Volumes
On-disk files in a container are ephemeral, which presents some problems for
non-trivial applications when running in containers. One problem occurs when
a container crashes or is stopped. Container state is not saved so all of the
files that were created or modified during the lifetime of the container are lost.
During a crash, kubelet restarts the container with a clean state.
Another problem occurs when multiple containers are running in a Pod
and
need to share files. It can be challenging to setup
and access a shared filesystem across all of the containers.
The Kubernetes volume abstraction
solves both of these problems.
Familiarity with Pods is suggested.
Background
Kubernetes supports many types of volumes. A Pod can use any number of volume types simultaneously. Ephemeral volume types have a lifetime of a pod, but persistent volumes exist beyond the lifetime of a pod. When a pod ceases to exist, Kubernetes destroys ephemeral volumes; however, Kubernetes does not destroy persistent volumes. For any kind of volume in a given pod, data is preserved across container restarts.
At its core, a volume is a directory, possibly with some data in it, which is accessible to the containers in a pod. How that directory comes to be, the medium that backs it, and the contents of it are determined by the particular volume type used.
To use a volume, specify the volumes to provide for the Pod in .spec.volumes
and declare where to mount those volumes into containers in .spec.containers[*].volumeMounts
.
A process in a container sees a filesystem view composed from the initial contents of
the container image, plus volumes
(if defined) mounted inside the container.
The process sees a root filesystem that initially matches the contents of the container
image.
Any writes to within that filesystem hierarchy, if allowed, affect what that process views
when it performs a subsequent filesystem access.
Volumes mount at the specified paths within
the image.
For each container defined within a Pod, you must independently specify where
to mount each volume that the container uses.
Volumes cannot mount within other volumes (but see Using subPath for a related mechanism). Also, a volume cannot contain a hard link to anything in a different volume.
Types of volumes
Kubernetes supports several types of volumes.
awsElasticBlockStore (deprecated)
In Kubernetes 1.31, all operations for the in-tree awsElasticBlockStore
type
are redirected to the ebs.csi.aws.com
CSI driver.
The AWSElasticBlockStore in-tree storage driver was deprecated in the Kubernetes v1.19 release and then removed entirely in the v1.27 release.
The Kubernetes project suggests that you use the AWS EBS third party storage driver instead.
azureDisk (deprecated)
In Kubernetes 1.31, all operations for the in-tree azureDisk
type
are redirected to the disk.csi.azure.com
CSI driver.
The AzureDisk in-tree storage driver was deprecated in the Kubernetes v1.19 release and then removed entirely in the v1.27 release.
The Kubernetes project suggests that you use the Azure Disk third party storage driver instead.
azureFile (deprecated)
Kubernetes v1.21 [deprecated]
The azureFile
volume type mounts a Microsoft Azure File volume (SMB 2.1 and 3.0)
into a pod.
For more details, see the azureFile
volume plugin.
azureFile CSI migration
Kubernetes v1.26 [stable]
The CSIMigration
feature for azureFile
, when enabled, redirects all plugin operations
from the existing in-tree plugin to the file.csi.azure.com
Container
Storage Interface (CSI) Driver. In order to use this feature, the Azure File CSI
Driver
must be installed on the cluster and the CSIMigrationAzureFile
feature gates must be enabled.
Azure File CSI driver does not support using same volume with different fsgroups. If
CSIMigrationAzureFile
is enabled, using same volume with different fsgroups won't be supported at all.
azureFile CSI migration complete
Kubernetes v1.21 [alpha]
To disable the azureFile
storage plugin from being loaded by the controller manager
and the kubelet, set the InTreePluginAzureFileUnregister
flag to true
.
cephfs (removed)
Kubernetes 1.31 does not include a cephfs
volume type.
The cephfs
in-tree storage driver was deprecated in the Kubernetes v1.28 release and then removed entirely in the v1.31 release.
cinder (deprecated)
In Kubernetes 1.31, all operations for the in-tree cinder
type
are redirected to the cinder.csi.openstack.org
CSI driver.
The OpenStack Cinder in-tree storage driver was deprecated in the Kubernetes v1.11 release and then removed entirely in the v1.26 release.
The Kubernetes project suggests that you use the OpenStack Cinder third party storage driver instead.
configMap
A ConfigMap
provides a way to inject configuration data into pods.
The data stored in a ConfigMap can be referenced in a volume of type
configMap
and then consumed by containerized applications running in a pod.
When referencing a ConfigMap, you provide the name of the ConfigMap in the
volume. You can customize the path to use for a specific
entry in the ConfigMap. The following configuration shows how to mount
the log-config
ConfigMap onto a Pod called configmap-pod
:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: configmap-pod
spec:
containers:
- name: test
image: busybox:1.28
command: ['sh', '-c', 'echo "The app is running!" && tail -f /dev/null']
volumeMounts:
- name: config-vol
mountPath: /etc/config
volumes:
- name: config-vol
configMap:
name: log-config
items:
- key: log_level
path: log_level
The log-config
ConfigMap is mounted as a volume, and all contents stored in
its log_level
entry are mounted into the Pod at path /etc/config/log_level
.
