Help Center/ Cloud Container Engine/ User Guide/ Storage/ Elastic Volume Service/ Dynamically Mounting an EVS Disk to a StatefulSet
Updated on 2024-11-11 GMT+08:00

Dynamically Mounting an EVS Disk to a StatefulSet

Application Scenarios

Dynamic mounting is available only for creating a StatefulSet. It is implemented through a volume claim template (volumeClaimTemplates field) and depends on dynamic creation of PVs through StorageClass. In this mode, each pod in a multi-pod StatefulSet is associated with a unique PVC and PV. After a pod is rescheduled, the original data can still be mounted to it based on the PVC name. In the common mounting mode for a Deployment, if ReadWriteMany is supported, multiple pods of the Deployment will be mounted to the same underlying storage.

When updating a StatefulSet in Kubernetes, it is not allowed to add or delete the volumeClaimTemplates field. This field can only be configured during the creation of the StatefulSet.

Prerequisites

Dynamically Mounting an EVS Disk on the Console

  1. Log in to the CCE console and click the cluster name to access the cluster console.
  2. Choose Workloads in the navigation pane. In the right pane, click the StatefulSets tab.
  3. Click Create Workload in the upper right corner. On the displayed page, click Data Storage in the Container Settings area and click Add Volume to select VolumeClaimTemplate.
  4. Click Create PVC. In the dialog box displayed, configure PVC parameters.

    Click Create.

    Parameter

    Description

    PVC Type

    In this example, select EVS.

    PVC Name

    Enter the name of the PVC. After a PVC is created, a suffix is automatically added based on the number of pods. The format is <Custom PVC name>-<Serial number>, for example, example-0.

    Creation Method

    You can select Dynamically provision to create a PVC, PV, and underlying storage on the console in cascading mode.

    Storage Classes

    The default StorageClass for EVS disks is csi-disk.

    AZ

    Select the AZ of the EVS disk. The AZ must be the same as that of the cluster node.

    NOTE:

    An EVS disk can only be mounted to a node in the same AZ. After an EVS disk is created, its AZ cannot be changed.

    Disk Type

    Select an EVS disk type. EVS disk types vary depending on regions. Obtain the available EVS types on the console.

    Capacity (GiB)

    Capacity of the requested storage volume.

    Access Mode

    EVS volumes support only ReadWriteOnce, indicating that a storage volume can be mounted to one node in read/write mode. For details, see Volume Access Modes.

    Enterprise Project

    The default enterprise project, the enterprise project to which the cluster belongs, or the enterprise project specified by StorageClass is available.

  5. Enter the path to which the volume is mounted.

    Table 1 Mounting a storage volume

    Parameter

    Description

    Mount Path

    Enter a mount path, for example, /tmp.

    This parameter specifies a container path to which a data volume will be mounted. Do not mount the volume to a system directory such as / or /var/run. This may lead to container errors. Mount the volume to an empty directory. If the directory is not empty, ensure that there are no files that affect container startup. Otherwise, the files will be replaced, leading to container startup failures or workload creation failures.
    NOTICE:

    If a volume is mounted to a high-risk directory, use an account with minimum permissions to start the container. Otherwise, high-risk files on the host may be damaged.

    Subpath

    Enter the subpath of the storage volume and mount a path in the storage volume to the container. In this way, different folders of the same storage volume can be used in a single pod. tmp, for example, indicates that data in the mount path of the container is stored in the tmp folder of the storage volume. If this parameter is left blank, the root path will be used by default.

    Permission

    • Read-only: You can only read the data in the mounted volumes.
    • Read-write: You can modify the data volumes mounted to the path. Newly written data will not be migrated if the container is migrated, which may cause data loss.

    In this example, the disk is mounted to the /data path of the container. The container data generated in this path is stored in the EVS disk.

  6. Dynamically mount and use storage volumes. For details about other parameters, see Creating a StatefulSet. After the configuration, click Create Workload.

    After the workload is created, the data in the container mount directory will be persistently stored. Verify the storage by referring to Verifying Data Persistence.

Dynamically Mounting an EVS Volume Through kubectl

  1. Use kubectl to access the cluster.
  2. Create a file named statefulset-evs.yaml. In this example, the EVS volume is mounted to the /data path.

    apiVersion: apps/v1
    kind: StatefulSet
    metadata:
      name: statefulset-evs
      namespace: default
    spec:
      selector:
        matchLabels:
          app: statefulset-evs
      template:
        metadata:
          labels:
            app: statefulset-evs
        spec:
          containers:
            - name: container-1
              image: nginx:latest
              volumeMounts:
                - name: pvc-disk           # The value must be the same as that in the volumeClaimTemplates field.
                  mountPath: /data         # Location where the storage volume is mounted
          imagePullSecrets:
            - name: default-secret
      serviceName: statefulset-evs         # Headless Service name
      replicas: 2
      volumeClaimTemplates:
        - apiVersion: v1
          kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
          metadata:
            name: pvc-disk
            namespace: default
            annotations:
              everest.io/disk-volume-type: SAS    # EVS disk type
    
              everest.io/enterprise-project-id: <your_project_id>  # (Optional) Enterprise project ID. If an enterprise project is specified, use the same enterprise project when creating a PVC. Otherwise, the PVC cannot be bound to a PV.
    
