Help Center/ Cloud Container Engine/ User Guide/ Storage/ Object Storage Service/ Using an Existing OBS Bucket Through a Static PV
Updated on 2024-09-02 GMT+08:00

Using an Existing OBS Bucket Through a Static PV

This section describes how to use an existing Object Storage Service (OBS) bucket to statically create PVs and PVCs for data persistence and sharing in workloads.

Prerequisites

Notes and Constraints

  • If OBS volumes are used, the owner group and permission of the mount point cannot be modified.
  • Every time an OBS volume is mounted to a workload through a PVC, a resident process is created in the backend. When a workload uses too many OBS volumes or reads and writes a large number of object storage files, resident processes will consume a significant amount of memory. To ensure stable running of the workload, make sure that the number of OBS volumes used does not exceed the requested memory. For example, if the workload requests for 4 GiB of memory, the number of OBS volumes should be no more than 4.
  • Kata containers do not support OBS volumes.
  • Hard links are not supported when common buckets are mounted.
  • Multiple PVs can use the same OBS storage volume with the following restrictions:
    • Do not mount the PVCs/PVs that use the same underlying OBS volume to one pod. This will lead to a pod startup failure because not all PVCs can be mounted to the pod due to the same volumeHandle value.
    • The persistentVolumeReclaimPolicy parameter in the PVs must be set to Retain. Otherwise, when a PV is deleted, the associated underlying volume may be deleted. In this case, other PVs associated with the underlying volume malfunction.
    • If underlying storage is repeatedly used, you are required to maintain data consistency. Enable isolation and protection for ReadWriteMany at the application layer and prevent multiple clients from writing the same file to prevent data overwriting and loss.

Using an Existing OBS Bucket on the Console

  1. Log in to the CCE console and click the cluster name to access the cluster console.
  2. Statically create a PVC and PV.

    1. Choose Storage in the navigation pane. In the right pane, click the PVCs tab. Click Create PVC in the upper right corner. In the dialog box displayed, configure PVC parameters.

      Parameter

      Description

      PVC Type

      In this example, select OBS.

      PVC Name

      Enter the PVC name, which must be unique in a namespace.

      Creation Method

      • If underlying storage is available, create a PV or use an existing PV to statically create a PVC.
      • If no underlying storage is available, select Dynamically provision. For details, see Using an OBS Bucket Through a Dynamic PV.

      In this example, select Create new to create both a PV and PVC on the console.

      PVa

      Select an existing PV in the cluster. For details about how to create a PV, see "Creating a storage volume" in Related Operations.

      You do not need to specify this parameter in this example.

      OBSb

      Click Select OBS. On the displayed page, select the OBS volume that meets your requirements and click OK.

      PV Nameb

      Enter the PV name, which must be unique in the same cluster.

      Access Modeb

      OBS volumes support only ReadWriteMany, indicating that a storage volume can be mounted to multiple nodes in read/write mode. For details, see Volume Access Modes.

      Reclaim Policyb

      You can select Delete or Retain to specify the reclaim policy of the underlying storage when the PVC is deleted. For details, see PV Reclaim Policy.

      NOTE:

      If multiple PVs use the same OBS volume, use Retain to prevent the underlying volume from being deleted with a PV.

      Access Key (AK/SK)b

      Custom (Recommended): Customize a secret if you want to assign different user permissions to different OBS storage devices. For details, see Using a Custom Access Key (AK/SK) to Mount an OBS Volume.

      Only secrets with the secret.kubernetes.io/used-by = csi label can be selected. The secret type is cfe/secure-opaque. If no secret is available, click Create Secret to create one.
      • Name: Enter a secret name.
      • Namespace: Select the namespace where the secret is.
      • Access Key (AK/SK): Upload a key file in .csv format. For details, see Obtaining an Access Key.

      Mount Optionsb

      Enter the mounting parameter key-value pairs. For details, see Configuring OBS Mount Options.

      a: The parameter is available when Creation Method is set to Use existing.

      b: The parameter is available when Creation Method is set to Create new.

    2. Click Create to create a PVC and a PV.

      You can choose Storage in the navigation pane and view the created PVC and PV on the PVCs and PVs tab pages, respectively.

