Hello selfhosted !
Continuing my journey of setup up my home k3s cluster.
I’ve been asking myself if Longhorn might be overkill for my home cluster,here’s what i did:
3 machines running k3s each. One of them has a storage in Raid 5 and I dont want to use any storage from the other two.
Thing is, i had to configure replicas to 1 in longhorn for my pv to be green.
Hence my question, since data is already replicated in the array, shouldn’t I just use a NFS storage class instead?
Thanks !
I’ve never heard of this particular “Longhorn” and was very confused as to why Windows Vista was coming up in conversation.
Same here.
https://longhorn.io/ for the curious
Exactly thanks!
Haha sorry indeed, it’s Kubernetes related and not Windows WeDontSayItsName related 😄
Longhorn is basically just acting like a fancy NFS mount in this configuration. It’s a really fancy NFS mount that will work well with kubernetes, for things like PVC resizing and snapshots, but longhorn isn’t really stretching its legs in this scenario.
I’d say leave it, because it’s already setup. And someday you might add more (non-RAID) disks to those other nodes, in which case you can set Longhorn to replicas=2 and get some better availability.
You are completely right.
However in my mind (might be wrong here) if I use another node, i wouldn’t use the RAID array completely.
While setup up i thought that its either:
- NAS storageClass attached to the RAID array, no longhorn
- with longhorn when there is no RAID, but replication at 3
In either case, the availability of my data would be quite the same right ?
(Then there is options to backup my PV to s3 with longhorn and all that i would have to setup again though )
Thanks for your answer !
You’re on the right track here. Longhorn kind of makes RAID irrelevant, but only for data stored in Longhorn. So anything on the host disk and not a PV is at risk. I tend to use MicroOS and k3s, so I’m okay with the risk, but it’s worth considering.
For replicas, I wouldn’t jump straight to 3 and ignore 2. A lot of distributed storage systems use 3 so that they can resolve the “split brain” problem. Basically, if half the nodes can’t talk to each other, the side with quorum (2 of 3) knows that it can keep going while the side with 1 of 3 knows to stop accepting writes it can’t replicate. But Longhorn already does this in a Kubernetes native way. So it can get away with replica 2 because only one of the replicas will get the lease from the kube-api.
Longhorn isn’t just about replication (which is not backup, and RAID is not backup either). Also if you only have one replica, is it even different from local storage at this point?
You’d use longhorn to make sure applications don’t choke and die when the storage they are using go down. Also, I’m not sure if you can supply longhorn storage to nodes that don’t run it. I haven’t tried it.
I suspect all pods that you’d define to use longhorn would only go up at the longhorn replica node.
All this is how I understand longhorn works. I haven’t tried it this way, my only experience is running it on every node so if one node goes down pods can just restart on any other node and carry on.
Hello ! Thanks for your response!
Yes RAID is used as availability of my data here, with or without longhorn, there wouldn’t be much difference there (especially since i only use one specific node)
And you would be right, since the other nodes are unscheduled, it will be available only on my “storage node” so if this one goes down my storage goes down.
That’s why i might be overkill with longhorn, but there are functions to restore and backup to s3 for exemple that i would need to setup i guess
Sounds like NFS is a way to go in your case. Longhorn adds for your setup unnecessary resource overhead and complexity.
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