ceph-csi/examples/README.md
Madhu Rajanna 3161a6b060 util: add support for the nsenter
add support to run rbd map and mount -t
commands with the nsenter.

complete design of pod/multus network
is added here https://github.com/rook/rook/
blob/master/design/ceph/multus-network.md#csi-pods

Signed-off-by: Madhu Rajanna <madhupr007@gmail.com>
(cherry picked from commit 7b2aef0d81)
2022-04-08 14:44:20 +00:00

299 lines
9.5 KiB
Markdown

# How to test RBD and CephFS plugins with Kubernetes 1.14+
## Deploying Ceph-CSI services
Create [ceph-config](./ceph-conf.yaml) configmap using the following command.
```bash
kubectl apply -f ./ceph-conf.yaml
```
Both `rbd` and `cephfs` directories contain `plugin-deploy.sh` and
`plugin-teardown.sh` helper scripts. You can use those to help you
deploy/teardown RBACs, sidecar containers and the plugin in one go.
By default, they look for the YAML manifests in
`../../deploy/{rbd,cephfs}/kubernetes`.
You can override this path by running
```bash
./plugin-deploy.sh /path/to/my/manifests
```
## Creating CSI configuration
The CSI plugin requires configuration information regarding the Ceph cluster(s),
that would host the dynamically or statically provisioned volumes. This
is provided by adding a per-cluster identifier (referred to as clusterID), and
the required monitor details for the same, as in the provided [sample config
map](./csi-config-map-sample.yaml).
Gather the following information from the Ceph cluster(s) of choice,
* Ceph monitor list
* Typically in the output of `ceph mon dump`
* Used to prepare a list of `monitors` in the CSI configuration file
* Ceph Cluster fsid
* If choosing to use the Ceph cluster fsid as the unique value of clusterID,
* Output of `ceph fsid`
* Alternatively, choose a `<cluster-id>` value that is distinct per Ceph
cluster in use by this kubernetes cluster
Update the [sample configmap](./csi-config-map-sample.yaml) with values
from a Ceph cluster and replace `<cluster-id>` with the chosen clusterID, to
create the manifest for the configmap which can be updated in the cluster
using the following command,
```bash
kubectl replace -f ./csi-config-map-sample.yaml
```
Storage class and snapshot class, using `<cluster-id>` as the value for the
option `clusterID`, can now be created on the cluster.
## Running CephCSI with pod networking
The current problem with Pod Networking, is when a CephFS/RBD volume is mounted
in a pod using Ceph CSI and then the CSI CephFS/RBD plugin is restarted or
terminated (e.g. by restarting or deleting its DaemonSet), all operations on
the volume become blocked, even after restarting the CSI pods.
The only workaround is to restart the node where the Ceph CSI plugin pod was
restarted. This can be mitigated by running the `rbd map`/`mount -t` commands
in a different network namespace which does not get deleted when the CSI
CephFS/RBD plugin is restarted or terminated.
If someone wants to run the CephCSI with the pod networking they can still do
by setting the `netNamespaceFilePath`. If this path is set CephCSI will execute
the `rbd map`/`mount -t` commands after entering the [network
namespace](https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man7/network_namespaces.7.html)
specified by `netNamespaceFilePath` with the
[nsenter](https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man1/nsenter.1.html) command.
`netNamespaceFilePath` should point to the network namespace of some
long-running process, typically it would be a symlink to
`/proc/<long running process id>/ns/net`.
The long-running process can also be another pod which is a Daemonset which
never restarts. This Pod should only be stopped and restarted when a node is
stopped so that volume operations do not become blocked. The new DaemonSet pod
can contain a single container, responsible for holding its pod network alive.
It is used as a passthrough by the CephCSI plugin pod which when mounting or
mapping will use the network namespace of this pod.
Once the pod is created get its PID and create a symlink to
`/proc/<PID>/ns/net` in the hostPath volume shared with the csi-plugin pod and
specify the path in the `netNamespaceFilePath` option.
*Note* This Pod should have `hostPID: true` in the Pod Spec.
## Deploying the storage class
Once the plugin is successfully deployed, you'll need to customize
`storageclass.yaml` and `secret.yaml` manifests to reflect your Ceph cluster
setup.
Please consult the documentation for info about available parameters.
After configuring the secrets, monitors, etc. you can deploy a
testing Pod mounting a RBD image / CephFS volume:
```bash
kubectl create -f secret.yaml
kubectl create -f storageclass.yaml
kubectl create -f pvc.yaml
kubectl create -f pod.yaml
```
Other helper scripts:
* `logs.sh` output of the plugin
* `exec-bash.sh` logs into the plugin's container and runs bash
