Documentation

File System Backup

Velero supports backing up and restoring Kubernetes volumes attached to pods from the file system of the volumes, called File System Backup (FSB shortly) or Pod Volume Backup. The data movement is fulfilled by using modules from free open-source backup tools restic and kopia. This support is considered beta quality. Please see the list of limitations to understand if it fits your use case.

Velero allows you to take snapshots of persistent volumes as part of your backups if you’re using one of the supported cloud providers’ block storage offerings (Amazon EBS Volumes, Azure Managed Disks, Google Persistent Disks). It also provides a plugin model that enables anyone to implement additional object and block storage backends, outside the main Velero repository.

If your storage supports CSI (Container Storage Interface) snapshots, Velero also allows you to take snapshots through CSI and then optionally move the snapshot data to a different storage location.

Velero’s File System Backup is an addition to the aforementioned snapshot approaches. Its pros and cons are listed below:
Pros:

  • It is capable of backing up and restoring almost any type of Kubernetes volume. Therefore, if you need a volume snapshot plugin for your storage platform, or if you’re using EFS, AzureFile, NFS, emptyDir, local, or any other volume type that doesn’t have a native snapshot concept, FSB might be for you.
  • It is not tied to a specific storage platform, so you could save the backup data to a different storage platform from the one backing Kubernetes volumes, for example, a durable storage.

Cons:

  • It backs up data from the live file system, in which way the data is not captured at the same point in time, so is less consistent than the snapshot approaches.
  • It access the file system from the mounted hostpath directory, so Velero Node Agent pods need to run as root user and even under privileged mode in some environments.

NOTE: hostPath volumes are not supported, but the local volume type is supported.

Setup File System Backup

Prerequisites

Install Velero Node Agent

Velero Node Agent is a Kubernetes daemonset that hosts FSB modules, i.e., restic, kopia uploader & repository.
To install Node Agent, use the --use-node-agent flag in the velero install command. See the install overview for more details on other flags for the install command.

velero install --use-node-agent

When using FSB on a storage that doesn’t have Velero support for snapshots, the --use-volume-snapshots=false flag prevents an unused VolumeSnapshotLocation from being created on installation.

At present, Velero FSB supports object storage as the backup storage only. Velero gets the parameters from the BackupStorageLocation config to compose the URL to the backup storage. Velero’s known object storage providers are include here supported providers, for which, Velero pre-defines the endpoints; if you want to use a different backup storage, make sure it is S3 compatible and you provide the correct bucket name and endpoint in BackupStorageLocation. Alternatively, for Restic, you could set the resticRepoPrefix value in BackupStorageLocation. For example, on AWS, resticRepoPrefix is something like s3:s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/bucket (note that resticRepoPrefix doesn’t work for Kopia). Velero handles the creation of the backup repo prefix in the backup storage, so make sure it is specified in BackupStorageLocation correctly.

Velero creates one backup repo per namespace. For example, if backing up 2 namespaces, namespace1 and namespace2, using kopia repository on AWS S3, the full backup repo path for namespace1 would be https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/bucket/kopia/ns1 and for namespace2 would be https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/bucket/kopia/ns2.

There may be additional installation steps depending on the cloud provider plugin you are using. You should refer to the plugin specific documentation for the most up to date information.

Note: Currently, Velero creates a secret named velero-repo-credentials in the velero install namespace, containing a default backup repository password. You can update the secret with your own password encoded as base64 prior to the first backup (i.e., FS Backup, data mover) targeting to the backup repository. The value of the key to update is

data:
  repository-password: <custom-password>

Backup repository is created during the first execution of backup targeting to it after installing Velero with node agent. If you update the secret password after the first backup which created the backup repository, then Velero will not be able to connect with the older backups.

Configure Node Agent DaemonSet spec

After installation, some PaaS/CaaS platforms based on Kubernetes also require modifications the node-agent DaemonSet spec. The steps in this section are only needed if you are installing on RancherOS, Nutanix, OpenShift, VMware Tanzu Kubernetes Grid Integrated Edition (formerly VMware Enterprise PKS), or Microsoft Azure.

