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Version: v0.6

CollaSet

CollaSet is responsible for managing a set of Pods. Similar to Kubernetes Deployment and StatefulSet, it also supports scaling and updating Pods. Additionally, CollaSet offers advanced features to provide users with more granular control over managing Pods.

A basic CollaSet configuration is represented in the following YAML format:

apiVersion: apps.kusionstack.io/v1alpha1
kind: CollaSet
metadata:
name: collaset-sample
spec:
replicas: 2
selector:
matchLabels:
app: foo
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: foo
spec:
containers:
- image: nginx:1.25.2
name: nginx

Let's explore the features of CollaSet.

Basic Features

Scaling Pods

CollaSet utilizes the field spec.replicas to indicate the number of Pods under management.

apiVersion: apps.kusionstack.io/v1alpha1
kind: CollaSet
metadata:
name: collaset-sample
spec:
replicas: 3 # indicate the number of Pods to manage
selector:
matchLabels:
app: foo
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: foo
spec:
containers:
- image: nginx:1.25.2
name: nginx
...

Pods can be provisioned by CollaSet.

$ kubectl -n default apply -f ./config/samples/apps_v1alpha1_collaset.yaml
collaset.apps.kusionstack.io/collaset-sample created

$ kubectl -n default get pod
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
collaset-sample-85q7g 1/1 Running 0 57s
collaset-sample-vx5ws 1/1 Running 0 57s
collaset-sample-hr7pv 1/1 Running 0 57s

$ kubectl -n default get cls
NAME DESIRED CURRENT UPDATED UPDATED_READY UPDATED_AVAILABLE CURRENT_REVISION UPDATED_REVISION AGE
collaset-sample 3 3 3 3 3 collaset-sample-6d7b7c58f collaset-sample-6d7b7c58f 64s

By default, CollaSet always creates new Pods using the latest template specified in spec.template. CollaSet establishes ownership over a set of Pods through the label selector defined in spec.selector. Thus, it's important to ensure that the labels provided in spec.selector match those in spec.template.metadata.labels.

CollaSet status provides general information about this CollaSet and all Pods under it.

$ kubectl -n default get cls collaset-sample -o yaml
......
status:
availableReplicas: 3
collisionCount: 0
conditions:
- lastTransitionTime: "2023-09-01T03:56:09Z"
reason: Updated
status: "True"
type: Update
currentRevision: collaset-sample-6d7b7c58f
observedGeneration: 1
operatingReplicas: 0
readyReplicas: 3
replicas: 3
scheduledReplicas: 3
updatedAvailableReplicas: 3
updatedReadyReplicas: 3
updatedReplicas: 3
updatedRevision: collaset-sample-6d7b7c58f

Some fields in CollaSet status are explained here:

updatedRevision indicates the latest revision that CollaSet uses to create or update Pods.

currentRevision indicates the last updated revision. It will be set to updatedRevision after all Pods are updated, and their PodReady conditions become True.

replicas indicates the count of Pods under this CollaSet.

scheduledReplicas indicates the count of Pods under this CollaSet that successfully got scheduled.

availableReplicas indicates the count of Pods under this CollaSet that have all expected finalizers attached.

updatedReplicas indicates the count of Pods under this CollaSet that have the updated revision.

updatedReadyReplicas indicates the count of Pods under this CollaSet that are counted in updatedReplicas and have their PodReady conditions set to True.

updatedAvailableReplicas indicates the count of Pods under this CollaSet that is counted in updatedReadyReplicas and have all expected finalizers attached.

Updating Pods

CollaSet generates Pods according to the pod template described in spec.template. This template can be updated to signal CollaSet to update each owned Pod:

$ kubectl -n default edit cls collaset-sample
apiVersion: apps.kusionstack.io/v1alpha1
kind: CollaSet
metadata:
......
spec:
......
template:
......
spec:
containers:
- image: nginx:1.24.0 # changed from nginx:1.25.2
......

CollaSet immediately updates all Pods it owns with the new Pod template by default.

