[Glusterfs](http://www.gluster.org) is an open source scale-out filesystem. These examples provide information about how to allow containers use Glusterfs volumes.
Set up Glusterfs server cluster; install Glusterfs client package on the Kubernetes nodes. ([Guide](https://www.howtoforge.com/high-availability-storage-with-glusterfs-3.2.x-on-debian-wheezy-automatic-file-replication-mirror-across-two-storage-servers))
The "IP" field should be filled with the address of a node in the Glusterfs server cluster. In this example, it is fine to give any valid value (from 1 to 65535) to the "port" field.
- **endpoints** is endpoints name that represents a Gluster cluster configuration. *kubelet* is optimized to avoid mount storm, it will randomly pick one from the endpoints to mount. If this host is unresponsive, the next Gluster host in the endpoints is automatically selected.
- **path** is the Glusterfs volume name.
- **readOnly** is the boolean that sets the mountpoint readOnly or readWrite.
POD IP CONTAINER(S) IMAGE(S) HOST LABELS STATUS CREATED MESSAGE
glusterfs 10.244.2.13 kubernetes-minion-151f/23.236.54.97 <none> Running About a minute
glusterfs kubernetes/pause Running About a minute
```
You may ssh to the host and run 'mount' to see if the Glusterfs volume is mounted,
```shell
$ mount | grep kube_vol
10.240.106.152:kube_vol on /var/lib/kubelet/pods/f164a571-fa68-11e4-ad5c-42010af019b7/volumes/kubernetes.io~glusterfs/glusterfsvol type fuse.glusterfs (rw,relatime,user_id=0,group_id=0,default_permissions,allow_other,max_read=131072)