Local Storage
If you want to use replicated storage leveraging disk space from a local disk with Talos Linux installed, OpenEBS Jiva is a great option. This requires installing the iscsi-tools system extension.
Since OpenEBS Jiva is a replicated storage, it’s recommended to have at least three nodes where sufficient local disk space is available. The documentation will follow installing OpenEBS Jiva via the offical Helm chart. Since Talos is different from standard Operating Systems, the OpenEBS components need a little tweaking after the Helm installation. Refer to the OpenEBS Jiva documentation if you need further customization.
NB: Also note that the Talos nodes need to be upgraded with
--preserve
set while running OpenEBS Jiva, otherwise you risk losing data. Even though it’s possible to recover data from other replicas if the node is wiped during an upgrade, this can require extra operational knowledge to recover, so it’s highly recommended to use--preserve
to avoid data loss.
Preparing the nodes
Create a machine config patch with the contents below and save as patch.yaml
- op: add
path: /machine/install/extensions
value:
- image: ghcr.io/siderolabs/iscsi-tools:v0.1.1
- op: add
path: /machine/kubelet/extraMounts
value:
- destination: /var/openebs/local
type: bind
source: /var/openebs/local
options:
- bind
- rshared
- rw
Apply the machine config to all the nodes using talosctl:
talosctl -e <endpoint ip/hostname> -n <node ip/hostname> patch mc -p @patch.yaml
To install the system extension, the node needs to be upgraded. If there is no new release of Talos, the node can be upgraded to the same version as the existing Talos version.
Run the following command on each nodes subsequently:
talosctl -e <endpoint ip/hostname> -n <node ip/hostname> upgrade --image=ghcr.io/siderolabs/installer:v1.1.1
Once the node has upgraded and booted successfully the extension status can be verfied by running the following command:
talosctl -e <endpoint ip/hostname> -n <node ip/hostname> get extensions
An output similar to below can be observed:
NODE NAMESPACE TYPE ID VERSION NAME VERSION
192.168.20.61 runtime ExtensionStatus 000.ghcr.io-siderolabs-iscsi-tools-v0.1.1 1 iscsi-tools v0.1.1
The service status can be checked by running the following command:
talosctl -e <endpoint ip/hostname> -n <node ip/hostname> services
You should see that the ext-tgtd
and the ext-iscsid
services are running.
NODE SERVICE STATE HEALTH LAST CHANGE LAST EVENT
192.168.20.51 apid Running OK 64h57m15s ago Health check successful
192.168.20.51 containerd Running OK 64h57m23s ago Health check successful
192.168.20.51 cri Running OK 64h57m20s ago Health check successful
192.168.20.51 etcd Running OK 64h55m29s ago Health check successful
192.168.20.51 ext-iscsid Running ? 64h57m19s ago Started task ext-iscsid (PID 4040) for container ext-iscsid
192.168.20.51 ext-tgtd Running ? 64h57m19s ago Started task ext-tgtd (PID 3999) for container ext-tgtd
192.168.20.51 kubelet Running OK 38h14m10s ago Health check successful
192.168.20.51 machined Running ? 64h57m29s ago Service started as goroutine
192.168.20.51 trustd Running OK 64h57m19s ago Health check successful
192.168.20.51 udevd Running OK 64h57m21s ago Health check successful
Install OpenEBS Jiva
helm repo add openebs-jiva https://openebs.github.io/jiva-operator
helm repo update
helm upgrade --install --create-namespace --namespace openebs --version 3.2.0 openebs-jiva openebs-jiva/jiva
This will create a storage class named openebs-jiva-csi-default
which can be used for workloads.
The storage class named openebs-hostpath
is used by jiva to create persistent volumes backed by local storage and then used for replicated storage by the jiva controller.
Patching the jiva installation
Since Jiva assumes iscisd
to be running natively on the host and not as a Talos extension service, we need to modify the CSI node daemonset to enable it to find the PID of the iscsid
service.
The default config map used by Jiva also needs to be modified so that it can execute iscsiadm
commands inside the PID namespace of the iscsid
service.
Start by creating a configmap definition named config.yaml
as below:
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
labels:
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: pulumi
name: openebs-jiva-csi-iscsiadm
namespace: openebs
data:
iscsiadm: |
#!/bin/sh
iscsid_pid=$(pgrep iscsid)
nsenter --mount="/proc/${iscsid_pid}/ns/mnt" --net="/proc/${iscsid_pid}/ns/net" -- /usr/local/sbin/iscsiadm "$@"
Replace the existing config map with the above config map by running the following command:
kubectl --namespace openebs apply --filename config.yaml
Now we need to update the jiva CSI daemonset to run with hostPID: true
so it can find the PID of the iscsid
service, by running the following command:
kubectl --namespace openebs patch daemonset openebs-jiva-csi-node --type=json --patch '[{"op": "add", "path": "/spec/template/spec/hostPID", "value": true}]'
Testing a simple workload
In order to test the Jiva installation, let’s first create a PVC referencing the openebs-jiva-csi-default
storage class:
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
name: example-jiva-csi-pvc
spec:
storageClassName: openebs-jiva-csi-default
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
resources:
requests:
storage: 4Gi
and then create a deployment using the above PVC:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: fio
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
name: fio
replicas: 1
strategy:
type: Recreate
rollingUpdate: null
template:
metadata:
labels:
name: fio
spec:
containers:
- name: perfrunner
image: openebs/tests-fio
command: ["/bin/bash"]
args: ["-c", "while true ;do sleep 50; done"]
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /datadir
name: fio-vol
volumes:
- name: fio-vol
persistentVolumeClaim:
claimName: example-jiva-csi-pvc
You can clean up the test resources by running the following command:
kubectl delete deployment fio
kubectl delete pvc example-jiva-csi-pvc