Creates a managed node group for an Amazon EKS cluster.
You can only create a node group for your cluster that is equal to the current Kubernetes version for the cluster. All node groups are created with the latest AMI release version for the respective minor Kubernetes version of the cluster, unless you deploy a custom AMI using a launch template. For more information about using launch templates, see Customizing managed nodes with launch templates .
An Amazon EKS managed node group is an Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling group and associated Amazon EC2 instances that are managed by Amazon Web Services for an Amazon EKS cluster. For more information, see Managed node groups in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
See also: AWS API Documentation
create-nodegroup
--cluster-name <value>
--nodegroup-name <value>
[--scaling-config <value>]
[--disk-size <value>]
--subnets <value>
[--instance-types <value>]
[--ami-type <value>]
[--remote-access <value>]
--node-role <value>
[--labels <value>]
[--taints <value>]
[--tags <value>]
[--client-request-token <value>]
[--launch-template <value>]
[--update-config <value>]
[--node-repair-config <value>]
[--capacity-type <value>]
[--release-version <value>]
[--kubernetes-version <value>]
[--cli-input-json | --cli-input-yaml]
[--generate-cli-skeleton <value>]
[--debug]
[--endpoint-url <value>]
[--no-verify-ssl]
[--no-paginate]
[--output <value>]
[--query <value>]
[--profile <value>]
[--region <value>]
[--version <value>]
[--color <value>]
[--no-sign-request]
[--ca-bundle <value>]
[--cli-read-timeout <value>]
[--cli-connect-timeout <value>]
[--cli-binary-format <value>]
[--no-cli-pager]
[--cli-auto-prompt]
[--no-cli-auto-prompt]
--cluster-name
(string)
The name of your cluster.
--nodegroup-name
(string)
The unique name to give your node group.
--scaling-config
(structure)
The scaling configuration details for the Auto Scaling group that is created for your node group.
minSize -> (integer)
The minimum number of nodes that the managed node group can scale in to.maxSize -> (integer)
The maximum number of nodes that the managed node group can scale out to. For information about the maximum number that you can specify, see Amazon EKS service quotas in the Amazon EKS User Guide .desiredSize -> (integer)
The current number of nodes that the managed node group should maintain.
Warning
If you use the Kubernetes Cluster Autoscaler , you shouldn’t change thedesiredSize
value directly, as this can cause the Cluster Autoscaler to suddenly scale up or scale down.Whenever this parameter changes, the number of worker nodes in the node group is updated to the specified size. If this parameter is given a value that is smaller than the current number of running worker nodes, the necessary number of worker nodes are terminated to match the given value. When using CloudFormation, no action occurs if you remove this parameter from your CFN template.
This parameter can be different from
minSize
in some cases, such as when starting with extra hosts for testing. This parameter can also be different when you want to start with an estimated number of needed hosts, but let the Cluster Autoscaler reduce the number if there are too many. When the Cluster Autoscaler is used, thedesiredSize
parameter is altered by the Cluster Autoscaler (but can be out-of-date for short periods of time). the Cluster Autoscaler doesn’t scale a managed node group lower thanminSize
or higher thanmaxSize
.
Shorthand Syntax:
minSize=integer,maxSize=integer,desiredSize=integer
JSON Syntax:
{
"minSize": integer,
"maxSize": integer,
"desiredSize": integer
}
--disk-size
(integer)
The root device disk size (in GiB) for your node group instances. The default disk size is 20 GiB for Linux and Bottlerocket. The default disk size is 50 GiB for Windows. If you specifylaunchTemplate
, then don’t specifydiskSize
, or the node group deployment will fail. For more information about using launch templates with Amazon EKS, see Customizing managed nodes with launch templates in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
--subnets
(list)
The subnets to use for the Auto Scaling group that is created for your node group. If you specify
launchTemplate
, then don’t specify `` SubnetId `` in your launch template, or the node group deployment will fail. For more information about using launch templates with Amazon EKS, see Customizing managed nodes with launch templates in the Amazon EKS User Guide .(string)
Syntax:
"string" "string" ...
