8e5b17cf13
Signed-off-by: Mrunal Patel <mrunalp@gmail.com>
1.7 KiB
1.7 KiB
How to Use it?
Install Ceph on the Kubernetes host. For example, on Fedora 21
# yum -y install ceph
If you don't have a Ceph cluster, you can set up a containerized Ceph cluster
Then get the keyring from the Ceph cluster and copy it to /etc/ceph/keyring.
Once you have installed Ceph and a Kubernetes cluster, you can create a pod based on my examples cephfs.yaml and cephfs-with-secret.yaml. In the pod yaml, you need to provide the following information.
- monitors: Array of Ceph monitors.
- path: Used as the mounted root, rather than the full Ceph tree. If not provided, default / is used.
- user: The RADOS user name. If not provided, default admin is used.
- secretFile: The path to the keyring file. If not provided, default /etc/ceph/user.secret is used.
- secretRef: Reference to Ceph authentication secrets. If provided, secret overrides secretFile.
- readOnly: Whether the filesystem is used as readOnly.
Here are the commands:
# kubectl create -f examples/volumes/cephfs/cephfs.yaml
# create a secret if you want to use Ceph secret instead of secret file
# kubectl create -f examples/volumes/cephfs/secret/ceph-secret.yaml
# kubectl create -f examples/volumes/cephfs/cephfs-with-secret.yaml
# kubectl get pods
If you ssh to that machine, you can run docker ps
to see the actual pod and docker inspect
to see the volumes used by the container.