Common pgo Client Tasks

While the full pgo client reference will tell you everything you need to know about how to use pgo, it may be helpful to see several examples on how to conduct “day-in-the-life” tasks for administrating PostgreSQL cluster with the PostgreSQL Operator.

The below guide covers many of the common operations that are required when managing PostgreSQL clusters. The guide is broken up by different administrative topics, such as provisioning, high-availability, etc.

Setup Before Running the Examples

Many of the pgo client commands require you to specify a namespace via the -n or --namespace flag. While this is a very helpful tool when managing PostgreSQL deployxments across many Kubernetes namespaces, this can become onerous for the intents of this guide.

If you install the PostgreSQL Operator using the quickstart guide, you will install the PostgreSQL Operator to a namespace called pgo. We can choose to always use one of these namespaces by setting the PGO_NAMESPACE environmental variable, which is detailed in the global pgo Client reference,

For convenience, we will use the pgo namespace in the examples below. For even more convenience, we recommend setting pgo to be the value of the PGO_NAMESPACE variable. In the shell that you will be executing the pgo commands in, run the following command:

export PGO_NAMESPACE=pgo

If you do not wish to set this environmental variable, or are in an environment where you are unable to use environmental variables, you will have to use the --namespace (or -n) flag for most commands, e.g.

pgo version -n pgo

JSON Output

The default for the pgo client commands is to output their results in a readable format. However, there are times where it may be helpful to you to have the format output in a machine parseable format like JSON.

Several commands support the -o/--output flags that delivers the results of the command in the specified output. Presently, the only output that is supported is json.

As an example of using this feature, if you wanted to get the results of the pgo test command in JSON, you could run the following:

pgo test hacluster -o json

PostgreSQL Operator System Basics

To get started, it’s first important to understand the basics of working with the PostgreSQL Operator itself. You should know how to test if the PostgreSQL Operator is working, check the overall status of the PostgreSQL Operator, view the current configuration that the PostgreSQL Operator us using, and seeing which Kubernetes Namespaces the PostgreSQL Operator has access to.

While this may not be as fun as creating high-availability PostgreSQL clusters, these commands will help you to perform basic troubleshooting tasks in your environment.

Checking Connectivity to the PostgreSQL Operator

A common task when working with the PostgreSQL Operator is to check connectivity to the PostgreSQL Operator. This can be accomplish with the pgo version command:

pgo version

which, if working, will yield results similar to:

pgo client version 4.5.2
pgo-apiserver version 4.5.2

Inspecting the PostgreSQL Operator Configuration

The pgo show config command allows you to view the current configuration that the PostgreSQL Operator is using. This can be helpful for troubleshooting issues such as which PostgreSQL images are being deployed by default, which storage classes are being used, etc.

You can run the pgo show config command by running:

pgo show config

which yields output similar to:

BasicAuth: ""
Cluster:
  CCPImagePrefix: crunchydata
  CCPImageTag: centos8-12.6-4.5.2
  Policies: ""
  Metrics: false
  Badger: false
  Port: "5432"
  PGBadgerPort: "10000"
  ExporterPort: "9187"
  User: testuser
  Database: userdb
  PasswordAgeDays: "60"
  PasswordLength: "8"
  Replicas: "0"
  ServiceType: ClusterIP
  BackrestPort: 2022
  Backrest: true
  BackrestS3Bucket: ""
  BackrestS3Endpoint: ""
  BackrestS3Region: ""
  BackrestS3URIStyle: ""
  BackrestS3VerifyTLS: true
  DisableAutofail: false
  PgmonitorPassword: ""
  EnableCrunchyadm: false
  DisableReplicaStartFailReinit: false
  PodAntiAffinity: preferred
  SyncReplication: false
Pgo:
  Audit: false
  PGOImagePrefix: crunchydata
  PGOImageTag: centos8-4.5.2
PrimaryStorage: nfsstorage
BackupStorage: nfsstorage
ReplicaStorage: nfsstorage
BackrestStorage: nfsstorage
Storage:
  nfsstorage:
    AccessMode: ReadWriteMany
    Size: 1G
    StorageType: create
    StorageClass: ""
    SupplementalGroups: "65534"
    MatchLabels: ""

Viewing PostgreSQL Operator Managed Namespaces

The PostgreSQL Operator has the ability to manage PostgreSQL clusters across Kubernetes Namespaces. During the course of Operations, it can be helpful to know which namespaces the PostgreSQL Operator can use for deploying PostgreSQL clusters.

You can view which namespaces the PostgreSQL Operator can utilize by using the pgo show namespace command. To list out the namespaces that the PostgreSQL Operator has access to, you can run the following command:

pgo show namespace --all

which yields output similar to:

pgo username: admin
namespace                useraccess          installaccess       
default                  accessible          no access           
kube-node-lease          accessible          no access           
kube-public              accessible          no access           
kube-system              accessible          no access           
pgo                      accessible          no access           
pgouser1                 accessible          accessible          
pgouser2                 accessible          accessible          
somethingelse            no access           no access   

NOTE: Based on your deployment, your Kubernetes administrator may restrict access to the multi-namespace feature of the PostgreSQL Operator. In this case, you do not need to worry about managing your namespaces and as such do not need to use this command, but we recommend setting the PGO_NAMESPACE variable as described in the general notes on this page.

Provisioning: Create, View, Destroy

Creating a PostgreSQL Cluster

You can create a cluster using the pgo create cluster command:

pgo create cluster hacluster

which if successfully, will yield output similar to this:

created Pgcluster hacluster
workflow id ae714d12-f5d0-4fa9-910f-21944b41dec8

Create a PostgreSQL Cluster with Different PVC Sizes

You can also create a PostgreSQL cluster with an arbitrary PVC size using the pgo create cluster command. For example, if you want to create a PostgreSQL cluster with with a 128GB PVC, you can use the following command:

pgo create cluster hacluster --pvc-size=128Gi

The above command sets the PVC size for all PostgreSQL instances in the cluster, i.e. the primary and replicas.

