The Red Hat Ecosystem Catalog is the official source for discovering and learning more about the Red Hat Ecosystem of both Red Hat and certified third-party products and services.
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The StorageOS Node container turns your Openshift node into a hyper-converged storage platform. Each host that runs the Node container can contribute available local or attached storage into a distributed pool, which is then available to all cluster members via a global namespace.
Volumes are available across the cluster so if a container gets moved to another node it still has access to its data. Data can be protected with synchronous replication. Compression, caching, and QoS are enabled by default, and all volumes are thinly-provisioned.
No other hardware or software is required.
The following information was extracted from the containerfile and other sources.
Summary | Highly-available persistent block storage for containerized applications |
Description | The StorageOS Node container runs on all nodes that consume or provide storage |
Provider | StorageOS Ltd |
Maintainer | support@storageos.com |
The following information was extracted from the containerfile and other sources.
Repository name | StorageOS Node |
Image version | v2-release-v2.5.0-6 |
Architecture | amd64 |
Exposed ports | ["5705/tcp"] |
Use the following instructions to get images from a Red Hat container registry using registry service account tokens. You will need to create a registry service account to use prior to completing any of the following tasks.
First, you will need to add a reference to the appropriate secret and repository to your Kubernetes pod configuration via an imagePullSecrets field.
Then, use the following from the command line or from the OpenShift Dashboard GUI interface.
Use the following command(s) from a system with podman installed
Use the following command(s) from a system with docker service installed and running
Use the following instructions to get images from a Red Hat container registry using your Red Hat login.
For best practices, it is recommended to use registry tokens when pulling content for OpenShift deployments.
Use the following command(s) from a system with podman installed
Use the following command(s) from a system with docker service installed and running