--instance-types
(list)
Specify the instance types for a node group. If you specify a GPU instance type, make sure to also specify an applicable GPU AMI type with the
amiType
parameter. If you specifylaunchTemplate
, then you can specify zero or one instance type in your launch template or you can specify 0-20 instance types forinstanceTypes
. If however, you specify an instance type in your launch template and specify anyinstanceTypes
, the node group deployment will fail. If you don’t specify an instance type in a launch template or forinstanceTypes
, thent3.medium
is used, by default. If you specifySpot
forcapacityType
, then we recommend specifying multiple values forinstanceTypes
. For more information, see Managed node group capacity types and Customizing managed nodes with launch templates in the Amazon EKS User Guide .(string)
Syntax:
"string" "string" ...
--ami-type
(string)
The AMI type for your node group. If you specify
launchTemplate
, and your launch template uses a custom AMI, then don’t specifyamiType
, or the node group deployment will fail. If your launch template uses a Windows custom AMI, then addeks:kube-proxy-windows
to your Windows nodesrolearn
in theaws-auth
ConfigMap
. For more information about using launch templates with Amazon EKS, see Customizing managed nodes with launch templates in the Amazon EKS User Guide .Possible values:
AL2_x86_64
AL2_x86_64_GPU
AL2_ARM_64
CUSTOM
BOTTLEROCKET_ARM_64
BOTTLEROCKET_x86_64
BOTTLEROCKET_ARM_64_NVIDIA
BOTTLEROCKET_x86_64_NVIDIA
WINDOWS_CORE_2019_x86_64
WINDOWS_FULL_2019_x86_64
WINDOWS_CORE_2022_x86_64
WINDOWS_FULL_2022_x86_64
AL2023_x86_64_STANDARD
AL2023_ARM_64_STANDARD
AL2023_x86_64_NEURON
AL2023_x86_64_NVIDIA
--remote-access
(structure)
The remote access configuration to use with your node group. For Linux, the protocol is SSH. For Windows, the protocol is RDP. If you specify
launchTemplate
, then don’t specifyremoteAccess
, or the node group deployment will fail. For more information about using launch templates with Amazon EKS, see Customizing managed nodes with launch templates in the Amazon EKS User Guide .ec2SshKey -> (string)
The Amazon EC2 SSH key name that provides access for SSH communication with the nodes in the managed node group. For more information, see Amazon EC2 key pairs and Linux instances in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide for Linux Instances . For Windows, an Amazon EC2 SSH key is used to obtain the RDP password. For more information, see Amazon EC2 key pairs and Windows instances in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide for Windows Instances .sourceSecurityGroups -> (list)
The security group IDs that are allowed SSH access (port 22) to the nodes. For Windows, the port is 3389. If you specify an Amazon EC2 SSH key but don’t specify a source security group when you create a managed node group, then the port on the nodes is opened to the internet (
0.0.0.0/0
). For more information, see Security Groups for Your VPC in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide .(string)
Shorthand Syntax:
ec2SshKey=string,sourceSecurityGroups=string,string
JSON Syntax:
{
"ec2SshKey": "string",
"sourceSecurityGroups": ["string", ...]
}
--node-role
(string)
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the IAM role to associate with your node group. The Amazon EKS worker nodekubelet
daemon makes calls to Amazon Web Services APIs on your behalf. Nodes receive permissions for these API calls through an IAM instance profile and associated policies. Before you can launch nodes and register them into a cluster, you must create an IAM role for those nodes to use when they are launched. For more information, see Amazon EKS node IAM role in the * Amazon EKS User Guide * . If you specifylaunchTemplate
, then don’t specify `` IamInstanceProfile `` in your launch template, or the node group deployment will fail. For more information about using launch templates with Amazon EKS, see Customizing managed nodes with launch templates in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
--labels
(map)
The Kubernetes
labels
to apply to the nodes in the node group when they are created.key -> (string)
value -> (string)
Shorthand Syntax:
KeyName1=string,KeyName2=string
JSON Syntax:
{"string": "string"
...}
--taints
(list)
The Kubernetes taints to be applied to the nodes in the node group. For more information, see Node taints on managed node groups .
