minio/docs/orchestration/kubernetes/k8s-yaml.md

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This document covers the steps needed to deploy MinIO on Kubernetes using plain YAML files.

Table of Contents

Prerequisites

To run this example, you need Kubernetes version >=1.4 cluster installed and running. You will also need to have installed and configured the kubectl command line tool in your path. Please see the getting started guides for installation instructions for your platform.

MinIO Standalone Server Deployment

The following section describes the process to deploy standalone MinIO server on Kubernetes. The deployment uses the official MinIO Docker image from Docker Hub.

This section uses following core components of Kubernetes:

Standalone Quickstart

Run the below commands to get started quickly

kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/minio/minio/master/docs/orchestration/kubernetes/minio-standalone-pvc.yaml
kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/minio/minio/master/docs/orchestration/kubernetes/minio-standalone-deployment.yaml
kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/minio/minio/master/docs/orchestration/kubernetes/minio-standalone-service.yaml

Create Persistent Volume Claim

MinIO needs persistent storage to store objects. If there is no persistent storage, the data stored in MinIO instance will be stored in the container file system and will be destroyed as soon as the container restarts.

Create a persistent volume claim (PVC) to request storage for the MinIO instance. Kubernetes looks out for PVs matching the PVC request in the cluster and binds it to the PVC automatically. Run the following to create the PersistentVolumeClaim:

kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/minio/minio/master/docs/orchestration/kubernetes/minio-standalone-pvc.yaml
persistentvolumeclaim "minio-pv-claim" created

Create MinIO Deployment

A deployment encapsulates replica sets and pods. If a pod goes down, the replication controller makes sure another pod comes up automatically. This way, you wont need to bother about pod failures and will have a stable MinIO service available. Create the Deployment using the following command:

kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/minio/minio/master/docs/orchestration/kubernetes/minio-standalone-deployment.yaml
deployment "minio-deployment" created

Create MinIO Service

Now that you have a MinIO deployment running, you may either access it internally (within the cluster) or expose it as a Service onto an external (outside of your cluster, for example public internet) IP address, depending on your use case. You can achieve this using Services. There are 3 major service typesthe default type is ClusterIP, which exposes a service to connection from inside the cluster. NodePort and LoadBalancer are two types that expose services to external traffic.

In this example, we expose the MinIO Deployment by creating a LoadBalancer service. Create the MinIO service using the following command

kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/minio/minio/master/docs/orchestration/kubernetes/minio-standalone-service.yaml
service "minio-service" created

The LoadBalancer service takes couple of minutes to launch. To check if the service was created successfully, run the following command:

kubectl get svc minio-service
NAME            CLUSTER-IP     EXTERNAL-IP       PORT(S)          AGE
minio-service   10.55.248.23   104.199.249.165   9000:31852/TCP   1m

Update existing MinIO Deployment

You can update an existing MinIO deployment to use a newer MinIO release. To do this, use the kubectl set image command:

kubectl set image deployment/minio-deployment minio=<replace-with-new-minio-image>

Kubernetes will restart the deployment to update the image. You will get a message similar to the one shown below, on successful update:

deployment "minio-deployment" image updated

Standalone Resource cleanup

You can cleanup the cluster using

kubectl delete deployment minio \
&& kubectl delete pvc minio-pv-claim \
&& kubectl delete svc minio-service

MinIO Distributed Server Deployment

The following document describes the process to deploy distributed MinIO server on Kubernetes. This example uses the official MinIO Docker image from Docker Hub.

This example uses following core components of Kubernetes:

Distributed Quickstart

Run the below commands to get started quickly

kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/minio/minio/master/docs/orchestration/kubernetes/minio-distributed-headless-service.yaml
kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/minio/minio/master/docs/orchestration/kubernetes/minio-distributed-statefulset.yaml
kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/minio/minio/master/docs/orchestration/kubernetes/minio-distributed-service.yaml

Create MinIO Headless Service

Headless Service controls the domain within which StatefulSets are created. The domain managed by this Service takes the form: $(service name).$(namespace).svc.cluster.local (where “cluster.local” is the cluster domain), and the pods in this domain take the form: $(pod-name-{i}).$(service name).$(namespace).svc.cluster.local. This is required to get a DNS resolvable URL for each of the pods created within the Statefulset. Create the Headless Service using the following command

$ kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/minio/minio/master/docs/orchestration/kubernetes/minio-distributed-headless-service.yaml
service "minio" created

Create MinIO Statefulset

A StatefulSet provides a deterministic name and a unique identity to each pod, making it easy to deploy stateful distributed applications. To launch distributed MinIO you need to pass drive locations as parameters to the minio server command. Then, youll need to run the same command on all the participating pods. StatefulSets offer a perfect way to handle this requirement. Create the Statefulset using the following command:

$ kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/minio/minio/master/docs/orchestration/kubernetes/minio-distributed-statefulset.yaml
statefulset "minio" created

Create MinIO Service

Now that you have a MinIO statefulset running, you may either access it internally (within the cluster) or expose it as a Service onto an external (outside of your cluster, maybe public internet) IP address, depending on your use case. You can achieve this using Services. There are 3 major service typesdefault type is ClusterIP, which exposes a service to connection from inside the cluster. NodePort and LoadBalancer are two types that expose services to external traffic. Create the MinIO service using the following command

$ kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/minio/minio/master/docs/orchestration/kubernetes/minio-distributed-service.yaml
service "minio-service" created

The LoadBalancer service takes couple of minutes to launch. To check if the service was created successfully, run the command

$ kubectl get svc minio-service
NAME            CLUSTER-IP     EXTERNAL-IP       PORT(S)          AGE
minio-service   10.55.248.23   104.199.249.165   9000:31852/TCP   1m

Update existing MinIO StatefulSet

You can update an existing MinIO StatefulSet to use a newer MinIO release. To do this, use the kubectl patch statefulset command:

kubectl patch statefulset minio --type='json' -p='[{"op": "replace", "path": "/spec/template/spec/containers/0/image", "value":"<replace-with-new-minio-image>"}]'

On successful update, you should see the output below

statefulset "minio" patched

Then delete all the pods in your StatefulSet one by one using the command shown below.

kubectl delete minio-0

As you delete each pod, Kubernetes will restart that pod for you, using the new image. Once all the pods are restarted, your upgrade process is complete.

Resource cleanup

You can cleanup the cluster using

kubectl delete statefulset minio \
&& kubectl delete svc minio \
&& kubectl delete svc minio-service

Deploying on cluster nodes with local host path

If your cluster does not have a storage solution or PV abstraction, you must explicitly define what nodes you wish to run MinIO on, and define a homogeneous path to a local fast block device available on every host.

This must be changed in the example daemonset: minio-distributed-daemonset.yaml

Specifically the hostpath:

        hostPath:
          path: /data/minio/

And the list of hosts:

        - http://hostname{1...4}/data/minio

Once deployed, tag the defined host with the minio-server=true label:

kubectl label node hostname1  -l minio-server=true
kubectl label node hostname2  -l minio-server=true
kubectl label node hostname3  -l minio-server=true
kubectl label node hostname4  -l minio-server=true

MinIO GCS Gateway Deployment

The following section describes the process to deploy MinIO GCS Gateway on Kubernetes. The deployment uses the official MinIO Docker image from Docker Hub.

This section uses following core components of Kubernetes:

GCS Gateway Quickstart

Create the Google Cloud Service credentials file using the steps mentioned here.

Use the path of file generated above to create a Kubernetes secret.

kubectl create secret generic gcs-credentials --from-file=/path/to/gcloud/credentials/application_default_credentials.json

Then download the minio-gcs-gateway-deployment.yaml file

wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/minio/minio/master/docs/orchestration/kubernetes/minio-gcs-gateway-deployment.yaml

Update the section gcp_project_id with your GCS project ID. Then run

kubectl create -f minio-gcs-gateway-deployment.yaml
kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/minio/minio/master/docs/orchestration/kubernetes/minio-gcs-gateway-service.yaml

Create GCS Credentials Secret

A secret is intended to hold sensitive information, such as passwords, OAuth tokens, and ssh keys. Putting this information in a secret is safer and more flexible than putting it verbatim in a pod definition or in a docker image.

Create the Google Cloud Service credentials file using the steps mentioned here.

Use the path of file generated above to create a Kubernetes secret.

kubectl create secret generic gcs-credentials --from-file=/path/to/gcloud/credentials/application_default_credentials.json

Create MinIO GCS Gateway Deployment

A deployment encapsulates replica sets and podsso, if a pod goes down, the replication controller makes sure another pod comes up automatically. This way you wont need to bother about pod failures and will have a stable MinIO service available.

MinIO Gateway uses GCS as its storage backend and needs to use a GCP projectid to identify your credentials. Update the section gcp_project_id with your GCS project ID. Create the Deployment using the following command

kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/minio/minio/master/docs/orchestration/kubernetes/minio-gcs-gateway-deployment.yaml
deployment "minio-deployment" created

Create MinIO LoadBalancer Service

Now that you have a MinIO deployment running, you may either access it internally (within the cluster) or expose it as a Service onto an external (outside of your cluster, for example via public internet) IP address, depending on your use case. You can achieve this using Services. There are 3 major service typesdefault type is ClusterIP, which exposes a service to connection from inside the cluster. NodePort and LoadBalancer are two types that expose services to external traffic. Create the MinIO service using the following command

kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/minio/minio/master/docs/orchestration/kubernetes/minio-gcs-gateway-service.yaml
service "minio-service" created

The LoadBalancer service takes couple of minutes to launch. To check if the service was created successfully, run the command

kubectl get svc minio-service
NAME            CLUSTER-IP     EXTERNAL-IP       PORT(S)          AGE
minio-service   10.55.248.23   104.199.249.165   9000:31852/TCP   1m

Update Existing MinIO GCS Deployment

You can update an existing MinIO deployment to use a newer MinIO release. To do this, use the kubectl set image command:

kubectl set image deployment/minio-deployment minio=<replace-with-new-minio-image>

Kubernetes will restart the deployment to update the image. You will get a message as shown below, on successful update:

deployment "minio-deployment" image updated

GCS Gateway Resource Cleanup

You can cleanup the cluster using

kubectl delete deployment minio-deployment \
&&  kubectl delete secret gcs-credentials