  3. Create an application.

    1. Choose Workloads in the navigation pane. In the right pane, click the Deployments tab.
    2. 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 PVC.
      Mount and use storage volumes, as shown in Table 1. For details about other parameters, see Workloads.
      Table 1 Mounting a storage volume

      Parameter

      Description

      PVC

      Select an existing OBS volume.

      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 OBS volume.

    3. 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 and Sharing.

Using an Existing OBS Bucket Through kubectl

  1. Use kubectl to access the cluster.
  2. Create a PV.

    1. Create the pv-obs.yaml file.
      apiVersion: v1
      kind: PersistentVolume
      metadata:
        annotations:
          pv.kubernetes.io/provisioned-by: everest-csi-provisioner
          everest.io/reclaim-policy: retain-volume-only      # (Optional) The underlying volume is retained when the PV is deleted.
        name: pv-obs       # PV name
      spec:
        accessModes:
        - ReadWriteMany    # Access mode. The value must be ReadWriteMany for OBS.
        capacity:
          storage: 1Gi     # OBS volume capacity
        csi:
          driver: obs.csi.everest.io        # Dependent storage driver for the mounting
          fsType: obsfs                     # Instance type
          volumeHandle: <your_volume_id>    # Name of the OBS volume
          volumeAttributes:
            storage.kubernetes.io/csiProvisionerIdentity: everest-csi-provisioner
            everest.io/obs-volume-type: STANDARD
            everest.io/region: <your_region>                        # Region where the OBS volume is
            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.
          nodePublishSecretRef:            # Custom secret of the OBS volume
            name: <your_secret_name>       # Custom secret name
            namespace: <your_namespace>    # Namespace of the custom secret
        persistentVolumeReclaimPolicy: Retain    # Reclaim policy
        storageClassName: csi-obs               # StorageClass name
        mountOptions: []                         # Mount options
      Table 2 Key parameters

      Parameter

      Mandatory

      Description

      everest.io/reclaim-policy: retain-volume-only

      No

      Optional.

      Only retain-volume-only is supported.

      This parameter is valid only when the Everest version is 1.2.9 or later and the reclaim policy is Delete. If the reclaim policy is Delete and the current value is retain-volume-only, the associated PV is deleted while the underlying storage volume is retained, when a PVC is deleted.

      fsType

      Yes

      Instance type. The value can be obsfs or s3fs.

      • obsfs: a parallel file system
      • s3fs: object bucket

      volumeHandle

      Yes

      OBS volume name.

      everest.io/obs-volume-type

      Yes

      OBS storage class.

      • If fsType is set to s3fs, STANDARD (standard bucket) and WARM (infrequent access bucket) are supported.
      • This parameter is invalid when fsType is set to obsfs.

      everest.io/region

      Yes

      Region where the OBS bucket is deployed.

      For details about the value of region, see Regions and Endpoints.

      everest.io/enterprise-project-id

      No

      Optional.

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

      How to obtain: On the OBS console, choose Buckets or Parallel File Systems in the navigation pane. Click the name of the OBS bucket to access its details page. In the Basic Information area, locate the enterprise project and click it to access the enterprise project console. Copy the corresponding ID to obtain the ID of the enterprise project to which the object storage belongs.

      nodePublishSecretRef

      No

      Access key (AK/SK) used for mounting the object storage volume. You can use the AK/SK to create a secret and mount it to the PV. For details, see Using a Custom Access Key (AK/SK) to Mount an OBS Volume.

      An example is as follows:
      nodePublishSecretRef:
        name: secret-demo
        namespace: default

      mountOptions

      No

      Mount options. For details, see Configuring OBS Mount Options.

      persistentVolumeReclaimPolicy

      Yes

      A reclaim policy is supported when the cluster version is or later than 1.19.10 and the Everest version is or later than 1.2.9.

      The Delete and Retain reclaim policies are supported. For details, see PV Reclaim Policy. If multiple PVs use the same OBS volume, use Retain to prevent the underlying volume from being deleted with a PV.