(structure)
A property that allows a node to repel a
Pod
. For more information, see Node taints on managed node groups in the Amazon EKS User Guide .key -> (string)
The key of the taint.value -> (string)
The value of the taint.effect -> (string)
The effect of the taint.
Shorthand Syntax:
key=string,value=string,effect=string ...
JSON Syntax:
[
{
"key": "string",
"value": "string",
"effect": "NO_SCHEDULE"|"NO_EXECUTE"|"PREFER_NO_SCHEDULE"
}
...
]
--tags
(map)
Metadata that assists with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both. Tags don’t propagate to any other cluster or Amazon Web Services resources.
key -> (string)
One part of a key-value pair that make up a tag. Akey
is a general label that acts like a category for more specific tag values.value -> (string)
The optional part of a key-value pair that make up a tag. Avalue
acts as a descriptor within a tag category (key).
Shorthand Syntax:
KeyName1=string,KeyName2=string
JSON Syntax:
{"string": "string"
...}
--client-request-token
(string)
A unique, case-sensitive identifier that you provide to ensure the idempotency of the request.
--launch-template
(structure)
An object representing a node group’s launch template specification. When using this object, don’t directly specify
instanceTypes
,diskSize
, orremoteAccess
. Make sure that the launch template meets the requirements inlaunchTemplateSpecification
. Also refer to Customizing managed nodes with launch templates in the Amazon EKS User Guide .name -> (string)
The name of the launch template.
You must specify either the launch template name or the launch template ID in the request, but not both.
version -> (string)
The version number of the launch template to use. If no version is specified, then the template’s default version is used.id -> (string)
The ID of the launch template.
You must specify either the launch template ID or the launch template name in the request, but not both.
Shorthand Syntax:
name=string,version=string,id=string
JSON Syntax:
{
"name": "string",
"version": "string",
"id": "string"
}
--update-config
(structure)
The node group update configuration.
maxUnavailable -> (integer)
The maximum number of nodes unavailable at once during a version update. Nodes are updated in parallel. This value ormaxUnavailablePercentage
is required to have a value.The maximum number is 100.maxUnavailablePercentage -> (integer)
The maximum percentage of nodes unavailable during a version update. This percentage of nodes are updated in parallel, up to 100 nodes at once. This value ormaxUnavailable
is required to have a value.
Shorthand Syntax:
maxUnavailable=integer,maxUnavailablePercentage=integer
JSON Syntax:
{
"maxUnavailable": integer,
"maxUnavailablePercentage": integer
}
--node-repair-config
(structure)
The node auto repair configuration for the node group.
enabled -> (boolean)
Specifies whether to enable node auto repair for the node group. Node auto repair is disabled by default.
Shorthand Syntax:
enabled=boolean
JSON Syntax:
{
"enabled": true|false
}
--capacity-type
(string)
The capacity type for your node group.
Possible values:
ON_DEMAND
SPOT
CAPACITY_BLOCK
--release-version
(string)
The AMI version of the Amazon EKS optimized AMI to use with your node group. By default, the latest available AMI version for the node group’s current Kubernetes version is used. For information about Linux versions, see Amazon EKS optimized Amazon Linux AMI versions in the Amazon EKS User Guide . Amazon EKS managed node groups support the November 2022 and later releases of the Windows AMIs. For information about Windows versions, see Amazon EKS optimized Windows AMI versions in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
If you specify
launchTemplate
, and your launch template uses a custom AMI, then don’t specifyreleaseVersion
, or the node group deployment will fail. For more information about using launch templates with Amazon EKS, see Customizing managed nodes with launch templates in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
--kubernetes-version
(string)
The Kubernetes version to use for your managed nodes. By default, the Kubernetes version of the cluster is used, and this is the only accepted specified value. If you specifylaunchTemplate
, and your launch template uses a custom AMI, then don’t specifyversion
, or the node group deployment will fail. For more information about using launch templates with Amazon EKS, see Customizing managed nodes with launch templates in the Amazon EKS User Guide .