$ kubectl -n default get pod -o yaml | grep "image: nginx"
- image: nginx:1.24.0
- image: nginx:1.24.0
- image: nginx:1.24.0

The update progress can be controlled using partition.

Partition

Similar to StatefulSet, partition is used to control the upgrade progress.

By default, if not indicated, all Pods will be updated when spec.template changes. The partition can be adjusted from 0 to spec.replicas to specify how many Pods CollaSet should update. Unlike StatefulSet, the partition in CollaSet represents the number of Pods to update.

Let's update the image back to nginx:1.25.2:

$ kubectl -n default edit cls collaset-sample
apiVersion: apps.kusionstack.io/v1alpha1
kind: CollaSet
metadata:
name: collaset-sample
spec:
template:
......
spec:
containers:
- image: nginx:1.25.2 # changed from nginx:1.24.0
...
updateStrategy:
rollingUpdate:
byPartition:
partition: 1 # use partition to control upgrade progress

In this case, CollaSet only updates 1 Pod to the updated revision.

$ kubectl -n default get pod -o yaml | grep "image: nginx"
- image: nginx:1.24.0
- image: nginx:1.25.2 # only 1 Pod updated
- image: nginx:1.24.0

Update by Label

By configuring the byLabel rolling update policy, users can precisely specify which Pods they want to update by using labels.

If you go back to the sample in the section Partition and change byPartition to byLabel like the following:

$ kubectl -n default edit cls collaset-sample
apiVersion: apps.kusionstack.io/v1alpha1
kind: CollaSet
metadata:
name: collaset-sample
spec:
...
updateStrategy:
rollingUpdate:
- byPartition:
- partition: 1
+ byLabel: {}

Subsequently, each Pod will only be updated if it's marked with the label collaset.kusionstack.io/update-included.

Advanced Features

Pod Instance ID

Each Pod created by CollaSet has a unique ID held by the label collaset.kusionstack.io/instance-id, which can be used to identify each individual Pod.

apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
labels:
collaset.kusionstack.io/instance-id: "0" # Pod instance ID
...

CollaSet provides a context to specify an ID pool, which defaults to the same name as the CollaSet and is immutable.

...
spec:
scaleStrategy:
context: <id-pool-name>

The same ID pool name can be indicated for multiple CollaSets, allowing them to share a single ID pool. Consequently, each Pod created by these CollaSets will be assigned a unique ID.

For example, these are two CollaSets with the same context:

$ cat ~/sample.yaml
apiVersion: apps.kusionstack.io/v1alpha1
kind: CollaSet
metadata:
name: collaset-sample-a
spec:
replicas: 2
scaleStrategy:
context: foo # with the same context foo
selector:
matchLabels:
app: foo
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: foo
spec:
containers:
- image: nginx:1.25.2
name: nginx
---

apiVersion: apps.kusionstack.io/v1alpha1
kind: CollaSet
metadata:
name: collaset-sample-b
spec:
replicas: 2
scaleStrategy:
context: foo # with the same context foo
selector:
matchLabels:
app: foo
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: foo
spec:
containers:
- image: nginx:1.25.2
name: nginx

Then create these CollaSets with the sample file:

$ kubectl -n default apply -f ~/sample.yaml
collaset.apps.kusionstack.io/collaset-sample-a created
collaset.apps.kusionstack.io/collaset-sample-b created

$ kubectl -n default get pod
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
collaset-sample-a-g4sjj 1/1 Running 0 42s
collaset-sample-a-ph9vc 1/1 Running 0 42s
collaset-sample-b-fqkq4 1/1 Running 0 42s
collaset-sample-b-lqg8f 1/1 Running 0 42s

$ kubectl -n default get pod -o yaml | grep collaset.kusionstack.io/instance-id
collaset.kusionstack.io/instance-id: "0"
collaset.kusionstack.io/instance-id: "1"
collaset.kusionstack.io/instance-id: "3"
collaset.kusionstack.io/instance-id: "2"

Now, the 4 Pods created by these 2 CollaSets will have a unique instance ID.