Note that this path is derived from the volume's mountPath
and the path
keyed with log_level
.
Note:
-
You must create a ConfigMap before you can use it.
-
A ConfigMap is always mounted as
readOnly
. -
A container using a ConfigMap as a
subPath
volume mount will not receive ConfigMap updates. -
Text data is exposed as files using the UTF-8 character encoding. For other character encodings, use
binaryData
.
downwardAPI
A downwardAPI
volume makes downward API
data available to applications. Within the volume, you can find the exposed
data as read-only files in plain text format.
Note:
A container using the downward API as asubPath
volume mount does not
receive updates when field values change.See Expose Pod Information to Containers Through Files to learn more.
emptyDir
For a Pod that defines an emptyDir
volume, the volume is created when the Pod is assigned to a node.
As the name says, the emptyDir
volume is initially empty. All containers in the Pod can read and write the same
files in the emptyDir
volume, though that volume can be mounted at the same
or different paths in each container. When a Pod is removed from a node for
any reason, the data in the emptyDir
is deleted permanently.
Note:
A container crashing does not remove a Pod from a node. The data in anemptyDir
volume
is safe across container crashes.Some uses for an emptyDir
are:
- scratch space, such as for a disk-based merge sort
- checkpointing a long computation for recovery from crashes
- holding files that a content-manager container fetches while a webserver container serves the data
The emptyDir.medium
field controls where emptyDir
volumes are stored. By
default emptyDir
volumes are stored on whatever medium that backs the node
such as disk, SSD, or network storage, depending on your environment. If you set
the emptyDir.medium
field to "Memory"
, Kubernetes mounts a tmpfs (RAM-backed
filesystem) for you instead. While tmpfs is very fast be aware that, unlike
disks, files you write count against the memory limit of the container that wrote them.
A size limit can be specified for the default medium, which limits the capacity
of the emptyDir
volume. The storage is allocated from node ephemeral
storage.
If that is filled up from another source (for example, log files or image
overlays), the emptyDir
may run out of capacity before this limit.
Note:
You can specify a size for memory backed volumes, provided that theSizeMemoryBackedVolumes
feature gate
is enabled in your cluster (this has been beta, and active by default, since the Kubernetes 1.22 release).
If you don't specify a volume size, memory backed volumes are sized to node allocatable memory.Caution:
Please check here for points to note in terms of resource management when using memory-backedemptyDir
.emptyDir configuration example
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: test-pd
spec:
containers:
- image: registry.k8s.io/test-webserver
name: test-container
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /cache
name: cache-volume
volumes:
- name: cache-volume
emptyDir:
sizeLimit: 500Mi
fc (fibre channel)
An fc
volume type allows an existing fibre channel block storage volume
to mount in a Pod. You can specify single or multiple target world wide names (WWNs)
using the parameter targetWWNs
in your Volume configuration. If multiple WWNs are specified,
targetWWNs expect that those WWNs are from multi-path connections.
Note:
You must configure FC SAN Zoning to allocate and mask those LUNs (volumes) to the target WWNs beforehand so that Kubernetes hosts can access them.See the fibre channel example for more details.
gcePersistentDisk (deprecated)
In Kubernetes 1.31, all operations for the in-tree gcePersistentDisk
type
are redirected to the pd.csi.storage.gke.io
CSI driver.
The gcePersistentDisk
in-tree storage driver was deprecated in the Kubernetes v1.17 release
and then removed entirely in the v1.28 release.
The Kubernetes project suggests that you use the Google Compute Engine Persistent Disk CSI third party storage driver instead.
gitRepo (deprecated)
Warning:
The gitRepo
volume type is deprecated.
To provision a Pod that has a Git repository mounted, you can
mount an
emptyDir
volume into an init container that
clones the repo using Git, then mount the
EmptyDir into the Pod's container.
You can restrict the use of gitRepo
volumes in your cluster using
policies such as
ValidatingAdmissionPolicy.
You can use the following Common Expression Language (CEL) expression as
part of a policy to reject use of gitRepo
volumes:
!has(object.spec.volumes) || !object.spec.volumes.exists(v, has(v.gitRepo))
.
A gitRepo
volume is an example of a volume plugin. This plugin
mounts an empty directory and clones a git repository into this directory
for your Pod to use.
Here is an example of a gitRepo
volume:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: server
spec:
containers:
- image: nginx
name: nginx
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /mypath
name: git-volume
volumes:
- name: git-volume
gitRepo:
repository: "git@somewhere:me/my-git-repository.git"
revision: "22f1d8406d464b0c0874075539c1f2e96c253775"
glusterfs (removed)
Kubernetes 1.31 does not include a glusterfs
volume type.
The GlusterFS in-tree storage driver was deprecated in the Kubernetes v1.25 release and then removed entirely in the v1.26 release.
hostPath
A hostPath
volume mounts a file or directory from the host node's filesystem
into your Pod. This is not something that most Pods will need, but it offers a
powerful escape hatch for some applications.
Warning:
Using the hostPath
volume type presents many security risks.
