Existing config maps are now replaced with rados omaps that help store information regarding the requested volume names and the rbd image names backing the same. Further to detect cluster, pool and which image a volume ID refers to, changes to volume ID encoding has been done as per provided design specification in the stateless ceph-csi proposal. Additional changes and updates, - Updated documentation - Updated manifests - Updated Helm chart - Addressed a few csi-test failures Signed-off-by: ShyamsundarR <srangana@redhat.com>
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CSI RBD Plugin
The RBD CSI plugin is able to provision new RBD images and attach and mount those to workloads.
Building
CSI RBD plugin can be compiled in a form of a binary file or in a form of a
Docker image. When compiled as a binary file, the result is stored in
_output/
directory with the name cephcsi
. When compiled as an image, it's
stored in the local Docker image store with name rbdplugin
.
Building binary:
make cephcsi
Building Docker image:
make image-rbdplugin
Configuration
Available command line arguments:
Option | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|
--endpoint |
unix://tmp/csi.sock |
CSI endpoint, must be a UNIX socket |
--drivername |
rbd.csi.ceph.com |
name of the driver (Kubernetes: provisioner field in StorageClass must correspond to this value) |
--nodeid |
empty | This node's ID |
--containerized |
true | Whether running in containerized mode |
--instanceid |
"default" | Unique ID distinguishing this instance of Ceph CSI among other instances, when sharing Ceph clusters across CSI instances for provisioning |
Available environmental variables:
HOST_ROOTFS
: rbdplugin searches /proc
directory under the directory set by HOST_ROOTFS
.
Available volume parameters:
Parameter | Required | Description |
---|---|---|
clusterID |
yes | String representing a Ceph cluster, must be unique across all Ceph clusters in use for provisioning, cannot be greater than 36 bytes in length, and should remain immutable for the lifetime of the Ceph cluster in use |
pool |
yes | Ceph pool into which the RBD image shall be created |
imageFormat |
no | RBD image format. Defaults to 2 . See man pages |
imageFeatures |
no | RBD image features. Available for imageFormat=2 . CSI RBD currently supports only layering feature. See man pages |
csi.storage.k8s.io/provisioner-secret-name , csi.storage.k8s.io/node-publish-secret-name |
yes (for Kubernetes) | name of the Kubernetes Secret object containing Ceph client credentials. Both parameters should have the same value |
csi.storage.k8s.io/provisioner-secret-namespace , csi.storage.k8s.io/node-publish-secret-namespace |
yes (for Kubernetes) | namespaces of the above Secret objects |
mounter |
no | if set to rbd-nbd , use rbd-nbd on nodes that have rbd-nbd and nbd kernel modules to map rbd images |
NOTE: An accompanying CSI configuration file, needs to be provided to the running pods. Refer to Creating CSI configuration for RBD based provisioning for more information.
NOTE: A suggested way to populate and retain uniquness of the clusterID is
to use the output of ceph fsid
of the Ceph cluster to be used for
provisioning.
Required secrets:
Admin credentials are required for provisioning new RBD images ADMIN_NAME
:
ADMIN_PASSWORD
- note that the key of the key-value pair is the name of the
client with admin privileges, and the value is its password
Deployment with Kubernetes
Requires Kubernetes 1.11
Your Kubernetes cluster must allow privileged pods (i.e. --allow-privileged
flag must be set to true for both the API server and the kubelet). Moreover, as
stated in the mount propagation
docs,
the Docker daemon of the cluster nodes must allow shared mounts.
YAML manifests are located in deploy/rbd/kubernetes
.
Deploy RBACs for sidecar containers and node plugins:
kubectl create -f csi-provisioner-rbac.yaml
kubectl create -f csi-nodeplugin-rbac.yaml
Those manifests deploy service accounts, cluster roles and cluster role bindings. These are shared for both RBD and CephFS CSI plugins, as they require the same permissions.
Deploy ConfigMap for CSI plugins:
kubectl create -f csi-config-map.yaml
The config map deploys an empty CSI configuration that is mounted as a volume within the Ceph CSI plugin pods. To add a specific Ceph clusters configuration details, refer to Creating CSI configuration for RBD based provisioning for more information.
Deploy CSI sidecar containers:
kubectl create -f csi-rbdplugin-provisioner.yaml
Deploys stateful set of provision which includes external-provisioner ,external-attacher,csi-snapshotter sidecar containers and CSI RBD plugin.
Deploy RBD CSI driver:
kubectl create -f csi-rbdplugin.yaml
Deploys a daemon set with two containers: CSI node-driver-registrar and the CSI RBD driver.
Verifying the deployment in Kubernetes
After successfully completing the steps above, you should see output similar to this:
$ kubectl get all
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
pod/csi-rbdplugin-fptqr 2/2 Running 0 21s
pod/csi-rbdplugin-provisioner-0 4/4 Running 0 22s
NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
service/csi-rbdplugin-provisioner ClusterIP 10.104.2.130 <none> 12345/TCP 23s
...
Once the CSI plugin configuration is updated with details from a Ceph cluster of choice, you can try deploying a demo pod from examples/rbd using the instructions provided to test the deployment further.
Deployment with Helm
The same requirements from the Kubernetes section apply here, i.e. Kubernetes version, privileged flag and shared mounts.
The Helm chart is located in deploy/rbd/helm
.
Deploy Helm Chart:
helm install ./deploy/rbd/helm
The Helm chart deploys all of the required resources to use the CSI RBD driver. After deploying the chart you can verify the deployment using the instructions above for verifying the deployment with Kubernetes