--cli-input-json
| --cli-input-yaml
(string)
Reads arguments from the JSON string provided. The JSON string follows the format provided by --generate-cli-skeleton
. If other arguments are provided on the command line, those values will override the JSON-provided values. It is not possible to pass arbitrary binary values using a JSON-provided value as the string will be taken literally. This may not be specified along with --cli-input-yaml
.
--generate-cli-skeleton
(string)
Prints a JSON skeleton to standard output without sending an API request. If provided with no value or the value input
, prints a sample input JSON that can be used as an argument for --cli-input-json
. Similarly, if provided yaml-input
it will print a sample input YAML that can be used with --cli-input-yaml
. If provided with the value output
, it validates the command inputs and returns a sample output JSON for that command. The generated JSON skeleton is not stable between versions of the AWS CLI and there are no backwards compatibility guarantees in the JSON skeleton generated.
--debug
(boolean)
Turn on debug logging.
--endpoint-url
(string)
Override command’s default URL with the given URL.
--no-verify-ssl
(boolean)
By default, the AWS CLI uses SSL when communicating with AWS services. For each SSL connection, the AWS CLI will verify SSL certificates. This option overrides the default behavior of verifying SSL certificates.
--no-paginate
(boolean)
Disable automatic pagination. If automatic pagination is disabled, the AWS CLI will only make one call, for the first page of results.
--output
(string)
The formatting style for command output.
--query
(string)
A JMESPath query to use in filtering the response data.
--profile
(string)
Use a specific profile from your credential file.
--region
(string)
The region to use. Overrides config/env settings.
--version
(string)
Display the version of this tool.
--color
(string)
Turn on/off color output.
--no-sign-request
(boolean)
Do not sign requests. Credentials will not be loaded if this argument is provided.
--ca-bundle
(string)
The CA certificate bundle to use when verifying SSL certificates. Overrides config/env settings.
--cli-read-timeout
(int)
The maximum socket read time in seconds. If the value is set to 0, the socket read will be blocking and not timeout. The default value is 60 seconds.
--cli-connect-timeout
(int)
The maximum socket connect time in seconds. If the value is set to 0, the socket connect will be blocking and not timeout. The default value is 60 seconds.
--cli-binary-format
(string)
The formatting style to be used for binary blobs. The default format is base64. The base64 format expects binary blobs to be provided as a base64 encoded string. The raw-in-base64-out format preserves compatibility with AWS CLI V1 behavior and binary values must be passed literally. When providing contents from a file that map to a binary blob fileb://
will always be treated as binary and use the file contents directly regardless of the cli-binary-format
setting. When using file://
the file contents will need to properly formatted for the configured cli-binary-format
.
--no-cli-pager
(boolean)
Disable cli pager for output.
--cli-auto-prompt
(boolean)
Automatically prompt for CLI input parameters.
--no-cli-auto-prompt
(boolean)
Disable automatically prompt for CLI input parameters.
To use the following examples, you must have the AWS CLI installed and configured. See the Getting started guide in the AWS CLI User Guide for more information.
Unless otherwise stated, all examples have unix-like quotation rules. These examples will need to be adapted to your terminal’s quoting rules. See Using quotation marks with strings in the AWS CLI User Guide .
Example 1: Creates a managed node group for an Amazon EKS cluster
The following create-nodegroup
example creates a managed node group for an Amazon EKS cluster.
