
Signed-off-by: Rafael Jardim <rafaeljordao.jardim@windriver.com> Change-Id: Ifb4fa92be9aaad2a9a78980fc6e922dd56ab3423
2.5 KiB
2.5 KiB
Create Persistent Volume Claims
Container images have an ephemeral file system by default. For data
to survive beyond the lifetime of a container, it can read and write
files to a persistent volume obtained with a PVC (Persistent Volume Claim)
created to provide
persistent storage.
The following steps create two 1Gb persistent volume claims.
- Create the test-claim1 persistent volume claim.
Create a yaml file defining the claim and its attributes.
For example:
~(keystone_admin)]$ cat <<EOF > claim1.yaml kind: PersistentVolumeClaim apiVersion: v1 metadata: name: test-claim1 spec: accessModes: - ReadWriteOnce resources: requests: storage: 1Gi storageClassName: general EOF
Apply the settings created above.
~(keystone_admin)]$ kubectl apply -f claim1.yaml persistentvolumeclaim/test-claim1 created
- Create the test-claim2 persistent volume claim.
Create a yaml file defining the claim and its attributes.
For example:
~(keystone_admin)]$ cat <<EOF > claim2.yaml kind: PersistentVolumeClaim apiVersion: v1 metadata: name: test-claim2 spec: accessModes: - ReadWriteOnce resources: requests: storage: 1Gi storageClassName: general EOF
Apply the settings created above.
~(keystone_admin)]$ kubectl apply -f claim2.yaml persistentvolumeclaim/test-claim2 created
Two 1Gb persistent volume claims have been created. You can view them with the following command.
~(keystone_admin)]$ kubectl get persistentvolumeclaims
NAME STATUS VOLUME CAPACITY ACCESS MODES STORAGECLASS AGE
test-claim1 Bound pvc-aaca.. 1Gi RWO general 2m56s
test-claim2 Bound pvc-e93f.. 1Gi RWO general 68s