RancherOS

Update the host path for volumes in the node-agent DaemonSet in the Velero namespace from /var/lib/kubelet/pods to /opt/rke/var/lib/kubelet/pods.

hostPath:
  path: /var/lib/kubelet/pods

to

hostPath:
  path: /opt/rke/var/lib/kubelet/pods

Nutanix

Update the host path for volumes in the node-agent DaemonSet in the Velero namespace from /var/lib/kubelet/pods to /var/nutanix/var/lib/kubelet.

hostPath:
  path: /var/lib/kubelet/pods

to

hostPath:
  path: /var/nutanix/var/lib/kubelet

OpenShift

To mount the correct hostpath to pods volumes, run the node-agent pod in privileged mode.

  1. Add the velero ServiceAccount to the privileged SCC:

    oc adm policy add-scc-to-user privileged -z velero -n velero
    
  2. Install Velero with the ‘–privileged-node-agent’ option to request a privileged mode:

    velero install --use-node-agent --privileged-node-agent
    

If node-agent is not running in a privileged mode, it will not be able to access pods volumes within the mounted hostpath directory because of the default enforced SELinux mode configured in the host system level. You can create a custom SCC to relax the security in your cluster so that node-agent pods are allowed to use the hostPath volume plugin without granting them access to the privileged SCC.

By default a userland openshift namespace will not schedule pods on all nodes in the cluster.

To schedule on all nodes the namespace needs an annotation:

oc annotate namespace <velero namespace> openshift.io/node-selector=""

This should be done before velero installation.

Or the ds needs to be deleted and recreated:

oc get ds node-agent -o yaml -n <velero namespace> > ds.yaml
oc annotate namespace <velero namespace> openshift.io/node-selector=""
oc create -n <velero namespace> -f ds.yaml

VMware Tanzu Kubernetes Grid Integrated Edition (formerly VMware Enterprise PKS)

You need to enable the Allow Privileged option in your plan configuration so that Velero is able to mount the hostpath.

The hostPath should be changed from /var/lib/kubelet/pods to /var/vcap/data/kubelet/pods

hostPath:
  path: /var/vcap/data/kubelet/pods

To back up

Velero supports two approaches of discovering pod volumes that need to be backed up using FSB:

  • Opt-in approach: Where every pod containing a volume to be backed up using FSB must be annotated with the volume’s name.
  • Opt-out approach: Where all pod volumes are backed up using FSB, with the ability to opt-out any volumes that should not be backed up.

The following sections provide more details on the two approaches.

Using the opt-out approach

In this approach, Velero will back up all pod volumes using FSB with the exception of:

  • Volumes mounting the default service account token, Kubernetes Secrets, and ConfigMaps
  • Hostpath volumes

It is possible to exclude volumes from being backed up using the backup.velero.io/backup-volumes-excludes annotation on the pod.

Instructions to back up using this approach are as follows:

  1. Run the following command on each pod that contains volumes that should not be backed up using FSB

    kubectl -n YOUR_POD_NAMESPACE annotate pod/YOUR_POD_NAME backup.velero.io/backup-volumes-excludes=YOUR_VOLUME_NAME_1,YOUR_VOLUME_NAME_2,...
    

    where the volume names are the names of the volumes in the pod spec.

    For example, in the following pod:

    apiVersion: v1
    kind: Pod
    metadata:
      name: app1
      namespace: sample
    spec:
      containers:
      - image: k8s.gcr.io/test-webserver
        name: test-webserver
        volumeMounts:
        - name: pvc1-vm
          mountPath: /volume-1
        - name: pvc2-vm
          mountPath: /volume-2
      volumes:
      - name: pvc1-vm
        persistentVolumeClaim:
          claimName: pvc1
      - name: pvc2-vm
          claimName: pvc2
    

    to exclude FSB of volume pvc1-vm, you would run:

    kubectl -n sample annotate pod/app1 backup.velero.io/backup-volumes-excludes=pvc1-vm
    
  2. Take a Velero backup:

    velero backup create BACKUP_NAME --default-volumes-to-fs-backup OTHER_OPTIONS
    

    The above steps uses the opt-out approach on a per backup basis.

    Alternatively, this behavior may be enabled on all velero backups running the velero install command with the --default-volumes-to-fs-backup flag. Refer install overview for details.

  3. When the backup completes, view information about the backups:

    velero backup describe YOUR_BACKUP_NAME
    
    kubectl -n velero get podvolumebackups -l velero.io/backup-name=YOUR_BACKUP_NAME -o yaml
    

Using opt-in pod volume backup

Velero, by default, uses this approach to discover pod volumes that need to be backed up using FSB. Every pod containing a volume to be backed up using FSB must be annotated with the volume’s name using the backup.velero.io/backup-volumes annotation.