This also extends to the size of the pgBackRest repository as well, if you are using the local Kubernetes cluster storage for your backup repository. To create a PostgreSQL cluster with a pgBackRest repository that uses a 1TB PVC, you can use the following command:

pgo create cluster hacluster --pgbackrest-pvc-size=1Ti

Specify CPU / Memory for a PostgreSQL Cluster

To specify the amount of CPU and memory to request for a PostgreSQL cluster, you can use the --cpu and --memory flags of the pgo create cluster command. Both of these values utilize the Kubernetes quantity format for specifying how to allocate resources.

For example, to create a PostgreSQL cluster that requests 4 CPU cores and has 16 gibibytes of memory, you can use the following command:

pgo create cluster hacluster --cpu=4 --memory=16Gi

Create a PostgreSQL Cluster with PostGIS

To create a PostgreSQL cluster that uses the geospatial extension PostGIS, you can execute the following command, updated with your desired image tag. In the example below, the cluster will use PostgreSQL 12.6 and PostGIS 3.0:

pgo create cluster hagiscluster \
  --ccp-image=crunchy-postgres-gis-ha \
  --ccp-image-tag=centos8-12.6-3.0-4.5.2

Create a PostgreSQL Cluster with a Tablespace

Tablespaces are a PostgreSQL feature that allows a user to select specific volumes to store data to, which is helpful in several types of scenarios. Often your workload does not require a tablespace, but the PostgreSQL Operator provides support for tablespaces throughout the lifecycle of a PostgreSQL cluster.

To create a PostgreSQL cluster that uses the tablespace feature with NFS storage, you can execute the following command:

pgo create cluster hactsluster --tablespace=name=ts1:storageconfig=nfsstorage

You can use your preferred storage engine instead of nfsstorage. For example, to create multiple tablespaces on GKE, you can execute the following command:

pgo create cluster hactsluster \
    --tablespace=name=ts1:storageconfig=gce \
    --tablespace=name=ts2:storageconfig=gce

Tablespaces are immediately available once the PostgreSQL cluster is provisioned. For example, to create a table using the tablespace ts1, you can run the following SQL on your PostgreSQL cluster:

CREATE TABLE sensor_data (
  id int GENERATED BY DEFAULT AS IDENTITY PRIMARY KEY,
  sensor1 numeric,
  sensor2 numeric,
  sensor3 numeric,
  sensor4 numeric
)
TABLESPACE ts1;

You can also create tablespaces that have different sized PVCs from the ones defined in the storage specification. For instance, to create two tablespaces, one that uses a 10GiB PVC and one that uses a 20GiB PVC, you can execute the following command:

pgo create cluster hactsluster \
    --tablespace=name=ts1:storageconfig=gce:pvcsize=10Gi \
    --tablespace=name=ts2:storageconfig=gce:pvcsize=20Gi

Create a PostgreSQL Cluster Using a Backup from Another PostgreSQL Cluster

It is also possible to create a new PostgreSQL Cluster using a backup from another PostgreSQL cluster. To do so, simply specify the cluster containing the backup that you would like to utilize using the restore-from option:

pgo create cluster hacluster2 --restore-from=hacluster1

When using this approach, a pgbackrest restore will be performed using the pgBackRest repository for the restore-from cluster specified in order to populate the initial PGDATA directory for the new PostgreSQL cluster. By default, pgBackRest will restore to the latest backup available and replay all WAL. However, a restore-opts option is also available that allows the restore command to be further customized, e.g. to perform a point-in-time restore and/or restore from an S3 storage bucket:

pgo create cluster hacluster2 \
  --restore-from=hacluster1 \
  --restore-opts="--repo-type=s3 --type=time --target='2020-07-02 20:19:36.13557+00'"

Tracking a Newly Provisioned Cluster

A new PostgreSQL cluster can take a few moments to provision. You may have noticed that the pgo create cluster command returns something called a “workflow id”. This workflow ID allows you to track the progress of your new PostgreSQL cluster while it is being provisioned using the pgo show workflow command:

pgo show workflow ae714d12-f5d0-4fa9-910f-21944b41dec8

which can yield output similar to:

parameter           value
---------           -----
pg-cluster          hacluster
task completed      2019-12-27T02:10:14Z
task submitted      2019-12-27T02:09:46Z
workflowid          ae714d12-f5d0-4fa9-910f-21944b41dec8

View PostgreSQL Cluster Details

To see details about your PostgreSQL cluster, you can use the pgo show cluster command. These details include elements such as:

  • The version of PostgreSQL that the cluster is using
  • The PostgreSQL instances that comprise the cluster
  • The Pods assigned to the cluster for all of the associated components, including the nodes that the pods are assigned to
  • The Persistent Volume Claims (PVC) that are being consumed by the cluster
  • The Kubernetes Deployments associated with the cluster
  • The Kubernetes Services associated with the cluster
  • The Kubernetes Labels that are assigned to the PostgreSQL instances

and more.

You can view the details of the cluster by executing the following command:

pgo show cluster hacluster

which will yield output similar to:

cluster : hacluster (crunchy-postgres-ha:centos8-12.6-4.5.2)
	pod : hacluster-6dc6cfcfb9-f9knq (Running) on node01 (1/1) (primary)
	pvc : hacluster
	resources : CPU Limit= Memory Limit=, CPU Request= Memory Request=
	storage : Primary=200M Replica=200M
	deployment : hacluster
	deployment : hacluster-backrest-shared-repo
	service : hacluster - ClusterIP (10.102.20.42)
	labels : pg-pod-anti-affinity= archive-timeout=60 crunchy-pgbadger=false crunchy-postgres-exporter=false deployment-name=hacluster pg-cluster=hacluster crunchy-pgha-scope=hacluster autofail=true pgo-backrest=true pgo-version=4.5.2 current-primary=hacluster name=hacluster pgouser=admin workflowid=ae714d12-f5d0-4fa9-910f-21944b41dec8

Deleting a Cluster

You can delete a PostgreSQL cluster that is managed by the PostgreSQL Operator by executing the following command:

pgo delete cluster hacluster

This will remove the cluster from being managed by the PostgreSQL Operator, as well as delete the root data Persistent Volume Claim (PVC) and backup PVCs associated with the cluster.

