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Community Blog Kubernetes Volume Basics: emptyDir and PersistentVolume

Kubernetes Volume Basics: emptyDir and PersistentVolume

In this article, we'll talk about Kubernetes Volumes, focusing on emptyDir and PersistentVolume.

By Alwyn Botha, Alibaba Cloud Tech Share Author. Tech Share is Alibaba Cloud's incentive program to encourage the sharing of technical knowledge and best practices within the cloud community.

Kubernetes Volumes are a vast topic, and it is best understood when taught in byte size chunks. The first part of this tutorial deals with the simplest volumes : emptyDir.

The second part deals with persistent volumes.

emptyDir are volumes that get created empty when a Pod is created.

While a Pod is running its emptyDir exists. If a container in a Pod crashes the emptyDir content is unaffected. Deleting a Pod deletes all its emptyDirs.

There are several ways a Pod can be deleted. Accidental and deliberate. All result in immediate emptyDir deletion. emptyDir are meant for temporary working disk space.

Let's create our first emptyDir volume and use it to learn more.

This tutorial will cover the following topics:

  • Basic emptyDir example
  • Pod with 3 containers sharing emptyDir use
  • emptyDir created in RAM
  • PersistentVolume and PersistentVolumeClaim

1) Basic emptyDir Example

nano myVolumes-Pod.yaml

apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
  name: myvolumes-pod
spec:
  containers:
  - image: alpine
    imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
    name: myvolumes-container
    
    command: [    'sh', '-c', 'echo The Bench Container 1 is Running ; sleep 3600']
    
    volumeMounts:
    - mountPath: /demo
      name: demo-volume
  volumes:
  - name: demo-volume
    emptyDir: {}

This tutorial only uses the Alpine Linux image, since it is a very small Linux operating system.

From : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpine_Linux

Because of its small size, it's heavily used in containers providing quick boot up times.

I also use the imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent . The Alpine image gets downloaded from Internet only once. Thereafter it uses the locally stored copy.

From Pod spec above:

  volumes:
  - name: demo-volume
    emptyDir: {}

We define an emptyDir volume named demo-volume. The {} at the end means we do not supply any further requirements for the emptyDir .

This emptyDir spec makes it available to all containers in the Pod.

From Pod spec above:

    volumeMounts:
    - mountPath: /demo
      name: demo-volume

Every container in the Pod needs to specify where it wants to have the emptyDir mounted.

Our example mounts the emptyDir at the mountPath: /demo

The name: demo-volume must refer to the volume at the bottom of the Pod spec. It specifies : mount demo-volume at /demo in the container.

Create the Pod.

kubectl create -f myVolumes-Pod.yaml

pod/myvolumes-pod created

Enter the Pod. Enter commands as shown at # shell prompt.

kubectl exec myvolumes-pod -i -t -- /bin/sh

/ # pwd
/
/ # ls
bin    demo   dev    etc    home   lib    media  mnt    proc   root   run    sbin   srv    sys    tmp    usr    var
/ # ls demo/
/ # echo test > demo/textfile
/ # ls demo/
textfile
/ # cat demo/textfile
test
/ # exit
  • ls ... we see the demo directory exists.
  • echo ... we can create a text file inside this directory.
  • cat ... we can display the content of our file.

Basic emptyDir example : everything works as expected.

Delete Pod.

kubectl delete -f myVolumes-Pod.yaml --force --grace-period=0

pod "myvolumes-pod" force deleted

To ensure fast action I use --force --grace-period=0 to delete Pod immediately. Do not use in production. By default Pods get 30 seconds to do their shutdown routines ( after receiving delete command ).

2) Pod with 3 Containers Sharing emptyDir Use

All containers in a Pod share use of the emptyDir .

Each container can independently mount the emptyDir at the same / or different path.

Demo below shows 3 containers all mounting the one emptyDir at different mount paths.

nano myVolumes-Pod.yaml

apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
  name: myvolumes-pod
spec:
  containers:
  - image: alpine
    imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
    name: myvolumes-container-1
    
    command: ['sh', '-c', 'echo The Bench Container 1 is Running ; sleep 3600']
    
    volumeMounts:
    - mountPath: /demo1
      name: demo-volume

  - image: alpine
    imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
    name: myvolumes-container-2
    
    command: ['sh', '-c', 'echo The Bench Container 2 is Running ; sleep 3600']
    
    volumeMounts:
    - mountPath: /demo2
      name: demo-volume

  - image: alpine
    imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
    name: myvolumes-container-3
    
    command: ['sh', '-c', 'echo The Bench Container 3 is Running ; sleep 3600']
    
    volumeMounts:
    - mountPath: /demo3
      name: demo-volume

  volumes:
  - name: demo-volume
    emptyDir: {}
    

Note all 3 containers refer to the same name: demo-volume

All 3 containers mount the emptyDir at different mount points. This is only to make tutorial easy to understand.