aws eks create-nodegroup \
--cluster-name my-eks-cluster \
--nodegroup-name my-eks-nodegroup \
--node-role arn:aws:iam::111122223333:role/role-name \
--subnets "subnet-0e2907431c9988b72" "subnet-04ad87f71c6e5ab4d" "subnet-09d912bb63ef21b9a" \
--scaling-config minSize=1,maxSize=3,desiredSize=1 \
--region us-east-2
Output:
{
"nodegroup": {
"nodegroupName": "my-eks-nodegroup",
"nodegroupArn": "arn:aws:eks:us-east-2:111122223333:nodegroup/my-eks-cluster/my-eks-nodegroup/bac7550f-b8b8-5fbb-4f3e-7502a931119e",
"clusterName": "my-eks-cluster",
"version": "1.26",
"releaseVersion": "1.26.12-20240329",
"createdAt": "2024-04-04T13:19:32.260000-04:00",
"modifiedAt": "2024-04-04T13:19:32.260000-04:00",
"status": "CREATING",
"capacityType": "ON_DEMAND",
"scalingConfig": {
"minSize": 1,
"maxSize": 3,
"desiredSize": 1
},
"instanceTypes": [
"t3.medium"
],
"subnets": [
"subnet-0e2907431c9988b72, subnet-04ad87f71c6e5ab4d, subnet-09d912bb63ef21b9a"
],
"amiType": "AL2_x86_64",
"nodeRole": "arn:aws:iam::111122223333:role/role-name",
"diskSize": 20,
"health": {
"issues": []
},
"updateConfig": {
"maxUnavailable": 1
},
"tags": {}
}
}
For more information, see Creating a managed node group in the Amazon EKS User Guide.
Example 2: Creates a managed node group for an Amazon EKS cluster with custom instance-types and disk-size
The following create-nodegroup
example creates a managed node group for an Amazon EKS cluster with custom instance-types and disk-size.
aws eks create-nodegroup \
--cluster-name my-eks-cluster \
--nodegroup-name my-eks-nodegroup \
--node-role arn:aws:iam::111122223333:role/role-name \
--subnets "subnet-0e2907431c9988b72" "subnet-04ad87f71c6e5ab4d" "subnet-09d912bb63ef21b9a" \
--scaling-config minSize=1,maxSize=3,desiredSize=1 \
--capacity-type ON_DEMAND \
--instance-types 'm5.large' \
--disk-size 50 \
--region us-east-2
Output:
{
"nodegroup": {
"nodegroupName": "my-eks-nodegroup",
"nodegroupArn": "arn:aws:eks:us-east-2:111122223333:nodegroup/my-eks-cluster/my-eks-nodegroup/c0c7551b-e4f9-73d9-992c-a450fdb82322",
"clusterName": "my-eks-cluster",
"version": "1.26",
"releaseVersion": "1.26.12-20240329",
"createdAt": "2024-04-04T13:46:07.595000-04:00",
"modifiedAt": "2024-04-04T13:46:07.595000-04:00",
"status": "CREATING",
"capacityType": "ON_DEMAND",
"scalingConfig": {
"minSize": 1,
"maxSize": 3,
"desiredSize": 1
},
"instanceTypes": [
"m5.large"
],
"subnets": [
"subnet-0e2907431c9988b72",
"subnet-04ad87f71c6e5ab4d",
"subnet-09d912bb63ef21b9a"
],
"amiType": "AL2_x86_64",
"nodeRole": "arn:aws:iam::111122223333:role/role-name",
"diskSize": 50,
"health": {
"issues": []
},
"updateConfig": {
"maxUnavailable": 1
},
"tags": {}
}
}
For more information, see Creating a managed node group in the Amazon EKS User Guide.
Example 3: Creates a managed node group for an Amazon EKS cluster with custom instance-types, disk-size, ami-type, capacity-type, update-config, labels, taints and tags.
The following create-nodegroup
example creates a managed node group for an Amazon EKS cluster with custom instance-types, disk-size, ami-type, capacity-type, update-config, labels, taints and tags.