If you wish to keep your PostgreSQL data PVC, you can delete the cluster with the following command:

pgo delete cluster hacluster --keep-data

You can then recreate the PostgreSQL cluster with the same data by using the pgo create cluster command with a cluster of the same name:

pgo create cluster hacluster

This technique is used when performing tasks such as upgrading the PostgreSQL Operator.

You can also keep the pgBackRest repository associated with the PostgreSQL cluster by using the --keep-backups flag with the pgo delete cluster command:

pgo delete cluster hacluster --keep-backups

Testing PostgreSQL Cluster Availability

You can test the availability of your cluster by using the pgo test command. The pgo test command checks to see if the Kubernetes Services and the Pods that comprise the PostgreSQL cluster are available to receive connections. This includes:

  • Testing that the Kubernetes Endpoints are available and able to route requests to healthy Pods
  • Testing that each PostgreSQL instance is available and ready to accept client connections by performing a connectivity check similar to the one performed by pg_isready

To test the availability of a PostgreSQL cluster, you can run the following command:

pgo test hacluster

which will yield output similar to:

cluster : hacluster
	Services
		primary (10.102.20.42:5432): UP
	Instances
		primary (hacluster-6dc6cfcfb9-f9knq): UP

Disaster Recovery: Backups & Restores

The PostgreSQL Operator supports sophisticated functionality for managing your backups and restores. For more information for how this works, please see the disaster recovery guide.

Creating a Backup

The PostgreSQL Operator uses the open source pgBackRest backup and recovery utility for managing backups and PostgreSQL archives. These backups are also used as part of managing the overall health and high-availability of PostgreSQL clusters managed by the PostgreSQL Operator and used as part of the cloning process as well.

When a new PostgreSQL cluster is provisioned by the PostgreSQL Operator, a full pgBackRest backup is taken by default. This is required in order to create new replicas (via pgo scale) for the PostgreSQL cluster as well as healing during a failover scenario.

To create a backup, you can run the following command:

pgo backup hacluster

which by default, will create an incremental pgBackRest backup. The reason for this is that the PostgreSQL Operator initially creates a pgBackRest full backup when the cluster is initial provisioned, and pgBackRest will take incremental backups for each subsequent backup until a different backup type is specified.

Most pgBackRest options are supported and can be passed in by the PostgreSQL Operator via the --backup-opts flag. What follows are some examples for how to utilize pgBackRest with the PostgreSQL Operator to help you create your optimal disaster recovery setup.

Creating a Full Backup

You can create a full backup using the following command:

pgo backup hacluster --backup-opts="--type=full"

Creating a Differential Backup

You can create a differential backup using the following command:

pgo backup hacluster --backup-opts="--type=diff"

Creating an Incremental Backup

You can create a differential backup using the following command:

pgo backup hacluster --backup-opts="--type=incr"

An incremental backup is created without specifying any options after a full or differential backup is taken.

Creating Backups in S3

The PostgreSQL Operator supports creating backups in S3 or any object storage system that uses the S3 protocol. For more information, please read the section on PostgreSQL Operator Backups with S3 in the architecture section.

Displaying Backup Information

You can see information about the current state of backups in a PostgreSQL cluster managed by the PostgreSQL Operator by executing the following command:

pgo show backup hacluster

Setting Backup Retention

By default, pgBackRest will allow you to keep on creating backups until you run out of disk space. As such, it may be helpful to manage how many backups are retained.

pgBackRest comes with several flags for managing how backups can be retained:

  • --repo1-retention-full: how many full backups to retain
  • --repo1-retention-diff: how many differential backups to retain
  • --repo1-retention-archive: how many sets of WAL archives to retain alongside the full and differential backups that are retained

For example, to create a full backup and retain the previous 7 full backups, you would execute the following command:

pgo backup hacluster --backup-opts="--type=full --repo1-retention-full=7"

Scheduling Backups

Any effective disaster recovery strategy includes having regularly scheduled backups. The PostgreSQL Operator enables this through its scheduling sidecar that is deployed alongside the Operator.

Creating a Scheduled Backup

For example, to schedule a full backup once a day at midnight, you can execute the following command:

pgo create schedule hacluster --schedule="0 1 * * *" \
  --schedule-type=pgbackrest  --pgbackrest-backup-type=full

To schedule an incremental backup once every 3 hours, you can execute the following command:

pgo create schedule hacluster --schedule="0 */3 * * *" \
  --schedule-type=pgbackrest  --pgbackrest-backup-type=incr

You can also create regularly scheduled backups and combine it with a retention policy. For example, using the above example of taking a nightly full backup, you can specify a policy of retaining 21 backups by executing the following command:

pgo create schedule hacluster --schedule="0 0 * * *" \
  --schedule-type=pgbackrest  --pgbackrest-backup-type=full \
  --schedule-opts="--repo1-retention-full=21"

Restore a Cluster

The PostgreSQL Operator supports the ability to perform a full restore on a PostgreSQL cluster (i.e. a “clone” or “copy”) as well as a point-in-time-recovery. There are two types of ways to restore a cluster:

  • Restore to a new cluster using the --restore-from flag in the pgo create cluster command. This is effectively a clone or a copy.
  • Restore in-place using the pgo restore command. Note that this is destructive.

It is typically better to perform a restore to a new cluster, particularly when performing a point-in-time-recovery, as it can allow you to more effectively manage your downtime and avoid making undesired changes to your production data.

