Customize a Postgres Cluster

The PostgreSQL Operator makes it very easy and quick to create a cluster, but there are possibly more customizations you want to make to your cluster. These include:

and more.

There are an abundance of ways to customize your PostgreSQL clusters with the PostgreSQL Operator. You can read about all of these options in the pgo create cluster reference.

The goal of this section is to present a few of the common actions that can be taken to help create the PostgreSQL cluster of your choice. Later sections of the tutorial will cover other topics, such as creating a cluster with TLS or tablespaces.

Create a PostgreSQL Cluster With Monitoring

The PostgreSQL Operator Monitoring stack provides a convenient way to gain insights into the availabilty and performance of your PostgreSQL clusters. In order to collect metrics from your PostgreSQL clusters, you have to enable the crunchy-postgres-exporter sidecar alongside your PostgreSQL cluster. You can do this with the --metrics flag on pgo create cluster:

pgo create cluster hippo --metrics

Note that the --metrics flag just enables a sidecar that can be scraped. You will need to install the monitoring stack separately, or tie it into your existing monitoring infrastructure.

Customize PVC Size

Databases come in all different sizes, and those sizes can certainly change over time. As such, it is helpful to be able to specify what size PVC you want to store your PostgreSQL data.

Customize PVC Size for PostgreSQL

The PostgreSQL Operator lets you choose the size of your “PostgreSQL data directory” (aka “PGDATA” directory) using the --pvc-size flag. The PVC size should be selected using standard Kubernetes resource units, e.g. 20Gi.

For example, to create a PostgreSQL cluster that has a data directory that is 20Gi in size:

pgo create cluster hippo --pvc-size=20Gi

Customize PVC Size for pgBackRest

You can also specify the PVC size for the pgBackRest repository with the --pgbackrest-pvc-size. pgBackRest is used to store all of your backups, so you want to size it so that you can meet your backup retention policy.

For example, to create a pgBackRest repository that has a PVC sized to 100Gi in size:

pgo create cluster hippo --pgbackrest-pvc-size=100Gi

Customize CPU / Memory

Databases have different CPU and memory requirements, often which is dictated by the amount of data in your working set (i.e. actively accessed data). Kubernetes provides several ways for Pods to manage CPU and memory resources:

  • CPU & Memory Requests
  • CPU & Memory Limits

A CPU or Memory Request tells Kubernetes to ensure that there is at least that amount of resource available on the Node to schedule a Pod to.

A CPU Limit tells Kubernetes to not let a Pod exceed utilizing that amount of CPU. A Pod will only be allowed to use that maximum amount of CPU. Similarly, a Memory limit tells Kubernetes to not let a Pod exceed a certain amount of Memory. In this case, if Kubernetes detects that a Pod has exceed a Memory limit, it will try to terminate any processes that are causing the limit to be exceed. We mention this as, prior to cgroups v2, Memory limits can potentially affect PostgreSQL availability and we advise to use them carefully.

The below goes into how you can customize the CPU and memory resources that are made available to the core deployment Pods with your PostgreSQL cluster. Customizing CPU and memory does add more resources to your PostgreSQL cluster, but to fully take advantage of additional resources, you will need to customize your PostgreSQL configuration and tune parameters such as shared_buffers and others.

Customize CPU / Memory for PostgreSQL

The PostgreSQL Operator provides several flags for pgo create cluster to help manage resources for a PostgreSQL instance:

  • --cpu: Specify the CPU Request for a PostgreSQL instance
  • --cpu-limit: Specify the CPU Limit for a PostgreSQL instance
  • --memory: Specify the Memory Request for a PostgreSQL instance
  • --memory-limit: Specify the Memory Limit for a PostgreSQL instance

For example, to create a PostgreSQL cluster that makes a CPU Request of 2.0 with a CPU Limit of 4.0 and a Memory Request of 4Gi with a Memory Limit of 6Gi:

pgo create cluster hippo \
  --cpu=2.0 --cpu-limit=4.0 \
  --memory=4Gi --memory-limit=6Gi

Customize CPU / Memory for Crunchy PostgreSQL Exporter Sidecar

If you deploy your PostgreSQL cluster with monitoring, you may want to adjust the resources of the crunchy-postgres-exporter sidecar that runs next to each PostgreSQL instnace. You can do this with the following flags:

  • --exporter-cpu: Specify the CPU Request for a crunchy-postgres-exporter sidecar
  • --exporter-cpu-limit: Specify the CPU Limit for a crunchy-postgres-exporter sidecar
  • --exporter-memory: Specify the Memory Request for a crunchy-postgres-exporter sidecar
  • --exporter-memory-limit: Specify the Memory Limit for a crunchy-postgres-exporter sidecar

