Successfully installed OpenEBS. Check the status by running: kubectl get pods -n {{ .Release.Namespace }} The default values will install NDM and enable OpenEBS hostpath and device storage engines along with their default StorageClasses. Use `kubectl get sc` to see the list of installed OpenEBS StorageClasses. **Note**: If you are upgrading from the older helm chart that was using cStor and Jiva (non-csi) volumes, you will have to run the following command to include the older provisioners: helm upgrade {{ .Release.Name }} openebs/openebs \ --namespace {{ .Release.Namespace }} \ --set legacy.enabled=true \ --reuse-values For other engines, you will need to perform a few more additional steps to enable the engine, configure the engines (e.g. creating pools) and create StorageClasses. For example, cStor can be enabled using commands like: helm upgrade {{ .Release.Name }} openebs/openebs \ --namespace {{ .Release.Namespace }} \ --set cstor.enabled=true \ --reuse-values For more information, - view the online documentation at https://openebs.io/docs or - connect with an active community on Kubernetes slack #openebs channel. {{- /* The section below can be removed once enableDeviceClass and enableHostpathClass options are removed. */}} {{ if or (eq .Values.localprovisioner.enableHostpathClass false) (eq .Values.localprovisioner.enableDeviceClass false) }} DEPRECATION NOTICE: ------------------- The options 'enableHostpathClass' and 'enableDeviceClass' are deprecated and will be removed in future releases. Please use the options hostpathClass.enabled and deviceClass.enabled instead. Example: helm install {{ .Release.Name }} openebs/openebs \ --namespace {{ .Release.Namespace }} \ --set localprovisioner.deviceClass.enabled="false" {{ end }}