Additionally, the “restore to a new cluster” technique works so long as you have a pgBackRest repository available: the pgBackRest repository does not need to be attached to an active cluster! For example, if a cluster named hippo was deleted as such:

pgo delete cluster hippo --keep-backups

you can create a new cluster from the backups like so:

pgo create cluster datalake --restore-from=hippo

Below provides guidance on how to perform a restore to a new PostgreSQL cluster both as a full copy and to a specific point in time. Additionally, it also shows how to restore in place to a specific point in time.

Restore to a New Cluster (aka “copy” or “clone”)

Restoring to a new PostgreSQL cluster allows one to take a backup and create a new PostgreSQL cluster that can run alongside an existing PostgreSQL cluster. There are several scenarios where using this technique is helpful:

  • Creating a copy of a PostgreSQL cluster that can be used for other purposes. Another way of putting this is “creating a clone.”
  • Restore to a point-in-time and inspect the state of the data without affecting the current cluster

and more.

Full Restore

To create a new PostgreSQL cluster from a backup and restore it fully, you can execute the following command:

pgo create cluster newcluster --restore-from=oldcluster
Point-in-time-Recovery (PITR)

To create a new PostgreSQL cluster and restore it to specific point-in-time (e.g. before a key table was dropped), you can use the following command, substituting the time that you wish to restore to:

pgo create cluster newcluster \
  --restore-from oldcluster \
  --restore-opts "--type=time --target='2019-12-31 11:59:59.999999+00'"

When the restore is complete, the cluster is immediately available for reads and writes. To inspect the data before allowing connections, add pgBackRest’s --target-action=pause option to the --restore-opts parameter.

The PostgreSQL Operator supports the full set of pgBackRest restore options, which can be passed into the --backup-opts parameter. For more information, please review the pgBackRest restore options

Restore in-place

Restoring a PostgreSQL cluster in-place is a destructive action that will perform a recovery on your existing data directory. This is accomplished using the pgo restore command. The most common scenario is to restore the database to a specific point in time.

Point-in-time-Recovery (PITR)

The more likely scenario when performing a PostgreSQL cluster restore is to recover to a particular point-in-time (e.g. before a key table was dropped). For example, to restore a cluster to December 31, 2019 at 11:59pm:

pgo restore hacluster --pitr-target="2019-12-31 11:59:59.999999+00" \
  --backup-opts="--type=time"

When the restore is complete, the cluster is immediately available for reads and writes. To inspect the data before allowing connections, add pgBackRest’s --target-action=pause option to the --backup-opts parameter.

The PostgreSQL Operator supports the full set of pgBackRest restore options, which can be passed into the --backup-opts parameter. For more information, please review the pgBackRest restore options

Using this technique, after a restore is complete, you will need to re-enable high availability on the PostgreSQL cluster manually. You can re-enable high availability by executing the following command:

pgo update cluster hacluster --enable-autofail

Logical Backups (pg_dump / pg_dumpall)

The PostgreSQL Operator supports taking logical backups with pg_dump and pg_dumpall. While they do not provide the same performance and storage optimizations as the physical backups provided by pgBackRest, logical backups are helpful when one wants to upgrade between major PostgreSQL versions, or provide only a subset of a database, such as a table.

Create a Logical Backup

To create a logical backup of the ‘postgres’ database, you can run the following command:

pgo backup hacluster --backup-type=pgdump

To create a logical backup of a specific database, you can use the --database flag, as in the following command:

pgo backup hacluster --backup-type=pgdump --database=mydb

You can pass in specific options to --backup-opts, which can accept most of the options that the pg_dump command accepts. For example, to only dump the data from a specific table called users:

pgo backup hacluster --backup-type=pgdump --backup-opts="-t users"

To use pg_dumpall to create a logical backup of all the data in a PostgreSQL cluster, you must pass the --dump-all flag in --backup-opts, i.e.:

pgo backup hacluster --backup-type=pgdump --backup-opts="--dump-all"

Viewing Logical Backups

To view an available list of logical backups, you can use the pgo show backup command:

pgo show backup --backup-type=pgdump

This provides information about the PVC that the logical backups are stored on as well as the timestamps required to perform a restore from a logical backup.

Restore from a Logical Backup

To restore from a logical backup, you need to reference the PVC that the logical backup is stored to, as well as the timestamp that was created by the logical backup.

You can restore a logical backup using the following command:

pgo restore hacluster --backup-type=pgdump --backup-pvc=hacluster-pgdump-pvc \
  --pitr-target="2019-01-15-00-03-25" -n pgouser1

To restore to a specific database, add the --pgdump-database flag to the command from above:

pgo restore hacluster --backup-type=pgdump --backup-pvc=hacluster-pgdump-pvc \
  --pgdump-database=mydb --pitr-target="2019-01-15-00-03-25" -n pgouser1

High-Availability: Scaling Up & Down

The PostgreSQL Operator supports a robust high-availability set up to ensure that your PostgreSQL clusters can stay up and running. For detailed information on how it works, please see the high-availability architecture section.

Creating a New Replica

To create a new replica, also known as “scaling up”, you can execute the following command:

pgo scale hacluster --replica-count=1

If you wanted to add two new replicas at the same time, you could execute the following command:

pgo scale hacluster --replica-count=2

Viewing Available Replicas

You can view the available replicas in a few ways. First, you can use pgo show cluster to see the overall information about the PostgreSQL cluster:

pgo show cluster hacluster

You can also find specific replica names by using the --query flag on the pgo failover and pgo scaledown commands, e.g.:

pgo failover --query hacluster

Manual Failover

The PostgreSQL Operator is set up with an automated failover system based on distributed consensus, but there may be times where you wish to have your cluster manually failover. If you wish to have your cluster manually failover, first, query your cluster to determine which failover targets are available. The query command also provides information that may help your decision, such as replication lag:

pgo failover --query hacluster

Once you have selected the replica that is best for your to failover to, you can perform a failover with the following command:

pgo failover hacluster --target=hacluster-abcd

where hacluster-abcd is the name of the PostgreSQL instance that you want to promote to become the new primary

Destroying a Replica

To destroy a replica, first query the available replicas by using the --query flag on the pgo scaledown command, i.e.:

pgo scaledown hacluster --query

Once you have picked the replica you want to remove, you can remove it by executing the following command:

pgo scaledown hacluster --target=hacluster-abcd

where hacluster-abcd is the name of the PostgreSQL replica that you want to destroy.

