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WARNING

This project was made before the local volume provisioner could detect nvme drives by pattern. The recommended usage is now here: https://github.com/Azure/kubernetes-volume-drivers/tree/master/local#usage

You still may need this if you want to RAID multiple disks, which the local provisioner doesn't normally support via patterns.

az-local-pvc

The goal of this project is to enable using NVMe SSDs e.g. on Azure LSv2 VMs with Kubernetes workloads

The project uses two pods to achieve this:

  • bootstrapper to format and mount disks initially
  • sig-storage-static-local-provisioner to scan local disks and create PVs for them.

Experimental

Code is new and may change or be removed in future versions. Please try it out and provide feedback. If it addresses a use-case that is important to you please open an issue to discuss it further.

Demo

asciicast

Usage

Under manifests/ there are several raw Kubernetes yaml files as well as a Kustomize manifest.

Required:

  • local-storage-formatter.yaml
  • local-storage-provisioner.yaml
  • rbac.yaml
  • storage-class.yaml

The kustomize manifest directly applies only the required manifests.

kustomize build manifests/ | kubectl apply -f -

or

kubectl apply -f manifests/local-storage-formatter.yaml
kubectl apply -f manifests/local-storage-provisioner.yaml
kubectl apply -f manifests/rbac.yaml
kubectl apply -f manifests/storage-class.yaml

# Wait for rollout
kubectl rollout status daemonset/local-storage-provisioner
kubectl rollout status daemonset/local-storage-formatter

local-storage-consumer.yaml contains a PVC using the newly created storage class and a pod with a claim for that PVC. Apply this and the pod should schedule and run successfully. Deleting that manifest deletes both the pod and the PVC, so the pv status via kubctl get pv -w should cycle from bound, to released, to terminated, to available within ~1-2 minutes.

kubectl apply -f manifests/local-storage-consumer.yaml

# wait for running
kubectl rollout status deploy/local-storage-consumer

# delete it
kubectl delete -f manifests/local-storage-consumer.yaml

# wait for pv to cycle back to available.
kubectl get pv -w

# clean up formatter and provisioner, if desired
kubectl delete -f manifests/local-storage-formatter.yaml
kubectl delete -f manifests/local-storage-provisioner.yaml
kubectl delete -f manifests/rbac.yaml
kubectl delete -f manifests/storage-class.yaml

Mechanics

Disclaimer: these are under rapid change and may not always be accurate.

  • Enumerate /sys/block/* for devices that look like nvme (name contains "nvme")
  • Get UUID. If populated, disk has been formatted.
  • Using known UUID, check for /pv-disks/$UUID. If it doesn't exist, create it.
  • Check if /dev/nvme* is mounted by invoking mount.static and reading line by line for /dev/nvme*
    • If it isn't, mount it at /pv-disks/$UUID
    • If it is, but not at /pv-disks/$UUID, error? or unmount, delete old mount point, and remount
    • If it is and it's at /pv-disks/$UUID, do nothing. We are done.

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Use NVMe SSDs on Azure VMs with your Kubernetes workloads

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