The documentation you are viewing is for Dapr v1.9 which is an older version of Dapr. For up-to-date documentation, see the latest version.
How-to: Mount Pod volumes to the Dapr sidecar
Introduction
The Dapr sidecar can be configured to mount any Kubernetes Volume attached to the application Pod. These Volumes can be accessed by the daprd
(sidecar) container in read-only or read-write modes. If a Volume is configured to be mounted but it does not exist in the Pod, Dapr logs a warning and ignores it.
For more information on different types of Volumes, check the Kubernetes documentation.
Configuration
You can set the following annotations in your deployment YAML:
- dapr.io/volume-mounts: for read-only volume mounts
- dapr.io/volume-mounts-rw: for read-write volume mounts
These annotations are comma separated pairs of volume-name:path/in/container
. Make sure that the corresponding Volumes exist in the Pod spec.
Within the official container images, Dapr runs as a process with user ID (UID) 65532
. Make sure that folders and files inside the mounted Volume are writable or readable by user 65532
as appropriate.
Although you can mount a Volume in any folder within the Dapr sidecar container, prevent conflicts and ensure smooth operations going forward by placing all mountpoints within one of these two locations, or in a subfolder within them:
/mnt
is recommended for Volumes containing persistent data that the Dapr sidecar process can read and/or write./tmp
is recommended for Volumes containing temporary data, such as scratch disks.
Example
In the example Deployment resource below, my-volume1
and my-volume2
are available inside the sidecar container at /mnt/sample1
and /mnt/sample2
respectively, in read-only mode. my-volume3
is available inside the sidecar container at /tmp/sample3
in read-write mode.
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: myapp
namespace: default
labels:
app: myapp
spec:
replicas: 1
selector:
matchLabels:
app: myapp
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: myapp
annotations:
dapr.io/enabled: "true"
dapr.io/app-id: "myapp"
dapr.io/app-port: "8000"
dapr.io/volume-mounts: "my-volume1:/mnt/sample1,my-volume2:/mnt/sample2"
dapr.io/volume-mounts-rw: "my-volume3:/tmp/sample3"
spec:
volumes:
- name: my-volume1
hostPath:
path: /sample
- name: my-volume2
persistentVolumeClaim:
claimName: pv-sample
- name: my-volume3
emptyDir: {}
...
Examples
Custom secrets storage using local file secret store
Since any type of Kubernetes Volume can be attached to the sidecar, you can use the local file secret store to read secrets from a variety of places. For example, if you have a Network File Share (NFS) server running at 10.201.202.203
, with secrets stored at /secrets/stage/secrets.json
, you can use that as a secrets storage.
- Configure the application pod to mount the NFS and attach it to the Dapr sidecar.
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: myapp
...
spec:
...
template:
...
annotations:
dapr.io/enabled: "true"
dapr.io/app-id: "myapp"
dapr.io/app-port: "8000"
dapr.io/volume-mounts: "nfs-secrets-vol:/mnt/secrets"
spec:
volumes:
- name: nfs-secrets-vol
nfs:
server: 10.201.202.203
path: /secrets/stage
...
- Point the local file secret store component to the attached file.
apiVersion: dapr.io/v1alpha1
kind: Component
metadata:
name: local-secret-store
spec:
type: secretstores.local.file
version: v1
metadata:
- name: secretsFile
value: /mnt/secrets/secrets.json
- Use the secrets.
GET http://localhost:<daprPort>/v1.0/secrets/local-secret-store/my-secret
Related links
Feedback
Was this page helpful?
Glad to hear it! Please tell us how we can improve.
Sorry to hear that. Please tell us how we can improve.