Quick Installation
Install Longhorn on Kubernetes
Longhorn can be installed on a Kubernetes cluster in several ways:
For air gapped environments, refer to Air Gap Installation.
For customizing Longhorn’s default settings, refer to Customizing Default Settings.
For deploying Longhorn on specific nodes and rejecting general workloads for those nodes, refer to Taints and Tolerations.
Unless otherwise noted, the requirements in this section apply to both the V1 and V2 Data Engines. Engine-specific requirements are listed in V1 Data Engine Requirements and V2 Data Engine Requirements.
Each node in the Kubernetes cluster where Longhorn is installed must fulfill the following requirements:
bash, curl, findmnt, grep, awk, blkid, lsblk must be installed.The Longhorn workloads must be able to run as root in order for Longhorn to be deployed and operated properly.
Longhorn Command Line Tool can be used to check the Longhorn environment for potential issues.
For the minimum recommended hardware, refer to the Best Practices.
You must perform additional setups before using Longhorn with certain operating systems and distributions.
Longhorn requires Kubernetes >= v1.25.
Use the following command to verify your cluster version:
kubectl version
Example output:
Client Version: version.Info{Major:"1", Minor:"26", GitVersion:"v1.26.10", GitCommit:"b8609d4dd75c5d6fba4a5eaa63a5507cb39a6e99", GitTreeState:"clean", BuildDate:"2023-10-18T11:44:31Z", GoVersion:"go1.20.10", Compiler:"gc", Platform:"linux/amd64"}
Server Version: version.Info{Major:"1", Minor:"26", GitVersion:"v1.26.10+k3s2", GitCommit:"cb5cb5557f34e240e38c68a8c4ca2506c68b1d86", GitTreeState:"clean", BuildDate:"2023-11-08T03:21:46Z", GoVersion:"go1.20.10", Compiler:"gc", Platform:"linux/amd64"}
Starting with v1.0.2, Longhorn is shipped with a default Pod Security Policy that will give Longhorn the necessary privileges to be able to run properly.
No special configuration is needed for Longhorn to work properly on clusters with Pod Security Policy enabled.
If your Kubernetes cluster was provisioned by Rancher v2.0.7+ or later, the MountPropagation feature is enabled by default.
If MountPropagation is disabled, Base Image feature will be disabled.
Longhorn components require root access with privileged permissions to achieve volume operations and management, because Longhorn relies on system resources on the host across different namespaces, for example, Longhorn uses nsenter to understand block devices’ usage or encrypt/decrypt volumes on the host.
The following table lists the host paths Longhorn needs to access with root and privileged permissions.
| Host path | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Longhorn Manager | |
/boot (read only) | Get required modules’ information from /boot/config-$(uname -r) on the host. |
/dev | Access block devices created by Longhorn. |
/proc (read only) | Find the recognized host process like container runtime, then use nsenter to access the mounts on the host to understand disks usage. |
/etc (read only) | Read necessary system configuration to get node status updated, for example, nfsmount.conf. |
/var/lib/longhorn | The default path for storing volume data on a host. |
| Longhorn Engine Image | |
/var/lib/longhorn/engine-binaries | The default path for storing the Longhorn engine binaries. |
| Longhorn Instance Manager | |
/ | Access any data path on this node and access Longhorn engine binaries. |
/dev | Access block devices created by Longhorn. |
/proc | Find the recognized host process like container runtime, then use nsenter to manage iSCSI targets and initiators, also some file system. |
| Longhorn Share Manager | |
/dev | Access block devices created by Longhorn. |
/lib/modules | Access kernel modules required by cryptsetup for volume encryption. |
/proc | Find the recognized host process like container runtime, then use nsenter for volume encryption. |
/sys | Support volume encryption by cryptsetup. |
| Longhorn CSI Plugin | |
/ | Perform host checks via the NFS customer mounter. This usage is deprecated and will be removed in a future release. |
/dev | Access block devices created by Longhorn. |
/lib/modules | Access kernel modules required by the Longhorn CSI plugin. |
/sys | Support volume encryption by cryptsetup. |
/var/lib/kubelet/plugins/kubernetes.io/csi | Create the staging path (via NodeStageVolume) of a block device. The staging path is bind-mounted to /var/lib/kubelet/pods (via NodePublishVolume) to support a single volume mounted to multiple Pods. |
/var/lib/kubelet/plugins_registry | Register the CSI plugin with kubelet. |
/var/lib/kubelet/plugins/driver.longhorn.io | Provide the socket path for communication with the Longhorn CSI driver. |
/var/lib/kubelet/pods | Mount volumes from the target path via NodePublishVolume. |
| Longhorn CSI Attacher/Provisioner/Resizer/Snapshotter | |
/var/lib/kubelet/plugins/driver.longhorn.io | Provide the socket path for communication with the Longhorn CSI driver. |
| Longhorn Backing Image Manager | |
/var/lib/longhorn | The default path for storing data on the host. |
| Longhorn Backing Image Data Source | |
/var/lib/longhorn | The default path for storing data on the host. |
| Longhorn System Restore Rollout | |
/var/lib/longhorn/engine-binaries | The default path for storing the Longhorn engine binaries. |
In rare cases, it may be required to modify the installed SELinux policy to get Longhorn working. If you are running an up-to-date version of a Fedora downstream distribution (e.g. Fedora, RHEL, Rocky, CentOS, etc.) and plan to leave SELinux enabled, see the KB for details.