( Each container is an independent isolated running Alpine instance. )

Create the Pod.

kubectl create -f myVolumes-Pod.yaml

pod/myvolumes-pod created

Enter the Pod. Enter commands as shown at # shell prompt.


 kubectl exec myvolumes-pod -c myvolumes-container-1 -i -t -- /bin/sh
/ # ls
bin    demo1  dev    etc    home   lib    media  mnt    proc   root   run    sbin   srv    sys    tmp    usr    var
/ # echo test1 > demo1/textfile1
/ # exit

Mount point demo1 exists and we could create a file there.

Enter container 2 and create a file at its mount point as shown below.

kubectl exec myvolumes-pod -c myvolumes-container-2 -i -t -- /bin/sh

/ # ls
bin    demo2  dev    etc    home   lib    media  mnt    proc   root   run    sbin   srv    sys    tmp    usr    var
/ # ls demo2/
textfile1
/ # echo test2 > demo2/textfile2
/ # exit

Note ls demo2/ shows the file container 1 created - IMPORTANT - containers in a Pod share an emptyDir .

Enter container 3 and create a file at its mount point as shown below.

kubectl exec myvolumes-pod -c myvolumes-container-3 -i -t -- /bin/sh
/ # ls
bin    demo3  dev    etc    home   lib    media  mnt    proc   root   run    sbin   srv    sys    tmp    usr    var
/ # ls demo3/
textfile1  textfile2
/ # echo test3 > demo3/textfile3
/ # ls demo3/
textfile1  textfile2  textfile3
/ # cat demo3/textfile1
test1
/ # cat demo3/textfile2
test2
/ # cat demo3/textfile3
test3
/ # exit

Note ls demo3/ lists the files created by all 3 containers.

All containers in a Pod have read/write access to the same emptyDir - if they requested a mount point for it. Containers can access the emptyDir using the same or different mount points.

Demo completed. Delete Pod.

kubectl delete -f myVolumes-Pod.yaml --force --grace-period=0

pod "myvolumes-pod" force deleted

3) emptyDir Created in RAM

If you do not specify where to create an emptyDir , it gets created on the disk space of the Kubernetes node.

If you need a small scratch volume, you can define it to be created in RAM. See very last line of spec below.

Everything else is identical to previous example.

nano myVolumes-Pod.yaml

apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
  name: myvolumes-pod
spec:
  containers:
  - image: alpine
    imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
    name: myvolumes-container

    command: ['sh', '-c', 'echo Container 1 is Running ; sleep 3600']

    volumeMounts:
    - mountPath: /demo
      name: demo-volume
  volumes:
  - name: demo-volume
    emptyDir:
      medium: Memory      

Create the Pod.

kubectl create -f myVolumes-Pod.yaml

pod/myvolumes-pod created

Enter the Pod. Enter commands as shown at # shell prompt.

kubectl exec myvolumes-pod -i -t -- /bin/sh

/ # df -h
Filesystem                Size      Used Available Use% Mounted on
tmpfs                    64.0M         0     64.0M   0% /dev
tmpfs                   932.3M         0    932.3M   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
tmpfs                   932.3M         0    932.3M   0% /demo
  • df ... displays how much disk space is available
  • -h ... print sizes in human readable format ( otherwise it prints size in bytes - a long unreadable string )
  • -h is the short version of --human-readable

We note on last line that our emptyDir got mounted on tmpfs : RAM.

The default size of a RAM-based emptyDir is half the RAM of the node it runs on. My tiny server has 1.8 GB RAM, so 900 MB is about right.

Such massive RAM disks may be overkill for most Pods. There is functionality to specify a sizeLimit.

Unfortunately that does not work as expected:

From https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/issues/63126#issuecomment-387817170 ( commented May 9, 2018 )

As you discovered, the sizeLimit parameter set for emptyDir volume could not be used for creating a volume with the size. Instead what it does it that eviction manager keeps monitoring the disk space used by pod emptyDir volume and it will evict pods when the usage exceeds the limit.

Enter the Pod and use the emptyDir .

kubectl exec myvolumes-pod -i -t -- /bin/sh

/ # dd if=/dev/urandom of=/demo/largefile bs=100M count=1
0+1 records in
0+1 records out

/ # df -h /demo
Filesystem                Size      Used Available Use% Mounted on
tmpfs                   932.3M     32.0M    900.3M   3% /demo

dd if=/dev/urandom of=/demo/largefile bs=100M count=1 does a diskdump of input file ( random numbers ) with a blocksize of 100M - one occurence.

Alpine dd command has limitation that it can have blocksize of 32M max.

Copy 2 100M blocks.

