If you are using a released version of Kubernetes, you should refer to the docs that go with that version.
The latest release of this document can be found [here](http://releases.k8s.io/release-1.1/docs/user-guide/persistent-volumes/README.md).Documentation for other releases can be found at releases.k8s.io.
The purpose of this guide is to help you become familiar with Kubernetes Persistent Volumes. By the end of the guide, we'll have nginx serving content from your persistent volume.
This guide assumes knowledge of Kubernetes fundamentals and that you have a cluster up and running.
See Persistent Storage design document for more information.
A Persistent Volume (PV) in Kubernetes represents a real piece of underlying storage capacity in the infrastructure. Cluster administrators must first create storage (create their Google Compute Engine (GCE) disks, export their NFS shares, etc.) in order for Kubernetes to mount it.
PVs are intended for "network volumes" like GCE Persistent Disks, NFS shares, and AWS ElasticBlockStore volumes. HostPath
was included
for ease of development and testing. You'll create a local HostPath
for this example.
IMPORTANT! For
HostPath
to work, you will need to run a single node cluster. Kubernetes does not support local storage on the host at this time. There is no guarantee your pod ends up on the correct node where theHostPath
resides.
# This will be nginx's webroot
$ mkdir /tmp/data01
$ echo 'I love Kubernetes storage!' > /tmp/data01/index.html
PVs are created by posting them to the API server.
$ kubectl create -f docs/user-guide/persistent-volumes/volumes/local-01.yaml
NAME LABELS CAPACITY ACCESSMODES STATUS CLAIM REASON
pv0001 type=local 10737418240 RWO Available
Users of Kubernetes request persistent storage for their pods. They don't know how the underlying cluster is provisioned. They just know they can rely on their claim to storage and can manage its lifecycle independently from the many pods that may use it.
Claims must be created in the same namespace as the pods that use them.
$ kubectl create -f docs/user-guide/persistent-volumes/claims/claim-01.yaml
$ kubectl get pvc
NAME LABELS STATUS VOLUME
myclaim-1 map[]
# A background process will attempt to match this claim to a volume.
# The eventual state of your claim will look something like this:
$ kubectl get pvc
NAME LABELS STATUS VOLUME
myclaim-1 map[] Bound pv0001
$ kubectl get pv
NAME LABELS CAPACITY ACCESSMODES STATUS CLAIM REASON
pv0001 type=local 10737418240 RWO Bound default/myclaim-1
Claims are used as volumes in pods. Kubernetes uses the claim to look up its bound PV. The PV is then exposed to the pod.
$ kubectl create -f docs/user-guide/persistent-volumes/simpletest/pod.yaml
$ kubectl get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
mypod 1/1 Running 0 1h
$ kubectl create -f docs/user-guide/persistent-volumes/simpletest/service.json
$ kubectl get services
NAME CLUSTER_IP EXTERNAL_IP PORT(S) SELECTOR AGE
frontendservice 10.0.0.241 <none> 3000/TCP name=frontendhttp 1d
kubernetes 10.0.0.2 <none> 443/TCP <none> 2d
You should be able to query your service endpoint and see what content nginx is serving. A "forbidden" error might mean you need to disable SELinux (setenforce 0).
$ curl 10.0.0.241:3000
I love Kubernetes storage!
Hopefully this simple guide is enough to get you started with PersistentVolumes. If you have any questions, join the team on Slack and ask!
Enjoy!