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--- | |
apiVersion: v1 | |
kind: Pod | |
metadata: | |
name: server | |
spec: | |
containers: | |
- image: resouer/sample:v2 | |
name: war | |
lifecycle: | |
postStart: | |
exec: | |
command: | |
- "cp" | |
- "/sample.war" | |
- "/app" | |
volumeMounts: | |
- mountPath: /app | |
name: hostv1 | |
- name: peer | |
image: busybox | |
command: ["tail", "-f", "/dev/null"] | |
volumeMounts: | |
- name: hostv2 | |
mountPath: /app/sample.war | |
volumes: | |
- name: hostv1 | |
hostPath: | |
path: /tmp | |
- name: hostv2 | |
hostPath: | |
path: /tmp/sample.war |
@scrisenbery The containers starts in order, but you still need to expect cp
finish quickly.
Container dependency is not promised in k8s' current design, but you can test if health check probe can make this better?
I just use hostDir for example, you can use emptyDIr, then there will be no messed problem.
I use a couple of simple start scripts to atomically copy the data and wait until it is ready.
# Copy the data in atomically
cp -r /src/data /dest/folder/temp && mv /dest/folder/temp /dest/folder/final
# Keep the side car alive so that it doesn't get restarted. This could also be implemented
# with `pause`.
# Note: This won't be necessary when per-pod restart policies are implemented
while true; do sleep 10; done
# Wait for the data to be available
until [ -d /dest/folder/final ]; do sleep 1; done;
./start.sh
What will happen if I want to use rolling update?
Is rolling update of one container inside a pod possible? Without touching second container?
@akamanocha It works well in your case. Just make sure that Tomcat can automatically load your wars, otherwise you need to restart it manually.
Keep the side car alive so that it doesn't get restarted. This could also be implemented
withpause
.
Note: This won't be necessary when per-pod restart policies are implemented
while true; do sleep 10; done
@kjvalencik What do you mean by "pause"? Java Web Application with Tomcat and Sidercar Container keeps its sidecar container alive by invoking tail -f /dev/null
.
Guys, this can be solved more elegant by using initContainer
, see my update in the original answer: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/30538210/how-to-mimic-volumes-from-in-kubernetes/33118902#33118902
Also, what would happen if Kubernetes put two of the same pod on one host?