      Delete:

      • If everest.io/reclaim-policy is not specified, both the PV and storage resources will be deleted when a PVC is deleted.
      • If everest.io/reclaim-policy is set to retain-volume-only, when a PVC is deleted, the PV will be deleted but the storage resources will be retained.

      Retain: When a PVC is deleted, both the PV and underlying storage resources will be retained. You need to manually delete these resources. After the PVC is deleted, the PV is in the Released state and cannot be bound to a PVC again.

      storage

      Yes

      Storage capacity, in Gi.

      For OBS, this field is used only for verification (cannot be empty or 0). Its value is fixed at 1, and any value you set does not take effect for OBS.

      storageClassName

      Yes

      StorageClass name, which is csi-obs for an OBS volume.

    2. Run the following command to create a PV:
      kubectl apply -f pv-obs.yaml

  3. Create a PVC.

    1. Create the pvc-obs.yaml file.
      apiVersion: v1
      kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
      metadata:
        name: pvc-obs
        namespace: default
        annotations:
          volume.beta.kubernetes.io/storage-provisioner: everest-csi-provisioner
          everest.io/obs-volume-type: STANDARD
          csi.storage.k8s.io/fstype: obsfs
          csi.storage.k8s.io/node-publish-secret-name: <your_secret_name>  # Custom secret name.
          csi.storage.k8s.io/node-publish-secret-namespace: <your_namespace>        # Namespace of the custom secret.
          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.
      spec:
        accessModes:
        - ReadWriteMany                  # The value must be ReadWriteMany for OBS.
        resources:
          requests:
            storage: 1Gi
        storageClassName: csi-obs       # StorageClass name, which must be the same as that of the PV
        volumeName: pv-obs    # PV name
      Table 3 Key parameters

      Parameter

      Mandatory

      Description

      csi.storage.k8s.io/node-publish-secret-name

      No

      Name of the custom secret specified in the PV.

      csi.storage.k8s.io/node-publish-secret-namespace

      No

      Namespace of the custom secret specified in the PV.

      everest.io/enterprise-project-id

      No

      Project ID of OBS.

      How to obtain: On the OBS console, choose Buckets or Parallel File Systems in the navigation pane. Click the name of the OBS bucket to access its details page. In the Basic Information area, locate the enterprise project and click it to access the enterprise project console. Copy the corresponding ID to obtain the ID of the enterprise project to which the object storage belongs.

      storage

      Yes

      Requested capacity in the PVC, in Gi.

      For OBS, this field is used only for verification (cannot be empty or 0). Its value is fixed at 1, and any value you set does not take effect for OBS.

      storageClassName

      Yes

      StorageClass name, which must be the same as the StorageClass of the PV in 1.

      StorageClass name, which is csi-obs for an OBS volume.

      volumeName

      Yes

      PV name, which must be the same as the PV name in 1.

    2. Run the following command to create a PVC:
      kubectl apply -f pvc-obs.yaml

  4. Create an application.

    1. Create a file named web-demo.yaml. In this example, the OBS volume is mounted to the /data path.
      apiVersion: apps/v1
      kind: Deployment
      metadata:
        name: web-demo
        namespace: default
      spec:
        replicas: 2
        selector:
          matchLabels:
            app: web-demo
        template:
          metadata:
            labels:
              app: web-demo
          spec:
            containers:
            - name: container-1
              image: nginx:latest
              volumeMounts:
              - name: pvc-obs-volume    # Volume name, which must be the same as the volume name in the volumes field
                mountPath: /data  # Location where the storage volume is mounted
            imagePullSecrets:
              - name: default-secret
            volumes:
              - name: pvc-obs-volume    # Volume name, which can be customized
                persistentVolumeClaim:
                  claimName: pvc-obs    # Name of the created PVC
    2. Run the following command to create a workload to which the OBS volume is mounted:
      kubectl apply -f web-demo.yaml

      After the workload is created, you can try Verifying Data Persistence and Sharing.