/ # dd if=/dev/urandom of=/demo/largefile bs=100M count=2
0+2 records in
0+2 records out
/ # df -h /demo
Filesystem                Size      Used Available Use% Mounted on
tmpfs                   932.3M     64.0M    868.3M   7% /demo

Alpine limitation: it copied 32MB twice. No problem - we can still see our emptyDir is in RAM ( tmpfs ).

Let's use smaller blocksizes ( 10 MB ). 10 such block equal 100 MB.

/ # dd if=/dev/urandom of=/demo/largefile bs=10M count=10
10+0 records in
10+0 records out
/ # df -h /demo
Filesystem                Size      Used Available Use% Mounted on
tmpfs                   932.3M    100.0M    832.3M  11% /demo

Success. 100 MB space used on our /demo mounted emptyDir.

Now use 20 times 10 MB blocks:

/ # dd if=/dev/urandom of=/demo/largefile bs=10M count=20
20+0 records in
20+0 records out
/ # df -h /demo
Filesystem                Size      Used Available Use% Mounted on
tmpfs                   932.3M    200.0M    732.3M  21% /demo
/ # exit

Success. We are now able to use our emptyDir mounted in RAM.

Delete Pod.

kubectl delete -f myVolumes-Pod.yaml --force --grace-period=0

pod "myvolumes-pod" force deleted

4) PersistentVolume and PersistentVolumeClaim

emptyDir volumes get deleted when a Pod gets deleted.

If you need persistent volumes you use: PersistentVolume and PersistentVolumeClaim

This is a 3 step process:

  • You or the Kubernetes administrator defines a PersistentVolume ( Disk space available for use )
  • You define a PersistentVolumeClaim - you claim usage of a part of that PersistentVolume disk space.
  • You create a Pod that refers to your PersistentVolumeClaim

Step 1 : The Kubernetes administrator creates PersistentVolume

You need to be signed in to the Kubernetes node where you want to make available some of its disk space.

Create a directory : /mnt/persistent-volume

mkdir /mnt/persistent-volume

echo persistent data >  /mnt/persistent-volume/persistent-file

That echo step is not normally done. Only done here so you can see we access the correct volume.

nano myPersistent-Volume.yaml

kind: PersistentVolume
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
  name: my-persistent-volume
  labels:
    type: local
spec:
  storageClassName: pv-demo 
  capacity:
    storage: 100Mi
  accessModes:
    - ReadWriteOnce
  hostPath:
    path: "/mnt/persistent-volume"

The storageClassName: pv-demo is what links PersistentVolumeClaim to PersistentVolume .

Last 2 lines : we define this disk space exists on the host at /mnt/persistent-volume

https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/persistent-volumes/#class

A PV can have a class, which is specified by setting the storageClassName attribute to the name of a StorageClass. A PV of a particular class can only be bound to PVCs requesting that class.

A PV with no storageClassName has no class and can only be bound to PVCs that request no particular class. ( not done in this tutorial )

Create the PersistentVolume .

kubectl create -f myPersistent-Volume.yaml

persistentvolume/my-persistent-volume created

We now have 100Mi storageClassName: pv-demo available for use.

Ask kubectl what Kubernetes knows about this storage:

kubectl get pv  my-persistent-volume
NAME                   CAPACITY   ACCESS MODES   RECLAIM POLICY   STATUS      CLAIM   STORAGECLASS   REASON   AGE
my-persistent-volume   100Mi      RWO            Retain           Available           pv-demo                 52s

From https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/persistent-volumes/#retain

The Retain reclaim policy allows for manual reclamation of the resource. When the PersistentVolumeClaim is deleted, the PersistentVolume still exists and the volume is considered "released". But it is not yet available for another claim because the previous claimant's data remains on the volume.

From https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/persistent-volumes/#access-modes

The access modes are:

  • ReadWriteOnce – the volume can be mounted as read-write by a single node ... RWO
  • ReadOnlyMany – the volume can be mounted read-only by many nodes ... ROX
  • ReadWriteMany – the volume can be mounted as read-write by many nodes ... RWX

Abbreviations shown at end of lines above.

