Longhorn can automatically reattach then remount volumes if an unexpected detachment happens, which can happen during a Kubernetes upgrade or a Docker reboot.
Note: This section assumes familiarity with Linux storage concepts such as attaching and mounting volumes, and Kubernetes configuration of persistent volume storage.
To enable Longhorn to restart workloads after automatically reattaching and remounting volumes
After reattachment and remount are complete, you may need to manually restart the related workload containers for the volume restoration if the following recommended setup is not applied.
- In a reattachment, Longhorn will reattach the volume if the volume engine dies unexpectedly.
- In a remount, Longhorn will detect and remount the filesystem for the volume after the reattachment.
Requirements
The auto remount does not work for xfs
filesystem.
Mounting one more layers with the xfs
filesystem is not allowed and will trigger the error XFS (sdb): Filesystem has duplicate UUID <filesystem UUID> - can't mount
.
If you use the xfs
filesystem, you will need to manually unmount, then mount the xfs
filesystem on the host. The device path on the host for the attached volume is /dev/longhorn/<volume name>
.
Automatically Remount Volumes and Restart Workloads
In order to recover unexpectedly detached volumes automatically, set restartPolicy
to Always
, then add livenessProbe
for the workloads using Longhorn volumes.
Then those workloads will be restarted automatically after reattachment and remount.
Here is one example for the setup:
apiVersion: v1
kind: PersistentVolumeClaim
metadata:
name: longhorn-volv-pvc
spec:
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
storageClassName: longhorn
resources:
requests:
storage: 2Gi
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: volume-test
namespace: default
spec:
restartPolicy: Always
containers:
- name: volume-test
image: nginx:stable-alpine
imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
livenessProbe:
exec:
command:
- ls
- /data/lost+found
initialDelaySeconds: 5
periodSeconds: 5
volumeMounts:
- name: volv
mountPath: /data
ports:
- containerPort: 80
volumes:
- name: volv
persistentVolumeClaim:
claimName: longhorn-volv-pvc
- The directory used in the
livenessProbe
will be<volumeMount.mountPath>/lost+found
- Don’t set a short interval for
livenessProbe.periodSeconds
, e.g., 1s. The liveness command is CPU consuming.
Manually Restart Workload Containers
This solution is applied only if:
- The Longhorn volume is reattached and remounted automatically.
- The above setup is not included when the related workload is launched. In this case, the volume mount propagation is not
Bidirectional
, and the Longhorn remount operation won’t be propagated to the workload containers if the containers are not restarted.
To restart the workload containers,
- Figure out on which node the related workload’s containers are running
kubectl -n <namespace of your workload> get pods <workload's pod name> -o wide
- Connect to the node. e.g.,
ssh
- Figure out the containers belonging to the workload
docker ps
By checking the columns COMMAND
and NAMES
of the output, you can find the corresponding container
- Restart the container
docker restart <the container ID of the workload>