Monitoring

PostgreSQL Metrics via pgMonitor

You can view metrics about your PostgreSQL cluster using PostgreSQL Operator Monitoring, which uses open source pgMonitor. First, you need to install the PostgreSQL Operator Monitoring stack for your PostgreSQL Operator environment.

After that, you need to ensure that you deploy the crunchy-postgres-exporter with each PostgreSQL cluster that you deploy:

pgo create cluster hippo --metrics

For more information on how monitoring with the PostgreSQL Operator works, please see the Monitoring section of the documentation.

View Disk Utilization

You can see a comparison of Postgres data size versus the Persistent volume claim size by entering the following:

pgo df hacluster -n pgouser1

Cluster Maintenance & Resource Management

There are several operations that you can perform to modify a PostgreSQL cluster over its lifetime.

Modify CPU / Memory for a PostgreSQL Cluster

As database workloads change, it may be necessary to modify the CPU and memory allocation for your PostgreSQL cluster. The PostgreSQL Operator allows for this via the --cpu and --memory flags on the pgo update cluster command. Similar to the create command, both flags accept values that follow the Kubernetes quantity format.

For example, to update a PostgreSQL cluster to use 8 CPU cores and has 32 gibibytes of memory, you can use the following command:

pgo update cluster hacluster --cpu=8 --memory=32Gi

The resource allocations apply to all instances in a PostgreSQL cluster: this means your primary and any replicas will have the same cluster resource allocations. Be sure to specify resource requests that your Kubernetes environment can support.

NOTE: This operation can cause downtime. Modifying the resource requests allocated to a Deployment requires that the Pods in a Deployment must be restarted. Each PostgreSQL instance is safely shutdown using the “fast” shutdown method to help ensure it will not enter crash recovery mode when a new Pod is created.

When the operation completes, each PostgreSQL instance will have the new resource allocations.

Adding a Tablespace to a Cluster

Based on your workload or volume of data, you may wish to add a tablespace to your PostgreSQL cluster.

You can add a tablespace to an existing PostgreSQL cluster with the pgo update cluster command. Adding a tablespace to a cluster uses a similar syntax to creating a cluster with a tablespace, for example:

pgo update cluster hacluster \
    --tablespace=name=tablespace3:storageconfig=storageconfigname

NOTE: This operation can cause downtime. In order to add a tablespace to a PostgreSQL cluster, persistent volume claims (PVCs) need to be created and mounted to each PostgreSQL instance in the cluster. The act of mounting a new PVC to a Kubernetes Deployment causes the Pods in the deployment to restart.

Each PostgreSQL instance is safely shutdown using the “fast” shutdown method to help ensure it will not enter crash recovery mode when a new Pod is created.

When the operation completes, the tablespace will be set up and accessible to use within the PostgreSQL cluster.

For more information on tablespaces, please visit the tablespace section of the documentation.

Clone a PostgreSQL Cluster

You can create a copy of an existing PostgreSQL cluster in a new PostgreSQL cluster by using the pgo create cluster command with the --restore-from flag (and, if needed, --restore-opts). The command copies the pgBackRest repository from either an active PostgreSQL cluster, or a pgBackRest repository that exists from a former cluster that was deleted using pgo delete cluster --keep-backups.

You can clone a PostgreSQL cluster by running the following command:

pgo clone hacluster newhacluster

By leveraging pgo create cluster, you are able to copy the data from a PostgreSQL cluster while creating the topology of a new cluster the way you want to. For instance, if you want to copy data from an existing cluster that does not have metrics to a new cluster that does, you can accomplish that with the following command:

pgo create cluster newcluster --restore-from=oldcluster --metrics

Clone a PostgreSQL Cluster to Different PVC Size

You can have a cloned PostgreSQL cluster use a different PVC size, which is useful when moving your PostgreSQL cluster to a larger PVC. For example, to clone a PostgreSQL cluster to a 256GiB PVC, you can execute the following command:

pgo create cluster bighippo --restore-from=hippo  --pvc-size=256Gi

You can also have the cloned PostgreSQL cluster use a larger pgBackRest backup repository by setting its PVC size. For example, to have a cloned PostgreSQL cluster use a 1TiB pgBackRest repository, you can execute the following command:

pgo create cluster bighippo --restore-from=hippo --pgbackrest-pvc-size=1Ti

Enable TLS

TLS allows secure TCP connections to PostgreSQL, and the PostgreSQL Operator makes it easy to enable this PostgreSQL feature. The TLS support in the PostgreSQL Operator does not make an opinion about your PKI, but rather loads in your TLS key pair that you wish to use for the PostgreSQL server as well as its corresponding certificate authority (CA) certificate. Both of these Secrets are required to enable TLS support for your PostgreSQL cluster when using the PostgreSQL Operator, but it in turn allows seamless TLS support.

Setup

There are three items that are required to enable TLS in your PostgreSQL clusters:

  • A CA certificate
  • A TLS private key
  • A TLS certificate

There are a variety of methods available to generate these items: in fact, Kubernetes comes with its own certificate management system! It is up to you to decide how you want to manage this for your cluster. The PostgreSQL documentation also provides an example for how to generate a TLS certificate as well.

To set up TLS for your PostgreSQL cluster, you have to create two Secrets: one that contains the CA certificate, and the other that contains the server TLS key pair.

First, create the Secret that contains your CA certificate. Create the Secret as a generic Secret, and note that the following requirements must be met:

  • The Secret must be created in the same Namespace as where you are deploying your PostgreSQL cluster
  • The name of the key that is holding the CA must be ca.crt

There are optional settings for setting up the CA secret:

  • You can pass in a certificate revocation list (CRL) for the CA secret by passing in the CRL using the ca.crl key name in the Secret.