    
    
            labels:
              failure-domain.beta.kubernetes.io/region: <your_region>   # Region of the node where the application is to be deployed
              failure-domain.beta.kubernetes.io/zone: <your_zone>       # AZ of the node where the application is to be deployed
          spec:
            accessModes:
              - ReadWriteOnce               # The value must be ReadWriteOnce for EVS disks.
            resources:
              requests:
                storage: 10Gi             # EVS disk capacity, ranging from 1 to 32768
            storageClassName: csi-disk    # StorageClass is EVS
    ---
    apiVersion: v1
    kind: Service
    metadata:
      name: statefulset-evs   # Headless Service name
      namespace: default
      labels:
        app: statefulset-evs
    spec:
      selector:
        app: statefulset-evs
      clusterIP: None
      ports:
        - name: statefulset-evs
          targetPort: 80
          nodePort: 0
          port: 80
          protocol: TCP
      type: ClusterIP
    Table 2 Key parameters

    Parameter

    Mandatory

    Description

    failure-domain.beta.kubernetes.io/region

    Yes

    Region where the cluster is located.

    failure-domain.beta.kubernetes.io/zone

    Yes

    AZ where the EVS volume is created. It must be the same as the AZ planned for the workload.

    everest.io/disk-volume-type

    Yes

    EVS disk type. All letters are in uppercase.
    • SAS: high I/O
    • SSD: ultra-high I/O

    everest.io/enterprise-project-id

    No

    Optional.

    Enterprise project ID of the EVS disk. If an enterprise project is specified, use the same enterprise project when creating a PVC. Otherwise, the PVC cannot be bound to a PV.

    To obtain an enterprise project ID, log in to the Cloud Server Console. In the navigation pane, choose Elastic Volume Service > Disks. Click the name of the target EVS disk to go to its details page. On the Summary tab page, click the enterprise project in Management Information to access the enterprise project console. Copy the corresponding ID to obtain the ID of the enterprise project to which the EVS disk belongs.

    storage

    Yes

    Requested PVC capacity, in Gi. The value ranges from 1 to 32768.

    storageClassName

    Yes

    The StorageClass for EVS disks is csi-disk.

  3. Run the following command to create a workload to which the EVS volume is mounted:

    kubectl apply -f statefulset-evs.yaml

    After the workload is created, the data in the container mount directory will be persistently stored. Verify the storage by referring to Verifying Data Persistence.

Verifying Data Persistence

  1. View the deployed application and EVS volume files.

    1. Run the following command to view the created pod:
      kubectl get pod | grep statefulset-evs
      Expected output:
      statefulset-evs-0          1/1     Running   0             45s
      statefulset-evs-1          1/1     Running   0             28s
    2. Run the following command to check whether the EVS volume has been mounted to the /data path:
      kubectl exec statefulset-evs-0 -- df | grep data

      Expected output:

      /dev/sdd              10255636     36888  10202364   0% /data
    3. Run the following command to check the files in the /data path:
      kubectl exec statefulset-evs-0 -- ls /data

      Expected output:

      lost+found

  2. Run the following command to create a file named static in the /data path:

    kubectl exec statefulset-evs-0 --  touch /data/static

  3. Run the following command to check the files in the /data path:

    kubectl exec statefulset-evs-0 -- ls /data

    Expected output:

    lost+found
    static

  4. Run the following command to delete the pod named web-evs-auto-0:

    kubectl delete pod statefulset-evs-0

    Expected output:

    pod "statefulset-evs-0" deleted

  5. After the deletion, the StatefulSet controller automatically creates a replica with the same name. Run the following command to check whether the files in the /data path have been modified:

    kubectl exec statefulset-evs-0 -- ls /data

    Expected output:

    lost+found
    static

    The static file is retained, indicating that the data in the EVS volume can be stored persistently.

Related Operations

You can also perform the operations listed in Table 3.
Table 3 Related operations

Operation

Description

Procedure

Expanding the capacity of an EVS disk

Quickly expand the capacity of an attached EVS disk on the CCE console.

Only the capacity of pay-per-use EVS disks can be expanded on the CCE console. To expand the capacity of yearly/monthly EVS disks, click the volume name to go to the EVS console.

  1. Choose Storage in the navigation pane. In the right pane, click the PVCs tab. Click More in the Operation column of the target PVC and select Scale-out.
  2. Enter the capacity to be added and click OK.

Viewing events

View event names, event types, number of occurrences, Kubernetes events, first occurrence time, and last occurrence time of the PVC or PV.

  1. Choose Storage in the navigation pane. In the right pane, click the PVCs or PVs tab.
  2. Click View Events in the Operation column of the target PVC or PV to view events generated within one hour (events are retained for one hour).

Viewing a YAML file

View, copy, or download the YAML file of a PVC or PV.

  1. Choose Storage in the navigation pane. In the right pane, click the PVCs or PVs tab.
  2. Click View YAML in the Operation column of the target PVC or PV to view or download the YAML.