Step 2 : Create a PersistentVolumeClaim

We claim usage of 10Mi of this PersistentVolume via a PersistentVolumeClaim .

nano myPersistent-VolumeClaim.yaml

kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
  name: my-persistent-volumeclaim
spec:
  storageClassName: pv-demo 
  accessModes:
    - ReadWriteOnce
  resources:
    requests:
      storage: 10Mi

Create the PersistentVolumeClaim.

kubectl create -f myPersistent-VolumeClaim.yaml

persistentvolumeclaim/my-persistent-volumeclaim created

Ask kubectl what Kubernetes knows about this storage:

kubectl get pvc my-persistent-volumeclaim

NAME                        STATUS   VOLUME                 CAPACITY   ACCESS MODES   STORAGECLASS   AGE
my-persistent-volumeclaim   Bound    my-persistent-volume   100Mi      RWO            pv-demo        110s

Step 3 : Create a Pod that refers to your PersistentVolumeClaim

apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
  name: myvolumes-pod
spec:
  containers:
  - image: alpine
    imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
    name: myvolumes-container

    command: ['sh', '-c', 'echo Container 1 is Running ; sleep 3600']

    volumeMounts:
      - mountPath: "/my-pv-path"
        name: my-persistent-volumeclaim-name

  volumes:
    - name: my-persistent-volumeclaim-name
      persistentVolumeClaim:
       claimName: my-persistent-volumeclaim       

Create the Pod.

kubectl create -f myVolumes-Pod.yaml

pod/myvolumes-pod created

Enter the Pod.

kubectl exec myvolumes-pod -i -t -- /bin/sh


/ # ls
bin         etc         lib         mnt         proc        run         srv         tmp         var
dev         home        media       my-pv-path  root        sbin        sys         usr
/ # ls /my-pv-path/
persistent-file
/ # cat /my-pv-path/persistent-file
persistent data
/ # echo more data >> /my-pv-path/persistent-file
/ # cat /my-pv-path/persistent-file
persistent data
more data
/ # exit
  • ls /my-pv-path/ ... it shows the persistent-file we created on the node ( Our spec mounts the right volume at the right mount path )
  • echo ... append one line of text to our file
  • cat ... display our file to see line added at bottom

Run on the node:

cat   /mnt/persistent-volume/persistent-file

persistent data
more data

It shows the line we added.

Delete Pod.

kubectl delete -f myVolumes-Pod.yaml --force --grace-period=0

pod "myvolumes-pod" force deleted

Important: After we delete the Pod the PersistentVolume continues to exist. All data still there.

$ cat   /mnt/persistent-volume/persistent-file
persistent data
more data

Considerable theoretical detail about PersistentVolume is available at https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/persistent-volumes/

You will be able to understand that better now that you have actually created and used a PersistentVolume .

This was just a step-by-step cut-and-paste beginner introduction to get practical experience.

Conclusion and Cleanup

kubectl delete persistentvolumeclaim/my-persistent-volumeclaim

persistentvolumeclaim "my-persistent-volumeclaim" deleted

Run this on the node:

cat   /mnt/persistent-volume/persistent-file

persistent data
more data

Persistent data on volume still exists after PersistentVolumeClaim gets deleted.

PersistentVolumeClaim ... points ... to data on PersistentVolume

PersistentVolumeClaim IS NOT the actual data.

Delete PersistentVolume itself.

kubectl delete persistentvolume/my-persistent-volume

persistentvolume "my-persistent-volume" deleted

Even the PersistentVolume itself IS NOT the data - it just points to it.

Run this on the node:

cat   /mnt/persistent-volume/persistent-file

persistent data
more data

Data still exists. Directory still exists.

Someone can now create other PersistentVolumeClaims and PersistentVolumes to use this PERSISTENT data.

Kubernetes supports 27 volume types https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/volumes/#types-of-volumes

You have just experienced the simplest two local disk storage types - and only a subset of the features.

Kubernetes supports several network-attached storage volume types.

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Comments

narainkrishh May 25, 2020 at 2:57 pm

"We claim usage of 10Mi of this PersistentVolume via a PersistentVolumeClaim ." I guess by 10Mi we just say we need a PV with minimum 10Mi storage right? It will still claim the whole PV right, in this case 100Mi

5756838639129890 May 28, 2020 at 5:50 am

Hi narainkrishh... I guess by 10Mi we just say we need a PV with minimum 10Mi storage right? Correct..It will still claim the whole PV right, in this case 100MiNo, you claim usage of just 10 Mi. 90 Mi of the PersistentVolume is still available to you and others. You or other people can continue to claim parts of the remaining 90 Mi until it is all claimed.Try it - create several additional pods using 10 - 80 Mi of the PersistentVolume - see that the claims work until the full 100Mi is claimed.

5756838639129890 May 28, 2020 at 5:52 am

Hi narainkrishhBlank lines deleted by post software, this below might be more readable.:::::::: I guess by 10Mi we just say we need a PV with minimum 10Mi storage right? ::::::::Correct:::::::: It will still claim the whole PV right, in this case 100Mi :::::::: No, you claim usage of just 10 Mi. 90 Mi of the PersistentVolume is still available to you and others. You or other people can continue to claim parts of the remaining 90 Mi until it is all claimed.Try it - create several additional pods using 10 - 80 Mi of the PersistentVolume - see that the claims work until the full 100Mi is claimed.