vsphere-csi-driver
blob-csi-driver
vsphere-csi-driver | blob-csi-driver | |
---|---|---|
6 | 2 | |
278 | 117 | |
3.2% | 0.9% | |
9.3 | 9.4 | |
1 day ago | 2 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
vsphere-csi-driver
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Understanding Kubernetes Limits and Requests
As we covered in our "What's new in Kubernetes 1.19" article, the CSI driver for vSphere has been stable for some time. Now, all plugin operations for vspherevolume are now redirected to the out-of-tree 'csi.vsphere.vmware.com' driver.
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Default Grafana K8s app PV issue: FailedBinding persistentvolume-controller no persistent volumes available for this claim and no storage class is set
Take a look at https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/vsphere-csi-driver as well as the stuff the other person mentioned.
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Which one of the two big FOSS RDBMS work best with .Net? MySQL or PostgreSQL?
Regarding your question about persistent storage: as I'm running in an on-prem environment I'm using VMware vSphere CSI to integrate our common storage infrastructure but I've to admin that I wasn't aware of OpenEBS even though I don't think that this is something I would need right now.
- Serving up storage to docker containers.
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[HELP] VSphere CSI Driver on OK failing versus installed on OCP?
For your issues with the CSI on OK, please log and issue here, the engineering team do check this github repo https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/vsphere-csi-driver
blob-csi-driver
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Introduction to Day 2 Kubernetes
Any Kubernetes cluster requires persistent storage - whether organizations choose to begin with an on-premise Kubernetes cluster and migrate to the public cloud, or provision a Kubernetes cluster using a managed service in the cloud. Kubernetes supports multiple types of persistent storage – from object storage (such as Azure Blob storage or Google Cloud Storage), block storage (such as Amazon EBS, Azure Disk, or Google Persistent Disk), or file sharing storage (such as Amazon EFS, Azure Files or Google Cloud Filestore). The fact that each cloud provider has its implementation of persistent storage adds to the complexity of storage management, not to mention a scenario where an organization is provisioning Kubernetes clusters over several cloud providers. To succeed in managing Kubernetes clusters over a long period, knowing which storage type to use for each scenario, requires storage expertise.
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Azure Data Lake Store Gen2 as Kubernetes Persistent Volume
There is a Azure blob storage CSI driver available: https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/blob-csi-driver
What are some alternatives?
rook - Storage Orchestration for Kubernetes
gcp-compute-persistent-disk-csi-driver - The Google Compute Engine Persistent Disk (GCE PD) Container Storage Interface (CSI) Storage Plugin.
okd - The self-managing, auto-upgrading, Kubernetes distribution for everyone
gcp-filestore-csi-driver - The Google Cloud Filestore Container Storage Interface (CSI) Plugin.
cloud-provider - cloud-provider defines the shared interfaces which Kubernetes cloud providers implement. These interfaces allow various controllers to integrate with any cloud provider in a pluggable fashion. Also serves as an issue tracker for SIG Cloud Provider.
aws-efs-csi-driver - CSI Driver for Amazon EFS https://aws.amazon.com/efs/ [Moved to: https://github.com/kubernetes-sigs/aws-efs-csi-driver]
cloud-provider-openstack
sriov-network-device-plugin - SRIOV network device plugin for Kubernetes
cluster-api-provider-vsphere
k8s-device-plugin - Kubernetes (k8s) device plugin to enable registration of AMD GPU to a container cluster
website - Kubernetes website and documentation repo: