Nomad
Installing Nomad
Nomad is available as a pre-compiled binary or as a package for several operating systems. You can also build Nomad from source.
If you are interested in trialing Nomad without installing it locally, see the Quickstart for options to get started with Nomad.
You can download a precompiled binary and
run it on your machine locally. You can also verify the binary using the
available SHA-256 sums. After downloading Nomad, unzip the package. Make sure
that the nomad
binary is available on your PATH
before continuing with the
other guides.
Post-installation steps
These steps are considered optional but can be helpful for running Nomad and to take advantage of additional Nomad functionalities.
Add the Nomad binary to your system path
Permanently add a new location to your path by editing your shell's settings
file (usually called something like ~/.bashrc
, where the part of the filename
after the .
and before rc
is the name of your shell). In that file you
should see a line that starts with export PATH=
, followed by a
colon-separated list of locations. Add the location of the Nomad binary to that
list and save the file. Then reload your shell's configuration with the command
source ~/.bashrc
, replacing bash
with the name of your shell.
Install CNI plugins
Nomad uses CNI plugins to configure network namespaces when using the bridge
network mode. All Linux Nomad client nodes using network namespaces must have
CNI plugins installed.
The following commands install the CNI reference plugins.
$ curl -L -o cni-plugins.tgz "https://github.com/containernetworking/plugins/releases/download/v1.0.0/cni-plugins-linux-$( [ $(uname -m) = aarch64 ] && echo arm64 || echo amd64)"-v1.0.0.tgz && \
sudo mkdir -p /opt/cni/bin && \
sudo tar -C /opt/cni/bin -xzf cni-plugins.tgz
Ensure your Linux operating system distribution has been configured to allow container traffic through the bridge network to be routed via iptables. These tunables can be set as follows.
$ echo 1 | sudo tee /proc/sys/net/bridge/bridge-nf-call-arptables && \
echo 1 | sudo tee /proc/sys/net/bridge/bridge-nf-call-ip6tables && \
echo 1 | sudo tee /proc/sys/net/bridge/bridge-nf-call-iptables
To preserve these settings on startup of a client node, add a file including the
following to /etc/sysctl.d/
or remove the file your Linux distribution puts in
that directory.
/etc/sysctl.d/bridge.conf
net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-arptables = 1
net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-ip6tables = 1
net.bridge.bridge-nf-call-iptables = 1
Verify cgroup controllers
On Linux, Nomad uses cgroups to control resource usage of tasks. If one or more required cgroups are unavailable, Nomad will disable resource controls that require cgroups entirely. With cgroups v2, you can verify that you have all required controllers as follows:
$ cat /sys/fs/cgroup/cgroup.controllers
cpuset cpu io memory pids
See the documentation on cgroup controller requirements for more details.
Verify the Installation
To verify Nomad was installed correctly, try the nomad
command.
$ nomad
You should see help output, similar to the following.
Usage: nomad [-version] [-help] [-autocomplete-(un)install] <command> [args]
Common commands:
run Run a new job or update an existing job
stop Stop a running job
status Display the status output for a resource
alloc Interact with allocations
job Interact with jobs
node Interact with nodes
agent Runs a Nomad agent
Other commands:
acl Interact with ACL policies and tokens
agent-info Display status information about the local agent
config Interact with configurations
deployment Interact with deployments
eval Interact with evaluations
exec Execute commands in task
fmt Rewrites Nomad config and job files to canonical format
license Interact with Nomad Enterprise License
login Login to Nomad using an auth method
monitor Stream logs from a Nomad agent
namespace Interact with namespaces
operator Provides cluster-level tools for Nomad operators
plugin Inspect plugins
quota Interact with quotas
recommendation Interact with the Nomad recommendation endpoint
scaling Interact with the Nomad scaling endpoint
sentinel Interact with Sentinel policies
server Interact with servers
service Interact with registered services
system Interact with the system API
tls Generate Self Signed TLS Certificates for Nomad
ui Open the Nomad Web UI
var Interact with variables
version Prints the Nomad version
volume Interact with volumes
Compiling from Source
To compile from source, you will need Go installed at the
version described by the .go-version file. You should properly
configure your Go environment, including setting a GOPATH
environment variable
and ensuring GOPATH/bin
is within your PATH
. A copy of
git
is also needed in your PATH
.
Clone the Nomad repository from GitHub into your
GOPATH
:$ mkdir -p $GOPATH/src/github.com/hashicorp && cd $_ $ git clone https://github.com/hashicorp/nomad.git $ cd nomad
Bootstrap the project. This will download and compile libraries and tools needed to compile Nomad:
$ make bootstrap
Build Nomad for your current system and put the binary in
./bin/
(relative to the git checkout). Themake dev
target is just a shortcut that buildsnomad
for only your local build environment (no cross-compiled targets).$ make dev