$ dd if=/dev/zero of=<loop10> bs=100M count=20
You can upload a local disk image into a block DataVolume by using the
virtctl
command-line utility.
In this workflow, you create a local block device to use as a PersistentVolume,
associate this block volume with an upload
DataVolume, and use virtctl
to upload the local disk image into the DataVolume.
If you require scratch space according to the CDI supported operations matrix, you must first define a StorageClass or prepare CDI scratch space for this operation to complete successfully.
DataVolume
objects are custom resources that are provided by the Containerized
Data Importer (CDI) project. DataVolumes orchestrate import, clone, and upload
operations that are associated with an underlying PersistentVolumeClaim (PVC).
DataVolumes are integrated with KubeVirt, and they prevent a virtual machine
from being started before the PVC has been prepared.
A block PersistentVolume (PV) is a PV that is backed by a raw block device. These volumes do not have a filesystem and can provide performance benefits for virtual machines that either write to the disk directly or implement their own storage service.
Raw block volumes are provisioned by specifying volumeMode: Block
in the
PV and PersistentVolumeClaim (PVC) specification.
Create a local block PersistentVolume (PV) on a node by populating a file and
mounting it as a loop device. You can then reference this loop device in a
PV configuration as a Block
volume and use it as a block device for a
virtual machine image.
Log in as root
to the node on which to create the local PV. This procedure
uses node01
for its examples.
Create a file and populate it with null characters so that it can be used as a block device.
The following example creates a file loop10
with a size of 2Gb (20 100Mb blocks):
$ dd if=/dev/zero of=<loop10> bs=100M count=20
Mount the loop10
file as a loop device.
$ losetup </dev/loop10>d3 <loop10> (1) (2)
1 | File path where the loop device is mounted. |
2 | The file created in the previous step to be mounted as the loop device. |
Create a PersistentVolume
configuration that references the mounted loop device.
kind: PersistentVolume
apiVersion: v1
metadata:
name: <local-block-pv10>
annotations:
spec:
local:
path: </dev/loop10> (1)
capacity:
storage: <2Gi>
volumeMode: Block (2)
storageClassName: local (3)
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
persistentVolumeReclaimPolicy: Delete
nodeAffinity:
required:
nodeSelectorTerms:
- matchExpressions:
- key: kubernetes.io/hostname
operator: In
values:
- <node01> (4)
1 | The path of the loop device on the node. |
2 | Specifies it is a block PV. |
3 | Optional: Set a StorageClass for the PV. If you omit it, the cluster default is used. |
4 | The node on which the block device was mounted. |
Create the block PV.
# oc create -f <local-block-pv10.yaml>(1)
1 | The filename of the PersistentVolume created in the previous step. |
Create a DataVolume with an upload
data source to use for uploading
local disk images.
Create a DataVolume configuration that specifies spec: source: upload{}
:
apiVersion: cdi.kubevirt.io/v1alpha1
kind: DataVolume
metadata:
name: <upload-datavolume> (1)
spec:
source:
upload: {}
pvc:
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
resources:
requests:
storage: <2Gi> (2)
1 | The name of the DataVolume |
2 | The size of the DataVolume |
Create the DataVolume:
$ oc create -f <upload-datavolume>.yaml
You can use the virtctl
CLI utility to upload a virtual machine disk image from
a client machine to a DataVolume (DV) in your cluster. After you upload the image,
you can add it to a virtual machine.
A virtual machine disk image, in RAW, ISO, or QCOW2 format, optionally
compressed by using xz
or gz
.
The kubevirt-virtctl
package must be installed on the client machine.
The client machine must be configured to trust the OpenShift Container Platform router’s certificate.
A spare DataVolume that is the same size or larger than the disk that you are uploading.
Identify the following items:
File location of the VM disk image that you want to upload
Name of the DataVolume
Run the virtctl image-upload
command to upload your disk image.
You must specify the DV name and file location. For example:
$ virtctl image-upload --dv-name=<upload-datavolume> --image-path=</images/fedora.qcow2> (1) (2)
1 | The name of the DataVolume that you are creating. |
2 | The filepath of the virtual machine disk image you are uploading. |
To allow insecure server connections when using HTTPS, use the |
To verify that the DV was created, view all DV objects:
$ oc get dvs
This matrix shows the supported CDI operations for content types against endpoints, and which of these operations requires scratch space.
Content types | HTTP | HTTPS | HTTP basic auth | Registry | Upload |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
KubeVirt(QCOW2) |
✓ QCOW2 |
✓ QCOW2** |
✓ QCOW2 |
✓ QCOW2* |
✓ QCOW2* |
KubeVirt (RAW) |
✓ RAW |
✓ RAW |
✓ RAW |
✓ RAW* |
✓ RAW* |
Archive+ |
✓ TAR |
✓ TAR |
✓ TAR |
□ TAR |
□ TAR |
✓ Supported operation
□ Unsupported operation
* Requires scratch space
** Requires scratch space if a custom certificate authority is required
+ Archive does not support block mode DVs