If you can avoid using a hostPath
volume, you should. For example,
define a local
PersistentVolume, and use that instead.
If you are restricting access to specific directories on the node using
admission-time validation, that restriction is only effective when you
additionally require that any mounts of that hostPath
volume are
read only. If you allow a read-write mount of any host path by an
untrusted Pod, the containers in that Pod may be able to subvert the
read-write host mount.
Take care when using hostPath
volumes, whether these are mounted as read-only
or as read-write, because:
- Access to the host filesystem can expose privileged system credentials (such as for the kubelet) or privileged APIs (such as the container runtime socket), that can be used for container escape or to attack other parts of the cluster.
- Pods with identical configuration (such as created from a PodTemplate) may behave differently on different nodes due to different files on the nodes.
hostPath
volume usage is not treated as ephemeral storage usage. You need to monitor the disk usage by yourself because excessivehostPath
disk usage will lead to disk pressure on the node.
Some uses for a hostPath
are:
- running a container that needs access to node-level system components
(such as a container that transfers system logs to a central location,
accessing those logs using a read-only mount of
/var/log
) - making a configuration file stored on the host system available read-only to a static pod; unlike normal Pods, static Pods cannot access ConfigMaps
hostPath
volume types
In addition to the required path
property, you can optionally specify a
type
for a hostPath
volume.
The available values for type
are:
Value | Behavior |
---|---|
"" |
Empty string (default) is for backward compatibility, which means that no checks will be performed before mounting the hostPath volume. |
DirectoryOrCreate |
If nothing exists at the given path, an empty directory will be created there as needed with permission set to 0755, having the same group and ownership with Kubelet. |
Directory |
A directory must exist at the given path |
FileOrCreate |
If nothing exists at the given path, an empty file will be created there as needed with permission set to 0644, having the same group and ownership with Kubelet. |
File |
A file must exist at the given path |
Socket |
A UNIX socket must exist at the given path |
CharDevice |
(Linux nodes only) A character device must exist at the given path |
BlockDevice |
(Linux nodes only) A block device must exist at the given path |
Caution:
TheFileOrCreate
mode does not create the parent directory of the file. If the parent directory
of the mounted file does not exist, the pod fails to start. To ensure that this mode works,
you can try to mount directories and files separately, as shown in the
FileOrCreate
example for hostPath
.Some files or directories created on the underlying hosts might only be
accessible by root. You then either need to run your process as root in a
privileged container
or modify the file permissions on the host to be able to read from
(or write to) a hostPath
volume.
hostPath configuration example
---
# This manifest mounts /data/foo on the host as /foo inside the
# single container that runs within the hostpath-example-linux Pod.
#
# The mount into the container is read-only.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: hostpath-example-linux
spec:
os: { name: linux }
nodeSelector:
kubernetes.io/os: linux
containers:
- name: example-container
image: registry.k8s.io/test-webserver
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /foo
name: example-volume
readOnly: true
volumes:
- name: example-volume
# mount /data/foo, but only if that directory already exists
hostPath:
path: /data/foo # directory location on host
type: Directory # this field is optional
---
# This manifest mounts C:\Data\foo on the host as C:\foo, inside the
# single container that runs within the hostpath-example-windows Pod.
#
# The mount into the container is read-only.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: hostpath-example-windows
spec:
os: { name: windows }
nodeSelector:
kubernetes.io/os: windows
containers:
- name: example-container
image: microsoft/windowsservercore:1709
volumeMounts:
- name: example-volume
mountPath: "C:\\foo"
readOnly: true
volumes:
# mount C:\Data\foo from the host, but only if that directory already exists
- name: example-volume
hostPath:
path: "C:\\Data\\foo" # directory location on host
type: Directory # this field is optional
hostPath FileOrCreate configuration example
The following manifest defines a Pod that mounts /var/local/aaa
inside the single container in the Pod. If the node does not
already have a path /var/local/aaa
, the kubelet creates
it as a directory and then mounts it into the Pod.
If /var/local/aaa
already exists but is not a directory,
the Pod fails. Additionally, the kubelet attempts to make
a file named /var/local/aaa/1.txt
inside that directory
(as seen from the host); if something already exists at
that path and isn't a regular file, the Pod fails.
Here's the example manifest:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: test-webserver
spec:
os: { name: linux }
nodeSelector:
kubernetes.io/os: linux
containers:
- name: test-webserver
image: registry.k8s.io/test-webserver:latest
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /var/local/aaa
name: mydir
- mountPath: /var/local/aaa/1.txt
name: myfile
volumes:
- name: mydir
hostPath:
# Ensure the file directory is created.
path: /var/local/aaa
type: DirectoryOrCreate
- name: myfile
hostPath:
path: /var/local/aaa/1.txt
type: FileOrCreate
image
Kubernetes v1.31 [alpha]
(enabled by default: false)
An image
volume source represents an OCI object (a container image or
artifact) which is available on the kubelet's host machine.