In Longhorn system, backup feature requires NFSv4, v4.1 or v4.2, and ReadWriteMany (RWX) volume feature requires NFSv4.1. Before installing NFSv4 client userspace daemon and utilities, make sure the client kernel support is enabled on each Longhorn node.
Check if NFSv4 support is enabled in the kernel:
cat /boot/config-`uname -r`| grep CONFIG_NFS_V4
Check if NFSv4.1 support is enabled in the kernel:
cat /boot/config-`uname -r`| grep CONFIG_NFS_V4_1
Check if NFSv4.2 support is enabled in the kernel:
cat /boot/config-`uname -r`| grep CONFIG_NFS_V4_2
The command used to install a NFSv4 client differs depending on the Linux distribution.
For Debian and Ubuntu, use this command:
apt-get install nfs-common
For RHEL, CentOS, and EKS with EKS Kubernetes Worker AMI with AmazonLinux2 image, use this command:
yum install nfs-utils
For SUSE/OpenSUSE you can install a NFSv4 client via:
zypper install nfs-client
For Talos Linux, the NFS client is part of the kubelet image maintained by the Talos team.
For Container-Optimized OS, the NFS is supported with the node image.
You can also use the Longhorn Command Line Tool to install nfs-client automatically.
Notice:
These steps only verify that the kernel supports NFSv4, v4.1, or v4.2.
To verify the NFS version in use, runmount | grep nfsornfsstat -mto confirm the mounted version. Using the correct NFS version is required for backup and RWX volume features in Longhorn.
Cryptsetup is an open-source utility used to conveniently set up dm-crypt based device-mapper targets and Longhorn uses Linux Unified Key Setup (LUKS2) format that is the standard for Linux disk encryption to support volume encryption.
The command used to install the cryptsetup tool differs depending on the Linux distribution.
For Debian and Ubuntu, use this command:
apt-get install cryptsetup
For RHEL, CentOS, Rocky Linux and EKS with EKS Kubernetes Worker AMI with AmazonLinux2 image, use this command:
yum install cryptsetup
For SUSE/OpenSUSE, use this command:
zypper install cryptsetup
The device mapper is a framework provided by the Linux kernel for mapping physical block devices onto higher-level virtual block devices. It forms the foundation of the dm-crypt disk encryption and provides the linear dm device on the top of v2 volume. The device mapper is typically included by default in many Linux distributions. Some lightweight or highly customized distributions or a minimal installation of a distribution might exclude it to save space or reduce complexity
The command used to install the device mapper differs depending on the Linux distribution.
For Debian and Ubuntu, use this command:
apt-get install dmsetup
For RHEL, CentOS, Rocky Linux and EKS with EKS Kubernetes Worker AMI with AmazonLinux2 image, use this command:
yum install device-mapper
For SUSE/OpenSUSE, use this command:
zypper install device-mapper
This is the default installation path for Longhorn. If you complete the Installation Requirements and install Longhorn using one of the supported methods, Longhorn runs with the V1 Data Engine by default.
In this default mode:
/var/lib/longhorn unless you configure additional filesystem-type disks.No additional data-engine-specific steps are required after installing Longhorn.
Each Longhorn node that will host V1 volumes must also meet the following requirements:
open-iscsi is installed, and the iscsid daemon is running on all the nodes. Longhorn relies on iscsiadm on the host to provide persistent volumes to Kubernetes.file extents feature to store the data. Currently we support:The command used to install open-iscsi differs depending on the Linux distribution.
For GKE, we recommend using Ubuntu as the guest OS image since it containsopen-iscsi already.
You may need to edit the cluster security group to allow SSH access.
SUSE and openSUSE:
zypper install open-iscsi
systemctl enable iscsid
systemctl start iscsid
Debian and Ubuntu:
apt-get install open-iscsi
RHEL, CentOS, and EKS (EKS Kubernetes Worker AMI with AmazonLinux2 image):
yum --setopt=tsflags=noscripts install iscsi-initiator-utils
echo "InitiatorName=$(/sbin/iscsi-iname)" > /etc/iscsi/initiatorname.iscsi
systemctl enable iscsid
systemctl start iscsid
Talos Linux: See Talos Linux Support.
Container-Optimized OS: See Container-Optimized OS Support
Please ensure the iscsi_tcp module has been loaded before the iscsid service starts. Generally, it should be automatically loaded along with the package installation.
modprobe iscsi_tcp
Important: On SUSE and openSUSE, the
iscsi_tcpmodule is included only in thekernel-defaultpackage. If thekernel-default-basepackage is installed on your system, you must replace it withkernel-default.
You can also use the Longhorn Command Line Tool to install open-iscsi automatically.
This section is for clusters that will use the V2 Data Engine. Complete the shared Installation Requirements first, then prepare each V2 node and enable the V2 Data Engine.
Longhorn’s V2 Data Engine leverages the Storage Performance Development Kit (SPDK) to deliver enhanced performance with lower I/O latency and higher IOPS and throughput.
Before you enable the V2 Data Engine, ensure that each Longhorn node that will host V2 volumes meets the following requirements:
vfio_pciuio_pci_genericnvme-tcpWhen the V2 Data Engine is enabled, each V2 instance-manager pod typically consumes one dedicated CPU core because the spdk_tgt process uses intensive polling.
After confirming these prerequisites, configure the V2 environment on each node and then enable the V2 Data Engine in Longhorn.
For the V2 Data Engine (SPDK) to claim a disk, the NVMe device must be isolatable. Because SPDK uses vfio-pci, the following hardware constraints apply:
vfio-pci.If your hardware topology places an NVMe device in the same IOMMU group as its parent PCIe bridge, SPDK cannot initialize the device. In such cases, the disk must be used in AIO mode instead of the SPDK NVMe path.
For Debian and Ubuntu, install Linux kernel extra modules before loading the required kernel modules:
apt install -y linux-modules-extra-`uname -r`
To configure the necessary kernel modules and huge pages for SPDK, you can use the Longhorn CLI.
Or, load the required modules manually on each Longhorn node:
modprobe vfio_pci
modprobe uio_pci_generic
modprobe nvme-tcp
To avoid reloading these modules after every reboot, configure your operating system to load them automatically during boot.
SPDK uses huge pages for performance and memory efficiency. You must configure 2 MiB-sized huge pages on each Longhorn node. Specifically, 1024 pages must be available on each node, which is equivalent to 2 GiB in total.
To allocate huge pages temporarily:
echo 1024 > /sys/kernel/mm/hugepages/hugepages-2048kB/nr_hugepages
Huge page allocations made through /sys/kernel/mm/hugepages/... are not persistent across reboots. To make the allocation persistent, configure the kernel boot parameters.
Update /etc/default/grub and append the required huge page parameters:
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="hugepagesz=2M hugepages=1024"
Apply the GRUB configuration:
BIOS systems:
sudo update-grub
RHEL/SUSE with GRUB2:
sudo grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/grub2/grub.cfg
UEFI systems:
sudo grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/efi/EFI/<distro>/grub.cfg
Reboot the node:
sudo reboot
Verify the huge pages:
grep Huge /proc/meminfo
Expected output:
HugePages_Total: 1024
Hugepagesize: 2048 kB
Verify the Kubernetes node resources:
kubectl describe node <node-name>
Expected in Capacity and Allocatable:
hugepages-2Mi: 2Gi
Restart kubelet on each node so Kubernetes can detect and use the configured huge pages.
After Longhorn is installed, enable the V2 Data Engine by changing the v2-data-engine setting to true.
You can do this in the Longhorn UI under Settings > V2 Data Engine.
After the setting is enabled, the instance-manager pods are automatically restarted.
Note
When the V2 Data Engine is enabled, each instance-manager pod for the V2 Data Engine typically consumes one dedicated CPU core because the
spdk_tgtprocess uses intensive polling.
block-type Disks in Longhorn NodesUnlike filesystem-type disks that are designed for legacy volumes, volumes using the V2 Data Engine are persistent on block-type disks. Therefore, nodes that host V2 volumes must provide block-type disks. For more information about block-type disks, see Block-Type Disks.
You can use longhornctl to check and install prerequisites for either the default V1 installation path or the V2 Data Engine installation path.
Download the longhornctl binary for your platform:
The longhornctl tool is a CLI for Longhorn operations. For more information, see Command Line Tool (longhornctl).
# For AMD64 platform
curl -sSfL -o longhornctl https://github.com/longhorn/cli/releases/download/v1.12.0/longhornctl-linux-amd64
# For ARM platform
curl -sSfL -o longhornctl https://github.com/longhorn/cli/releases/download/v1.12.0/longhornctl-linux-arm64
chmod +x longhornctl
Use the base preflight check for the default V1 installation path. If you plan to use the V2 Data Engine, run the same check with --enable-spdk to validate the additional V2 requirements.
For V1 Data Engine:
./longhornctl check preflight
Example of result:
./longhornctl check preflight
INFO[2024-01-01T00:00:01Z] Initializing preflight checker
INFO[2024-01-01T00:00:01Z] Cleaning up preflight checker
INFO[2024-01-01T00:00:01Z] Running preflight checker
INFO[2024-01-01T00:00:02Z] Retrieved preflight checker result:
worker1:
info:
- Service iscsid is running
- NFS4 is supported
- Package nfs-common is installed
- Package open-iscsi is installed
warn:
- multipathd.service is running. Please refer to https://longhorn.io/kb/troubleshooting-volume-with-multipath/ for more information.
worker2:
info:
- Service iscsid is running
- NFS4 is supported
- Package nfs-common is not installed
- Package open-iscsi is installed
For V2 Data Engine:
./longhornctl check preflight --enable-spdk
This command validates, among other things:
open-iscsi and NFS supportUse the base install command for the default V1 installation path. If you plan to use the V2 Data Engine, run the install command with --enable-spdk to install the additional V2 prerequisites.
For V1 Data Engine:
longhornctl --kubeconfig ~/.kube/config --image longhornio/longhorn-cli:v1.12.0 install preflight
Example of result:
INFO[2025-03-11T08:17:57+08:00] Initializing preflight installer
INFO[2025-03-11T08:17:57+08:00] Cleaning up preflight installer
INFO[2025-03-11T08:17:57+08:00] Running preflight installer
INFO[2025-03-11T08:17:57+08:00] Installing dependencies with package manager
INFO[2025-03-11T08:18:28+08:00] Installed dependencies with package manager
INFO[2025-03-11T08:18:28+08:00] Cleaning up preflight installer
INFO[2025-03-11T08:18:28+08:00] Completed preflight installer. Use 'longhornctl check preflight' to check the result.
Note: Some immutable Linux distributions, such as SUSE Linux Enterprise Micro (SLE Micro), require you to reboot worker nodes after running the
installsub-command. After the reboot, you must run theinstallsub-command again to complete the operation.The documentation of the Linux distribution you are using should outline such requirements. For example, the SLE Micro documentation explains how all changes made by the
transactional-updatecommand become active only after the node is rebooted.
For V2 Data Engine:
longhornctl --kubeconfig ~/.kube/config --image longhornio/longhorn-cli:v1.12.0 install preflight --enable-spdk
After installation, run the check command again to verify that all V2-related prerequisites are correctly configured.
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