Revision Consistency

Pods within a CollaSet can utilize more than two different Pod templates simultaneously, including both the current and updated revisions. This can result from partial updates. To ensure the stability of Pod revisions over time, CollaSet records this information. When a Pod is deleted, CollaSet recreates it using its previous revision.

It can be reproduced by following steps:

  1. Provision a new CollaSet with replicas 3.
$ kubectl -n default apply -f ./config/samples/apps_v1alpha1_collaset.yaml
collaset.apps.kusionstack.io/collaset-sample created

$ kubectl get pod
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
collaset-sample-5tgcs 1/1 Running 0 4s
collaset-sample-glgnb 1/1 Running 0 4s
collaset-sample-qs46r 1/1 Running 0 4s

$ kubectl -n default get cls
NAME DESIRED CURRENT UPDATED UPDATED_READY UPDATED_AVAILABLE CURRENT_REVISION UPDATED_REVISION AGE
collaset-sample 3 3 3 3 3 collaset-sample-6d7b7c58f collaset-sample-6d7b7c58f 64s
  1. Update the image of PodTemplate of the CollaSet to image nginx:1.24.0 and set the partition to 2. Then there will be 2 Pods with image nginx:1.24.0 and 1 Pod with image nginx:1.25.2.
$ kubectl -n default edit cls collaset-sample
apiVersion: apps.kusionstack.io/v1alpha1
kind: CollaSet
metadata:
name: collaset-sample
spec:
template:
......
spec:
containers:
- image: nginx:1.24.0 # changed from nginx:1.25.2
...
updateStrategy:
rollingUpdate:
byPartition:
partition: 2 # update 2 Pods

# Wait until these 2 Pods are updated, and check the Pod's images.
$ kubectl get pod -o yaml | grep "image: nginx"
- image: nginx:1.25.2
- image: nginx:1.24.0
- image: nginx:1.24.0
  1. Update the image of PodTemplate of the CollaSet to image nginx:1.23.4 and set the partition to 1.
$ kubectl -n default edit cls collaset-sample
apiVersion: apps.kusionstack.io/v1alpha1
kind: CollaSet
metadata:
name: collaset-sample
spec:
template:
......
spec:
containers:
- image: nginx:1.23.4 # changed from nginx:1.24.0
...
updateStrategy:
rollingUpdate:
byPartition:
partition: 1 # update 1 Pod

# Wait until the Pod is updated, and check the Pod's images.
$ kubectl get pod -o yaml | grep "image: nginx"
- image: nginx:1.25.2
- image: nginx:1.24.0 # Pod collaset-sample-qs46r
- image: nginx:1.23.4

Now, there are 3 Pods, each of which has an individual image. If we then delete the Pod with the image nginx:1.24.0, the new Pod replacing it will be created with the same image nginx:1.24.0 in order for the Pod to inherit the revision.

$ kubectl delete -n default delete pod collaset-sample-qs46r
pod "collaset-sample-qs46r" deleted

$ kubectl get pod
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
collaset-sample-5tgcs 1/1 Running 0 3h
collaset-sample-ht9x6 1/1 Running 0 2m27s # Pod recreated
collaset-sample-qs46r 1/1 Running 1 (3h ago) 3h

$ kubectl get pod -o yaml | grep "image: nginx"
- image: nginx:1.25.2
- image: nginx:1.24.0 # image has not been changed
- image: nginx:1.23.4

In-Place Update Pod

In addition to the Recreate update policy, which is identical to Deployment and StatefulSet, CollaSet offers the InPlaceIfPossible update policy.

apiVersion: apps.kusionstack.io/v1alpha1
kind: CollaSet
metadata:
name: collaset-sample
spec:
...
updateStrategy:
podUpgradePolicy: InPlaceIfPossible # Options: InPlaceIfPossible, Recreate, Replace

InPlaceIfPossible is the default value, which instructs CollaSets to try to update Pods in place when only container images, labels, and annotations have changed. If some other fields have changed too, the policy will back off to the Recreate policy.

Recreate indicates CollaSets always delete the old Pod and create a new one with an updated revision.

