Author:
Ben Swartzlander (NetApp)
The volume populators feature is now two releases old and entering beta! The AnyVolumeDataSouce
feature
gate defaults to enabled in Kubernetes v1.24, which means that users can specify any custom resource
as the data source of a PVC.
An earlier blog article detailed how the
volume populators feature works. In short, a cluster administrator can install a CRD and
associated populator controller in the cluster, and any user who can create instances of
the CR can create pre-populated volumes by taking advantage of the populator.
Multiple populators can be installed side by side for different purposes. The SIG storage
community is already seeing some implementations in public, and more prototypes should
appear soon.
Cluster administrations are strongly encouraged to install the
volume-data-source-validator controller and associated VolumePopulator
CRD before installing
any populators so that users can get feedback about invalid PVC data sources.
New Features
The lib-volume-populator library
on which populators are built now includes metrics to help operators monitor and detect
problems. This library is now beta and latest release is v1.0.1.
The volume data source validator
controller also has metrics support added, and is in beta. The VolumePopulator
CRD is
beta and the latest release is v1.0.1.
Trying it out
To see how this works, you can install the sample “hello” populator and try it
out.
First install the volume-data-source-validator controller.
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes-csi/volume-data-source-validator/v1.0.1/client/config/crd/populator.storage.k8s.io_volumepopulators.yaml
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes-csi/volume-data-source-validator/v1.0.1/deploy/kubernetes/rbac-data-source-validator.yaml
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes-csi/volume-data-source-validator/v1.0.1/deploy/kubernetes/setup-data-source-validator.yaml
Next install the example populator.
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes-csi/lib-volume-populator/v1.0.1/example/hello-populator/crd.yaml
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kubernetes-csi/lib-volume-populator/87a47467b86052819e9ad13d15036d65b9a32fbb/example/hello-populator/deploy.yaml
Your cluster now has a new CustomResourceDefinition that provides a test API named Hello.
Create an instance of the Hello
custom resource, with some text:
apiVersion: hello.example.com/v1alpha1
kind: Hello
metadata:
name: example-hello
spec:
fileName: example.txt
fileContents: Hello, world!
Create a PVC that refers to that CR as its data source.
apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
metadata:
name: example-pvc
spec:
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
resources:
requests:
storage: 10Mi
dataSourceRef:
apiGroup: hello.example.com
kind: Hello
name: example-hello
volumeMode: Filesystem
Next, run a Job that reads the file in the PVC.
apiVersion: batch/v1
kind: Job
metadata:
name: example-job
spec:
template:
spec:
containers:
- name: example-container
image: busybox:latest
command:
- cat
- /mnt/example.txt
volumeMounts:
- name: vol
mountPath: /mnt
restartPolicy: Never
volumes:
- name: vol
persistentVolumeClaim:
claimName: example-pvc
Wait for the job to complete (including all of its dependencies).
kubectl wait --for=condition=Complete job/example-job
And last examine the log from the job.
kubectl logs job/example-job
The output should be:
Hello, world!
Note that the volume already contained a text file with the string contents from
the CR. This is only the simplest example. Actual populators can set up the volume
to contain arbitrary contents.
How to write your own volume populator
Developers interested in writing new poplators are encouraged to use the
lib-volume-populator library
and to only supply a small controller wrapper around the library, and a pod image
capable of attaching to volumes and writing the appropriate data to the volume.
Individual populators can be extremely generic such that they work with every type
of PVC, or they can do vendor specific things to rapidly fill a volume with data
if the volume was provisioned by a specific CSI driver from the same vendor, for
example, by communicating directly with the storage for that volume.
How can I learn more?
The enhancement proposal,
Volume Populators, includes lots of detail about the history and technical implementation
of this feature.
Volume populators and data sources, within the documentation topic about persistent volumes,
explains how to use this feature in your cluster.
Please get involved by joining the Kubernetes storage SIG to help us enhance this
feature. There are a lot of good ideas already and we’d be thrilled to have more!
Originally posted on Kubernetes – Production-Grade Container Orchestration
Author: