FUSE
Our images of Apache Hadoop do contain the necessary binaries and libraries to use the HDFS FUSE driver.
FUSE is short for Filesystem in Userspace and allows a user to export a filesystem into the Linux kernel, which can then be mounted. HDFS contains a native FUSE driver/application, which means that an existing HDFS filesystem can be mounted into a Linux environment.
To use the FUSE driver you can either copy the required files out of the image and run it on a host outside of Kubernetes or you can run it in a Pod. This pod, however, will need some extra capabilities.
This is an example pod that will work as long as the host system that is running the kubelet does support FUSE:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
  name: hdfs-fuse
spec:
  containers:
    - name: hdfs-fuse
      env:
        - name: HADOOP_CONF_DIR
          value: /stackable/conf/hdfs
      image: docker.stackable.tech/stackable/hadoop:<version> (1)
      imagePullPolicy: Always
      securityContext:
        privileged: true
      command:
        - tail
        - -f
        - /dev/null
      volumeMounts:
        - mountPath: /stackable/conf/hdfs
          name: hdfs-config
  volumes:
    - name: hdfs-config
      configMap:
        name: <your hdfs here> (2)| 1 | Ideally use the same version your HDFS is using. FUSE is baked in to our images as of SDP 23.11. | 
| 2 | This needs to be a reference to a discovery ConfigMap as written by our HDFS operator. | 
| Privileged Pods Instead of  Example Unfortunately, there is no way around some extra privileges. In Kubernetes the Pods usually share the Kernel with the host running the Kubelet, which means a Pod wanting to use FUSE will need access to the underlying Kernel modules. | 
Inside this Pod you can get a shell (e.g. using kubectl exec --stdin --tty hdfs-fuse — /bin/bash) to get access to a script called fuse_dfs_wrapper (it is in the PATH of our Hadoop images).
To see the available options, call the script without any parameters.
To mount HDFS call the script like this:
fuse_dfs_wrapper dfs://<your hdfs> <target> (1) (2)
# This will run in debug mode and stay in the foreground
fuse_dfs_wrapper -odebug dfs://<your hdfs> <target>
# Example:
mkdir simple-hdfs
fuse_dfs_wrapper dfs://simple-hdfs simple-hdfs
cd simple-hdfs
# Any operations in this directory will now happen in HDFS| 1 | Again, use the name of the HDFS service as above | 
| 2 | targetis the directory in which HDFS will be mounted, it must exist otherwise this command will fail |