If update pod template with InPlaceIfPossible policy as following example, the Pod will not be recreated.

$ kubectl -n default edit cls collaset-sample
apiVersion: apps.kusionstack.io/v1alpha1
kind: CollaSet
metadata:
name: collaset-sample
spec:
template:
......
spec:
containers:
- image: nginx:1.24.0 # changed from nginx:1.25.2
...
updateStrategy:
podUpgradePolicy: InPlaceIfPossible # use InPlaceIfPossible policy

$ kubectl -n default get pod -o yaml | grep "image: nginx"
- image: nginx:1.24.0
- image: nginx:1.24.0
- image: nginx:1.24.0

$ kubectl -n default get pod
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
collaset-sample-5wvlh 1/1 Running 1 (6s ago) 2m10s
collaset-sample-ldvrg 1/1 Running 1 (6s ago) 2m10s
collaset-sample-pbz75 1/1 Running 1 (6s ago) 2m10s

Replace Update Pod

CollaSet provides the Replace policy for certain applications that are sensitive to the available number of Pods.

apiVersion: apps.kusionstack.io/v1alpha1
kind: CollaSet
metadata:
name: collaset-sample
spec:
...
updateStrategy:
podUpgradePolicy: Replace # Options: InPlaceIfPossible, Recreate, Replace

The Replace policy indicates that CollaSet should update a Pod by creating a new one to replace it. Unlike the Recreate policy, which deletes the old Pod before creating a new updated one, or the InPlaceIfPossible policy, which updates the current Pod in place, the Replace policy first creates a new Pod with the updated revision. It then deletes the old Pod once the new one becomes available for service.

# Before updating CollaSet
$ kubectl -n default get pod
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
collaset-sample-dwkls 1/1 Running 0 6m55s

# After updating CollaSet, the updated Pod is created first
$ kubectl -n default get pod
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
collaset-sample-dwkls 1/1 Running 0 6m55s
collaset-sample-rcmbv 0/1 ContainerCreating 0 0s

# Once the created Pod is available for service, the old Pod will be deleted
$ kubectl -n default get pod
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
collaset-sample-rcmbv 1/1 Running 0 1s
collaset-sample-dwkls 1/1 Terminating 0 7m12s

The two Pods will have a pair of labels to identify their relationship. The new Pod will have the label collaset.kusionstack.io/replace-pair-origin-name to indicate the name of the old Pod, and the old Pod will have the label collaset.kusionstack.io/replace-pair-new-id to indicate the instance ID of the new Pod.

Additionally, the new Pod and old Pod will each begin their own PodOpsLifecycles, which are independent of each other.

Recreate And Replace Specified Pod

In practice, users often need to recreate or replace specified Pods under a CollaSet.

To delete a Pod, users can simply call the Kubernetes API, like executing kubectl delete pod <pod-name>. However, this will bypass the PodOpsLifecycle Mechanism. We provide following two options:

  1. Enable the feature GraceDeleteWebhook so that it is possible to delete Pods through PodOpsLifecycle.
# Enable the GraceDeleteWebhook feature when starting the controller with this argument
$ /manager --feature-gates=GraceDeleteWebhook=true
$ kubectl -n default get pod
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
collaset-sample-vqccr 1/1 Running 0 21s

# Delete the pod directly. A message will respond indicating that the Pod deletion is handled by PodOpsLifecycle
kubectl -n default delete pod collaset-sample-vqccr
Error from server (failed to validate GraceDeleteWebhook, pod deletion process is underway and being managed by PodOpsLifecycle): admission webhook "validating-pod.apps.kusionstack.io" denied the request: failed to validate GraceDeleteWebhook, pod deletion process is underway and being managed by PodOpsLifecycle

