Author here! If you're running a Kubernetes cluster, I recommend you check `kubectl version` and see if you're running "Server Version: v1.36.[0,1,2]". If so, you may want to use the one-liner at the end of the article to check your "process_resident_memory_bytes" on each node, and consider restarting kubelet as a temporary workaround to tame the memory leak until v1.36.3 is released.
__turbobrew__
A good reason to health check the kubelet process and restart it when the checks fail.
show comments
rirze
Very cool. It's often daunting to contribute to such a well-established and recognizable project, but this is exactly how it should work.
CamouflagedKiwi
Nice find.
Can't help but feel this is one of the subtle traps hidden beneath the advice that contexts aren't supposed to be stored. I know it's not always that easy, of course.
Author here! If you're running a Kubernetes cluster, I recommend you check `kubectl version` and see if you're running "Server Version: v1.36.[0,1,2]". If so, you may want to use the one-liner at the end of the article to check your "process_resident_memory_bytes" on each node, and consider restarting kubelet as a temporary workaround to tame the memory leak until v1.36.3 is released.
A good reason to health check the kubelet process and restart it when the checks fail.
Very cool. It's often daunting to contribute to such a well-established and recognizable project, but this is exactly how it should work.
Nice find.
Can't help but feel this is one of the subtle traps hidden beneath the advice that contexts aren't supposed to be stored. I know it's not always that easy, of course.
Not all heroes wear capes! Well done