Customize a Postgres Cluster

Postgres is known for its ease of customization; PGO helps you to roll out changes efficiently and without disruption. After resizing the resources for our Postgres cluster in the previous step of this tutorial, lets see how we can tweak our Postgres configuration to optimize its usage of them.

Custom Postgres Configuration

Part of the trick of managing multiple instances in a Postgres cluster is ensuring all of the configuration changes are propagated to each of them. This is where PGO helps: when you make a Postgres configuration change for a cluster, PGO will apply the changes to all of the managed instances.

For example, in our previous step we added CPU and memory limits of 2.0 and 4Gi respectively. Let’s tweak some of the Postgres settings to better use our new resources. We can do this in the spec.patroni.dynamicConfiguration section. Here is an example updated manifest that tweaks several settings:

apiVersion: postgres-operator.crunchydata.com/v1beta1
kind: PostgresCluster
metadata:
  name: hippo
spec:
  image: registry.developers.crunchydata.com/crunchydata/crunchy-postgres:ubi8-14.4-0
  postgresVersion: 14
  instances:
    - name: instance1
      replicas: 2
      resources:
        limits:
          cpu: 2.0
          memory: 4Gi
      dataVolumeClaimSpec:
        accessModes:
        - "ReadWriteOnce"
        resources:
          requests:
            storage: 1Gi
  backups:
    pgbackrest:
      image: registry.developers.crunchydata.com/crunchydata/crunchy-pgbackrest:ubi8-2.38-2
      repos:
      - name: repo1
        volume:
          volumeClaimSpec:
            accessModes:
            - "ReadWriteOnce"
            resources:
              requests:
                storage: 1Gi
  patroni:
    dynamicConfiguration:
      postgresql:
        parameters:
          max_parallel_workers: 2
          max_worker_processes: 2
          shared_buffers: 1GB
          work_mem: 2MB

In particular, we added the following to spec:

patroni:
  dynamicConfiguration:
    postgresql:
      parameters:
        max_parallel_workers: 2
        max_worker_processes: 2
        shared_buffers: 1GB
        work_mem: 2MB

Apply these updates to your Kubernetes cluster with the following command:

kubectl apply -k kustomize/postgres

PGO will go and apply these settings to all of the Postgres clusters. You can verify that the changes are present using the Postgres SHOW command, e.g.

SHOW work_mem;

should yield something similar to:

 work_mem
----------
 2MB

Customize TLS

All connections in PGO use TLS to encrypt communication between components. PGO sets up a PKI and certificate authority (CA) that allow you create verifiable endpoints. However, you may want to bring a different TLS infrastructure based upon your organizational requirements. The good news: PGO lets you do this!

If you want to use the TLS infrastructure that PGO provides, you can skip the rest of this section and move on to learning how to apply software updates.

How to Customize TLS

There are a few different TLS endpoints that can be customized for PGO, including those of the Postgres cluster and controlling how Postgres instances authenticate with each other. Let’s look at how we can customize TLS.

Your TLS certificate should have a Common Name (CN) setting that matches the primary Service name. This is the name of the cluster suffixed with -primary. For example, for our hippo cluster this would be hippo-primary.

To customize the TLS for a Postgres cluster, you will need to create a Secret in the Namespace of your Postgres cluster that contains the TLS key (tls.key), TLS certificate (tls.crt) and the CA certificate (ca.crt) to use. The Secret should contain the following values:

data:
  ca.crt: <value>
  tls.crt: <value>
  tls.key: <value>

For example, if you have files named ca.crt, hippo.key, and hippo.crt stored on your local machine, you could run the following command:

kubectl create secret generic -n postgres-operator hippo.tls \
  --from-file=ca.crt=ca.crt \
  --from-file=tls.key=hippo.key \
  --from-file=tls.crt=hippo.crt

You can specify the custom TLS Secret in the spec.customTLSSecret.name field in your postgrescluster.postgres-operator.crunchydata.com custom resource, e.g:

spec:
  customTLSSecret:
    name: hippo.tls

If you’re unable to control the key-value pairs in the Secret, you can create a mapping that looks similar to this:

spec:
  customTLSSecret:
    name: hippo.tls
    items:
      - key: <tls.crt key>
        path: tls.crt
      - key: <tls.key key>
        path: tls.key
      - key: <ca.crt key>
        path: ca.crt

If spec.customTLSSecret is provided you must also provide spec.customReplicationTLSSecret and both must contain the same ca.crt.