# The old Pod is deleted, and a new Pod will be created
$ kubectl -n default get pod -w
collaset-sample-vqccr 1/1 Running 0 71s
collaset-sample-vqccr 1/1 Terminating 0 71s
......
collaset-sample-nbl6t 0/1 Pending 0 0s
collaset-sample-nbl6t 0/1 ContainerCreating 0 0s
......
collaset-sample-nbl6t 1/1 Running 0 0s
  1. Label the Pod with podopslifecycle.kusionstack.io/to-delete, so that CollaSet will delete the Pod through PodOpsLifecycle.
# Label Pod
$ kubectl -n default label pod collaset-sample-nbl6t podopslifecycle.kusionstack.io/to-delete=true

# The old Pod is deleted, and a new Pod will be recreated
$ kubectl -n default get pod -w
collaset-sample-nbl6t 1/1 Running 0 5m28s
collaset-sample-nbl6t 1/1 Terminating 0 5m28s
......
collaset-sample-w6x69 0/1 Pending 0 0s
......
collaset-sample-w6x69 0/1 ContainerCreating 0 0s
......
collaset-sample-w6x69 1/1 Running 0 2s

Recreating a Pod will delete the old Pod first and then create a new one. This will affect the available Pod count. To avoid this, CollaSet provides a feature to replace Pods by labeling them with podopslifecycle.kusionstack.io/to-replace.

# Replace Pod by label
$ kubectl -n echo label pod collaset-sample-w6x69 podopslifecycle.kusionstack.io/to-replace=true

# The old Pod is deleted, and a new Pod will be created
$ kubectl -n default get pod -w
collaset-sample-w6x69 1/1 Running 0 5m29s
collaset-sample-74fsv 0/1 Pending 0 0s
collaset-sample-74fsv 0/1 ContainerCreating 0 0s
......
collaset-sample-74fsv 1/1 Running 0 2s
......
collaset-sample-w6x69 0/1 Terminating 0 5m33s

Supprting PVCs

CollaSet introduces support for PVCs, allowing user to declare VolumeClaimTemplates to create PVCs for each Pod. Furthermore, in response to common issues with PVCs management, such as high modification costs and difficult control, CollaSet extends its functionality with the following advantages vs. StatefulSet:

  1. Support update, add and delete on volumeClaimTemplates.
  2. Provide control over PVC lifecycle.

Provision PVCs

The collaset-pvc.yaml file declares a CollaSet with VolumeClaimTemplates to provision a PVC with 1Gi storage for each Pod. These PVCs are then mounted on the container at the path /path/mount/www.

apiVersion: apps.kusionstack.io/v1alpha1
kind: CollaSet
metadata:
name: foo
spec:
replicas: 2
selector:
matchLabels:
app: foo
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: foo
spec:
containers:
- image: nginx:1.25
name: nginx
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /path/mount/www # path to mount PVC
name: www
volumeClaimTemplates:
- metadata:
name: www
spec:
storageClassName: standard
volumeMode: Filesystem
accessModes: [ "ReadWriteOnce" ]
resources:
requests:
storage: 1Gi

Pods and PVCs can be provisioned by CollaSet.

$ kubectl -n default apply -f collaset-pvc.yaml
collaset.apps.kusionstack.io/foo created

$ kubectl -n default get pod
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
foo-pw5lg 1/1 Running 0 4s
foo-5n6ts 1/1 Running 0 4s

$ kubectl -n default get pvc
NAME STATUS VOLUME CAPACITY ACCESS MODES STORAGECLASS AGE
foo-www-h5zv7 Bound pvc-8a7d8ea0-ced0-423a-9255-bedfad0f2db6 1Gi RWO standard 7s
foo-www-lswp2 Bound pvc-9564b44b-9c99-467b-abee-4285183ff9c3 1Gi RWO standard 7s

Each Pod and its related PVC have the same value of label collaset.kusionstack.io/instance-id.

$ kubectl -n default get pod -o yaml | grep instance-id
collaset.kusionstack.io/instance-id: "1"
collaset.kusionstack.io/instance-id: "0"

$ kubectl -n default get pvc -o yaml | grep instance-id
collaset.kusionstack.io/instance-id: "1"
collaset.kusionstack.io/instance-id: "0"

Update PVCs

To save the operating costs of PVCs, i.e. expand storage capacity, CollaSet supports update, add and delete on volumeClaimTemplates.