Instructions to back up using this approach are as follows:

  1. Run the following for each pod that contains a volume to back up:

    kubectl -n YOUR_POD_NAMESPACE annotate pod/YOUR_POD_NAME backup.velero.io/backup-volumes=YOUR_VOLUME_NAME_1,YOUR_VOLUME_NAME_2,...
    

    where the volume names are the names of the volumes in the pod spec.

    For example, for the following pod:

    apiVersion: v1
    kind: Pod
    metadata:
      name: sample
      namespace: foo
    spec:
      containers:
      - image: k8s.gcr.io/test-webserver
        name: test-webserver
        volumeMounts:
        - name: pvc-volume
          mountPath: /volume-1
        - name: emptydir-volume
          mountPath: /volume-2
      volumes:
      - name: pvc-volume
        persistentVolumeClaim:
          claimName: test-volume-claim
      - name: emptydir-volume
        emptyDir: {}
    

    You’d run:

    kubectl -n foo annotate pod/sample backup.velero.io/backup-volumes=pvc-volume,emptydir-volume
    

    This annotation can also be provided in a pod template spec if you use a controller to manage your pods.

  2. Take a Velero backup:

    velero backup create NAME OPTIONS...
    
  3. When the backup completes, view information about the backups:

    velero backup describe YOUR_BACKUP_NAME
    
    kubectl -n velero get podvolumebackups -l velero.io/backup-name=YOUR_BACKUP_NAME -o yaml
    

To restore

Regardless of how volumes are discovered for backup using FSB, the process of restoring remains the same.

  1. Restore from your Velero backup:

    velero restore create --from-backup BACKUP_NAME OPTIONS...
    
  2. When the restore completes, view information about your pod volume restores:

    velero restore describe YOUR_RESTORE_NAME
    
    kubectl -n velero get podvolumerestores -l velero.io/restore-name=YOUR_RESTORE_NAME -o yaml
    

Limitations

  • hostPath volumes are not supported. Local persistent volumes are supported.
  • At present, Velero uses a static, common encryption key for all backup repositories it creates. This means that anyone who has access to your backup storage can decrypt your backup data. Make sure that you limit access to the backup storage appropriately.
  • An incremental backup chain will be maintained across pod reschedules for PVCs. However, for pod volumes that are not PVCs, such as emptyDir volumes, when a pod is deleted/recreated (for example, by a ReplicaSet/Deployment), the next backup of those volumes will be full rather than incremental, because the pod volume’s lifecycle is assumed to be defined by its pod.
  • Even though the backup data could be incrementally preserved, for a single file data, FSB leverages on deduplication to find the difference to be saved. This means that large files (such as ones storing a database) will take a long time to scan for data deduplication, even if the actual difference is small.
  • Velero’s File System Backup reads/writes data from volumes by accessing the node’s filesystem, on which the pod is running. For this reason, FSB can only backup volumes that are mounted by a pod and not directly from the PVC. For orphan PVC/PV pairs (without running pods), some Velero users overcame this limitation running a staging pod (i.e. a busybox or alpine container with an infinite sleep) to mount these PVC/PV pairs prior taking a Velero backup.
  • Velero File System Backup expects volumes to be mounted under <hostPath>/<pod UID> (hostPath is configurable as mentioned in Configure Node Agent DaemonSet spec). Some Kubernetes systems (i.e., vCluster) don’t mount volumes under the <pod UID> sub-dir, Velero File System Backup is not working with them.
  • File system restores of the same pod won’t start until all the volumes of the pod get bound, even though some of the volumes have been bound and ready for restore. An a result, if a pod has multiple volumes, while only part of the volumes are restored by file system restore, these file system restores won’t start until the other volumes are restored completely by other restore types (i.e., CSI Snapshot Restore, CSI Snapshot Data Movement), the file system restores won’t happen concurrently with those other types of restores.

Customize Restore Helper Container

Velero uses a helper init container when performing a FSB restore. By default, the image for this container is velero/velero-restore-helper:<VERSION>, where VERSION matches the version/tag of the main Velero image. You can customize the image that is used for this helper by creating a ConfigMap in the Velero namespace with the alternate image.

In addition, you can customize the resource requirements for the init container, should you need.