As with the other changes, you can roll out the TLS customizations with kubectl apply.

Labels

There are several ways to add your own custom Kubernetes Labels to your Postgres cluster.

  • Cluster: You can apply labels to any PGO managed object in a cluster by editing the spec.metadata.labels section of the custom resource.
  • Postgres: You can apply labels to a Postgres instance set and its objects by editing spec.instances.metadata.labels.
  • pgBackRest: You can apply labels to pgBackRest and its objects by editing postgresclusters.spec.backups.pgbackrest.metadata.labels.
  • PgBouncer: You can apply labels to PgBouncer connection pooling instances by editing spec.proxy.pgBouncer.metadata.labels.

Annotations

There are several ways to add your own custom Kubernetes Annotations to your Postgres cluster.

  • Cluster: You can apply annotations to any PGO managed object in a cluster by editing the spec.metadata.annotations section of the custom resource.
  • Postgres: You can apply annotations to a Postgres instance set and its objects by editing spec.instances.metadata.annotations.
  • pgBackRest: You can apply annotations to pgBackRest and its objects by editing spec.backups.pgbackrest.metadata.annotations.
  • PgBouncer: You can apply annotations to PgBouncer connection pooling instances by editing spec.proxy.pgBouncer.metadata.annotations.

Pod Priority Classes

PGO allows you to use pod priority classes to indicate the relative importance of a pod by setting a priorityClassName field on your Postgres cluster. This can be done as follows:

  • Instances: Priority is defined per instance set and is applied to all Pods in that instance set by editing the spec.instances.priorityClassName section of the custom resource.
  • Dedicated Repo Host: Priority defined under the repoHost section of the spec is applied to the dedicated repo host by editing the spec.backups.pgbackrest.repoHost.priorityClassName section of the custom resource.
  • PgBouncer: Priority is defined under the pgBouncer section of the spec and will apply to all PgBouncer Pods by editing the spec.proxy.pgBouncer.priorityClassName section of the custom resource.
  • Backup (manual and scheduled): Priority is defined under the spec.backups.pgbackrest.jobs.priorityClassName section and applies that priority to all pgBackRest backup Jobs (manual and scheduled).
  • Restore (data source or in-place): Priority is defined for either a “data source” restore or an in-place restore by editing the spec.dataSource.postgresCluster.priorityClassName section of the custom resource.
  • Data Migration: The priority defined for the first instance set in the spec (array position 0) is used for the PGDATA and WAL migration Jobs. The pgBackRest repo migration Job will use the priority class applied to the repoHost.

Separate WAL PVCs

PostgreSQL commits transactions by storing changes in its Write-Ahead Log (WAL). Because the way WAL files are accessed and utilized often differs from that of data files, and in high-performance situations, it can desirable to put WAL files on separate storage volume. With PGO, this can be done by adding the walVolumeClaimSpec block to your desired instance in your PostgresCluster spec, either when your cluster is created or anytime thereafter:

spec:
  instances:
    - name: instance
      walVolumeClaimSpec:
        accessModes:
        - "ReadWriteMany"
        resources:
          requests:
            storage: 1Gi

This volume can be removed later by removing the walVolumeClaimSpec section from the instance. Note that when changing the WAL directory, care is taken so as not to lose any WAL files. PGO only deletes the PVC once there are no longer any WAL files on the previously configured volume.

Database Initialization SQL

PGO can run SQL for you as part of the cluster creation and initialization process. PGO runs the SQL using the psql client so you can use meta-commands to connect to different databases, change error handling, or set and use variables. Its capabilities are described in the psql documentation.