aws eks create-nodegroup \
--cluster-name my-eks-cluster \
--nodegroup-name my-eks-nodegroup \
--node-role arn:aws:iam::111122223333:role/role-name \
--subnets "subnet-0e2907431c9988b72" "subnet-04ad87f71c6e5ab4d" "subnet-09d912bb63ef21b9a" \
--scaling-config minSize=1,maxSize=5,desiredSize=4 \
--instance-types 't3.large' \
--disk-size 50 \
--ami-type AL2_x86_64 \
--capacity-type SPOT \
--update-config maxUnavailable=2 \
--labels '{"my-eks-nodegroup-label-1": "value-1" , "my-eks-nodegroup-label-2": "value-2"}' \
--taints '{"key": "taint-key-1" , "value": "taint-value-1", "effect": "NO_EXECUTE"}' \
--tags '{"my-eks-nodegroup-key-1": "value-1" , "my-eks-nodegroup-key-2": "value-2"}'
Output:
{
"nodegroup": {
"nodegroupName": "my-eks-nodegroup",
"nodegroupArn": "arn:aws:eks:us-east-2:111122223333:nodegroup/my-eks-cluster/my-eks-nodegroup/88c75524-97af-0cb9-a9c5-7c0423ab5314",
"clusterName": "my-eks-cluster",
"version": "1.26",
"releaseVersion": "1.26.12-20240329",
"createdAt": "2024-04-04T14:05:07.940000-04:00",
"modifiedAt": "2024-04-04T14:05:07.940000-04:00",
"status": "CREATING",
"capacityType": "SPOT",
"scalingConfig": {
"minSize": 1,
"maxSize": 5,
"desiredSize": 4
},
"instanceTypes": [
"t3.large"
],
"subnets": [
"subnet-0e2907431c9988b72",
"subnet-04ad87f71c6e5ab4d",
"subnet-09d912bb63ef21b9a"
],
"amiType": "AL2_x86_64",
"nodeRole": "arn:aws:iam::111122223333:role/role-name",
"labels": {
"my-eks-nodegroup-label-2": "value-2",
"my-eks-nodegroup-label-1": "value-1"
},
"taints": [
{
"key": "taint-key-1",
"value": "taint-value-1",
"effect": "NO_EXECUTE"
}
],
"diskSize": 50,
"health": {
"issues": []
},
"updateConfig": {
"maxUnavailable": 2
},
"tags": {
"my-eks-nodegroup-key-1": "value-1",
"my-eks-nodegroup-key-2": "value-2"
}
}
}
For more information, see Creating a managed node group in the Amazon EKS User Guide.
nodegroup -> (structure)
The full description of your new node group.
nodegroupName -> (string)
The name associated with an Amazon EKS managed node group.nodegroupArn -> (string)
The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) associated with the managed node group.clusterName -> (string)
The name of your cluster.version -> (string)
The Kubernetes version of the managed node group.releaseVersion -> (string)
If the node group was deployed using a launch template with a custom AMI, then this is the AMI ID that was specified in the launch template. For node groups that weren’t deployed using a launch template, this is the version of the Amazon EKS optimized AMI that the node group was deployed with.createdAt -> (timestamp)
The Unix epoch timestamp at object creation.modifiedAt -> (timestamp)
The Unix epoch timestamp for the last modification to the object.status -> (string)
The current status of the managed node group.capacityType -> (string)
The capacity type of your managed node group.scalingConfig -> (structure)
The scaling configuration details for the Auto Scaling group that is associated with your node group.
minSize -> (integer)
The minimum number of nodes that the managed node group can scale in to.maxSize -> (integer)
The maximum number of nodes that the managed node group can scale out to. For information about the maximum number that you can specify, see Amazon EKS service quotas in the Amazon EKS User Guide .desiredSize -> (integer)
The current number of nodes that the managed node group should maintain.
Warning
If you use the Kubernetes Cluster Autoscaler , you shouldn’t change thedesiredSize
value directly, as this can cause the Cluster Autoscaler to suddenly scale up or scale down.Whenever this parameter changes, the number of worker nodes in the node group is updated to the specified size. If this parameter is given a value that is smaller than the current number of running worker nodes, the necessary number of worker nodes are terminated to match the given value. When using CloudFormation, no action occurs if you remove this parameter from your CFN template.
