dbench
local-path-provisioner
Our great sponsors
dbench | local-path-provisioner | |
---|---|---|
1 | 30 | |
250 | 1,982 | |
- | 3.1% | |
0.0 | 6.3 | |
5 months ago | 14 days ago | |
Shell | Go | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
dbench
-
Storage provisioner for self-created clusters in 2022, for disk-heavy workload like MySQL?
Perhaps this might be true for i3.2xlarge or larger machines, but for smaller VMs these were the results I got. My setup was 3 masters - 6 workers (2vCPUs - 4GBs RAM). You can try it yourself with dbench and see what you get.
local-path-provisioner
-
Deploy Ghost with MySQL DB replication using helm chart
Deploy local-path-provisioner storage class but it does not support readwritemany so for high availability of your Kubernetes cluster better to use longhorn
-
lvp: Local Volume CSI Provisioner -- Dynamic PV Provisioning for your Home Cluster
I use this one. I'm waiting for the day it's combined with syncthing to sync across all nodes. https://github.com/rancher/local-path-provisioner
-
issues with pv retaining data on local-path SC
So I have this single node k3s cluster. k3s uses local-path (https://github.com/rancher/local-path-provisioner) as default SC that allows one to create dynamic volumes using nodes local storage.
-
How to format drives for local persistent volumes
Just create 1 single partition and format it with whatevery filesystem you like. And then use ranchers local-path-provisioner which will create a folder per PV (k3s has this integrated by default).
-
Persisting data in a dynamic volume?
Tinkering locally with local path provisioner (https://github.com/rancher/local-path-provisioner), I find that I can delete and re-create the pod, and the data persists on disk. However, if I delete the PVC, when I recreate the PVC, a new directory on disk is created.
-
Issues with "victoria-metrics-k8s-stack", monitoring k8s targets
It is better to use https://github.com/rancher/local-path-provisioner (or similar) for this case which will do PVC on local directories because manually linking PV<>PVC will not work.
-
single node k8s on nuc - homelab/prod - storage question
Since you only have one physical node anyway, I would just make the cluster a single-node cluster (1 VM) and use local storage on that VM. I’m biased though because this is what I do (I run K3s and use local path provisioner).
-
Using local disks for both K8s workloads, and exporting via SMB?
Rancher's Local Path Provisioner - From reading, seems to just use HostPath or Local PVs under the hood, but adds dynamic provisoning
-
Kubernetes: How to Persistent Storage
With any of those tools, you'd implement a network storage on top of a network storage. I would go with mouting few volumes per node +local storage like (https://github.com/rancher/local-path-provisioner).
- There doesn't seam to be any good distributed block storage for Kubernetes
What are some alternatives?
kbench - Benchmark your Kubernetes storage.
sig-storage-local-static-provisioner - Static provisioner of local volumes
dperf - Drive performance measurement tool
topolvm - Capacity-aware CSI plugin for Kubernetes
yet-another-bench-script - YABS - a simple bash script to estimate Linux server performance using fio, iperf3, & Geekbench
csi-lib-utils - Common code for Kubernetes CSI sidecar containers (e.g. `external-attacher`, `external-provisioner`, etc.)
dev-benchmark - Benchmark script to measure performance of usual development tools.
kind - Kubernetes IN Docker - local clusters for testing Kubernetes
rook - Storage Orchestration for Kubernetes
nfs-ganesha-server-and-external-provisioner - NFS Ganesha Server and Volume Provisioner.
csi-driver-nfs - This driver allows Kubernetes to access NFS server on Linux node.