4.3 KiB
PLEASE NOTE: This document applies to the HEAD of the source tree
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-1.3/examples/experimental/persistent-volume-provisioning/README.md).Documentation for other releases can be found at releases.k8s.io.
Persistent Volume Provisioning
This example shows how to use experimental persistent volume provisioning.
Pre-requisites
This example assumes that you have an understanding of Kubernetes administration and can modify the scripts that launch kube-controller-manager.
Admin Configuration
No configuration is required by the admin! 3 cloud providers will be provided in the alpha version of this feature: EBS, GCE, and Cinder.
When Kubernetes is running in one of those clouds, there will be an implied provisioner. There is no provisioner when running outside of any of those 3 cloud providers.
A fourth provisioner is included for testing and development only. It creates HostPath volumes, which will never work outside of a single node cluster. It is not supported in any way except for local for testing and development.
User provisioning requests
Users request dynamically provisioned storage by including a storage class in their PersistentVolumeClaim
.
The annotation volume.alpha.kubernetes.io/storage-class
is used to access this experimental feature.
In the future, admins will be able to define many storage classes.
The storage class may remain in an annotation or become a field on the claim itself.
The value of the storage-class annotation does not matter in the alpha version of this feature. There is a single implied provisioner per cloud (which creates 1 kind of volume in the provider). The full version of the feature will require that this value matches what is configured by the administrator.
{
"kind": "PersistentVolumeClaim",
"apiVersion": "v1",
"metadata": {
"name": "claim1",
"annotations": {
"volume.alpha.kubernetes.io/storage-class": "foo"
}
},
"spec": {
"accessModes": [
"ReadWriteOnce"
],
"resources": {
"requests": {
"storage": "3Gi"
}
}
}
}
Sample output
This example uses HostPath but any provisioner would follow the same flow.
First we note there are no Persistent Volumes in the cluster. After creating a claim, we see a new PV is created and automatically bound to the claim requesting storage.
$ kubectl get pv
$ kubectl create -f examples/experimental/persistent-volume-provisioning/claim1.json
I1012 13:07:57.666759 22875 decoder.go:141] decoding stream as JSON
persistentvolumeclaim "claim1" created
$ kubectl get pv
NAME LABELS CAPACITY ACCESSMODES STATUS CLAIM REASON AGE
pv-hostpath-r6z5o createdby=hostpath-dynamic-provisioner 3Gi RWO Bound default/claim1 2s
$ kubectl get pvc
NAME LABELS STATUS VOLUME CAPACITY ACCESSMODES AGE
claim1 <none> Bound pv-hostpath-r6z5o 3Gi RWO 7s
# delete the claim to release the volume
$ kubectl delete pvc claim1
persistentvolumeclaim "claim1" deleted
# the volume is deleted in response to being release of its claim
$ kubectl get pv