To achieve this, for each PVC, CollaSet calculates a hash value based on its template, and attatch it to label collaset.kusionstack.io/pvc-template-hash. Once users modify the templates, CollaSet recognizes, caculates a new hash value and attach it on new PVCs to replace old ones.

Let's give it a try, update the storage of PVC template from 1Gi to 2Gi.

$ kubectl -n default edit cls foo
......
volumeClaimTemplates:
- metadata:
name: www
spec:
storageClassName: standard
volumeModes: Filesystem
accessModes: [ "ReadWriteOnce" ]
resources:
requests:
- storage: 1Gi
+ storage: 2Gi # update pvc template to expand storage
......

There are 2 new PVCs with 2Gi storage created with different hash values.

$ kubectl -n default edit cls foo
collaset.apps.kusionstack.io/foo edited

$ kubectl -n default get pod
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
foo-pw5lg 1/1 Terminating 0 7s
foo-5n6ts 1/1 Terminating 0 7s
foo-9nhz4 0/1 Pending 0 1s
foo-xb2gd 0/1 Pending 0 1s

$ kubectl -n default get pvc
NAME STATUS VOLUME CAPACITY ACCESS MODES STORAGECLASS AGE
foo-www-h5zv7 Terminating pvc-8a7d8ea0-ced0-423a-9255-bedfad0f2db6 1Gi RWO standard 11s
foo-www-lswp2 Terminating pvc-9564b44b-9c99-467b-abee-4285183ff9c3 1Gi RWO standard 11s
foo-www-cj2s9 Bound pvc-647e2a81-7fc6-4f37-a835-e63da9172de3 2Gi RWO standard 5s
foo-www-hp2t6 Bound pvc-03d7536e-cd3f-465f-bd30-362a9510f0c9 2Gi RWO standard 5s

$ kubectl -n default get pvc -o yaml | grep pvc-template-hash
collaset.kusionstack.io/pvc-template-hash: 594d8857f9 # hash value of old pvc
collaset.kusionstack.io/pvc-template-hash: 594d8857f9
collaset.kusionstack.io/pvc-template-hash: d78c5ff6b # hash value of new pvc
collaset.kusionstack.io/pvc-template-hash: d78c5ff6b

For old Pvcs, users can retain them by configuring whenScaled policy to Retain . Then old PVCs can be re-mount on its related Pod after rolling back. Otherwise, old PVCs can be deleted by default policy Delete.

Add PVCs

Add a PVC template yyy, which is mounted on the container at the path /path/mount/yyy.

$ kubectl -n default edit cls foo
......
spec:
containers:
- image: nginx:1.25
name: nginx
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /path/mount/www # path to mount PVC
name: www
+ - mountPath: /path/mount/yyy # path to mount PVC
+ name: yyy
volumeClaimTemplates:
- metadata:
name: www
spec:
storageClassName: standard
volumeMode: Filesystem
accessModes: [ "ReadWriteOnce" ]
resources:
requests:
storage: 2Gi
+ - metadata: # added pvc template
+ name: yyy
+ spec:
+ storageClassName: standard
+ volumeMode: Filesystem
+ accessModes: [ "ReadWriteOnce" ]
+ resources:
+ requests:
+ storage: 2Gi

Now, each pod has two PVCs, which include a new PVCs claimed by template yyy and one old PVC claimed by template www.

$ kubectl -n default edit cls foo
collaset.apps.kusionstack.io/foo edited

$ kubectl -n default get pod
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
foo-8wwsz 0/1 Pending 0 1s
foo-9nhz4 1/1 Terminating 0 23s
foo-hd2cv 0/1 Pending 0 1s
foo-xb2gd 1/1 Terminating 0 23s

$ kubectl -n default get pvc
NAME STATUS VOLUME CAPACITY ACCESS MODES STORAGECLASS AGE
foo-www-cj2s9 Bound pvc-647e2a81-7fc6-4f37-a835-e63da9172de3 2Gi RWO standard 25s
foo-www-hp2t6 Bound pvc-03d7536e-cd3f-465f-bd30-362a9510f0c9 2Gi RWO standard 25s
foo-yyy-c68nh Bound pvc-94ee5eff-2350-4cb7-8411-85f0928d25fc 2Gi RWO standard 3s # new pvc
foo-yyy-vpwss Bound pvc-8363dc78-3340-47d0-aa11-0adac36308d5 2Gi RWO standard 3s # new pvc

Delete PVCs

Delete the PVC template yyy on CollaSet.

