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heketi's Introduction

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In this doc I will explain how we can use dynamic volume provisioning in Kubernetes with GlusterFS and Heketi API

We're going to create heketi api as pod on kubernetes and we're going to use ssh executor for heketi api to communicate with glusterfs nodes, all glusterfs servers are going to be installed on baremetal hosts directly, and that's why we'll be using ssh instead of kubernetes executor.

It is very important that only one replica of heketi is created and running at any time, and this is required because of heketi db on which only one instance of heketi can have read-write permissions (lock acquired), also if pod is terminated, kubernetes replication controller will make sure that new heketi pod is up and running.

Install

GlusterFS

GlusterFS server has to be installed on all Kubernetes nodes (excluding master nodes)

Add latest glusterfs repo

apt install software-properties-common
add-apt-repository ppa:gluster/glusterfs-3.10

Install dependencies

apt install thin-provisioning-tools

Finally install glusterfs-server

apt install glusterfs-server glusterfs-client

Check glusterfs-server status

systemctl status glusterfs-server.service

Add label on all Kubernetes nodes with GlusterFS

kubectl label node node1 storagenode=glusterfs
kubectl label node node2 storagenode=glusterfs
kubectl label node node3 storagenode=glusterfs

Heketi CLI

Heketi CLI can be installed wherever you want, preferably on Kubernetes master nodes or on your local machine

HEKETI_BIN="heketi-cli"      # heketi or heketi-cli
HEKETI_VERSION="5.0.0"       # latest heketi version => https://github.com/heketi/heketi/releases
HEKETI_OS="linux"            # linux or darwin

curl -SL https://github.com/heketi/heketi/releases/download/v${HEKETI_VERSION}/heketi-v${HEKETI_VERSION}.${HEKETI_OS}.amd64.tar.gz -o /tmp/heketi-v${HEKETI_VERSION}.${HEKETI_OS}.amd64.tar.gz && \
tar xzvf /tmp/heketi-v${HEKETI_VERSION}.${HEKETI_OS}.amd64.tar.gz -C /tmp && \
rm -vf /tmp/heketi-v${HEKETI_VERSION}.${HEKETI_OS}.amd64.tar.gz && \
cp /tmp/heketi/${HEKETI_BIN} /usr/local/bin/${HEKETI_BIN}_${HEKETI_VERSION} && \
rm -vrf /tmp/heketi && \
cd /usr/local/bin && \
ln -vsnf ${HEKETI_BIN}_${HEKETI_VERSION} ${HEKETI_BIN} && cd

unset HEKETI_BIN HEKETI_VERSION HEKETI_OS

Configure

Heketi API on Kubernetes

Create required directories on all glusterfs servers

mkdir -p /data/heketi/{db,.ssh} && chmod 700 /data/heketi/.ssh

Generate heketi ssh keys that will be used by heketi api for password-less login to glusterfs servers

ssh-keygen -t rsa -b 2048 -f /data/heketi/.ssh/id_rsa

Copy .ssh dir to all glusterfs servers

for NODE in node1 node2 node3; do scp -r /data/heketi/.ssh root@${NODE}:/data/heketi; done

Import ssh public key to all glusterfs servers (node1, node2 and node3 in our example)

for NODE in node1 node2 node3; do cat /data/heketi/.ssh/id_rsa.pub | ssh root@${NODE} "cat >> /root/.ssh/authorized_keys"; done

There are several parameters in heketi-deployment.json you have to pay attention to before provisioning heketi on Kubernetes

Pod will be instantly terminated, which will lead to instant heketi db lock release and this is exactly what we want

"terminationGracePeriodSeconds": 0,

Heketi pod will be scheduled to run only on GlusterFS nodes (if you recall we already created a label for this)

"nodeSelector": {
  "storagenode": "glusterfs"
}

Heketi admin key (password) will be stored in secret object that we must create before heketi deployment and storageclass objects

{
  "name": "HEKETI_ADMIN_KEY",
  "valueFrom": {
    "secretKeyRef": {
      "name": "heketi-secret",
      "key": "key"
    }
  }
}

First we have to create Secret object that will store password for heketi authentication
Make sure to replace value of key with based64 encoded password in heketi-secret.yaml file
This password will be later on collected directly from this secret and defined as value of HEKETI_ADMIN_KEY environment variable, see heketi-deployment.json file and also it will be called from storageclass object as well
This is the only place where you have to set this password

kubectl apply -f kubernetes/heketi-secret.yaml

Create heketi api deployment and service objects

kubectl apply -f kubernetes/heketi-deployment.json

Find exposed port to access heketi api
Note: Replace resturl in heketi-storageclass.yaml

kubectl get svc -l glusterfs=heketi-service

Test heketi api (replace node name and port number)

curl -s http://node1:30348/hello

Test heketi api with heketi cli (replace node name and port number)
Note: output should be empty because we haven't created any cluster yet

heketi-cli --user admin --secret password --server http://node1:30348 cluster list

Heketi topology

Create a cluster from topology file
Note: change parameters in the topology file to mirror your environment

heketi-cli --user admin --secret password --server http://node1:30348 topology load --json heketi-topology.json

Replace clusterid in heketi-storageclass.yaml

heketi-cli --user admin --secret password --server http://node1:30348 cluster list

Show current cluster topology

heketi-cli --user admin --secret password --server http://node1:30348 topology info

Heketi DB

Create glusterfs shared volume

heketi-cli --user admin --secret password --server http://node1:30348 setup-openshift-heketi-storage --listfile heketi-storage.json

Migrate Heketi database to previously created glusterfs volume

kubectl apply -f heketi-storage.json

If job is successful you can remove all created migration objects, otherwise you should try recreating them until success status is reached

Check status

kubectl get job -o wide

Delete temporary objects if success status is reached

kubectl delete -f heketi-storage.json

or try again

kubectl delete -f heketi-storage.json
kubectl apply -f heketi-storage.json

Now we have heketi database migrated to heketidbstorage glusterfs replicated volume and now we can remove local heketi database from all glusterfs servers and mount glusterfs volume to shared location /data/heketi/db

for NODE in node1 node2 node3; do ssh root@${NODE} "rm -f /data/heketi/db/heketi.db && mount.glusterfs ${NODE}:/heketidbstorage /data/heketi/db"; done

In order to make mount persistent we have to append following lines into the /etc/rc.local file on all glusterfs nodes (in our example node1, node2 and node3)

Example how it should look on node1

# Mount GlusterFS on boot
sleep 5
mount.glusterfs node1:/heketidbstorage /data/heketi/db

Kubernetes StorageClass object

Create SC with glusterfs provisioner Make sure to replace resturl and clusterid parameters as mentioned above

kubectl apply -f kubernetes/heketi-storageclass.yaml

Kubernetes PersistentVolumeClaim

Creation of PVC will automatically trigger creation of PV

kubectl apply -f kubernetes/heketi-pvc.yaml
kubectl get pvc test-claim
kubectl get pv

Show volume list

heketi-cli --user admin --secret password --server http://node1:30348 volume list

Pod with PVC

kubectl apply -f kubernetes/nginx-pod.yaml

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