This parameter can be different from
minSize
in some cases, such as when starting with extra hosts for testing. This parameter can also be different when you want to start with an estimated number of needed hosts, but let the Cluster Autoscaler reduce the number if there are too many. When the Cluster Autoscaler is used, thedesiredSize
parameter is altered by the Cluster Autoscaler (but can be out-of-date for short periods of time). the Cluster Autoscaler doesn’t scale a managed node group lower thanminSize
or higher thanmaxSize
.instanceTypes -> (list)
If the node group wasn’t deployed with a launch template, then this is the instance type that is associated with the node group. If the node group was deployed with a launch template, then this is
null
.(string)
subnets -> (list)
The subnets that were specified for the Auto Scaling group that is associated with your node group.
(string)
remoteAccess -> (structure)
If the node group wasn’t deployed with a launch template, then this is the remote access configuration that is associated with the node group. If the node group was deployed with a launch template, then this is
null
.ec2SshKey -> (string)
The Amazon EC2 SSH key name that provides access for SSH communication with the nodes in the managed node group. For more information, see Amazon EC2 key pairs and Linux instances in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide for Linux Instances . For Windows, an Amazon EC2 SSH key is used to obtain the RDP password. For more information, see Amazon EC2 key pairs and Windows instances in the Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud User Guide for Windows Instances .sourceSecurityGroups -> (list)
The security group IDs that are allowed SSH access (port 22) to the nodes. For Windows, the port is 3389. If you specify an Amazon EC2 SSH key but don’t specify a source security group when you create a managed node group, then the port on the nodes is opened to the internet (
0.0.0.0/0
). For more information, see Security Groups for Your VPC in the Amazon Virtual Private Cloud User Guide .(string)
amiType -> (string)
If the node group was deployed using a launch template with a custom AMI, then this isCUSTOM
. For node groups that weren’t deployed using a launch template, this is the AMI type that was specified in the node group configuration.nodeRole -> (string)
The IAM role associated with your node group. The Amazon EKS nodekubelet
daemon makes calls to Amazon Web Services APIs on your behalf. Nodes receive permissions for these API calls through an IAM instance profile and associated policies.labels -> (map)
The Kubernetes
labels
applied to the nodes in the node group.Note
Onlylabels
that are applied with the Amazon EKS API are shown here. There may be other Kuberneteslabels
applied to the nodes in this group.key -> (string)
value -> (string)
taints -> (list)
The Kubernetes taints to be applied to the nodes in the node group when they are created. Effect is one of
No_Schedule
,Prefer_No_Schedule
, orNo_Execute
. Kubernetes taints can be used together with tolerations to control how workloads are scheduled to your nodes. For more information, see Node taints on managed node groups .(structure)
A property that allows a node to repel a
Pod
. For more information, see Node taints on managed node groups in the Amazon EKS User Guide .key -> (string)
The key of the taint.value -> (string)
The value of the taint.effect -> (string)
The effect of the taint.resources -> (structure)
The resources associated with the node group, such as Auto Scaling groups and security groups for remote access.
autoScalingGroups -> (list)
The Auto Scaling groups associated with the node group.
(structure)
An Auto Scaling group that is associated with an Amazon EKS managed node group.
name -> (string)
The name of the Auto Scaling group associated with an Amazon EKS managed node group.remoteAccessSecurityGroup -> (string)
The remote access security group associated with the node group. This security group controls SSH access to the nodes.diskSize -> (integer)
If the node group wasn’t deployed with a launch template, then this is the disk size in the node group configuration. If the node group was deployed with a launch template, then this isnull
.health -> (structure)
The health status of the node group. If there are issues with your node group’s health, they are listed here.
issues -> (list)
Any issues that are associated with the node group.
(structure)
An object representing an issue with an Amazon EKS resource.
code -> (string)
A brief description of the error.
- AccessDenied : Amazon EKS or one or more of your managed nodes is failing to authenticate or authorize with your Kubernetes cluster API server.
- AsgInstanceLaunchFailures : Your Auto Scaling group is experiencing failures while attempting to launch instances.
- AutoScalingGroupNotFound : We couldn’t find the Auto Scaling group associated with the managed node group. You may be able to recreate an Auto Scaling group with the same settings to recover.