One example to use the image
volume source is:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: image-volume
spec:
containers:
- name: shell
command: ["sleep", "infinity"]
image: debian
volumeMounts:
- name: volume
mountPath: /volume
volumes:
- name: volume
image:
reference: quay.io/crio/artifact:v1
pullPolicy: IfNotPresent
The volume is resolved at pod startup depending on which pullPolicy
value is
provided:
Always
- the kubelet always attempts to pull the reference. If the pull fails, the kubelet sets the Pod to
Failed
. Never
- the kubelet never pulls the reference and only uses a local image or artifact. The Pod becomes
Failed
if any layers of the image aren't already present locally, or if the manifest for that image isn't already cached. IfNotPresent
- the kubelet pulls if the reference isn't already present on disk. The Pod becomes
Failed
if the reference isn't present and the pull fails.
The volume gets re-resolved if the pod gets deleted and recreated, which means that new remote content will become available on pod recreation. A failure to resolve or pull the image during pod startup will block containers from starting and may add significant latency. Failures will be retried using normal volume backoff and will be reported on the pod reason and message.
The types of objects that may be mounted by this volume are defined by the
container runtime implementation on a host machine and at minimum must include
all valid types supported by the container image field. The OCI object gets
mounted in a single directory (spec.containers[*].volumeMounts.mountPath
) by
will be mounted read-only. On Linux, the container runtime typically also mounts the
volume with file execution blocked (noexec
).
Beside that:
- Sub path mounts for containers are not supported
(
spec.containers[*].volumeMounts.subpath
). - The field
spec.securityContext.fsGroupChangePolicy
has no effect on this volume type. - The
AlwaysPullImages
Admission Controller does also work for this volume source like for container images.
The following fields are available for the image
type:
reference
- Artifact reference to be used. For example, you could specify
registry.k8s.io/conformance:v1.31.0
to load the files from the Kubernetes conformance test image. Behaves in the same way aspod.spec.containers[*].image
. Pull secrets will be assembled in the same way as for the container image by looking up node credentials, service account image pull secrets, and pod spec image pull secrets. This field is optional to allow higher level config management to default or override container images in workload controllers like Deployments and StatefulSets. More info about container images pullPolicy
- Policy for pulling OCI objects. Possible values are:
Always
,Never
orIfNotPresent
. Defaults toAlways
if:latest
tag is specified, orIfNotPresent
otherwise.
See the Use an Image Volume With a Pod example for more details on how to use the volume source.
iscsi
An iscsi
volume allows an existing iSCSI (SCSI over IP) volume to be mounted
into your Pod. Unlike emptyDir
, which is erased when a Pod is removed, the
contents of an iscsi
volume are preserved and the volume is merely
unmounted. This means that an iscsi volume can be pre-populated with data, and
that data can be shared between pods.
Note:
You must have your own iSCSI server running with the volume created before you can use it.A feature of iSCSI is that it can be mounted as read-only by multiple consumers simultaneously. This means that you can pre-populate a volume with your dataset and then serve it in parallel from as many Pods as you need. Unfortunately, iSCSI volumes can only be mounted by a single consumer in read-write mode. Simultaneous writers are not allowed.
See the iSCSI example for more details.
local
A local
volume represents a mounted local storage device such as a disk,
partition or directory.
Local volumes can only be used as a statically created PersistentVolume. Dynamic provisioning is not supported.
Compared to hostPath
volumes, local
volumes are used in a durable and
portable manner without manually scheduling pods to nodes. The system is aware
of the volume's node constraints by looking at the node affinity on the PersistentVolume.
However, local
volumes are subject to the availability of the underlying
node and are not suitable for all applications. If a node becomes unhealthy,
then the local
volume becomes inaccessible by the pod. The pod using this volume
is unable to run. Applications using local
volumes must be able to tolerate this
reduced availability, as well as potential data loss, depending on the
durability characteristics of the underlying disk.
The following example shows a PersistentVolume using a local
volume and
nodeAffinity
:
apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolume
metadata:
name: example-pv
spec:
capacity:
storage: 100Gi
volumeMode: Filesystem
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
persistentVolumeReclaimPolicy: Delete
storageClassName: local-storage
local:
path: /mnt/disks/ssd1
nodeAffinity:
required:
nodeSelectorTerms:
- matchExpressions:
- key: kubernetes.io/hostname
operator: In
values:
- example-node
You must set a PersistentVolume nodeAffinity
when using local
volumes.
The Kubernetes scheduler uses the PersistentVolume nodeAffinity
to schedule
these Pods to the correct node.
PersistentVolume volumeMode
can be set to "Block" (instead of the default
value "Filesystem") to expose the local volume as a raw block device.
When using local volumes, it is recommended to create a StorageClass with
volumeBindingMode
set to WaitForFirstConsumer
. For more details, see the
local StorageClass example.
Delaying volume binding ensures that the PersistentVolumeClaim binding decision
will also be evaluated with any other node constraints the Pod may have,
such as node resource requirements, node selectors, Pod affinity, and Pod anti-affinity.
An external static provisioner can be run separately for improved management of the local volume lifecycle. Note that this provisioner does not support dynamic provisioning yet. For an example on how to run an external local provisioner, see the local volume provisioner user guide.
