GlusterFS Volumes
This section only applies to RKE clusters. |
In clusters that store data on GlusterFS volumes, you may experience an issue where pods fail to mount volumes after restarting the kubelet
. The logging of the kubelet
will show: transport endpoint is not connected
. To prevent this from happening, you can configure your cluster to mount the systemd-run
binary in the kubelet
container. There are two requirements before you can change the cluster configuration:
-
The node needs to have the
systemd-run
binary installed (this can be checked by using the commandwhich systemd-run
on each cluster node) -
The
systemd-run
binary needs to be compatible with Debian OS on which the hyperkube image is based (this can be checked using the following command on each cluster node, replacing the image tag with the Kubernetes version you want to use)
docker run -v /usr/bin/systemd-run:/usr/bin/systemd-run -v /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libcrypto.so.3:/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libcrypto.so.3 -v /lib/systemd/libsystemd-shared-249.so:/lib/systemd/libsystemd-shared-249.so --entrypoint /usr/bin/systemd-run rancher/hyperkube:v1.26.14-rancher1 --version
Before updating your Kubernetes YAML to mount the |
services: kubelet: extra_binds: - "/usr/bin/systemd-run:/usr/bin/systemd-run" - "/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libcrypto.so.3:/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libcrypto.so.3" - "/lib/systemd/libsystemd-shared-249.so:/lib/systemd/libsystemd-shared-249.so"
After the cluster has finished provisioning, you can check the kubelet
container logging to see if the functionality is activated by looking for the following logline:
Detected OS with systemd