The ConfigMap must look like the following:

apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
  # any name can be used; Velero uses the labels (below)
  # to identify it rather than the name
  name: fs-restore-action-config
  # must be in the velero namespace
  namespace: velero
  # the below labels should be used verbatim in your
  # ConfigMap.
  labels:
    # this value-less label identifies the ConfigMap as
    # config for a plugin (i.e. the built-in restore
    # item action plugin)
    velero.io/plugin-config: ""
    # this label identifies the name and kind of plugin
    # that this ConfigMap is for.
    velero.io/pod-volume-restore: RestoreItemAction
data:
  # The value for "image" can either include a tag or not;
  # if the tag is *not* included, the tag from the main Velero
  # image will automatically be used.
  image: myregistry.io/my-custom-helper-image[:OPTIONAL_TAG]

  # "cpuRequest" sets the request.cpu value on the restore init containers during restore.
  # If not set, it will default to "100m". A value of "0" is treated as unbounded.
  cpuRequest: 200m

  # "memRequest" sets the request.memory value on the restore init containers during restore.
  # If not set, it will default to "128Mi". A value of "0" is treated as unbounded.
  memRequest: 128Mi

  # "cpuLimit" sets the request.cpu value on the restore init containers during restore.
  # If not set, it will default to "100m". A value of "0" is treated as unbounded.
  cpuLimit: 200m

  # "memLimit" sets the request.memory value on the restore init containers during restore.
  # If not set, it will default to "128Mi". A value of "0" is treated as unbounded.
  memLimit: 128Mi

  # "secCtxRunAsUser" sets the securityContext.runAsUser value on the restore init containers during restore.
  secCtxRunAsUser: 1001

  # "secCtxRunAsGroup" sets the securityContext.runAsGroup value on the restore init containers during restore.
  secCtxRunAsGroup: 999

  # "secCtxAllowPrivilegeEscalation" sets the securityContext.allowPrivilegeEscalation value on the restore init containers during restore.
  secCtxAllowPrivilegeEscalation: false

  # "secCtx" sets the securityContext object value on the restore init containers during restore.
  # This key override  `secCtxRunAsUser`, `secCtxRunAsGroup`, `secCtxAllowPrivilegeEscalation` if `secCtx.runAsUser`, `secCtx.runAsGroup` or `secCtx.allowPrivilegeEscalation` are set.
  secCtx: |
    capabilities:
      drop:
      - ALL
      add: []
    allowPrivilegeEscalation: false
    readOnlyRootFilesystem: true
    runAsUser: 1001
    runAsGroup: 999

Troubleshooting

Run the following checks:

Are your Velero server and daemonset pods running?

kubectl get pods -n velero

Does your backup repository exist, and is it ready?

velero repo get

velero repo get REPO_NAME -o yaml

Are there any errors in your Velero backup/restore?

velero backup describe BACKUP_NAME
velero backup logs BACKUP_NAME

velero restore describe RESTORE_NAME
velero restore logs RESTORE_NAME

What is the status of your pod volume backups/restores?

kubectl -n velero get podvolumebackups -l velero.io/backup-name=BACKUP_NAME -o yaml

kubectl -n velero get podvolumerestores -l velero.io/restore-name=RESTORE_NAME -o yaml

Is there any useful information in the Velero server or daemon pod logs?

kubectl -n velero logs deploy/velero
kubectl -n velero logs DAEMON_POD_NAME

NOTE: You can increase the verbosity of the pod logs by adding --log-level=debug as an argument to the container command in the deployment/daemonset pod template spec.

How backup and restore work

How Velero integrates with Restic

Velero integrate Restic binary directly, so the operations are done by calling Restic commands:

  • Run restic init command to initialize the restic repository
  • Run restic prune command periodically to prune restic repository
  • Run restic backup commands to backup pod volume data
  • Run restic restore commands to restore pod volume data

How Velero integrates with Kopia

Velero integrate Kopia modules into Velero’s code, primarily two modules:

  • Kopia Uploader: Velero makes some wrap and isolation around it to create a generic file system uploader, which is used to backup pod volume data
  • Kopia Repository: Velero integrates it with Velero’s Unified Repository Interface, it is used to preserve the backup data and manage the backup storage

For more details, refer to kopia architecture and Velero’s Unified Repository & Kopia Integration Design

Custom resource and controllers

Velero has three custom resource definitions and associated controllers:

  • BackupRepository - represents/manages the lifecycle of Velero’s backup repositories. Velero creates a backup repository per namespace when the first FSB backup/restore for a namespace is requested. The backup repository is backed by restic or kopia, the BackupRepository controller invokes restic or kopia internally, refer to restic integration and kopia integration for details.

    You can see information about your Velero’s backup repositories by running velero repo get.