Note:
The local PersistentVolume requires manual cleanup and deletion by the user if the external static provisioner is not used to manage the volume lifecycle.nfs
An nfs
volume allows an existing NFS (Network File System) share to be
mounted into a Pod. Unlike emptyDir
, which is erased when a Pod is
removed, the contents of an nfs
volume are preserved and the volume is merely
unmounted. This means that an NFS volume can be pre-populated with data, and
that data can be shared between pods. NFS can be mounted by multiple
writers simultaneously.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: test-pd
spec:
containers:
- image: registry.k8s.io/test-webserver
name: test-container
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /my-nfs-data
name: test-volume
volumes:
- name: test-volume
nfs:
server: my-nfs-server.example.com
path: /my-nfs-volume
readOnly: true
Note:
You must have your own NFS server running with the share exported before you can use it.
Also note that you can't specify NFS mount options in a Pod spec. You can either set mount options server-side or use /etc/nfsmount.conf. You can also mount NFS volumes via PersistentVolumes which do allow you to set mount options.
See the NFS example for an example of mounting NFS volumes with PersistentVolumes.
persistentVolumeClaim
A persistentVolumeClaim
volume is used to mount a
PersistentVolume into a Pod. PersistentVolumeClaims
are a way for users to "claim" durable storage (such as an iSCSI volume)
without knowing the details of the particular cloud environment.
See the information about PersistentVolumes for more details.
portworxVolume (deprecated)
Kubernetes v1.25 [deprecated]
A portworxVolume
is an elastic block storage layer that runs hyperconverged with
Kubernetes. Portworx fingerprints storage
in a server, tiers based on capabilities, and aggregates capacity across multiple servers.
Portworx runs in-guest in virtual machines or on bare metal Linux nodes.
A portworxVolume
can be dynamically created through Kubernetes or it can also
be pre-provisioned and referenced inside a Pod.
Here is an example Pod referencing a pre-provisioned Portworx volume:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: test-portworx-volume-pod
spec:
containers:
- image: registry.k8s.io/test-webserver
name: test-container
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /mnt
name: pxvol
volumes:
- name: pxvol
# This Portworx volume must already exist.
portworxVolume:
volumeID: "pxvol"
fsType: "<fs-type>"
Note:
Make sure you have an existing PortworxVolume with namepxvol
before using it in the Pod.For more details, see the Portworx volume examples.
Portworx CSI migration
Kubernetes v1.25 [beta]
By default, Kubernetes 1.31 attempts to migrate legacy
Portworx volumes to use CSI. (CSI migration for Portworx has been available since
Kubernetes v1.23, but was only turned on by default since the v1.31 release).
If you want to disable automatic migration, you can set the CSIMigrationPortworx
feature gate
to false
; you need to make that change for the kube-controller-manager and on
every relevant kubelet.
It redirects all plugin operations from the existing in-tree plugin to the
pxd.portworx.com
Container Storage Interface (CSI) Driver.
Portworx CSI Driver
must be installed on the cluster.
projected
A projected volume maps several existing volume sources into the same directory. For more details, see projected volumes.
rbd (removed)
Kubernetes 1.31 does not include a rbd
volume type.
The Rados Block Device (RBD) in-tree storage driver and its csi migration support were deprecated in the Kubernetes v1.28 release and then removed entirely in the v1.31 release.
secret
A secret
volume is used to pass sensitive information, such as passwords, to
Pods. You can store secrets in the Kubernetes API and mount them as files for
use by pods without coupling to Kubernetes directly. secret
volumes are
backed by tmpfs (a RAM-backed filesystem) so they are never written to
non-volatile storage.
Note:
-
You must create a Secret in the Kubernetes API before you can use it.
-
A Secret is always mounted as
readOnly
. -
A container using a Secret as a
subPath
volume mount will not receive Secret updates.
For more details, see Configuring Secrets.
vsphereVolume (deprecated)
Note:
The Kubernetes project recommends using the vSphere CSI out-of-tree storage driver instead.A vsphereVolume
is used to mount a vSphere VMDK volume into your Pod. The contents
of a volume are preserved when it is unmounted. It supports both VMFS and VSAN datastore.
For more information, see the vSphere volume examples.
vSphere CSI migration
Kubernetes v1.26 [stable]
In Kubernetes 1.31, all operations for the in-tree vsphereVolume
type
are redirected to the csi.vsphere.vmware.com
CSI driver.
vSphere CSI driver
must be installed on the cluster. You can find additional advice on how to migrate in-tree vsphereVolume
in VMware's documentation page
Migrating In-Tree vSphere Volumes to vSphere Container Storage Plug-in.
If vSphere CSI Driver is not installed volume operations can not be performed on the PV created with the in-tree vsphereVolume
type.
You must run vSphere 7.0u2 or later in order to migrate to the vSphere CSI driver.
If you are running a version of Kubernetes other than v1.31, consult the documentation for that version of Kubernetes.
