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I am trying to run a docker container registry in Minikube for testing a CSI driver that I am writing.

I am running minikube on mac and am trying to use the following minikube start command: minikube start --vm-driver=hyperkit --disk-size=40g. I have tried with both kubeadm and localkube bootstrappers and with the virtualbox vm-driver.

This is the resource definition I am using for the registry pod deployment.

---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
  name: registry
  labels:
    app: registry
  namespace: docker-registry
spec:
  containers:
  - name: registry
    image: registry:2
    imagePullPolicy: Always
    ports:
      - containerPort: 5000
    volumeMounts:
      - mountPath: /var/lib/registry
        name: registry-data
  volumes:
  - hostPath:
      path: /var/lib/kubelet/plugins/csi-registry
      type: DirectoryOrCreate
    name: registry-data

I attempt to create it using kubectl apply -f registry-setup.yaml. Before running this my minikube cluster reports itself as ready and with all the normal minikube containers running.

However, this fails to run and upon running kubectl describe pod, I see the following message:

    Name:         registry
    Namespace:    docker-registry
    Node:         minikube/192.168.64.43
    Start Time:   Wed, 08 Aug 2018 12:24:27 -0700
    Labels:       app=registry
    Annotations:  kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration={"apiVersion":"v1","kind":"Pod","metadata":{"annotations":{},"labels":{"app":"registry"},"name":"registry","namespace":"docker-registry"},"spec":{"cont...
    Status:       Running
    IP:           172.17.0.2
    Containers:
    registry:
        Container ID:   docker://42e5193ac563c2b2e2a2b381c91350d30f7e7c5009a30a5977d33b403a374e7f
        Image:          registry:2
    ...
    TRUNCATED FOR SPACE
    ...
    Events:
    Type    Reason                 Age   From               Message
    ----    ------                 ----  ----               -------
    Normal  Scheduled              1m    default-scheduler  Successfully assigned registry to minikube
    Normal  SuccessfulMountVolume  1m    kubelet, minikube  MountVolume.SetUp succeeded for volume "registry-data"
    Normal  SuccessfulMountVolume  1m    kubelet, minikube  MountVolume.SetUp succeeded for volume "default-token-kq5mq"
    Normal  Pulling                1m    kubelet, minikube  pulling image "registry:2"
    Normal  Pulled                 1m    kubelet, minikube  Successfully pulled image "registry:2"
    Normal  Created                1m    kubelet, minikube  Created container
    Normal  Started                1m    kubelet, minikube  Started container
    ...
    TRUNCATED
    ...
    Name:         storage-provisioner
    Namespace:    kube-system
    Node:         minikube/192.168.64.43
    Start Time:   Wed, 08 Aug 2018 12:24:38 -0700
    Labels:       addonmanager.kubernetes.io/mode=Reconcile
                integration-test=storage-provisioner
    Annotations:  kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration={"apiVersion":"v1","kind":"Pod","metadata":{"annotations":{},"labels":{"addonmanager.kubernetes.io/mode":"Reconcile","integration-test":"storage-provis...
    Status:       Pending
    IP:           192.168.64.43
    Containers:
    storage-provisioner:
        Container ID:  
        Image:         gcr.io/k8s-minikube/storage-provisioner:v1.8.1
        Image ID:      
        Port:          <none>
        Host Port:     <none>
        Command:
        /storage-provisioner
        State:          Waiting
        Reason:       ErrImagePull
        Ready:          False
        Restart Count:  0
        Environment:    <none>
        Mounts:
        /tmp from tmp (rw)
        /var/run/secrets/kubernetes.io/serviceaccount from storage-provisioner-token-sb5hz (ro)
    Conditions:
    Type           Status
    Initialized    True 
    Ready          False 
    PodScheduled   True 
    Volumes:
    tmp:
        Type:          HostPath (bare host directory volume)
        Path:          /tmp
        HostPathType:  Directory
    storage-provisioner-token-sb5hz:
        Type:        Secret (a volume populated by a Secret)
        SecretName:  storage-provisioner-token-sb5hz
        Optional:    false
    QoS Class:       BestEffort
    Node-Selectors:  <none>
    Tolerations:     node.kubernetes.io/not-ready:NoExecute for 300s
                    node.kubernetes.io/unreachable:NoExecute for 300s
    Events:
    Type     Reason                 Age               From               Message
    ----     ------                 ----              ----               -------
    Normal   Scheduled              1m                default-scheduler  Successfully assigned storage-provisioner to minikube
    Normal   SuccessfulMountVolume  1m                kubelet, minikube  MountVolume.SetUp succeeded for volume "tmp"
    Normal   SuccessfulMountVolume  1m                kubelet, minikube  MountVolume.SetUp succeeded for volume "storage-provisioner-token-sb5hz"
    Normal   Pulling                23s (x3 over 1m)  kubelet, minikube  pulling image "gcr.io/k8s-minikube/storage-provisioner:v1.8.1"
    Warning  Failed                 21s (x3 over 1m)  kubelet, minikube  Failed to pull image "gcr.io/k8s-minikube/storage-provisioner:v1.8.1": rpc error: code = Unknown desc = failed to register layer: Error processing tar file(exit status 1): write /storage-provisioner: no space left on device
    Warning  Failed                 21s (x3 over 1m)  kubelet, minikube  Error: ErrImagePull
    Normal   BackOff                7s (x3 over 1m)   kubelet, minikube  Back-off pulling image "gcr.io/k8s-minikube/storage-provisioner:v1.8.1"
    Warning  Failed                 7s (x3 over 1m)   kubelet, minikube  Error: ImagePullBackOff
    ------------------------------------------------------------
    ...

