Configure a Pod to Use a Projected Volume for Storage
This page shows how to use a projected Volume to mount
several existing volume sources into the same directory. Currently, secret, configMap, downwardAPI,
and serviceAccountToken volumes can be projected.
Note:
serviceAccountToken is not a volume type.Before you begin
You need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl command-line tool must be configured to communicate with your cluster. It is recommended to run this tutorial on a cluster with at least two nodes that are not acting as control plane hosts. If you do not already have a cluster, you can create one by using minikube or you can use one of these Kubernetes playgrounds:
To check the version, enter  kubectl version.
Configure a projected volume for a pod
In this exercise, you create username and password Secrets from local files. You then create a Pod that runs one container, using a projected Volume to mount the Secrets into the same shared directory.
Here is the configuration file for the Pod:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
  name: test-projected-volume
spec:
  containers:
  - name: test-projected-volume
    image: busybox:1.28
    args:
    - sleep
    - "86400"
    volumeMounts:
    - name: all-in-one
      mountPath: "/projected-volume"
      readOnly: true
  volumes:
  - name: all-in-one
    projected:
      sources:
      - secret:
          name: user
      - secret:
          name: pass
- 
Create the Secrets: # Create files containing the username and password: echo -n "admin" > ./username.txt echo -n "1f2d1e2e67df" > ./password.txt # Package these files into secrets: kubectl create secret generic user --from-file=./username.txt kubectl create secret generic pass --from-file=./password.txt
- 
Create the Pod: kubectl apply -f https://k8s.io/examples/pods/storage/projected.yaml
- 
Verify that the Pod's container is running, and then watch for changes to the Pod: kubectl get --watch pod test-projected-volumeThe output looks like this: NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE test-projected-volume 1/1 Running 0 14s
- 
In another terminal, get a shell to the running container: kubectl exec -it test-projected-volume -- /bin/sh
- 
In your shell, verify that the projected-volumedirectory contains your projected sources:ls /projected-volume/
Clean up
Delete the Pod and the Secrets:
kubectl delete pod test-projected-volume
kubectl delete secret user pass
What's next
- Learn more about projectedvolumes.
- Read the all-in-one volume design document.