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  • License
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  • Created about 7 years ago
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Repository Details

Kubernetes external provisioner using Freenas as backend

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freenas-provisioner

FreeNAS-provisioner is a Kubernetes external provisioner. When a PersistentVolumeClaim appears on a Kube cluster, the provisioner will make the corresponding calls to the configured FreeNAS API to create a dataset and a NFS share usable by the claim. When the claim or the persistent volume is deleted, the provisioner deletes the previously created dataset and share.

See this for more info on external provisioner: https://github.com/kubernetes-incubator/external-storage

Usage

The scope of the provisioner allows for a single instance to service multiple classes (and/or FreeNAS servers). The provisioner itself can be deployed into the cluster or ran out of cluster, for example, directly on a FreeNAS server.

Each StorageClass should have a corresponding Secret created which contains the credentials and host information used to communicate with with FreeNAS API. In essence each Secret corresponds to a FreeNAS server.

The Secret namespace and name may be customized using the appropriate StorageClass parameters. By default kube-system and freenas-nfs are used. While multiple StorageClass resources may point to the same server and hence same Secret, it is recommended to create a new Secret for each StorageClass resource.

It is highly recommended to read deploy/claim.yaml to review available parameters and gain a better understanding of functionality and behavior.

FreeNAS Setup

You must manually create a dataset. You may simply use a pool as the parent dataset but it's recommended to create a dedicated dataset.

Additionally, you need to enabled the NFS service. It's highly recommended to configure the NFS service as v3. If v4 must be used then it's also recommended to enable the NFSv3 ownership model for NFSv4 option.

Provision the provisioner

Run it on the cluster:

kubectl apply -f deploy/rbac.yaml -f deploy/deployment.yaml

Alternatively, for advanced use-cases you may run the provisioner out of cluster including directly on the FreeNAS server if desired. Running out of cluster is not currently recommended.

./bin/freenas-provisioner-freebsd --kubeconfig=/path/to/kubeconfig.yaml

Create StorageClass and Secret

All the necessary resources are available in the deploy folder. At a minimum secret.yaml must be modified (remember to base64 the values) to reflect the server details. You may also want to read class.yaml to review available parameters of the storage class. For instance to set the datasetParentName.

kubectl apply -f deploy/secret.yaml -f deploy/class.yaml

Example usage

Next, create a PersistentVolumeClaim using the storage class (deploy/test-claim.yaml):

---
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
  name: freenas-test-pvc
spec:
  storageClassName: freenas-nfs
  accessModes:
    - ReadWriteMany
  resources:
    requests:
      storage: 1Mi

Use that claim on a testing pod (deploy/test-pod.yaml):

---
kind: Pod
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
  name: freenas-test-pod
spec:
  containers:
  - name: freenas-test-pod
    image: gcr.io/google_containers/busybox:1.24
    command:
      - "/bin/sh"
    args:
      - "-c"
      - "date >> /mnt/file.log && exit 0 || exit 1"
    volumeMounts:
      - name: freenas-test-volume
        mountPath: "/mnt"
  restartPolicy: "Never"
  volumes:
    - name: freenas-test-volume
      persistentVolumeClaim:
        claimName: freenas-test-pvc

The underlying dataset / NFS share should quickly be appearing up on FreeNAS side. In case of issue, follow the provisioner's logs using:

kubectl -n kube-system logs -f freenas-nfs-provisioner-<id>

Development

make vendor && make

Binary is located into bin/freenas-provisioner. It is compiled to be run on linux-amd64 by default, but you may run the following for different builds:

make vendor && make darwin
# OR
make vendor && make freebsd

To run locally with an appropriate $KUBECONFIG you may run:

./local-start.sh

To format code before committing:

make fmt

Release

  • Update the Makefile with the future new version to be released and pushed (docker image)
  • Update deploy/deployment.yaml with the new image version as well
  • Commit, push
  • Create a tag:
git tag v<version>
git push --tags
  • Once release is done by Travis, push the new docker image:
make push

Docs

TODO

Notes

To sniff API traffic between host and server:

sudo tcpdump -A -s 0 'host <server ip> and tcp port 80 and (((ip[2:2] - ((ip[0]&0xf)<<2)) - ((tcp[12]&0xf0)>>2)) != 0)'