Create Longhorn Volumes
In this tutorial, you’ll learn how to create Kubernetes persistent storage resources of persistent volumes (PVs) and persistent volume claims (PVCs) that correspond to Longhorn volumes. You will use kubectl to dynamically provision storage for workloads using a Longhorn storage class. For help creating volumes from the Longhorn UI, refer to this section.
This section assumes that you understand how Kubernetes persistent storage works. For more information, see the Kubernetes documentation.
First, you will create a Longhorn StorageClass. The Longhorn StorageClass contains the parameters to provision persistent volumes.
Next, a PersistentVolumeClaim is created that references the StorageClass. Finally, the PersistentVolumeClaim is mounted as a volume within a Pod.
When the Pod is deployed, the Kubernetes master will check the PersistentVolumeClaim to make sure the resource request can be fulfilled. If storage is available, the Kubernetes master will create the Longhorn volume and bind it to the Pod.
Use following command to create a StorageClass called longhorn
:
kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/longhorn/longhorn/v1.2.0/examples/storageclass.yaml
The following example StorageClass is created:
kind: StorageClass
apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1
metadata:
name: longhorn
provisioner: driver.longhorn.io
allowVolumeExpansion: true
parameters:
numberOfReplicas: "3"
staleReplicaTimeout: "2880" # 48 hours in minutes
fromBackup: ""
# diskSelector: "ssd,fast"
# nodeSelector: "storage,fast"
# recurringJobSelector: '[
# {
# "name":"snap",
# "isGroup":true,
# },
# {
# "name":"backup",
# "isGroup":false,
# }
# ]'
Create a Pod that uses Longhorn volumes by running this command:
kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/longhorn/longhorn/v1.2.0/examples/pod_with_pvc.yaml
A Pod named volume-test
is launched, along with a PersistentVolumeClaim named longhorn-volv-pvc
. The PersistentVolumeClaim references the Longhorn StorageClass:
apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
metadata:
name: longhorn-volv-pvc
spec:
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
storageClassName: longhorn
resources:
requests:
storage: 2Gi
The persistentVolumeClaim is mounted in the Pod as a volume:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: volume-test
namespace: default
spec:
containers:
- name: volume-test
image: nginx:stable-alpine
imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
volumeMounts:
- name: volv
mountPath: /data
ports:
- containerPort: 80
volumes:
- name: volv
persistentVolumeClaim:
claimName: longhorn-volv-pvc
More examples are available here.
It is possible to use a Longhorn StorageClass to bind a workload to a PV without creating a StorageClass object in Kubernetes.
Since the Storage Class is also a field used to match a PVC with a PV, which doesn’t have to be created by a Provisioner, you can create a PV manually with a custom StorageClass name, then create a PVC asking for the same StorageClass name.
When a PVC requests a StorageClass that does not exist as a Kubernetes resource, Kubernetes will try to bind your PVC to a PV with the same StorageClass name. The StorageClass will be used like a label to find the matching PV, and only existing PVs labeled with the StorageClass name will be used.
If the PVC names a StorageClass, Kubernetes will:
Since the Longhorn volume already exists while creating PV/PVC, a StorageClass is not needed for dynamically provisioning Longhorn volume. However, the field storageClassName
should be set in PVC/PV, to be used for PVC bounding purpose. And it’s unnecessary for users create the related StorageClass object.
By default the StorageClass for Longhorn created PV/PVC is longhorn-static
. Users can modified it in Setting - General - Default Longhorn Static StorageClass Name
as they need.
Users need to manually delete PVC and PV created by Longhorn.
Now users can create PV/PVC via our Longhorn UI for the existing Longhorn volumes. Only detached volume can be used by newly created pod.
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