For example, to create a CA Secret with the trusted CA to use for the PostgreSQL clusters, you could execute the following command:

kubectl create secret generic postgresql-ca --from-file=ca.crt=/path/to/ca.crt

To create a CA Secret that includes a CRL, you could execute the following command:

kubectl create secret generic postgresql-ca \
  --from-file=ca.crt=/path/to/ca.crt \
  --from-file=ca.crl=/path/to/ca.crl

Note that you can reuse this CA Secret for other PostgreSQL clusters deployed by the PostgreSQL Operator.

Next, create the Secret that contains your TLS key pair. Create the Secret as a a TLS Secret, and note the following requirement must be met:

  • The Secret must be created in the same Namespace as where you are deploying your PostgreSQL cluster
kubectl create secret tls hacluster-tls-keypair \
  --cert=/path/to/server.crt \
  --key=/path/to/server.key

Now you can create a TLS-enabled PostgreSQL cluster!

Create a TLS Enabled PostgreSQL Cluster

Using the above example, to create a TLS-enabled PostgreSQL cluster that can accept both TLS and non-TLS connections, execute the following command:

pgo create cluster hacluster-tls \
  --server-ca-secret=postgresql-ca \
  --server-tls-secret=hacluster-tls-keypair

Including the --server-ca-secret and --server-tls-secret flags automatically enable TLS connections in the PostgreSQL cluster that is deployed. These flags should reference the CA Secret and the TLS key pair Secret, respectively.

If deployed successfully, when you connect to the PostgreSQL cluster, assuming your PGSSLMODE is set to prefer or higher, you will see something like this in your psql terminal:

SSL connection (protocol: TLSv1.2, cipher: ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384, bits: 256, compression: off)

Force TLS in a PostgreSQL Cluster

There are many environments where you want to force all remote connections to occur over TLS, for example, if you deploy your PostgreSQL cluster’s in a public cloud or on an untrusted network. The PostgreSQL Operator lets you force all remote connections to occur over TLS by using the --tls-only flag.

For example, using the setup above, you can force TLS in a PostgreSQL cluster by executing the following command:

pgo create cluster hacluster-tls-only \
  --tls-only \
  --server-ca-secret=postgresql-ca --server-tls-secret=hacluster-tls-keypair

If deployed successfully, when you connect to the PostgreSQL cluster, assuming your PGSSLMODE is set to prefer or higher, you will see something like this in your psql terminal:

SSL connection (protocol: TLSv1.2, cipher: ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384, bits: 256, compression: off)

If you try to connect to a PostgreSQL cluster that is deployed using the --tls-only with TLS disabled (i.e. PGSSLMODE=disable), you will receive an error that connections without TLS are unsupported.

TLS Authentication for PostgreSQL Replication

PostgreSQL supports certificate-based authentication, which allows for PostgreSQL to authenticate users based on the common name (CN) in a certificate. Using this feature, the PostgreSQL Operator allows you to configure PostgreSQL replicas in a cluster to authenticate using a certificate instead of a password.

To use this feature, first you will need to set up a Kubernetes TLS Secret that has a CN of primaryuser. If you do not wish to have this as your CN, you will need to map the CN of this certificate to the value of primaryuser using a pg_ident username map, which you can configure as part of a custom PostgreSQL configuration.

You also need to ensure that the certificate is verifiable by the certificate authority (CA) chain that you have provided for your PostgreSQL cluster. The CA is provided as part of the --server-ca-secret flag in the pgo create cluster command.

To create a PostgreSQL cluster that uses TLS authentication for replication, first create Kubernetes Secrets for the server and the CA. For the purposes of this example, we will use the ones that were created earlier: postgresql-ca and hacluster-tls-keypair. After generating a certificate that has a CN of primaryuser, create a Kubernetes Secret that references this TLS keypair called hacluster-tls-replication-keypair:

kubectl create secret tls hacluster-tls-replication-keypair \
  --cert=/path/to/replication.crt \
  --key=/path/to/replication.key

We can now create a PostgreSQL cluster and allow for it to use TLS authentication for its replicas! Let’s create a PostgreSQL cluster with two replicas that also requires TLS for any connection:

pgo create cluster hippo \
  --tls-only \
  --server-ca-secret=postgresql-ca \
  --server-tls-secret=hacluster-tls-keypair \
  --replication-tls-secret=hacluster-tls-replication-keypair \
  --replica-count=2

By default, the PostgreSQL Operator has each replica connect to PostgreSQL using a PostgreSQL TLS mode of verify-ca. If you wish to perform TLS mutual authentication between PostgreSQL instances (i.e. certificate-based authentication with SSL mode of verify-full), you will need to create a PostgreSQL custom configuration.

Custom PostgreSQL Configuration

Customizing PostgreSQL configuration is currently not subject to the pgo client, but given it is a common question, we thought it may be helpful to link to how to do it from here. To find out more about how to customize your PostgreSQL configuration, please refer to the Custom PostgreSQL Configuration section of the documentation.

pgAdmin 4: PostgreSQL Administration

pgAdmin 4 is a popular graphical user interface that lets you work with PostgreSQL databases from both a desktop or web-based client. In the case of the PostgreSQL Operator, the pgAdmin 4 web client can be deployed and synchronized with PostgreSQL clusters so that users can administrate their databases with their PostgreSQL username and password.