For example, to create a PostgreSQL cluster with a metrics sidecar with custom CPU and memory requests + limits, you could do the following:

pgo create cluster hippo --metrics \
  --exporter-cpu=0.5 --exporter-cpu-limit=1.0 \
  --exporter-memory=256Mi --exporter-memory-limit=1Gi

Customize CPU / Memory for pgBackRest

You can also customize the CPU and memory requests and limits for pgBackRest with the following flags:

  • --pgbackrest-cpu: Specify the CPU Request for pgBackRest
  • --pgbackrest-cpu-limit: Specify the CPU Limit for pgBackRest
  • --pgbackrest-memory: Specify the Memory Request for pgBackRest
  • --pgbackrest-memory-limit: Specify the Memory Limit for pgBackRest

For example, to create a PostgreSQL cluster with custom CPU and memory requests + limits for pgBackRest, you could do the following:

pgo create cluster hippo \
  --pgbackrest-cpu=0.5 --pgbackrest-cpu-limit=1.0 \
  --pgbackrest-memory=256Mi --pgbackrest-memory-limit=1Gi

Create a High Availability PostgreSQL Cluster

High availability allows you to deploy PostgreSQL clusters with redundancy that allows them to be accessible by your applications even if there is a downtime event to your primary instance. The PostgreSQL clusters use the distributed consensus storage system that comes with Kubernetes so that availability is tied to that of your Kubenretes clusters. For an in-depth discussion of the topic, please read the high availability section of the documentation.

To create a high availability PostgreSQL cluster with one replica, you can run the following command:

pgo create cluster hippo --replica-count=1

You can scale up and down your PostgreSQL cluster with the pgo scale and pgo scaledown commands.

Customize PostgreSQL Configuration

PostgreSQL provides a lot of different knobs that can be used to fine tune the configuration for your workload. While you can customize your PostgreSQL configuration after your cluster has been deployed, you may also want to load in your custom configuration during initialization.

The PostgreSQL Operator uses Patroni to help manage cluster initialization and high availability. To understand how to build out a configuration file to be used to customize your PostgreSQL cluster, please review the Patroni documentation.

For example, let’s say we want to create a PostgreSQL cluster with shared_buffers set to 2GB, max_connections set to 30 and password_encryption set to scram-sha-256. We would create a configuration file that looks similar to:

---
bootstrap:
  dcs:
    postgresql:
      parameters:
        max_connections: 30
        shared_buffers: 2GB
        password_encryption: scram-sha-256

Save this configuration in a file called postgres-ha.yaml.

Next, create a ConfigMap called hippo-custom-config like so:

kubectl -n pgo create configmap hippo-custom-config --from-file=postgres-ha.yaml

You can then have you new PostgreSQL cluster use hippo-custom-config as part of its cluster initialization by using the --custom-config flag of pgo create cluster:

pgo create cluster hippo --custom-config=hippo-custom-config

After your cluster is initialized, connect to your cluster and confirm that your settings have been applied:

SHOW shared_buffers;

 shared_buffers
----------------
 2GB

Troubleshooting

PostgreSQL Pod Can’t Be Scheduled

There are many reasons why a PostgreSQL Pod may not be scheduled:

  • Resources are unavailable. Ensure that you have a Kubernetes Node with enough resources to satisfy your memory or CPU Request.
  • PVC cannot be provisioned. Ensure that you request a PVC size that is available, or that your PVC storage class is set up correctly.
  • Node affinity rules cannot be satisfied. If you assigned a node label, ensure that the Nodes with that label are available for scheduling. If they are, ensure that there are enough resources available.
  • Pod anti-affinity rules cannot be satisfied. This most likely happens when pod anti-affinity is set to required and there are not enough Nodes available for scheduling. Consider adding more Nodes or relaxing your anti-affinity rules.

PostgreSQL Pod reports “Authentication Failed for ccp_monitoring

This is a temporary error that occurs when a new PostgreSQL cluster is first initialized with the --metrics flag. The crunchy-postgres-exporter container within the PostgreSQL Pod may be ready before the container with PostgreSQL is ready. If a message in your logs further down displays a timestamp, e.g.:

             now              
-------------------------------
2020-11-10 08:23:15.968196-05

Then the ccp_monitoring user is properly reconciled with the PostgreSQL cluster.

If the error message does not go away, this could indicate a few things:

  • The PostgreSQL instance has not initialized. Check to ensure that PostgreSQL has successfully started.
  • The password for the ccp_monitoring user has changed. In this case you will need to update the Secret with the monitoring credentials.

Next Steps

As mentioned at the beginning, there are a lot more customizations that you can make to your PostgreSQL cluster, and we will cover those as the tutorial progresses! This section was to get you familiar with some of the most common customizations, and to explore how many options pgo create cluster has!

Now you have your PostgreSQL cluster up and running and using the resources as you see fit. What if you want to make changes to the cluster? We’ll explore some of the commands that can be used to update your PostgreSQL cluster!