data persistence. Run the following command to check storage classes:
$ kubectl get sc
The command output should be similar to the following:
NAME PROVISIONER RECLAIMPOLICY VOLUMEBINDINGMODE ALLOWVOLUMEEXPANSION AGE
local-path (default) rancher.io/local-path Delete WaitForFirstConsumer false 461d
Install Helm Chart for Milvus
Helm is a Kubernetes package manager that can help you deploy Milvus quickly.
- Add Milvus to Helm's repository.
$ helm repo add milvus https://zilliztech.github.io/milvus-helm/
The Milvus Helm Charts repo at https://milvus-io.github.io/milvus-helm/
has been archived and you can get further updates from https://zilliztech.github.io/milvus-helm/
as follows:
helm repo add zilliztech https://zilliztech.github.io/milvus-helm
helm repo update
# upgrade existing helm release
helm upgrade my-release zilliztech/milvus
The archived repo is still available for the charts up to 4.0.31. For later releases, use the new repo instead.
- Update your local chart repository.
$ helm repo update
Start Milvus standalone
Start Milvus with Helm by specifying the release name, the chart, and parameters you expect to change. This topic uses my-release
as the release name. To use a different release name, replace my-release
in the command.
Milvus allows you to assign one or more GPU devices to Milvus.
Assign a single GPU device
Run the following commands to assign a single GPU device to Milvus:
cat <<EOF > custom-values.yaml
standalone:
resources:
requests:
nvidia.com/gpu: "1"
limits:
nvidia.com/gpu: "1"
EOF
$ helm install my-release milvus/milvus --set cluster.enabled=false --set etcd.replicaCount=1 --set minio.mode=standalone --set pulsar.enabled=false -f custom-values.yaml
Assign multiple GPU devices
Run the following commands to assign multiple GPU devices to Milvus:
cat <<EOF > custom-values.yaml
standalone:
resources:
requests:
nvidia.com/gpu: "2"
limits:
nvidia.com/gpu: "2"
extraEnv:
- name: CUDA_VISIBLE_DEVICES
value: "0, 1"
EOF
$ helm install my-release milvus/milvus --set cluster.enabled=false --set etcd.replicaCount=1 --set minio.mode=standalone --set pulsar.enabled=false -f custom-values.yaml
Check the status of the running pods:
$ kubectl get pods
After Milvus starts, the READY
column displays 1/1
for all pods.
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
my-release-etcd-0 1/1 Running 0 30s
my-release-milvus-standalone-54c4f88cb9-f84pf 1/1 Running 0 30s
my-release-minio-5564fbbddc-mz7f5 1/1 Running 0 30s
Connect to Milvus
Verify which local port the Milvus server is listening on. Replace the pod name with your own.
$ kubectl get pod my-release-milvus-standalone-54c4f88cb9-f84pf --template='{{(index (index .spec.containers 0).ports 0).containerPort}}{{"\n"}}'
19530
Open a new terminal and run the following command to forward a local port to the port that Milvus uses. Optionally, omit the designated port and use :19530
to let kubectl
allocate a local port for you so that you don't have to manage port conflicts.
$ kubectl port-forward service/my-release-milvus 27017:19530
Forwarding from 127.0.0.1:27017 -> 19530
By default, ports forwarded by kubectl only listen on localhost. Use flag address
if you want Milvus server to listen on selected IP or all addresses.
$ kubectl port-forward --address 0.0.0.0 service/my-release-milvus 27017:19530
Forwarding from 0.0.0.0:27017 -> 19530
Uninstall Milvus
Run the following command to uninstall Milvus.
$ helm uninstall my-release
What's next
Having installed Milvus, you can:
-
Check Hello Milvus to run an example code with different SDKs to see what Milvus can do.
-
Learn the basic operations of Milvus:
-
Explore Milvus Backup, an open-source tool for Milvus data backups.
-
Explore Birdwatcher, an open-source tool for debugging Milvus and dynamic configuration updates.
-
Explore Attu, an open-source GUI tool for intuitive Milvus management.