Attach Azure disks in < 1 second. Attach as many as you want. Attach them where ever you want. dysk mounts Azure disks as Linux block devices directly on VMs without dependency on the host.
Project Status: Alpha
- Pack more data disks per VM. Dysk has no restriction on max # of disks. Dysk can mount many disks per node (depending on CPU/Memory/Network).
- Quickly attach and detach disks to node (or node's workload). dysk attaches/detaches disks in 1 second or less.
- Treat Azure disks (in essence they are storage client) as workload (similar to pods in kubernetes). They start fast on nodes and move fast between nodes when needed.
Check Design for details on how dysk works.
Dysk works with storage accounts V1 or V2[storage api version:2017-04-17]. Premium SKU is subject to size based throttling. Please install dysk kernel module before running the below commands.
Auto-Create and mount 2 GB Azure Page Blob as a block device
sudo dyskctl mount auto-create -a {STORAGE ACCOUNT NAME} -k {STORAGE ACCOUNT KEY}
## output
Created PageBlob in account:xdysk dysks/dysk6Hjr5R52.vhd(2GiB)
Wrote VHD header for PageBlob in account:xdysk dysks/dysk6Hjr5R52.vhd
Type Name VHD SizeGB AccountName Path
RW dysk6Hjr5R52 Yes 2 xdysk /dysks/dysk6Hjr5R52.vhd
When using the auto-create command the client library by default writes the vhd footer for you. This enables you to mount the disk using ARM if needed. You can disable this using the
-vhd
flag Make sure the storage account supports http (not https)
Mount existing Azure Page Blob (with or without a lease id)
sudo dyskctl mount -a {STORAGE ACCOUNT NAME} -k {STORAGE ACCOUNT KEY} -c {CONTAINER NAME} -d {DISK NAME} -i {LEASE ID}
## output
Type Name VHD SizeGB AccountName Path
RW dysk1cmwC5uU Yes 2 dyskdemo /dysks/dysk1cmwC5uU.vhd
If you are seeing error storage: service returned error: StatusCode=409, ErrorCode=LeaseAlreadyPresent, ErrorMessage=There is already a lease present.
, you can set the --break-lease
flag to true
to break the existing lease.
sudo dyskctl mount -a {STORAGE ACCOUNT NAME} -k {STORAGE ACCOUNT KEY} -c {CONTAINER NAME} -d {DISK NAME} -i {LEASE ID} -b true
## output
lease not valid
acquiring new lease
break lease
Type Name VHD SizeGB AccountName Path
RW dysk1cmwC5uU Yes 2 dyskdemo /dysks/dysk1cmwC5uU.vhd
If you do not provide a
--lease-id
, you will most likely need to set the--break-lease
flag totrue
to break any existing lease on it. Unless it has been previously released.
Dysks are block devices, so it can be used using common Linux commands
#List block devices
lsblk
# dysks can be formatted as regular disks using mkfs command, example:
sudo mkfs.ext4 /dev/dysk6Hjr5R52 #Device name from the output above.
Dysks can be mounted as read-only (on many nodes) devices using the --read-only flag
You can list dysks using the following command
# List currently attached dysks
sudo dyskctl list -o json
[
{
"Type": "RW",
"Name": "dyskxOQO4esH",
"AccountName": "xdysk",
"AccountKey": "{KEY}",
"Path": "/dysks/dyskxOQO4esH.vhd",
"LeaseId": "{LEASE}",
"Major": 252,
"Minor": 32,
"Vhd": true,
"SizeGB": 2
},
{
"Type": "RW",
"Name": "dysk6Hjr5R52",
"AccountName": "xdysk",
"AccountKey": "{KEY}",
"Path": "/dysks/dysk6Hjr5R52.vhd",
"LeaseId": "{LEASE}",
"Major": 252,
"Minor": 16,
"Vhd": true,
"SizeGB": 2
}
]
Keys are never stored, they are kept in module's kernel memory.
Unmounting using the following command
sudo dyskctl unmount -d dysk6Hjr5R52
for further CLI commands execute
dyskctl --help