Skip to content

Dynamic Hostpath Local Volumes for Kubernetes Stateful workloads

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

AliDotS/rawfile-localpv

 
 

FOSSA Status

RawFilePV

Kubernetes LocalPVs on Steroids

Prerequisite

  • Kubernetes: 1.21+

Install

helm install -n kube-system rawfile-csi ./deploy/charts/rawfile-csi/

Usage

Create a StorageClass with your desired options:

apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: StorageClass
metadata:
  name: my-sc
provisioner: rawfile.csi.openebs.io
reclaimPolicy: Delete
volumeBindingMode: WaitForFirstConsumer
allowVolumeExpansion: true

Features

  • Direct I/O: Near-zero disk performance overhead
  • Dynamic provisioning
  • Enforced volume size limit
  • Access Modes
    • ReadWriteOnce
    • ReadOnlyMany
    • ReadWriteMany
  • Volume modes
    • Filesystem mode
    • Block mode
  • Volume metrics
  • Supports fsTypes: ext4, btrfs, xfs
  • Online expansion: If fs supports it (e.g. ext4, btrfs, xfs)
  • Online shrinking: If fs supports it (e.g. btrfs)
  • Offline expansion/shrinking
  • Ephemeral inline volume
  • Snapshots: If the fs supports it (e.g. btrfs)

Motivation

One might have a couple of reasons to consider using node-based (rather than network-based) storage solutions:

  • Performance: Almost no network-based storage solution can keep up with baremetal disk performance in terms of IOPS/latency/throughput combined. And you’d like to get the best out of the SSD you’ve got!
  • On-premise Environment: You might not be able to afford the cost of upgrading all your networking infrastructure, to get the best out of your network-based storage solution.
  • Complexity: Network-based solutions are distributed systems. And distributed systems are not easy! You might want to have a system that is easier to understand and to reason about. Also, with less complexity, you can fix unpredicted issues more easily.

Using node-based storage has come a long way since k8s was born. Right now, OpenEBS’s hostPath makes it pretty easy to automatically provision hostPath PVs and use them in your workloads. There are known limitations though:

  • You can’t monitor volume usage: There are hacky workarounds to run “du” regularly, but that could prove to be a performance killer, since it could put a lot of burden on your CPU and cause your filesystem cache to fill up. Not really good for a production workload.
  • You can’t enforce hard limits on your volume’s size: Again, you can hack your way around it, with the same caveats.
  • You are stuck with whatever filesystem your kubelet node is offering
  • You can’t customize your filesystem:

All these issues stem from the same root cause: hostPath/LocalPVs are simple bind-mounts from the host filesystem into the pod.

The idea here is to use a single file as the block device, using Linux’s loop, and create a volume based on it. That way:

  • You can monitor volume usage by running df in O(1) since devices are mounted separately.
  • The size limit is enforced by the operating system, based on the backing file size.
  • Since volumes are backed by different files, each file could be formatted using different filesystems, and/or customized with different filesystem options.

License

FOSSA Status

About

Dynamic Hostpath Local Volumes for Kubernetes Stateful workloads

Resources

License

Code of conduct

Security policy

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 93.5%
  • Shell 3.6%
  • Mustache 2.3%
  • Dockerfile 0.6%