You are looking at the documentation of a prior release. To read the documentation of the latest release, please visit here.

New to KubeDB? Please start here.

Don’t know how to take continuous backup? Check this tutorial on Continuous Archiving.

PostgreSQL Initialization from GCS

WAL-G is used to handle replay, and restoration mechanism. Please refer to Initialization from WAL files in KubeDB to know more about it.

Before You Begin

At first, you need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl command-line tool must be configured to communicate with your cluster. If you do not already have a cluster, you can create one by using kind.

Now, install KubeDB cli on your workstation and KubeDB operator in your cluster following the steps here.

To keep things isolated, this tutorial uses a separate namespace called demo throughout this tutorial.

$ kubectl create ns demo
namespace/demo created

Prepare WAL Archive

We need a WAL archive to perform initialization. If you don’t have a WAL archive ready, create one by following the tutorial here.

Let’s populate the database so that we can verify that the initialized database has the same data. We will exec into the database pod and use psql command-line tool to create a table.

At first, find out the primary replica using the following command,

$ kubectl get pods -n demo --selector="kubedb.com/name=wal-postgres","kubedb.com/role=primary"
NAME             READY     STATUS    RESTARTS   AGE
wal-postgres-0   1/1       Running   0          8m

Now, let’s exec into the pod and create a table,

$ kubectl exec -it -n demo wal-postgres-0 sh
# login as "postgres" superuser.
/ # psql -U postgres
psql (11.1)
Type "help" for help.

# list available databases
postgres=# \l
                                 List of databases
   Name    |  Owner   | Encoding |  Collate   |   Ctype    |   Access privileges
-----------+----------+----------+------------+------------+-----------------------
 postgres  | postgres | UTF8     | en_US.utf8 | en_US.utf8 |
 template0 | postgres | UTF8     | en_US.utf8 | en_US.utf8 | =c/postgres          +
           |          |          |            |            | postgres=CTc/postgres
 template1 | postgres | UTF8     | en_US.utf8 | en_US.utf8 | =c/postgres          +
           |          |          |            |            | postgres=CTc/postgres
(3 rows)

# connect to "postgres" database
postgres=# \c postgres
You are now connected to database "postgres" as user "postgres".

# create a table
postgres=# CREATE TABLE COMPANY( NAME TEXT NOT NULL, EMPLOYEE INT NOT NULL);
CREATE TABLE

# list tables
postgres=# \d
          List of relations
 Schema |  Name   | Type  |  Owner
--------+---------+-------+----------
 public | company | table | postgres

# quit from the database
postgres=# \q

# exit from the pod
/ # exit

Now, we are ready to proceed for rest of the tutorial.

Note: YAML files used in this tutorial are stored in docs/examples/postgres folder in GitHub repository kubedb/docs.

Create Postgres with WAL source

User can initialize a new database from this archived WAL files. We have to specify the archive backend in the spec.init.postgresWAL field of Postgres object.

The YAML file in this tutorial creates a Postgres object using WAL files from Google Cloud Storage.

apiVersion: kubedb.com/v1alpha2
kind: Postgres
metadata:
  name: replay-postgres
  namespace: demo
spec:
  version: "11.1-v3"
  replicas: 2
  authSecret:
    name: wal-postgres-auth
  storage:
    storageClassName: "standard"
    accessModes:
    - ReadWriteOnce
    resources:
      requests:
        storage: 1Gi
  init:
    postgresWAL:
      storageSecretName: gcs-secret
      gcs:
        bucket: kubedb
        prefix: 'kubedb/demo/wal-postgres/archive'

Here,

  • spec.init.postgresWAL specifies storage information that will be used by WAL-G
    • storageSecretName points to the Secret containing the credentials for cloud storage destination.
    • gcs points to storage configuration of GCS.
    • gcs.bucket points to the bucket name where archived WAL data is stored.
    • gcs.prefix points to the path of archived WAL data.

wal-g receives archived WAL data from a directory inside the bucket called /kubedb/{namespace}/{postgres-name}/archive/.

Here, {namespace} & {postgres-name} indicates Postgres object whose WAL archived data will be replayed.

Note: Postgres replay-postgres must have same superuser credentials as archived Postgres. In our case, it is wal-postgres.

Now, let’s create the Postgres object that’s YAML has shown above,

$ kubectl create -f https://github.com/kubedb/docs/raw/v2020.10.27-rc.1/docs/examples/postgres/initialization/replay-postgres-gcs.yaml
postgres.kubedb.com/replay-postgres created

This will create a new database and will initialize the database from the archived WAL files.

Verify Initialization

Let’s verify that the new database has been initialized successfully from the WAL archive. It must contain the table we have created for wal-postgres database.

We will exec into new database pod and use psql command-line tool to list tables of postgres database.

$ kubectl exec -it -n demo replay-postgres-0 sh
# login as "postgres" superuser
/ # psql -U postgres
psql (11.1)
Type "help" for help.

# list available databases
postgres=# \l
                                 List of databases
   Name    |  Owner   | Encoding |  Collate   |   Ctype    |   Access privileges
-----------+----------+----------+------------+------------+-----------------------
 postgres  | postgres | UTF8     | en_US.utf8 | en_US.utf8 |
 template0 | postgres | UTF8     | en_US.utf8 | en_US.utf8 | =c/postgres          +
           |          |          |            |            | postgres=CTc/postgres
 template1 | postgres | UTF8     | en_US.utf8 | en_US.utf8 | =c/postgres          +
           |          |          |            |            | postgres=CTc/postgres
(3 rows)

# connect to "postgres" database
postgres=# \c postgres
You are now connected to database "postgres" as user "postgres".

# list tables
postgres=# \d
          List of relations
 Schema |  Name   | Type  |  Owner
--------+---------+-------+----------
 public | company | table | postgres
(1 row)

# quit from the database
postgres=# \q

# exit from pod
/ # exit

So, we can see that our new database replay-postgres has been initialized successfully and contains the data we had inserted into wal-postgres.

Cleaning up

To cleanup the Kubernetes resources created by this tutorial, run:

kubectl patch -n demo pg/replay-postgres -p '{"spec":{"terminationPolicy":"WipeOut"}}' --type="merge"
kubectl delete -n demo pg/replay-postgres

kubectl delete ns demo

Also cleanup the resources created for wal-postgres following the guide here.

Next Steps