Verifying Data Persistence and Sharing

  1. View the deployed application and files.

    1. Run the following command to view the created pod:
      kubectl get pod | grep web-demo
      Expected output:
      web-demo-846b489584-mjhm9   1/1     Running   0             46s
      web-demo-846b489584-wvv5s   1/1     Running   0             46s
    2. Run the following commands in sequence to view the files in the /data path of the pods:
      kubectl exec web-demo-846b489584-mjhm9 -- ls /data
      kubectl exec web-demo-846b489584-wvv5s -- ls /data

      If no result is returned for both pods, no file exists in the /data path.

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

    kubectl exec web-demo-846b489584-mjhm9 --  touch /data/static

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

    kubectl exec web-demo-846b489584-mjhm9 -- ls /data

    Expected output:

    static

  4. Verify data persistence.

    1. Run the following command to delete the pod named web-demo-846b489584-mjhm9:
      kubectl delete pod web-demo-846b489584-mjhm9

      Expected output:

      pod "web-demo-846b489584-mjhm9" deleted

      After the deletion, the Deployment controller automatically creates a replica.

    2. Run the following command to view the created pod:
      kubectl get pod | grep web-demo
      The expected output is as follows, in which web-demo-846b489584-d4d4j is the newly created pod:
      web-demo-846b489584-d4d4j   1/1     Running   0             110s
      web-demo-846b489584-wvv5s    1/1     Running   0             7m50s
    3. Run the following command to check whether the files in the /data path of the new pod have been modified:
      kubectl exec web-demo-846b489584-d4d4j -- ls /data

      Expected output:

      static

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

  5. Verify data sharing.

    1. Run the following command to view the created pod:
      kubectl get pod | grep web-demo
      Expected output:
      web-demo-846b489584-d4d4j   1/1     Running   0             7m
      web-demo-846b489584-wvv5s   1/1     Running   0             13m
    2. Run the following command to create a file named share in the /data path of either pod: In this example, select the pod named web-demo-846b489584-d4d4j.
      kubectl exec web-demo-846b489584-d4d4j --  touch /data/share
      Check the files in the /data path of the pod.
      kubectl exec web-demo-846b489584-d4d4j -- ls /data

      Expected output:

      share
      static
    3. Check whether the share file exists in the /data path of another pod (web-demo-846b489584-wvv5s) as well to verify data sharing.
      kubectl exec web-demo-846b489584-wvv5s -- ls /data

      Expected output:

      share
      static

      After you create a file in the /data path of a pod, if the file is also created in the /data path of the other pod, the two pods share the same volume.

Related Operations

You can also perform the operations listed in Table 4.
Table 4 Related operations

Operation

Description

Procedure

Creating a storage volume (PV)

Create a PV on the CCE console.

  1. Choose Storage in the navigation pane. In the right pane, click the PVs tab. Click Create PersistentVolume in the upper right corner. In the dialog box displayed, configure parameters.
    • Volume Type: Select OBS.
    • OBS: Click Select OBS. On the displayed page, select the OBS volume that meets your requirements and click OK.
    • PV Name: Enter the PV name, which must be unique in a cluster.
    • Access Mode: SFS volumes support only ReadWriteMany, indicating that a storage volume can be mounted to multiple nodes in read/write mode. For details, see Volume Access Modes.
    • Reclaim Policy: Delete or Retain is supported. For details, see PV Reclaim Policy.
      NOTE:

      If multiple PVs use the same underlying storage volume, use Retain to prevent the underlying volume from being deleted with a PV.

    • Access Key (AK/SK): (Recommended) Customize a secret if you want to assign different user permissions to different OBS storage devices. For details, see Using a Custom Access Key (AK/SK) to Mount an OBS Volume.

      Only secrets with the secret.kubernetes.io/used-by = csi label can be selected. The secret type is cfe/secure-opaque. If no secret is available, click Create Secret to create one.

    • Mount Options: Enter the mounting parameter key-value pairs. For details, see Configuring OBS Mount Options.
  2. Click Create.

Updating an access key

Update the access key of object storage on the CCE 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 Update Access Key.
  2. Upload a key file in .csv format. For details, see Obtaining an Access Key. Click OK.
    NOTE:

    After a global access key is updated, all pods mounted with the object storage that uses this access key can be accessed only after being restarted.

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.