  • PodVolumeBackup - represents a FSB backup of a volume in a pod. The main Velero backup process creates one or more of these when it finds an annotated pod. Each node in the cluster runs a controller for this resource (in a daemonset) that handles the PodVolumeBackups for pods on that node. PodVolumeBackup is backed by restic or kopia, the controller invokes restic or kopia internally, refer to restic integration and kopia integration for details.

  • PodVolumeRestore - represents a FSB restore of a pod volume. The main Velero restore process creates one or more of these when it encounters a pod that has associated FSB backups. Each node in the cluster runs a controller for this resource (in the same daemonset as above) that handles the PodVolumeRestores for pods on that node. PodVolumeRestore is backed by restic or kopia, the controller invokes restic or kopia internally, refer to restic integration and kopia integration for details.

Path selection

Velero’s FSB supports two data movement paths, the restic path and the kopia path. Velero allows users to select between the two paths:

  • For backup, the path is specified at the installation time through the uploader-type flag, the valid value is either restic or kopia, or default to kopia if the value is not specified. The selection is not allowed to be changed after the installation.
  • For restore, the path is decided by the path used to back up the data, it is automatically selected. For example, if you’ve created a backup with restic path, then you reinstall Velero with uploader-type=kopia, when you create a restore from the backup, the restore still goes with restic path.

Backup

  1. Based on configuration, the main Velero backup process uses the opt-in or opt-out approach to check each pod that it’s backing up for the volumes to be backed up using FSB.
  2. When found, Velero first ensures a backup repository exists for the pod’s namespace, by:
    • checking if a BackupRepository custom resource already exists
    • if not, creating a new one, and waiting for the BackupRepository controller to init/connect it
  3. Velero then creates a PodVolumeBackup custom resource per volume listed in the pod annotation
  4. The main Velero process now waits for the PodVolumeBackup resources to complete or fail
  5. Meanwhile, each PodVolumeBackup is handled by the controller on the appropriate node, which:
    • has a hostPath volume mount of /var/lib/kubelet/pods to access the pod volume data
    • finds the pod volume’s subdirectory within the above volume
    • based on the path selection, Velero invokes restic or kopia for backup
    • updates the status of the custom resource to Completed or Failed
  6. As each PodVolumeBackup finishes, the main Velero process adds it to the Velero backup in a file named <backup-name>-podvolumebackups.json.gz. This file gets uploaded to object storage alongside the backup tarball. It will be used for restores, as seen in the next section.

Restore

  1. The main Velero restore process checks each existing PodVolumeBackup custom resource in the cluster to backup from.
  2. For each PodVolumeBackup found, Velero first ensures a backup repository exists for the pod’s namespace, by:
    • checking if a BackupRepository custom resource already exists
    • if not, creating a new one, and waiting for the BackupRepository controller to connect it (note that in this case, the actual repository should already exist in backup storage, so the Velero controller will simply check it for integrity and make a location connection)
  3. Velero adds an init container to the pod, whose job is to wait for all FSB restores for the pod to complete (more on this shortly)
  4. Velero creates the pod, with the added init container, by submitting it to the Kubernetes API. Then, the Kubernetes scheduler schedules this pod to a worker node. If the pod fails to be scheduled for some reason (i.e. lack of cluster resources), the FSB restore will not be done.
  5. Velero creates a PodVolumeRestore custom resource for each volume to be restored in the pod
  6. The main Velero process now waits for each PodVolumeRestore resource to complete or fail
  7. Meanwhile, each PodVolumeRestore is handled by the controller on the appropriate node, which:
    • has a hostPath volume mount of /var/lib/kubelet/pods to access the pod volume data
    • waits for the pod to be running the init container
    • finds the pod volume’s subdirectory within the above volume
    • based on the path selection, Velero invokes restic or kopia for restore
    • on success, writes a file into the pod volume, in a .velero subdirectory, whose name is the UID of the Velero restore that this pod volume restore is for
    • updates the status of the custom resource to Completed or Failed
  8. The init container that was added to the pod is running a process that waits until it finds a file within each restored volume, under .velero, whose name is the UID of the Velero restore being run
  9. Once all such files are found, the init container’s process terminates successfully and the pod moves on to running other init containers/the main containers.

Velero won’t restore a resource if a that resource is scaled to 0 and already exists in the cluster. If Velero restored the requested pods in this scenario, the Kubernetes reconciliation loops that manage resources would delete the running pods because its scaled to be 0. Velero will be able to restore once the resources is scaled up, and the pods are created and remain running.