Note:
The following StorageClass parameters from the built-in vsphereVolume
plugin are not supported by the vSphere CSI driver:
diskformat
hostfailurestotolerate
forceprovisioning
cachereservation
diskstripes
objectspacereservation
iopslimit
Existing volumes created using these parameters will be migrated to the vSphere CSI driver, but new volumes created by the vSphere CSI driver will not be honoring these parameters.
vSphere CSI migration complete
Kubernetes v1.19 [beta]
To turn off the vsphereVolume
plugin from being loaded by the controller manager and the kubelet, you need to set InTreePluginvSphereUnregister
feature flag to true
. You must install a csi.vsphere.vmware.com
CSI driver on all worker nodes.
Using subPath
Sometimes, it is useful to share one volume for multiple uses in a single pod.
The volumeMounts[*].subPath
property specifies a sub-path inside the referenced volume
instead of its root.
The following example shows how to configure a Pod with a LAMP stack (Linux Apache MySQL PHP)
using a single, shared volume. This sample subPath
configuration is not recommended
for production use.
The PHP application's code and assets map to the volume's html
folder and
the MySQL database is stored in the volume's mysql
folder. For example:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: my-lamp-site
spec:
containers:
- name: mysql
image: mysql
env:
- name: MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD
value: "rootpasswd"
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /var/lib/mysql
name: site-data
subPath: mysql
- name: php
image: php:7.0-apache
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /var/www/html
name: site-data
subPath: html
volumes:
- name: site-data
persistentVolumeClaim:
claimName: my-lamp-site-data
Using subPath with expanded environment variables
Kubernetes v1.17 [stable]
Use the subPathExpr
field to construct subPath
directory names from
downward API environment variables.
The subPath
and subPathExpr
properties are mutually exclusive.
In this example, a Pod
uses subPathExpr
to create a directory pod1
within
the hostPath
volume /var/log/pods
.
The hostPath
volume takes the Pod
name from the downwardAPI
.
The host directory /var/log/pods/pod1
is mounted at /logs
in the container.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: pod1
spec:
containers:
- name: container1
env:
- name: POD_NAME
valueFrom:
fieldRef:
apiVersion: v1
fieldPath: metadata.name
image: busybox:1.28
command: [ "sh", "-c", "while [ true ]; do echo 'Hello'; sleep 10; done | tee -a /logs/hello.txt" ]
volumeMounts:
- name: workdir1
mountPath: /logs
# The variable expansion uses round brackets (not curly brackets).
subPathExpr: $(POD_NAME)
restartPolicy: Never
volumes:
- name: workdir1
hostPath:
path: /var/log/pods
Resources
The storage media (such as Disk or SSD) of an emptyDir
volume is determined by the
medium of the filesystem holding the kubelet root dir (typically
/var/lib/kubelet
). There is no limit on how much space an emptyDir
or
hostPath
volume can consume, and no isolation between containers or between
pods.
To learn about requesting space using a resource specification, see how to manage resources.
Out-of-tree volume plugins
The out-of-tree volume plugins include Container Storage Interface (CSI), and also FlexVolume (which is deprecated). These plugins enable storage vendors to create custom storage plugins without adding their plugin source code to the Kubernetes repository.
Previously, all volume plugins were "in-tree". The "in-tree" plugins were built, linked, compiled, and shipped with the core Kubernetes binaries. This meant that adding a new storage system to Kubernetes (a volume plugin) required checking code into the core Kubernetes code repository.
Both CSI and FlexVolume allow volume plugins to be developed independent of the Kubernetes code base, and deployed (installed) on Kubernetes clusters as extensions.
For storage vendors looking to create an out-of-tree volume plugin, please refer to the volume plugin FAQ.
csi
Container Storage Interface (CSI) defines a standard interface for container orchestration systems (like Kubernetes) to expose arbitrary storage systems to their container workloads.
Please read the CSI design proposal for more information.
Note:
Support for CSI spec versions 0.2 and 0.3 are deprecated in Kubernetes v1.13 and will be removed in a future release.Note:
CSI drivers may not be compatible across all Kubernetes releases. Please check the specific CSI driver's documentation for supported deployments steps for each Kubernetes release and a compatibility matrix.Once a CSI compatible volume driver is deployed on a Kubernetes cluster, users
may use the csi
volume type to attach or mount the volumes exposed by the
CSI driver.
