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Overview
Quickstart
Architecture

Operations

Stop / Start / Restart
Vertical Scaling
Horizontal Scaling
Manage Services
Volume Expansion

Monitoring

Prometheus Integration
  1. Architecture
  2. Supported Versions
  3. Features
  4. Limitations

KubeBlocks for MinIO Overview

MinIO is a high-performance, Kubernetes-native object storage system compatible with the Amazon S3 API. KubeBlocks manages MinIO as a stateful distributed cluster with automatic credential management, health checking, and lifecycle operations.

Architecture

MinIO runs in distributed erasure coding mode where all replicas form a single pool:

  • Each replica is a MinIO server node
  • Data is striped across all nodes using erasure coding for redundancy
  • All nodes must be running for writes; reads tolerate up to N/2 failures
  • The S3 API (port 9000) and Web Console (port 9001) are exposed as services
NOTE

MinIO requires a minimum of 2 replicas. For production, use at least 4 replicas distributed across multiple Kubernetes nodes.

Supported Versions

VersionNotes
2025.10.15Default
2024.6.29
NOTE

Starting from the 2025 release, MinIO uses source-only distribution. KubeBlocks uses the coollabsio/minio community-maintained image which provides pre-built binaries.

Features

  • S3-compatible API — Drop-in replacement for Amazon S3
  • Web Console — Browser-based management UI on port 9001
  • Auto credential management — Root credentials generated and stored as a Kubernetes Secret
  • Horizontal scale-out — Add nodes to grow storage and throughput capacity
  • Vertical scaling — Adjust CPU and memory
  • TLS encryption — Optional TLS for both API and console
  • Prometheus metrics — Built-in metrics at /minio/v2/metrics/cluster
  • Initial bucket creation — Automatically create buckets on startup via MINIO_BUCKETS env var

Limitations

  • Scale-in not supported — Once nodes are added, they cannot be removed. KubeBlocks blocks scale-in OpsRequests to prevent data loss.
  • Minimum 2 replicas per pool — Each scale-out adds a new pool; each pool requires at least 2 nodes
  • No parameter reconfiguration — Server configuration changes require cluster rebuild
  • No switchover — Distributed object store; all nodes are peers

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