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CSI Driver for dynamic provisioning of Persistent Local Volumes for Kubernetes using LVM.

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OpenEBS LVM CSI Driver

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CSI driver for provisioning Local PVs backed by LVM and more.

Project Status

Currently the LVM CSI Driver is in beta.

Project Tracker

See roadmap.

Usage

Prerequisites

Before installing LVM driver please make sure your Kubernetes Cluster must meet the following prerequisites:

  1. all the nodes must have lvm2 utils installed
  2. volume group has been setup for provisioning the volume
  3. You have access to install RBAC components into kube-system namespace. The OpenEBS LVM driver components are installed in kube-system namespace to allow them to be flagged as system critical components.

Supported System

K8S : 1.20+

OS : Ubuntu

LVM version : LVM 2

Setup

Find the disk which you want to use for the LVM, for testing you can use the loopback device

truncate -s 1024G /tmp/disk.img
sudo losetup -f /tmp/disk.img --show

Create the Volume group on all the nodes, which will be used by the LVM Driver for provisioning the volumes

sudo pvcreate /dev/loop0
sudo vgcreate lvmvg /dev/loop0       ## here lvmvg is the volume group name to be created

Installation

We can install the latest release of OpenEBS LVM driver by running the following command.

$ kubectl apply -f https://openebs.github.io/charts/lvm-operator.yaml

NOTE: For some Kubernetes distributions, the kubelet directory must be changed at all relevant places in the YAML powering the operator (both the openebs-lvm-controller and openebs-lvm-node).

  • For microk8s, we need to change the kubelet directory to /var/snap/microk8s/common/var/lib/kubelet/, we need to replace /var/lib/kubelet/ with /var/snap/microk8s/common/var/lib/kubelet/ at all the places in the operator yaml and then we can apply it on microk8s.

  • For k0s, the default directory (/var/lib/kubelet) should be changed to /var/lib/k0s/kubelet.

Verify that the LVM driver Components are installed and running using below command :

$ kubectl get pods -n kube-system -l role=openebs-lvm

Depending on number of nodes, you will see one lvm-controller pod and lvm-node daemonset running on the nodes.

NAME                       READY   STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
openebs-lvm-controller-0   5/5     Running   0          35s
openebs-lvm-node-54slv     2/2     Running   0          35s
openebs-lvm-node-9vg28     2/2     Running   0          35s
openebs-lvm-node-qbv57     2/2     Running   0          35s

Once LVM driver is successfully installed, we can provision volumes.

Deployment

1. Create a Storage class

$ cat sc.yaml

apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: StorageClass
metadata:
  name: openebs-lvmpv
parameters:
  storage: "lvm"
  volgroup: "lvmpv-vg"
provisioner: local.csi.openebs.io

Check the doc on storageclasses to know all the supported parameters for LVM-LocalPV

VolumeGroup Availability

If LVM volume group is available on certain nodes only, then make use of topology to tell the list of nodes where we have the volgroup available. As shown in the below storage class, we can use allowedTopologies to describe volume group availability on nodes.

apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: StorageClass
metadata:
  name: openebs-lvmpv
allowVolumeExpansion: true
parameters:
  storage: "lvm"
  volgroup: "lvmpv-vg"
provisioner: local.csi.openebs.io
allowedTopologies:
- matchLabelExpressions:
  - key: kubernetes.io/hostname
    values:
      - lvmpv-node1
      - lvmpv-node2

The above storage class tells that volume group "lvmpv-vg" is available on nodes lvmpv-node1 and lvmpv-node2 only. The LVM driver will create volumes on those nodes only.

Please note that the provisioner name for LVM driver is "local.csi.openebs.io", we have to use this while creating the storage class so that the volume provisioning/deprovisioning request can come to LVM driver.

2. Create the PVC

$ cat pvc.yaml

kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
  name: csi-lvmpv
spec:
  storageClassName: openebs-lvmpv
  accessModes:
    - ReadWriteOnce
  resources:
    requests:
      storage: 4Gi

Create a PVC using the storage class created for the LVM driver.

3. Deploy the application

Create the deployment yaml using the pvc backed by LVM storage.

$ cat fio.yaml

apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
  name: fio
spec:
  restartPolicy: Never
  containers:
  - name: perfrunner
    image: openebs/tests-fio
    command: ["/bin/bash"]
    args: ["-c", "while true ;do sleep 50; done"]
    volumeMounts:
       - mountPath: /datadir
         name: fio-vol
    tty: true
  volumes:
  - name: fio-vol
    persistentVolumeClaim:
      claimName: csi-lvmpv

After the deployment of the application, we can go to the node and see that the lvm volume is being used by the application for reading/writting the data and space is consumed from the LVM. Please note that to check the provisioned volumes on the node, we need to run pvscan --cache command to update the lvm cache and then we can use lvdisplay and all other lvm commands on the node.

4. Deprovisioning

for deprovisioning the volume we can delete the application which is using the volume and then we can go ahead and delete the pv, as part of deletion of pv this volume will also be deleted from the volume group and data will be freed.

$ kubectl delete -f fio.yaml
pod "fio" deleted
$ kubectl delete -f pvc.yaml
persistentvolumeclaim "csi-lvmpv" deleted

Features

  • Access Modes
    • ReadWriteOnce
    • ReadOnlyMany
    • ReadWriteMany
  • Volume modes
    • Filesystem mode
    • Block mode
  • Supports fsTypes: ext4, btrfs, xfs
  • Volume metrics
  • Topology
  • Snapshot
  • Clone
  • Volume Resize
  • Thin Provision
  • Backup/Restore
  • Ephemeral inline volume

Limitation

  • Resize of volumes with snapshot is not supported

License

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CSI Driver for dynamic provisioning of Persistent Local Volumes for Kubernetes using LVM.

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