Initialization SQL ConfigMap

The Postgres cluster spec accepts a reference to a ConfigMap containing your init SQL file. Update your cluster spec to include the ConfigMap name, spec.databaseInitSQL.name, and the data key, spec.databaseInitSQL.key, for your SQL file. For example, if you create your ConfigMap with the following command:

kubectl -n postgres-operator create configmap hippo-init-sql --from-file=init.sql=/path/to/init.sql

You would add the following section to your Postgrescluster spec:

spec:
  databaseInitSQL:
    key: init.sql
    name: hippo-init-sql
The ConfigMap must exist in the same namespace as your Postgres cluster.

After you add the ConfigMap reference to your spec, apply the change with kubectl apply -k kustomize/postgres. PGO will create your hippo cluster and run your initialization SQL once the cluster has started. You can verify that your SQL has been run by checking the databaseInitSQL status on your Postgres cluster. While the status is set, your init SQL will not be run again. You can check cluster status with the kubectl describe command:

kubectl -n postgres-operator describe postgresclusters.postgres-operator.crunchydata.com hippo
In some cases, due to how Kubernetes treats PostgresCluster status, PGO may run your SQL commands more than once. Please ensure that the commands defined in your init SQL are idempotent.

Now that databaseInitSQL is defined in your cluster status, verify database objects have been created as expected. After verifying, we recommend removing the spec.databaseInitSQL field from your spec. Removing the field from the spec will also remove databaseInitSQL from the cluster status.

PSQL Usage

PGO uses the psql interactive terminal to execute SQL statements in your database. Statements are passed in using standard input and the filename flag (e.g. psql -f -).

SQL statements are executed as superuser in the default maintenance database. This means you have full control to create database objects, extensions, or run any SQL statements that you might need.

Integration with User and Database Management

If you are creating users or databases, please see the User/Database Management documentation. Databases created through the user management section of the spec can be referenced in your initialization sql. For example, if a database zoo is defined:

spec:
  users:
    - name: hippo
      databases:
       - "zoo"

You can connect to zoo by adding the following psql meta-command to your SQL:

\c zoo
create table t_zoo as select s, md5(random()::text) from generate_Series(1,5) s;

Transaction support

By default, psql commits each SQL command as it completes. To combine multiple commands into a single transaction, use the BEGIN and COMMIT commands.

BEGIN;
create table t_random as select s, md5(random()::text) from generate_Series(1,5) s;
COMMIT;

PSQL Exit Code and Database Init SQL Status

The exit code from psql will determine when the databaseInitSQL status is set. When psql returns 0 the status will be set and SQL will not be run again. When psql returns with an error exit code the status will not be set. PGO will continue attempting to execute the SQL as part of its reconcile loop until psql returns normally. If psql exits with a failure, you will need to edit the file in your ConfigMap to ensure your SQL statements will lead to a successful psql return. The easiest way to make live changes to your ConfigMap is to use the following kubectl edit command:

kubectl -n <cluster-namespace> edit configmap hippo-init-sql

Be sure to transfer any changes back over to your local file. Another option is to make changes in your local file and use kubectl --dry-run to create a template and pipe the output into kubectl apply:

kubectl create configmap hippo-init-sql --from-file=init.sql=/path/to/init.sql --dry-run=client -o yaml | kubectl apply -f -
If you edit your ConfigMap and your changes aren’t showing up, you may be waiting for PGO to reconcile your cluster. After some time, PGO will automatically reconcile the cluster or you can trigger reconciliation by applying any change to your cluster (e.g. with kubectl apply -k kustomize/postgres).

To ensure that psql returns a failure exit code when your SQL commands fail, set the ON_ERROR_STOP variable as part of your SQL file:

\set ON_ERROR_STOP
\echo Any error will lead to exit code 3
create table t_random as select s, md5(random()::text) from generate_Series(1,5) s;

Troubleshooting

Changes Not Applied

If your Postgres configuration settings are not present, you may need to check a few things. First, ensure that you are using the syntax that Postgres expects. You can see this in the Postgres configuration documentation.

Some settings, such as shared_buffers, require for Postgres to restart. Patroni only performs a reload when parameter changes are identified. Therefore, for parameters that require a restart, the restart can be performed manually by executing into a Postgres instance and running patronictl restart --force <clusterName>-ha.

Next Steps

You’ve now seen how you can further customize your Postgres cluster, but what about managing users and atabases? That’s a great question that is answered in the next section.