For example, let’s work with a PostgreSQL cluster called hippo that has a user named hippo with password datalake, e.g.:

pgo create cluster hippo --username=hippo --password=datalake

Once the hippo PostgreSQL cluster is ready, create the pgAdmin 4 deployment with the pgo create pgadmin command:

pgo create pgadmin hippo

This creates a pgAdmin 4 deployment unique to this PostgreSQL cluster and synchronizes the PostgreSQL user information into it. To access pgAdmin 4, you can set up a port-forward to the Service, which follows the pattern <clusterName>-pgadmin, to port 5050:

kubectl port-forward svc/hippo-pgadmin 5050:5050

Point your browser at http://localhost:5050 and use your database username (e.g. hippo) and password (e.g. datalake) to log in.

pgAdmin 4 Login Page

(Note: if your password does not appear to work, you can retry setting up the user with the pgo update user command: pgo update user hippo --password=datalake)

The pgo create user, pgo update user, and pgo delete user commands are synchronized with the pgAdmin 4 deployment. Any user with credentials to this PostgreSQL cluster will be able to log in and use pgAdmin 4:

pgAdmin 4 Query

You can remove the pgAdmin 4 deployment with the pgo delete pgadmin command.

For more information, please read the pgAdmin 4 Architecture section of the documentation.

Standby Clusters: Multi-Cluster Kubernetes Deployments

A standby PostgreSQL cluster can be used to create an advanced high-availability set with a PostgreSQL cluster running in a different Kubernetes cluster, or used for other operations such as migrating from one PostgreSQL cluster to another. Note: this is not high availability per se: a high-availability PostgreSQL cluster will automatically fail over upon a downtime event, whereas a standby PostgreSQL cluster must be explicitly promoted.

With that said, you can run multiple PostgreSQL Operators in different Kubernetes clusters, and the below functionality will work!

Below are some commands for setting up and using standby PostgreSQL clusters. For more details on how standby clusters work, please review the section on Kubernetes Multi-Cluster Deployments.

Creating a Standby Cluster

Before creating a standby cluster, you will need to ensure that your primary cluster is created properly. Standby clusters require the use of S3 or equivalent S3-compatible storage system that is accessible to both the primary and standby clusters. For example, to create a primary cluster to these specifications:

pgo create cluster hippo --pgbouncer --replica-count=2 \
  --pgbackrest-storage-type=local,s3 \
  --pgbackrest-s3-key=<redacted> \
  --pgbackrest-s3-key-secret=<redacted> \
  --pgbackrest-s3-bucket=watering-hole \
  --pgbackrest-s3-endpoint=s3.amazonaws.com \
  --pgbackrest-s3-region=us-east-1 \
  --pgbackrest-s3-uri-style=host \
  --pgbackrest-s3-verify-tls=true \
  --password-superuser=supersecrethippo \
  --password-replication=somewhatsecrethippo \
  --password=opensourcehippo

Before setting up the standby PostgreSQL cluster, you will need to wait a few moments for the primary PostgreSQL cluster to be ready. Once your primary PostgreSQL cluster is available, you can create a standby cluster by using the following command:

pgo create cluster hippo-standby --standby --replica-count=2 \
  --pgbackrest-storage-type=s3 \
  --pgbackrest-s3-key=<redacted> \
  --pgbackrest-s3-key-secret=<redacted> \
  --pgbackrest-s3-bucket=watering-hole \
  --pgbackrest-s3-endpoint=s3.amazonaws.com \
  --pgbackrest-s3-region=us-east-1 \
  --pgbackrest-s3-uri-style=host \
  --pgbackrest-s3-verify-tls=true \
  --pgbackrest-repo-path=/backrestrepo/hippo-backrest-shared-repo \
  --password-superuser=supersecrethippo \
  --password-replication=somewhatsecrethippo \
  --password=opensourcehippo

If you are unsure of your user credentials form the original hippo cluster, you can retrieve them using the pgo show user command with the --show-system-accounts flag:

pgo show user hippo --show-system-accounts

The standby cluster will take a few moments to bootstrap, but it is now set up!

Promoting a Standby Cluster

Before promoting a standby cluster, it is first necessary to shut down the primary cluster, otherwise you can run into a potential “split-brain“ scenario (if your primary Kubernetes cluster is down, it may not be possible to do this).

To shutdown, run the following command:

pgo update cluster hippo --shutdown

Once it is shut down, you can promote the standby cluster:

pgo update cluster hippo-standby --promote-standby

The standby is now an active PostgreSQL cluster and can start to accept writes.

To convert the previous active cluster into a standby cluster, you can run the following command:

pgo update cluster hippo --enable-standby

This will take a few moments to make this PostgreSQL cluster into a standby cluster. When it is ready, you can start it up with the following command:

pgo update cluster hippo --startup

Labels

Labels are a helpful way to organize PostgreSQL clusters, such as by application type or environment. The PostgreSQL Operator supports managing Kubernetes Labels as a convenient way to group PostgreSQL clusters together.

You can view which labels are assigned to a PostgreSQL cluster using the pgo show cluster command. You are also able to see these labels when using kubectl or oc.

Add a Label to a PostgreSQL Cluster

Labels can be added to PostgreSQL clusters using the pgo label command. For example, to add a label with a key/value pair of env=production, you could execute the following command:

pgo label hacluster --label=env=production

Add a Label to Multiple PostgreSQL Clusters

You can add also add a label to multiple PostgreSQL clusters simultaneously using the --selector flag on the pgo label command. For example, to add a label with a key/value pair of env=production to clusters that have a label key/value pair of app=payment, you could execute the following command:

pgo label --selector=app=payment --label=env=production

Custom Annotations

There are a variety of reasons why one may want to add additional Annotations to the Deployments, and by extension Pods, managed by the PostgreSQL Operator:

  • External applications that extend functionality via details in an annotation
  • Tracking purposes for an internal application

etc.