So while the registry container starts up correctly, a few of the other minikube services (including dns, http ingress service, etc) begin to fail with reasons such as the following: write /storage-provisioner: no space left on device. Despite allocating a 40GB disk-size to minikube, it seems as though minikube is trying to write to rootfs or devtempfs (depending on the vm-driver) which has only 1GB of space.

$ df -h
Filesystem      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
rootfs          919M  713M  206M  78% /
devtmpfs        919M     0  919M   0% /dev
tmpfs           996M     0  996M   0% /dev/shm
tmpfs           996M  8.9M  987M   1% /run
tmpfs           996M     0  996M   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
tmpfs           996M  8.0K  996M   1% /tmp
/dev/sda1        34G  1.3G   30G   4% /mnt/sda1

Is there a way to make minikube actually use the 34GB of space that was allocated to /mnt/sda1 instead of rootfs when pulling images and creating containers?

Thanks in advance for any help!

2 Answers 2

2

You need to configure your Minikube virtual machine for using /dev/sda1 instead of / for Docker. To log in to it, use minikube ssh command.

Than you have two options:

  1. Mount /dev/sda1 to var/lib/docker, but don't forget to copy the content from original var/lib/docker to /mnt/sda1 before that.

  2. Reconfigure Docker for using /mnt/sda1 instead of var/lib/docker for storing images. Look through this link for more information about it.

2

You can also use the minikube --docker-opt option to set the --data-root option of the dockerd daemon running inside minikube. --docker-opt can be used as a pass-through for any parameter to dockerd.

For example, in the case you describe above it would look like:

minikube start --vm-driver=hyperkit --disk-size=40g --docker-opt="--data-root /mnt/sda1"

Keep in mind that if you try to modify an existing minikube cluster you either have to copy var/lib/docker to /mnt/sda1 (as the previous answer also suggested) before restarting or delete and rebuild the cluster.

update: After experimentation, I noticed that the above solution will not work the first time you run minikube start as it somehow interferes with minikube's own core-system build and boot-up process. In practice this means that you need to run minikube start at least once without the --docker-opt to build the core system and then re-run it with --docker-opt.

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