$ kubectl -n default edit cls foo
......
spec:
containers:
- image: nginx:1.25
name: nginx
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /path/mount/www # path to mount PVC
name: www
- - mountPath: /path/mount/yyy # path to mount PVC
- name: yyy
volumeClaimTemplates:
- metadata:
name: www
spec:
storageClassName: standard
volumeMode: Filesystem
accessModes: [ "ReadWriteOnce" ]
resources:
requests:
storage: 2Gi
- - metadata: # delete pvc template
- name: yyy
- spec:
- storageClassName: standard
- volumeMode: Filesystem
- accessModes: [ "ReadWriteOnce" ]
- resources:
- requests:
- storage: 2Gi

Now, PVCs claimed by template yyy are deleted and the origin PVCs claimed by template www are retained.

$ kubectl -n default edit cls foo
collaset.apps.kusionstack.io/foo edited

$ kubectl -n default get pod
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
foo-6qcpc 1/1 Running 0 2s
foo-z2jqv 1/1 Running 0 2s
foo-8wwsz 1/1 Terminating 0 38s
foo-hd2cv 1/1 Terminating 0 38s

$ kubectl -n default get pvc
NAME STATUS VOLUME CAPACITY ACCESS MODES STORAGECLASS AGE
foo-www-cj2s9 Bound pvc-647e2a81-7fc6-4f37-a835-e63da9172de3 2Gi RWO standard 61s
foo-www-hp2t6 Bound pvc-03d7536e-cd3f-465f-bd30-362a9510f0c9 2Gi RWO standard 61s
foo-yyy-c68nh Terminating pvc-94ee5eff-2350-4cb7-8411-85f0928d25fc 2Gi RWO standard 39s
foo-yyy-vpwss Terminating pvc-8363dc78-3340-47d0-aa11-0adac36308d5 2Gi RWO standard 39s

PVC Retention Policy

CollaSet provides control over PVC lifecycle by configuring spec.persistentVolumeClaimRetentionPolicy. Users can retain or delete PVCs after its related Pod is scaled down or CollaSet is deleted, respectively. This feature is also supported by StatefulSet since v1.27. Basic rule is detailed as follows:

  • whenScale : decides to delete or retain PVCs after Pod is scaled down.
  • whenDeleted: decides to delete or retain PVCs after CollaSet is deleted.

For each policy users can set the value to either Delete (by default) or Retain. Note that for StatefulSet, the default policy is Retain.

whenScaled

Apply collaset-pvc.yaml and edit foo to scale replicas to 1.

$ kubectl apply -f collaset-pvc.yaml
collaset.apps.kusionstack.io/foo created

$ kubectl edit cls foo
......
spec:
- replicas: 2
+ replicas: 1 # scale in 1 pod
selector:
matchLabels:
app: foo
......

As the whenScaled is not configured, thus its value is Delete by default. Consequently, PVC foo-www-wzwbq is deleted as its related Pod foo-tkc5m is scaling down.

$ kubectl -n default edit cls foo
collaset.apps.kusionstack.io/foo edited

$ kubectl -n default get pod
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
foo-tkc5m 0/1 Terminating 0 27s # related pvc is terminating
foo-vwtcm 1/1 Running 0 27s

$ kubectl -n default get pvc
NAME STATUS VOLUME CAPACITY ACCESS MODES STORAGECLASS AGE
foo-www-wzwbq Terminating pvc-b92c28c6-59ad-4976-810c-8d538c4a22c6 1Gi RWO standard 29s
foo-www-r4vlh Bound pvc-dd7f7cce-a3cb-4bba-a106-e5ad264959a2 1Gi RWO standard 29s

Set Retain to whenScaled, and scale replicas to 0.