Backup Deletion

When a backup is created, a snapshot is saved into the repository for the volume data under the both path. The snapshot is a reference to the volume data saved in the repository.
When deleting a backup, Velero calls the repository to delete the repository snapshot. So the repository snapshot disappears immediately after the backup is deleted. Then the volume data backed up in the repository turns to orphan, but it is not deleted by this time. The repository relies on the maintenance functionalitiy to delete the orphan data.
As a result, after you delete a backup, you don’t see the backup storage size reduces until some full maintenance jobs completes successfully. And for the same reason, you should check and make sure that the periodical repository maintenance job runs and completes successfully.

Even after deleting all the backups and their backup data (by repository maintenance), the backup storage is still not empty, some repository metadata are there to keep the instance of the backup repository.
Furthermore, Velero never deletes these repository metadata, if you are sure you’ll never usage the backup repository, you can empty the backup storage manually.

For Kopia path, Kopia uploader may keep some internal snapshots which is not managed by Velero. In normal cases, the internal snapshots are deleted along with running of backups.
However, if you run a backup which aborts halfway(some internal snapshots are thereby generated) and never run new backups again, some internal snapshots may be left there. In this case, since you stop using the backup repository, you can delete the entire repository metadata from the backup storage manually.

3rd party controllers

Monitor backup annotation

Velero does not provide a mechanism to detect persistent volume claims that are missing the File System Backup annotation.

To solve this, a controller was written by Thomann Bits&Beats: velero-pvc-watcher

Support ReadOnlyRootFilesystem setting

Kopia

When the Velero server/node-agent pod’s SecurityContext sets the ReadOnlyRootFileSystem parameter to true, the Velero server/node-agent pod’s filesystem is running in read-only mode. If the user creates a backup with Kopia as the uploader, the backup will fail, because the Kopia needs to write some cache and configuration data into the pod filesystem.

Errors: Velero:    name: /mongodb-0 message: /Error backing up item error: /failed to wait BackupRepository: backup repository is not ready: error to connect to backup repo: error to connect repo with storage: error to connect to repository: unable to write config file: unable to create config directory: mkdir /home/cnb/udmrepo: read-only file system name: /mongodb-1 message: /Error backing up item error: /failed to wait BackupRepository: backup repository is not ready: error to connect to backup repo: error to connect repo with storage: error to connect to repository: unable to write config file: unable to create config directory: mkdir /home/cnb/udmrepo: read-only file system name: /mongodb-2 message: /Error backing up item error: /failed to wait BackupRepository: backup repository is not ready: error to connect to backup repo: error to connect repo with storage: error to connect to repository: unable to write config file: unable to create config directory: mkdir /home/cnb/udmrepo: read-only file system Cluster:    <none>

The workaround is making those directories as ephemeral k8s volumes, then those directories are not counted as pod’s root filesystem. The user-name is the Velero pod’s running user name. The default value is cnb.

apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
  name: velero
  namespace: velero
spec:
  template:
    spec:
      containers:
      - name: velero
        ......
        volumeMounts:
          ......
          - mountPath: /home/<user-name>/udmrepo
            name: udmrepo
          - mountPath: /home/<user-name>/.cache
            name: cache
          ......
      volumes:
        ......
        - emptyDir: {}
          name: udmrepo
        - emptyDir: {}
          name: cache
        ......

Resource Consumption

Both the uploader and repository consume remarkable CPU/memory during the backup/restore, especially for massive small files or large backup size cases.
Velero node-agent uses BestEffort as the QoS for node-agent pods (so no CPU/memory request/limit is set), so that backups/restores wouldn’t fail due to resource throttling in any cases.
If you want to constraint the CPU/memory usage, you need to customize the resource limits. The CPU/memory consumption is always related to the scale of data to be backed up/restored, refer to Performance Guidance for more details, so it is highly recommended that you perform your own testing to find the best resource limits for your data.

During the restore, the repository may also cache data/metadata so as to reduce the network footprint and speed up the restore. The repository uses its own policy to store and clean up the cache.
For Kopia repository, the cache is stored in the node-agent pod’s root file system and the cleanup is triggered for the data/metadata that are older than 10 minutes (not configurable at present). So you should prepare enough disk space, otherwise, the node-agent pod may be evicted due to running out of the ephemeral storage.

Getting Started

To help you get started, see the documentation.