• Volume Snapshots
    • Introduction
    • Lifecycle of a volume snapshot and volume snapshot content
      • Provisioning Volume Snapshot
        • Static
        • Dynamic
      • Binding
      • Persistent Volume Claim in Use Protection
      • Delete
    • Volume Snapshot Contents
      • Class
    • VolumeSnapshots
      • Class
    • Provisioning Volumes from Snapshots
    • Feedback

    Volume Snapshots

    FEATURE STATE: Kubernetes v1.12alphaThis feature is currently in a alpha state, meaning:

    • The version names contain alpha (e.g. v1alpha1).
    • Might be buggy. Enabling the feature may expose bugs. Disabled by default.
    • Support for feature may be dropped at any time without notice.
    • The API may change in incompatible ways in a later software release without notice.
    • Recommended for use only in short-lived testing clusters, due to increased risk of bugs and lack of long-term support.

    This document describes the current state of VolumeSnapshots in Kubernetes. Familiarity with persistent volumes is suggested.

    Introduction

    Similar to how API resources PersistentVolume and PersistentVolumeClaim are used to provision volumes for users and administrators, VolumeSnapshotContent and VolumeSnapshot API resources are provided to create volume snapshots for users and administrators.

    A VolumeSnapshotContent is a snapshot taken from a volume in the cluster that has been provisioned by an administrator. It is a resource in the cluster just like a PersistentVolume is a cluster resource.

    A VolumeSnapshot is a request for snapshot of a volume by a user. It is similar to a PersistentVolumeClaim.

    While VolumeSnapshots allow a user to consume abstract storage resources, cluster administratorsneed to be able to offer a variety of VolumeSnapshotContents without exposingusers to the details of how those volume snapshots should be provisioned. For these needsthere is the VolumeSnapshotClass resource.

    Users need to be aware of the following when using this feature:

    • API Objects VolumeSnapshot, VolumeSnapshotContent, and VolumeSnapshotClass are CRDs, not part of the core API.
    • VolumeSnapshot support is only available for CSI drivers.
    • As part of the deployment process, the Kubernetes team provides a sidecar helper container for the snapshot controller called external-snapshotter. It watches VolumeSnapshot objects and triggers CreateSnapshot and DeleteSnapshot operations against a CSI endpoint.
    • CSI drivers may or may not have implemented the volume snapshot functionality. The CSI drivers that have provided support for volume snapshot will likely use external-snapshotter.
    • The CSI drivers that support volume snapshot will automatically install CRDs defined for the volume snapshots.

    Lifecycle of a volume snapshot and volume snapshot content

    VolumeSnapshotContents are resources in the cluster. VolumeSnapshots are requests for those resources. The interaction between VolumeSnapshotContents and VolumeSnapshots follow this lifecycle:

    Provisioning Volume Snapshot

    There are two ways snapshots may be provisioned: statically or dynamically.

    Static

    A cluster administrator creates a number of VolumeSnapshotContents. They carry the details of the real storage which is available for use by cluster users. They exist in the Kubernetes API and are available for consumption.

    Dynamic

    When none of the static VolumeSnapshotContents the administrator created matches a user’s VolumeSnapshot,the cluster may try to dynamically provision a volume snapshot specially for the VolumeSnapshot object.This provisioning is based on VolumeSnapshotClasses: the VolumeSnapshot must request avolume snapshot class andthe administrator must have created and configured that class in order for dynamicprovisioning to occur.

    Binding

    A user creates, or has already created in the case of dynamic provisioning, a VolumeSnapshot with a specific amount of storage requested and with certain access modes. A control loop watches for new VolumeSnapshots, finds a matching VolumeSnapshotContent (if possible), and binds them together. If a VolumeSnapshotContent was dynamically provisioned for a new VolumeSnapshot, the loop will always bind that VolumeSnapshotContent to the VolumeSnapshot. Once bound, VolumeSnapshot binds are exclusive, regardless of how they were bound. A VolumeSnapshot to VolumeSnapshotContent binding is a one-to-one mapping.

    VolumeSnapshots will remain unbound indefinitely if a matching VolumeSnapshotContent does not exist. VolumeSnapshots will be bound as matching VolumeSnapshotContents become available.

    Persistent Volume Claim in Use Protection

    The purpose of the Persistent Volume Claim Object in Use Protection feature is to ensure that in-use PVC API objects are not removed from the system (as this may result in data loss).

    If a PVC is in active use by a snapshot as a source to create the snapshot, the PVC is in-use. If a user deletes a PVC API object in active use as a snapshot source, the PVC object is not removed immediately. Instead, removal of the PVC object is postponed until the PVC is no longer actively used by any snapshots. A PVC is no longer used as a snapshot source when ReadyToUse of the snapshot Status becomes true.

    Delete

    Deletion removes both the VolumeSnapshotContent object from the Kubernetes API, as well as the associated storage asset in the external infrastructure.

    Volume Snapshot Contents

    Each VolumeSnapshotContent contains a spec, which is the specification of the volume snapshot.

    1. apiVersion: snapshot.storage.k8s.io/v1alpha1
    2. kind: VolumeSnapshotContent
    3. metadata:
    4. name: new-snapshot-content-test
    5. spec:
    6. snapshotClassName: csi-hostpath-snapclass
    7. source:
    8. name: pvc-test
    9. kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
    10. volumeSnapshotSource:
    11. csiVolumeSnapshotSource:
    12. creationTime: 1535478900692119403
    13. driver: csi-hostpath
    14. restoreSize: 10Gi
    15. snapshotHandle: 7bdd0de3-aaeb-11e8-9aae-0242ac110002

    Class

    A VolumeSnapshotContent can have a class, which is specified by setting thesnapshotClassName attribute to the name of aVolumeSnapshotClass.A VolumeSnapshotContent of a particular class can only be bound to VolumeSnapshots requestingthat class. A VolumeSnapshotContent with no snapshotClassName has no class and can only be boundto VolumeSnapshots that request no particular class.

    VolumeSnapshots

    Each VolumeSnapshot contains a spec and a status, which is the specification and status of the volume snapshot.

    1. apiVersion: snapshot.storage.k8s.io/v1alpha1
    2. kind: VolumeSnapshot
    3. metadata:
    4. name: new-snapshot-test
    5. spec:
    6. snapshotClassName: csi-hostpath-snapclass
    7. source:
    8. name: pvc-test
    9. kind: PersistentVolumeClaim

    Class

    A volume snapshot can request a particular class by specifying the name of aVolumeSnapshotClassusing the attribute snapshotClassName.Only VolumeSnapshotContents of the requested class, ones with the same snapshotClassNameas the VolumeSnapshot, can be bound to the VolumeSnapshot.

    Provisioning Volumes from Snapshots

    You can provision a new volume, pre-populated with data from a snapshot, by usingthe dataSource field in the PersistentVolumeClaim object.

    For more details, seeVolume Snapshot and Restore Volume from Snapshot.

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