synology-csi
A Container Storage Interface Driver for Synology NAS.
Platforms Supported
The driver supports linux only since it requires iscsiadm
to be installed on the host. It is currently tested with Ubuntu 16.04, Ubuntu 18.04, and Alpine.
We have pre-built Docker images for amd64, arm64, armv7 architectures.
Quickstart Guide
Synology Configuration:
- Create a Storage Pool
- Create a Volume
- Go to Control Panel > Security > General: Enable "Enhance browser compatibility by skipping IP checking"
- Go to Control Panel > Security > Account: Disable "Auto block"
- Create a Storage User service account and add it to the "administrators" group
Synology CSI Configuration and Setup
- Clone the repository
- Perform the following on all your Kubernetes cluster nodes (Ubuntu):
- Install the build dependencies:
apt-get update && apt-get install -y open-iscsi make && snap install go --classic
- Change (
cd
) to the cloned repository - Run the Makefile build:
make
- Create the kubelet plugins directory:
mkdir -p /var/lib/kubelet/plugins/csi.synology.com/
- Copy the built binary from
<cloned repository path>/bin/
to the kubelet plugin directory:cp ./bin/synology-csi-driver /var/lib/kubelet/plugins/csi.synology.com/
- Edit the appropriate deployment for your Kubernetes version as needed
- You will probably want to adjust the
storage_class.yml
based on your Synology volume, filesystem, and provisioning type (thick/thin) and additionally the name of the class as well to meet your requirements/preferences. - You may also have to build containers depending on your hardware architecture and adjust the container images in the deployments. This will involve building the container images for this project and the following projects:
- Create a syno-config.yml
- Create the namespace:
kubectl create ns synology-csi
- Create a secret from the customized syno-config.yml:
kubectl create secret -n synology-csi generic synology-config --from-file=syno-config.yml
- Apply the deployment:
kubectl apply -f deploy/<kubernetes version>
At this point you should be able to deploy persistent volume claims with the new storage class.
Install Details
Make sure that iscsiadm
is installed on all the nodes where you want this attacher to run.
Build
Build package
make
Build Docker Image
# e.g. docker build -t jparklab/synology-csi .
docker build [-f Dockerfile] -t <repo>[:<tag>] .
Build Docker Multi-architecture Images
In order to build a multiarch image, you must have Docker 19.03 or higher version that supports buildx
# e.g. ./build.sh -t jparklab/synology-csi
./build.sh -t <repo>[:<tag>] .
Test
Here we use gocsi to test the driver.
Create a Configuration File for Testing
You need to create a config file that contains information to connect to the Synology NAS API. See Create a config file below
Start Plugin Driver
# You can specify any name for nodeid
go run cmd/syno-csi-plugin/main.go \
--nodeid CSINode \
--endpoint tcp://127.0.0.1:10000 \
--synology-config syno-config.yml
Get plugin info
csc identity plugin-info -e tcp://127.0.0.1:10000
Create a volume
csc controller create-volume \
--req-bytes 2147483648 \
-e tcp://127.0.0.1:10000 \
test-volume
"8.1" 2147483648 "iqn"="iqn.2000-01.com.synology:kube-csi-test-volume" "mappingIndex"="1" "targetID"="8"
List Volumes
The first column in the output is the volume D
csc controller list-volumes -e tcp://127.0.0.1:10000
"8.1" 2147483648 "iqn"="iqn.2000-01.com.synology:kube-csi-test-volume" "mappingIndex"="1" "targetID"="8"
Delete the Volume
# e.g.
## csc controller delete-volume -e tcp://127.0.0.1:10000 8.1
csc controller delete-volume -e tcp://127.0.0.1:10000 <volume id>
Deploy
Ensure Kubernetes Cluster is Configured for CSI Drivers
For Kubernetes v1.12, and v1.13, feature gates need to be enabled to use CSI drivers. Follow instructions on https://kubernetes-csi.github.io/docs/csi-driver-object.html and https://kubernetes-csi.github.io/docs/csi-node-object.html to set up your Kubernetes cluster.
Create a config file
---
# syno-config.yml file
host: <hostname> # ip address or hostname of the Synology NAS
port: 5000 # change this if you use a port other than the default one
sslVerify: false # set this true to use https
username: <login> # username
password: <password> # password
loginApiVersion: 2 # Optional. Login version. From 2 to 6. Defaults to "2".
loginHttpMethod: <method> # Optional. Method. "GET", "POST" or "auto" (default). "auto" uses POST on version >= 6
sessionName: Core # You won't need to touch this value
enableSynoToken: no # Optional. Set to 'true' to enable syno token. Only for versions 3 and above.
enableDeviceToken: yes # Optional. Set to 'true' to enable device token. Only for versions 6 and above.
deviceId: <device-id> # Optional. Only for versions 6 and above. If not set, DEVICE_ID environment var is read.
deviceName: <name> # Optional. Only for versions 6 and above.
Create a Secret from the syno-config.yml file
kubectl create secret -n synology-csi generic synology-config --from-file=syno-config.yml
(Optional) Use https with self-signed CA
To use https with certificate that is issued by self-signed CA. CSI drivers needs to access the CA's certificate. You can add the certificate using configmap.
Create a configmap with the certificate
# e.g.
## kubectl create configmap synology-csi-ca-cert --from-file=self-ca.crt
kubectl create configmap synology-csi-ca-cert --from-file=<ca file>
Add the certificate to the deployments
# Add to attacher.yml, node.yml, and provisioner.yml
..
spec:
...
- name: csi-plugin
...
volumeMounts:
...
- mountPath: /etc/ssl/certs/self-ca.crt
name: cert
subPath: self-ca.crt # this should be the same as the file name that is used to create the configmap
...
volumes:
- configMap:
defaultMode: 0444
name: synology-csi-ca-cert
Deploy to Kubernetes
kubectl apply -f deploy/kubernetes/v1.15
Parameters for the StorageClass and Synology
By default, iscsi LUN will be created on Volume 1 (/volume1
) location with thin provisioning.
You can set parameters in storage_class.yml
to choose different locations or volume type.
apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: StorageClass
name: synology-iscsi-storage
...
provisioner: csi.synology.com
parameters:
location: '/volume2'
type: 'FILE' # if the location has ext4 file system, use FILE for thick provisioning, and THIN for thin provisioning.
# for btrfs file system, use BLUN_THICK for thick provisioning, and BLUN for thin provisioning.
reclaimPolicy: Delete
allowVolumeExpansion: true # support from Kubernetes 1.16
NOTE: if you have already created storage class, you would need to delete the storage class and recreate it.
Synology Configuration Details
As multiple logins are executed from this service at almost the same time, your Synology might block the
requests and you will see 407
errors (with version 6) or 400
errors in your log. It is advisable to
disable Auto block and IP checking if you want to get this working properly.
Make sure you do the following:
- go to Control Panel / Security / General: Enable "Enhance browser compatibility by skipping IP checking"
- go to Control Panel / Security / Account: Disable "Auto block"