As such the pgo client allows you to manage your own custom annotations on the Operator. There are four different ways to add annotations:

  • On PostgreSQL instances
  • On pgBackRest instances
  • On pgBouncer instances
  • On all of the above

The custom annotation feature follows the same syntax as Kubernetes for adding and removing annotations, e.g.:

--annotation=name=value

would add an annotation called name with a value of value, and:

--annotation=name-

would remove an annotation called name

Adding an Annotation

There are two ways to add an Annotation during the lifecycle of a PostgreSQL cluster:

There are several flags available for managing Annotations, i.e.:

  • --annotation: adds an Annotation to all managed Deployments (PostgreSQL, pgBackRest, pgBouncer)
  • --annotation-postgres: adds an Annotation only to PostgreSQL Deployments
  • --annotation-pgbackrest: adds an Annotation only to pgBackrest Deployments
  • --annotation-pgbouncer: adds an Annotation only to pgBouncer Deployments

To add an Annotation with key hippo and value awesome to all of the managed Deployments when creating a cluster, you would run the following command:

pgo create cluster hippo --annotation=hippo=awesome

To add an Annotation with key elephant and value cool to only the PostgreSQL Deployments when creating a cluster, you would run the following command:

pgo create cluster hippo --annotation-postgres=elephant=cool

To add an Annotation to all the managed Deployments in an existing cluster, you can use the pgo update cluster command:

pgo update cluster hippo --annotation=zebra=nice

Adding Multiple Annotations

There are two syntaxes you could use to add multiple Annotations to a cluster:

pgo create cluster hippo --annotation=hippo=awesome,elephant=cool

or

pgo create cluster hippo --annotation=hippo=awesome --annotation=elephant=cool

Updating Annotations

To update an Annotation, you can use the pgo update cluster command and reference the original Annotation key. For intance, if I wanted to update the hippo annotation to be rad:

pgo update cluster hippo --annotation=hippo=rad

Removing Annotations

To remove an Annotation, you need to add a - to the end of the Annotation name. For example, to remove the hippo annotation:

pgo update cluster hippo --annotation=hippo-

Policy Management

Create a Policy

To create a SQL policy, enter the following:

pgo create policy mypolicy --in-file=mypolicy.sql -n pgouser1

This examples creates a policy named mypolicy using the contents of the file mypolicy.sql which is assumed to be in the current directory.

You can view policies as following:

pgo show policy --all -n pgouser1

Apply a Policy

pgo apply mypolicy --selector=environment=prod
pgo apply mypolicy --selector=name=hacluster

Advanced Operations

Connection Pooling via pgBouncer

To add a pgbouncer Deployment to your Postgres cluster, enter:

pgo create cluster hacluster --pgbouncer -n pgouser1

You can add pgbouncer after a Postgres cluster is created as follows:

pgo create pgbouncer hacluster
pgo create pgbouncer --selector=name=hacluster

You can also specify a pgbouncer password as follows:

pgo create cluster hacluster --pgbouncer --pgbouncer-pass=somepass -n pgouser1

You can remove a pgbouncer from a cluster as follows:

pgo delete pgbouncer hacluster -n pgouser1

Query Analysis via pgBadger

You can create a pgbadger sidecar container in your Postgres cluster pod as follows:

pgo create cluster hacluster --pgbadger -n pgouser1

Create a Cluster using Specific Storage

pgo create cluster hacluster --storage-config=somestorageconfig -n pgouser1

Likewise, you can specify a storage configuration when creating a replica:

pgo scale hacluster --storage-config=someslowerstorage -n pgouser1

This example specifies the somestorageconfig storage configuration to be used by the Postgres cluster. This lets you specify a storage configuration that is defined in the pgo.yaml file specifically for a given Postgres cluster.

You can create a Cluster using a Preferred Node as follows:

pgo create cluster hacluster --node-label=speed=superfast -n pgouser1

That command will cause a node affinity rule to be added to the Postgres pod which will influence the node upon which Kubernetes will schedule the Pod.

Likewise, you can create a Replica using a Preferred Node as follows:

pgo scale hacluster --node-label=speed=slowerthannormal -n pgouser1

Create a Cluster with LoadBalancer ServiceType

pgo create cluster hacluster --service-type=LoadBalancer -n pgouser1

This command will cause the Postgres Service to be of a specific type instead of the default ClusterIP service type.

Namespace Operations

Create an Operator namespace where Postgres clusters can be created and managed by the Operator:

pgo create namespace mynamespace

Update a Namespace to be able to be used by the Operator:

pgo update namespace somenamespace

Delete a Namespace:

pgo delete namespace mynamespace

PostgreSQL Operator User Operations

PGO users are users defined for authenticating to the PGO REST API. You can manage those users with the following commands:

pgo create pgouser someuser --pgouser-namespaces="pgouser1,pgouser2" --pgouser-password="somepassword" --pgouser-roles="pgoadmin"
pgo create pgouser otheruser --all-namespaces --pgouser-password="somepassword" --pgouser-roles="pgoadmin"

Update a user:

pgo update pgouser someuser --pgouser-namespaces="pgouser1,pgouser2" --pgouser-password="somepassword" --pgouser-roles="pgoadmin"
pgo update pgouser otheruser --all-namespaces --pgouser-password="somepassword" --pgouser-roles="pgoadmin"

Delete a PGO user:

pgo delete pgouser someuser

PGO roles are also managed as follows:

pgo create pgorole somerole --permissions="Cat,Ls"

Delete a PGO role with:

pgo delete pgorole somerole

Update a PGO role with:

pgo update pgorole somerole --permissions="Cat,Ls"

PostgreSQL Cluster User Operations

Managed Postgres users can be viewed using the following command:

pgo show user hacluster

Postgres users can be created using the following command examples:

pgo create user hacluster --username=somepguser --password=somepassword --managed
pgo create user --selector=name=hacluster --username=somepguser --password=somepassword --managed

Those commands are identical in function, and create on the hacluster Postgres cluster, a user named somepguser, with a password of somepassword, the account is managed meaning that these credentials are stored as a Secret on the Kubernetes cluster in the Operator namespace.

Postgres users can be deleted using the following command:

pgo delete user hacluster --username=somepguser

That command deletes the user on the hacluster Postgres cluster.

Postgres users can be updated using the following command:

pgo update user hacluster --username=somepguser --password=frodo

That command changes the password for the user on the hacluster Postgres cluster.