- What's New
- Function Overview
- Service Overview
- Billing
- Getting Started
- User Guide
- Best Practices
-
Developer Guide
- Overview
- Using Native kubectl (Recommended)
- Namespace and Network
- Pod
- Label
- Deployment
- EIPPool
- EIP
- Pod Resource Monitoring Metric
- Collecting Pod Logs
- Managing Network Access Through Service and Ingress
- Using PersistentVolumeClaim to Apply for Persistent Storage
- ConfigMap and Secret
- Creating a Workload Using Job and Cron Job
- YAML Syntax
-
API Reference
- Before You Start
- Calling APIs
- Getting Started
- Proprietary APIs
-
Kubernetes APIs
- ConfigMap
- Pod
- StorageClass
- Service
-
Deployment
- Querying All Deployments
- Deleting All Deployments in a Namespace
- Querying Deployments in a Namespace
- Creating a Deployment
- Deleting a Deployment
- Querying a Deployment
- Updating a Deployment
- Replacing a Deployment
- Querying the Scaling Operation of a Specified Deployment
- Updating the Scaling Operation of a Specified Deployment
- Replacing the Scaling Operation of a Specified Deployment
- Querying the Status of a Deployment
- Ingress
- OpenAPIv2
- VolcanoJob
- Namespace
- ClusterRole
- Secret
- Endpoint
- ResourceQuota
- CronJob
-
API groups
- Querying API Versions
- Querying All APIs of v1
- Querying an APIGroupList
- Querying APIGroup (/apis/apps)
- Querying APIs of apps/v1
- Querying an APIGroup (/apis/batch)
- Querying an APIGroup (/apis/batch.volcano.sh)
- Querying All APIs of batch.volcano.sh/v1alpha1
- Querying All APIs of batch/v1
- Querying All APIs of batch/v1beta1
- Querying an APIGroup (/apis/crd.yangtse.cni)
- Querying All APIs of crd.yangtse.cni/v1
- Querying an APIGroup (/apis/extensions)
- Querying All APIs of extensions/v1beta1
- Querying an APIGroup (/apis/metrics.k8s.io)
- Querying All APIs of metrics.k8s.io/v1beta1
- Querying an APIGroup (/apis/networking.cci.io)
- Querying All APIs of networking.cci.io/v1beta1
- Querying an APIGroup (/apis/rbac.authorization.k8s.io)
- Querying All APIs of rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
- Event
- PersistentVolumeClaim
- RoleBinding
- StatefulSet
- Job
- ReplicaSet
- Data Structure
- Permissions Policies and Supported Actions
- Appendix
- Out-of-Date APIs
- Change History
-
FAQs
- Product Consulting
-
Basic Concept FAQs
- What Is CCI?
- What Are the Differences Between Cloud Container Instance and Cloud Container Engine?
- What Is an Environment Variable?
- What Is a Service?
- What Is Mcore?
- What Are the Relationships Between Images, Containers, and Workloads?
- What Are Kata Containers?
- Can kubectl Be Used to Manage Container Instances?
- What Are Core-Hours in CCI Resource Packages?
- Workload Abnormalities
-
Container Workload FAQs
- Why Service Performance Does Not Meet the Expectation?
- How Do I Set the Quantity of Instances (Pods)?
- How Do I Check My Resource Quotas?
- How Do I Set Probes for a Workload?
- How Do I Configure an Auto Scaling Policy?
- What Do I Do If the Workload Created from the sample Image Fails to Run?
- How Do I View Pods After I Call the API to Delete a Deployment?
- Why an Error Is Reported When a GPU-Related Operation Is Performed on the Container Entered by Using exec?
- Can I Start a Container in Privileged Mode When Running the systemctl Command in a Container in a CCI Cluster?
- Why Does the Intel oneAPI Toolkit Fail to Run VASP Tasks Occasionally?
- Why Are Pods Evicted?
- Why Is the Workload Web-Terminal Not Displayed on the Console?
- Why Are Fees Continuously Deducted After I Delete a Workload?
-
Image Repository FAQs
- Can I Export Public Images?
- How Do I Create a Container Image?
- How Do I Upload Images?
- Does CCI Provide Base Container Images for Download?
- Does CCI Administrator Have the Permission to Upload Image Packages?
- What Permissions Are Required for Uploading Image Packages for CCI?
- What Do I Do If Authentication Is Required During Image Push?
-
Network Management FAQs
- How Do I View the VPC CIDR Block?
- Does CCI Support Load Balancing?
- How Do I Configure the DNS Service on CCI?
- Does CCI Support InfiniBand (IB) Networks?
- How Do I Access a Container from a Public Network?
- How Do I Access a Public Network from a Container?
- What Do I Do If Access to a Workload from a Public Network Fails?
- What Do I Do If Error 504 Is Reported When I Access a Workload?
- What Do I Do If the Connection Timed Out?
- Storage Management FAQs
- Log Collection
- Account
- SDK Reference
- Videos
- General Reference
Copied.
Initializing a Container
Concepts
Before containers that run applications are started, one or some init containers are started first. If there are multiple init containers, they will be started in the defined sequence. The application containers are started only after all init containers run to completion and exit. Storage volumes in a pod are shared. Therefore, the data generated in the init containers can be used by the application containers.
Init containers can be used in multiple Kubernetes resources, such as Deployments, DaemonSets, and jobs. They perform initialization before application containers are started.
Scenarios
Before deploying a service, you can use an init container to make preparations before the pod where the service is running is deployed. After the preparations are complete, the init container runs to completion and exits, and the container to be deployed will be started.
- Scenario 1: Wait for other modules to be ready. For example, an application contains two containerized services: web server and database. The web server service needs to access the database service. However, when the application is started, the database service may have not been started. The web server may fail to access database. To solve this problem, you can use an init container in the pod where web server is running to check whether database is ready. The init container runs to completion only when database is accessible. Then, the web server is started and initiates a formal access request to database.
- Scenario 2: Initialize the configuration. For example, the init container can check all existing member nodes in the cluster and prepare the cluster configuration information for the application container. After the application container is started, it can be added to the cluster using the configuration information.
- Other scenarios: For example, register a pod with a central database and download application dependencies.
For details, see Init Containers.
Procedure
- Edit the YAML file of the init container workload.
vi deployment.yaml
An example YAML file is provided as follows:
apiVersion: apps/v1 kind: Deployment metadata: name: mysql spec: replicas: 1 selector: matchLabels: name: mysql template: metadata: labels: name: mysql spec: initContainers: - name: getresource image: busybox command: ['sleep','20'] containers: - name: mysql image: percona:5.7.22 imagePullPolicy: Always ports: - containerPort: 3306 resources: limits: memory: "500Mi" cpu: "500m" requests: memory: "500Mi" cpu: "250m" env: - name: MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD value: "mysql"
- Create an init container workload.
kubectl create -f deployment.yaml
Information similar to the following is displayed:
deployment.apps/mysql created
Feedback
Was this page helpful?
Provide feedbackThank you very much for your feedback. We will continue working to improve the documentation.See the reply and handling status in My Cloud VOC.
For any further questions, feel free to contact us through the chatbot.
Chatbot