Kubernetes volumes provide a way for containers in a pod to access and share data via the filesystem. There are different kinds of volume that you can use for different purposes, such as: populating a configuration file based on a ConfigMap or a Secret providing some temporary scratch space for a pod sharing a filesystem between two different containers in the same pod sharing a filesystem between two different pods (even if those Pods run on different nodes) durably storing data so that it s...| Kubernetes
I tried changing the root-dir for kubelet and other things started to break.| Jack's home on the web
If you plan to run stateful applications in your Kubernetes cluster, you quickly run into the question of where to store this state. A database is often the best solution, though writing to disk is sometimes the only — or at least easier, option.| Stonegarden
Do you need to provision a whole bunch of ephemeral storage to your Autopilot Pods? For example, as part of a data processing pipeline? In the past with Kubernetes, you might have used emptyDir as a way to allocate a bunch of storage (taken from the node's boot disk) to your containers. This however| William Denniss
Since the very beginning of Kubernetes, the topic of persistent data and how to address the requirement of stateful applications has been an important topic. Support for stateless deployments was natural, present from the start, and garnered attention, becoming very well-known. Work on better support for stateful applications was also present from early on, with each release increasing the scope of what could be run on Kubernetes. Message queues, databases, clustered filesystems: these are so...| www.kubernetes.dev