A csi
volume can be used in a Pod in three different ways:
- through a reference to a PersistentVolumeClaim
- with a generic ephemeral volume
- with a CSI ephemeral volume if the driver supports that
The following fields are available to storage administrators to configure a CSI persistent volume:
driver
: A string value that specifies the name of the volume driver to use. This value must correspond to the value returned in theGetPluginInfoResponse
by the CSI driver as defined in the CSI spec. It is used by Kubernetes to identify which CSI driver to call out to, and by CSI driver components to identify which PV objects belong to the CSI driver.volumeHandle
: A string value that uniquely identifies the volume. This value must correspond to the value returned in thevolume.id
field of theCreateVolumeResponse
by the CSI driver as defined in the CSI spec. The value is passed asvolume_id
on all calls to the CSI volume driver when referencing the volume.readOnly
: An optional boolean value indicating whether the volume is to be "ControllerPublished" (attached) as read only. Default is false. This value is passed to the CSI driver via thereadonly
field in theControllerPublishVolumeRequest
.fsType
: If the PV'sVolumeMode
isFilesystem
then this field may be used to specify the filesystem that should be used to mount the volume. If the volume has not been formatted and formatting is supported, this value will be used to format the volume. This value is passed to the CSI driver via theVolumeCapability
field ofControllerPublishVolumeRequest
,NodeStageVolumeRequest
, andNodePublishVolumeRequest
.volumeAttributes
: A map of string to string that specifies static properties of a volume. This map must correspond to the map returned in thevolume.attributes
field of theCreateVolumeResponse
by the CSI driver as defined in the CSI spec. The map is passed to the CSI driver via thevolume_context
field in theControllerPublishVolumeRequest
,NodeStageVolumeRequest
, andNodePublishVolumeRequest
.controllerPublishSecretRef
: A reference to the secret object containing sensitive information to pass to the CSI driver to complete the CSIControllerPublishVolume
andControllerUnpublishVolume
calls. This field is optional, and may be empty if no secret is required. If the Secret contains more than one secret, all secrets are passed.nodeExpandSecretRef
: A reference to the secret containing sensitive information to pass to the CSI driver to complete the CSINodeExpandVolume
call. This field is optional, and may be empty if no secret is required. If the object contains more than one secret, all secrets are passed. When you have configured secret data for node-initiated volume expansion, the kubelet passes that data via theNodeExpandVolume()
call to the CSI driver. All supported versions of Kubernetes offer thenodeExpandSecretRef
field, and have it available by default. Kubernetes releases prior to v1.25 did not include this support.- Enable the feature gate
named
CSINodeExpandSecret
for each kube-apiserver and for the kubelet on every node. Since Kubernetes version 1.27 this feature has been enabled by default and no explicit enablement of the feature gate is required. You must also be using a CSI driver that supports or requires secret data during node-initiated storage resize operations. nodePublishSecretRef
: A reference to the secret object containing sensitive information to pass to the CSI driver to complete the CSINodePublishVolume
call. This field is optional, and may be empty if no secret is required. If the secret object contains more than one secret, all secrets are passed.nodeStageSecretRef
: A reference to the secret object containing sensitive information to pass to the CSI driver to complete the CSINodeStageVolume
call. This field is optional, and may be empty if no secret is required. If the Secret contains more than one secret, all secrets are passed.
CSI raw block volume support
Kubernetes v1.18 [stable]
Vendors with external CSI drivers can implement raw block volume support in Kubernetes workloads.
You can set up your PersistentVolume/PersistentVolumeClaim with raw block volume support as usual, without any CSI specific changes.
CSI ephemeral volumes
Kubernetes v1.25 [stable]
You can directly configure CSI volumes within the Pod specification. Volumes specified in this way are ephemeral and do not persist across pod restarts. See Ephemeral Volumes for more information.
For more information on how to develop a CSI driver, refer to the kubernetes-csi documentation
Windows CSI proxy
Kubernetes v1.22 [stable]
CSI node plugins need to perform various privileged operations like scanning of disk devices and mounting of file systems. These operations differ for each host operating system. For Linux worker nodes, containerized CSI node plugins are typically deployed as privileged containers. For Windows worker nodes, privileged operations for containerized CSI node plugins is supported using csi-proxy, a community-managed, stand-alone binary that needs to be pre-installed on each Windows node.
For more details, refer to the deployment guide of the CSI plugin you wish to deploy.
Migrating to CSI drivers from in-tree plugins
Kubernetes v1.25 [stable]
The CSIMigration
feature directs operations against existing in-tree
plugins to corresponding CSI plugins (which are expected to be installed and configured).
As a result, operators do not have to make any
configuration changes to existing Storage Classes, PersistentVolumes or PersistentVolumeClaims
(referring to in-tree plugins) when transitioning to a CSI driver that supersedes an in-tree plugin.
Note:
Existing PVs created by a in-tree volume plugin can still be used in the future without any configuration changes, even after the migration to CSI is completed for that volume type, and even after you upgrade to a version of Kubernetes that doesn't have compiled-in support for that kind of storage.
As part of that migration, you - or another cluster administrator - must have installed and configured the appropriate CSI driver for that storage. The core of Kubernetes does not install that software for you.
After that migration, you can also define new PVCs and PVs that refer to the legacy, built-in storage integrations. Provided you have the appropriate CSI driver installed and configured, the PV creation continues to work, even for brand new volumes. The actual storage management now happens through the CSI driver.
The operations and features that are supported include: provisioning/delete, attach/detach, mount/unmount and resizing of volumes.
In-tree plugins that support CSIMigration
and have a corresponding CSI driver implemented
are listed in Types of Volumes.
The following in-tree plugins support persistent storage on Windows nodes:
flexVolume (deprecated)
Kubernetes v1.23 [deprecated]
FlexVolume is an out-of-tree plugin interface that uses an exec-based model to interface with storage drivers. The FlexVolume driver binaries must be installed in a pre-defined volume plugin path on each node and in some cases the control plane nodes as well.