$ kubectl -n default edit cls foo
......
spec:
- replicas: 1
+ replicas: 0 # scale in 1 pod
selector:
matchLabels:
app: foo
+ scaleStrategy:
+ persistentVolumeClaimRetentionPolicy:
+ whenScaled: Retain # retain the pvc after pod is scaled down
......

Pod foo-vwtcm is terminating, while its related PVC foo-www-r4vlh is retained.

$ kubectl -n default edit cls foo
collaset.apps.kusionstack.io/foo edited

$ kubectl -n default get pod
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
foo-vwtcm -n default 1/1 Terminating 0 62s # related pvc is retained

$ kubectl -n default get pvc
NAME STATUS VOLUME CAPACITY ACCESS MODES STORAGECLASS AGE
foo-www-r4vlh Bound pvc-dd7f7cce-a3cb-4bba-a106-e5ad264959a2 1Gi RWO standard 63s

To validate the retention policy, try ro scale replicas to 2, and the remaining PVC should be mounted again.

$ kubectl -n default edit cls foo
......
spec:
- replicas: 0
+ replicas: 2 # scale out 2 pods
......

We can see that PVC foo-www-r4vlh is retained by Pod foo-px487 as they have the same instance-id.

$ kubectl -n default edit cls foo
collaset.apps.kusionstack.io/foo edited

$ kubectl -n default get pod
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
foo-ld5xc 1/1 Running 0 27s
foo-px487 1/1 Running 0 27s

$ kubectl -n default get pvc
NAME STATUS VOLUME CAPACITY ACCESS MODES STORAGECLASS AGE
foo-www-d48gx Bound pvc-1884ee45-5cc9-48ee-b01a-20f5ad63d6d4 1Gi RWO standard 29s
foo-www-r4vlh Bound pvc-dd7f7cce-a3cb-4bba-a106-e5ad264959a2 1Gi RWO standard 2m47s

$ kubectl -n default get pod foo-px487 -o yaml | grep instance-id
collaset.kusionstack.io/instance-id: "1"

$ kubectl -n default get pvc foo-www-r4vlh -o yaml | grep instance-id
collaset.kusionstack.io/instance-id: "1" # pvc foo-www-r4vlh is retained

whenDelete

Edit foo to configure Retain policy for whenDelete, and then delete this CollaSet.

$ kubectl -n default edit cls foo
......
scaleStrategy:
persistentVolumeClaimRetentionPolicy:
whenScaled: Retain
+ whenDelete: Retain # retain the pvc after collaset is deleted
......
collaset.apps.kusionstack.io/foo edited

$ kubectl -n default delete cls foo
collaset.apps.kusionstack.io "foo" deleted

Now, try to recreate foo with 2 replicas, and the result shows both PVCs are retained.

$ kubectl -n default apply -f collaset-pvc.yaml
collaset.apps.kusionstack.io/foo created

$ kubectl -n default get pod
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
foo-qhh8t 1/1 Running 0 2s
foo-ss255 1/1 Running 0 2s

$ kubectl -n default get pvc
NAME STATUS VOLUME CAPACITY ACCESS MODES STORAGECLASS AGE
foo-www-d48gx Bound pvc-1884ee45-5cc9-48ee-b01a-20f5ad63d6d4 1Gi RWO standard 4m29s
foo-www-r4vlh Bound pvc-dd7f7cce-a3cb-4bba-a106-e5ad264959a2 1Gi RWO standard 6m47s

$ kubectl -n default get pod foo-px487 -o yaml | grep instance-id
collaset.kusionstack.io/instance-id: "0"
collaset.kusionstack.io/instance-id: "1"

$ kubectl -n default get pvc foo-www-r4vlh -o yaml | grep instance-id
collaset.kusionstack.io/instance-id: "0" # pvc foo-www-d48gx is retained
collaset.kusionstack.io/instance-id: "1" # pvc foo-www-r4vlh is retained