- ClusterUnreachable : Amazon EKS or one or more of your managed nodes is unable to to communicate with your Kubernetes cluster API server. This can happen if there are network disruptions or if API servers are timing out processing requests.
- Ec2InstanceTypeDoesNotExist : One or more of the supplied Amazon EC2 instance types do not exist. Amazon EKS checked for the instance types that you provided in this Amazon Web Services Region, and one or more aren’t available.
- Ec2LaunchTemplateNotFound : We couldn’t find the Amazon EC2 launch template for your managed node group. You may be able to recreate a launch template with the same settings to recover.
- Ec2LaunchTemplateVersionMismatch : The Amazon EC2 launch template version for your managed node group does not match the version that Amazon EKS created. You may be able to revert to the version that Amazon EKS created to recover.
- Ec2SecurityGroupDeletionFailure : We could not delete the remote access security group for your managed node group. Remove any dependencies from the security group.
- Ec2SecurityGroupNotFound : We couldn’t find the cluster security group for the cluster. You must recreate your cluster.
- Ec2SubnetInvalidConfiguration : One or more Amazon EC2 subnets specified for a node group do not automatically assign public IP addresses to instances launched into it. If you want your instances to be assigned a public IP address, then you need to enable the
auto-assign public IP address
setting for the subnet. See Modifying the public ``IPv4` addressing attribute for your subnet <https://docs.aws.amazon.com/vpc/latest/userguide/vpc-ip-addressing.html#subnet-public-ip>`__ in the Amazon VPC User Guide .- IamInstanceProfileNotFound : We couldn’t find the IAM instance profile for your managed node group. You may be able to recreate an instance profile with the same settings to recover.
- IamNodeRoleNotFound : We couldn’t find the IAM role for your managed node group. You may be able to recreate an IAM role with the same settings to recover.
- InstanceLimitExceeded : Your Amazon Web Services account is unable to launch any more instances of the specified instance type. You may be able to request an Amazon EC2 instance limit increase to recover.
- InsufficientFreeAddresses : One or more of the subnets associated with your managed node group does not have enough available IP addresses for new nodes.
- InternalFailure : These errors are usually caused by an Amazon EKS server-side issue.
- NodeCreationFailure : Your launched instances are unable to register with your Amazon EKS cluster. Common causes of this failure are insufficient node IAM role permissions or lack of outbound internet access for the nodes.
message -> (string)
The error message associated with the issue.resourceIds -> (list)
The Amazon Web Services resources that are afflicted by this issue.
(string)
updateConfig -> (structure)
The node group update configuration.
maxUnavailable -> (integer)
The maximum number of nodes unavailable at once during a version update. Nodes are updated in parallel. This value ormaxUnavailablePercentage
is required to have a value.The maximum number is 100.maxUnavailablePercentage -> (integer)
The maximum percentage of nodes unavailable during a version update. This percentage of nodes are updated in parallel, up to 100 nodes at once. This value ormaxUnavailable
is required to have a value.nodeRepairConfig -> (structure)
The node auto repair configuration for the node group.
enabled -> (boolean)
Specifies whether to enable node auto repair for the node group. Node auto repair is disabled by default.launchTemplate -> (structure)
If a launch template was used to create the node group, then this is the launch template that was used.
name -> (string)
The name of the launch template.
You must specify either the launch template name or the launch template ID in the request, but not both.
version -> (string)
The version number of the launch template to use. If no version is specified, then the template’s default version is used.id -> (string)
The ID of the launch template.
You must specify either the launch template ID or the launch template name in the request, but not both.
tags -> (map)
Metadata that assists with categorization and organization. Each tag consists of a key and an optional value. You define both. Tags don’t propagate to any other cluster or Amazon Web Services resources.
key -> (string)
One part of a key-value pair that make up a tag. Akey
is a general label that acts like a category for more specific tag values.value -> (string)
The optional part of a key-value pair that make up a tag. Avalue
acts as a descriptor within a tag category (key).