Scheduler
Crunchy Scheduler
The Crunchy Scheduler container implements a cronlike microservice within a namespace to automate backups of a PostgreSQL database.
Currently Crunchy Scheduler only supports two types of tasks:
- pgBackRest
- pgBaseBackup
This service watches Kubernetes for config maps with the label crunchy-scheduler=true
.
If found the scheduler will parse the data found in the config map (json object) and
convert it to a scheduled task. If the config map is removed, the scheduler will
delete the task.
See the following examples for creating config maps that Crunchy Scheduler can parse:
The Crunchy Scheduler requires a Service Account to create jobs (pgBaseBackup) and to exec (pgBackRest). See the scheduler example for the required permissions on this account.
UTC
timezone for all schedules.pgBackRest Schedules
To configure Crunchy Scheduler to create pgBackRest backups the following is required:
- pgBackRest schedule definition requires a deployment name. The PostgreSQL pod should be created by a deployment.
pgBaseBackup Schedules
To configure Crunchy Scheduler to create pgBaseBackup scheduled backups, the following is required:
- The name of the secret that contains the username and password the Scheduler will use to configure the job template. See the primary secret example for the structure required by the Scheduler.
- The name of the PVC created for the backups. This should be created by the user prior to scheduling the task.
When using pgBaseBackup schedules, it may be required to apply specific supplementalGroups
or an fsGroup
to the backup job created by the scheduler. To apply a specific securityContext
for your
storage provider, mount a backup-template.json
to /configs
on the scheduler pod.
For an example of applying a custom template, see the scheduler example.
Kubernetes and OpenShift
First, start the PostgreSQL example created for the Scheduler by running the following commands:
# Kubernetes
cd $CCPROOT/examples/kube/scheduler/primary
./run.sh
The pod created should show a ready status before proceeding.
Next, start the scheduler by running the following command:
# Kubernetes
cd $CCPROOT/examples/kube/scheduler
./run.sh
Once the scheduler is deployed, register the backup tasks by running the following command:
# Kubernetes
cd $CCPROOT/examples/kube/scheduler
./add-schedules.sh
The scheduled tasks will (these are just for fast results, not recommended for production):
- take a backup every minute using pgBaseBackup
- take a full pgBackRest backup every even minute
- take a diff pgBackRest backup every odd minute
View the logs for the scheduler
pod until the tasks run:
${CCP_CLI?} logs scheduler -f
View the pgBaseBackup
pods results after the backup completes:
${CCP_CLI?} logs <basebackup pod name>
View the pgBackRest
backups via exec after the backup completes:
${CCP_CLI?} exec -ti <primary deployment pod name> -- pgbackrest info
Clean up the examples by running the following commands:
$CCPROOT/examples/kube/scheduler/primary/cleanup.sh
$CCPROOT/examples/kube/scheduler/cleanup.sh