This is a Container Storage Interface (CSI) for S3 (or S3 compatible) storage. This can dynamically allocate buckets and mount them via a fuse mount into any container.
This is still very experimental and should not be used in any production environment. Unexpected data loss could occur depending on what mounter and S3 storage backend is being used.
- Kubernetes 1.16+ (CSI v1.0.0 compatibility)
- Kubernetes has to allow privileged containers
- Docker daemon must allow shared mounts (Systemd flag
MountFlags=shared
)
# deploy/kubernetes/secret.yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: csi-driver-s3-secret
namespace: kube-system
stringData:
accessKeyID: <YOUR_ACCESS_KEY_ID>
secretAccessKey: <YOUR_SECRET_ACCES_KEY>
# For AWS set it to "https://s3.<region>.amazonaws.com"
endpoint: <S3_ENDPOINT_URL>
# If not on S3, set it to ""
region: <S3_REGION>
The region can be empty if you are using some other S3 compatible storage.
kubectl apply -f deploy/kubernetes
Create a PVC
kubectl apply -f deploy/sample/pvc.yaml
Check if the PVC has been bound:
$ kubectl get pvc
NAME STATUS VOLUME CAPACITY ACCESS MODES STORAGECLASS AGE
csi-driver-s3-pvc Bound pvc-c5d4634f-8507-11e8-9f33-0e243832354b 5Gi RWO csi-driver-s3 9s
Create a test pod which mounts your volume:
kubectl apply -f deploy/sample/pod.yaml
If the pod can start, everything should be working.
Test the mount
$ kubectl exec -ti csi-driver-s3-test-nginx bash
$ mount | grep fuse
s3fs on /var/lib/www/html type fuse.s3fs (rw,nosuid,nodev,relatime,user_id=0,group_id=0,allow_other)
$ touch /var/lib/www/html/hello_world
If something does not work as expected, check the troubleshooting section below.
As S3 is not a real file system there are some limitations to consider here. Depending on what mounter you are using, you will have different levels of POSIX compatibility. Also depending on what S3 storage backend you are using there are not always consistency guarantees.
The csi-driver-s3 uses s3fs to mount the bucket into the PVC.
- Large subset of POSIX
- Files can be viewed normally with any S3 client
- Does not support appends or random writes
- s3fs
Check the logs of the provisioner:
kubectl logs -l app=csi-provisioner-s3 -c csi-driver-s3
- Ensure feature gate
MountPropagation
is not set tofalse
- Check the logs of the s3-driver:
kubectl logs -l app=csi-driver-s3 -c csi-driver-s3
This project can be built like any other go application.
go get -u github.com/majst01/csi-driver-s3
make build
Currently, the driver is tested by the CSI Sanity Tester. As end-to-end tests require S3 storage and a mounter like s3fs, this is best done in a docker container. A Dockerfile and the test script are in the test
directory. The easiest way to run the tests is to just use the make command:
make test