### How to test RBD Snapshot feature
Before continuing, make sure you enabled the required
feature gate `VolumeSnapshotDataSource=true` in your Kubernetes cluster.
In the `examples/rbd` directory you will find two files related to snapshots:
[snapshotclass.yaml](./rbd/snapshotclass.yaml) and
[snapshot.yaml](./rbd/snapshot.yaml).
Once you created your RBD volume, you'll need to customize at least
`snapshotclass.yaml` and make sure the `clusterid` parameter matches
your Ceph cluster setup.
If you followed the documentation to create the rbdplugin, you shouldn't
have to edit any other file.
Note that it is recommended to create a volume snapshot or a PVC clone
only when the PVC is not in use.
After configuring everything you needed, deploy the snapshot class:
```bash
kubectl create -f snapshotclass.yaml
```
Verify that the snapshot class was created:
```console
$ kubectl get volumesnapshotclass
NAME AGE
csi-rbdplugin-snapclass 4s
```
Create a snapshot from the existing PVC:
```bash
kubectl create -f snapshot.yaml
```
To verify if your volume snapshot has successfully been created, run the following:
```console
$ kubectl get volumesnapshot
NAME AGE
rbd-pvc-snapshot 6s
```
To check the status of the snapshot, run the following:
```bash
$ kubectl describe volumesnapshot rbd-pvc-snapshot
Name: rbd-pvc-snapshot
Namespace: default
Labels: <none>
Annotations: <none>
API Version: snapshot.storage.k8s.io/v1alpha1
Kind: VolumeSnapshot
Metadata:
Creation Timestamp: 2019-02-06T08:52:34Z
Finalizers:
snapshot.storage.kubernetes.io/volumesnapshot-protection
Generation: 5
Resource Version: 84239
Self Link: /apis/snapshot.storage.k8s.io/v1alpha1/namespaces/default/volumesnapshots/rbd-pvc-snapshot
UID: 8b9b5740-29ec-11e9-8e0f-b8ca3aad030b
Spec:
Snapshot Class Name: csi-rbdplugin-snapclass
Snapshot Content Name: snapcontent-8b9b5740-29ec-11e9-8e0f-b8ca3aad030b
Source:
API Group: <nil>
Kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
Name: rbd-pvc
Status:
Creation Time: 2019-02-06T08:52:34Z
Ready To Use: true
Restore Size: 1Gi
Events: <none>
```
To be sure everything is OK you can run `rbd snap ls [your-pvc-name]` inside
one of your Ceph pod.
To restore the snapshot to a new PVC, deploy
[pvc-restore.yaml](./rbd/pvc-restore.yaml) and a testing pod
[pod-restore.yaml](./rbd/pod-restore.yaml):
```bash
kubectl create -f pvc-restore.yaml
kubectl create -f pod-restore.yaml
```
### How to test RBD MULTI_NODE_MULTI_WRITER BLOCK feature
Requires feature-gates: `BlockVolume=true` `CSIBlockVolume=true`
*NOTE* The MULTI_NODE_MULTI_WRITER capability is only available for
Volumes that are of access_type `block`
*WARNING* This feature is strictly for workloads that know how to deal
with concurrent access to the Volume (eg Active/Passive applications).
Using RWX modes on non clustered file systems with applications trying
to simultaneously access the Volume will likely result in data corruption!
Following are examples for issuing a request for a `Block`
`ReadWriteMany` Claim, and using the resultant Claim for a POD
```yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
metadata:
name: block-pvc
spec:
accessModes:
- ReadWriteMany
volumeMode: Block
resources:
requests:
storage: 1Gi
storageClassName: csi-rbd-sc
```
Create a POD that uses this PVC:
```yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: my-pod
spec:
containers:
- name: my-container
image: docker.io/library/debian:latest
command: ["/bin/bash", "-c"]
args: [ "tail -f /dev/null" ]
volumeDevices:
- devicePath: /dev/rbdblock
name: my-volume
imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
volumes:
- name: my-volume
persistentVolumeClaim:
claimName: block-pvc
```
Now, we can create a second POD (ensure the POD is scheduled on a different
node; multiwriter single node works without this feature) that also uses this
PVC at the same time, again wait for the pod to enter running state, and verify
the block device is available.
```yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: another-pod
spec:
containers:
- name: my-container
image: docker.io/library/debian:latest
command: ["/bin/bash", "-c"]
args: [ "tail -f /dev/null" ]
volumeDevices:
- devicePath: /dev/rbdblock
name: my-volume
imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
volumes:
- name: my-volume
persistentVolumeClaim:
claimName: block-pvc
```
Wait for the PODs to enter Running state, check that our block device
is available in the container at `/dev/rdbblock` in both containers:
```bash
$ kubectl exec -it my-pod -- fdisk -l /dev/rbdblock
Disk /dev/rbdblock: 1 GiB, 1073741824 bytes, 2097152 sectors
Units: sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 4194304 bytes / 4194304 bytes
```
```bash
$ kubectl exec -it another-pod -- fdisk -l /dev/rbdblock
Disk /dev/rbdblock: 1 GiB, 1073741824 bytes, 2097152 sectors
Units: sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 4194304 bytes / 4194304 bytes
```