Pods interact with FlexVolume drivers through the flexVolume
in-tree volume plugin.
For more details, see the FlexVolume README document.
The following FlexVolume plugins, deployed as PowerShell scripts on the host, support Windows nodes:
Note:
FlexVolume is deprecated. Using an out-of-tree CSI driver is the recommended way to integrate external storage with Kubernetes.
Maintainers of FlexVolume driver should implement a CSI Driver and help to migrate users of FlexVolume drivers to CSI. Users of FlexVolume should move their workloads to use the equivalent CSI Driver.
Mount propagation
Caution:
Mount propagation is a low-level feature that does not work consistently on all volume types. It is recommended to use only withhostPath
or in-memory emptyDir
volumes. See this discussion
for more context.Mount propagation allows for sharing volumes mounted by a container to other containers in the same pod, or even to other pods on the same node.
Mount propagation of a volume is controlled by the mountPropagation
field
in containers[*].volumeMounts
. Its values are:
-
None
- This volume mount will not receive any subsequent mounts that are mounted to this volume or any of its subdirectories by the host. In similar fashion, no mounts created by the container will be visible on the host. This is the default mode.This mode is equal to
rprivate
mount propagation as described inmount(8)
However, the CRI runtime may choose
rslave
mount propagation (i.e.,HostToContainer
) instead, whenrprivate
propagation is not applicable. cri-dockerd (Docker) is known to chooserslave
mount propagation when the mount source contains the Docker daemon's root directory (/var/lib/docker
). -
HostToContainer
- This volume mount will receive all subsequent mounts that are mounted to this volume or any of its subdirectories.In other words, if the host mounts anything inside the volume mount, the container will see it mounted there.
Similarly, if any Pod with
Bidirectional
mount propagation to the same volume mounts anything there, the container withHostToContainer
mount propagation will see it.This mode is equal to
rslave
mount propagation as described in themount(8)
-
Bidirectional
- This volume mount behaves the same theHostToContainer
mount. In addition, all volume mounts created by the container will be propagated back to the host and to all containers of all pods that use the same volume.A typical use case for this mode is a Pod with a FlexVolume or CSI driver or a Pod that needs to mount something on the host using a
hostPath
volume.This mode is equal to
rshared
mount propagation as described in themount(8)
Warning:
Bidirectional
mount propagation can be dangerous. It can damage the host operating system and therefore it is allowed only in privileged containers. Familiarity with Linux kernel behavior is strongly recommended. In addition, any volume mounts created by containers in pods must be destroyed (unmounted) by the containers on termination.
Read-only mounts
A mount can be made read-only by setting the .spec.containers[].volumeMounts[].readOnly
field to true
.
This does not make the volume itself read-only, but that specific container will
not be able to write to it.
Other containers in the Pod may mount the same volume as read-write.
On Linux, read-only mounts are not recursively read-only by default.
For example, consider a Pod which mounts the hosts /mnt
as a hostPath
volume. If
there is another filesystem mounted read-write on /mnt/<SUBMOUNT>
(such as tmpfs,
NFS, or USB storage), the volume mounted into the container(s) will also have a writeable
/mnt/<SUBMOUNT>
, even if the mount itself was specified as read-only.
Recursive read-only mounts
Kubernetes v1.31 [beta]
(enabled by default: true)
Recursive read-only mounts can be enabled by setting the
RecursiveReadOnlyMounts
feature gate
for kubelet and kube-apiserver, and setting the .spec.containers[].volumeMounts[].recursiveReadOnly
field for a pod.
The allowed values are:
-
Disabled
(default): no effect. -
Enabled
: makes the mount recursively read-only. Needs all the following requirements to be satisfied:readOnly
is set totrue
mountPropagation
is unset, or, set toNone
- The host is running with Linux kernel v5.12 or later
- The CRI-level container runtime supports recursive read-only mounts
- The OCI-level container runtime supports recursive read-only mounts. It will fail if any of these is not true.
-
IfPossible
: attempts to applyEnabled
, and falls back toDisabled
if the feature is not supported by the kernel or the runtime class.
Example:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: rro
spec:
volumes:
- name: mnt
hostPath:
# tmpfs is mounted on /mnt/tmpfs
path: /mnt
containers:
- name: busybox
image: busybox
args: ["sleep", "infinity"]
volumeMounts:
# /mnt-rro/tmpfs is not writable
- name: mnt
mountPath: /mnt-rro
readOnly: true
mountPropagation: None
recursiveReadOnly: Enabled
# /mnt-ro/tmpfs is writable
- name: mnt
mountPath: /mnt-ro
readOnly: true
# /mnt-rw/tmpfs is writable
- name: mnt
mountPath: /mnt-rw
When this property is recognized by kubelet and kube-apiserver,
the .status.containerStatuses[].volumeMounts[].recursiveReadOnly
field is set to either
Enabled
or Disabled
.
Implementations
The following container runtimes are known to support recursive read-only mounts.
CRI-level:
- containerd, since v2.0
- CRI-O, since v1.30
OCI-level:
What's next
Follow an example of deploying WordPress and MySQL with Persistent Volumes.
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