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Vertical Scale MariaDB Cluster
This guide will show you how to use KubeDB
Enterprise operator to update the resources of a MariaDB cluster database.
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.Install
KubeDB
Community and Enterprise operator in your cluster following the steps here.You should be familiar with the following
KubeDB
concepts:
To keep everything isolated, we are going to use a separate namespace called demo
throughout this tutorial.
$ kubectl create ns demo
namespace/demo created
Apply Vertical Scaling on Cluster
Here, we are going to deploy a MariaDB
cluster using a supported version by KubeDB
operator. Then we are going to apply vertical scaling on it.
Prepare MariaDB Cluster
Now, we are going to deploy a MariaDB
cluster database with version 10.5.23
.
Vertical Scaling for
MariaDB Standalone
can be performed in the same way asMariaDB Cluster
. Only remove thespec.replicas
field from the below yaml to deploy a MariaDB Standalone.
Deploy MariaDB Cluster
In this section, we are going to deploy a MariaDB cluster database. Then, in the next section we will update the resources of the database using MariaDBOpsRequest
CRD. Below is the YAML of the MariaDB
CR that we are going to create,
apiVersion: kubedb.com/v1alpha2
kind: MariaDB
metadata:
name: sample-mariadb
namespace: demo
spec:
version: "10.5.23"
replicas: 3
storageType: Durable
storage:
storageClassName: "standard"
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
resources:
requests:
storage: 1Gi
terminationPolicy: WipeOut
Let’s create the MariaDB
CR we have shown above,
$ kubectl create -f https://github.com/kubedb/docs/raw/v2023.12.28/docs/guides/mariadb/scaling/vertical-scaling/cluster/example/sample-mariadb.yaml
mariadb.kubedb.com/sample-mariadb created
Now, wait until sample-mariadb
has status Ready
. i.e,
$ kubectl get mariadb -n demo
NAME VERSION STATUS AGE
sample-mariadb 10.5.23 Ready 3m46s
Let’s check the Pod containers resources,
$ kubectl get pod -n demo sample-mariadb-0 -o json | jq '.spec.containers[].resources'
{
"limits": {
"cpu": "500m",
"memory": "1Gi"
},
"requests": {
"cpu": "500m",
"memory": "1Gi"
}
}
You can see the Pod has the default resources which is assigned by Kubedb operator.
We are now ready to apply the MariaDBOpsRequest
CR to update the resources of this database.
Vertical Scaling
Here, we are going to update the resources of the database to meet the desired resources after scaling.
Create MariaDBOpsRequest
In order to update the resources of the database, we have to create a MariaDBOpsRequest
CR with our desired resources. Below is the YAML of the MariaDBOpsRequest
CR that we are going to create,
apiVersion: ops.kubedb.com/v1alpha1
kind: MariaDBOpsRequest
metadata:
name: mdops-vscale
namespace: demo
spec:
type: VerticalScaling
databaseRef:
name: sample-mariadb
verticalScaling:
mariadb:
resources:
requests:
memory: "1.2Gi"
cpu: "0.6"
limits:
memory: "1.2Gi"
cpu: "0.6"
Here,
spec.databaseRef.name
specifies that we are performing vertical scaling operation onsample-mariadb
database.spec.type
specifies that we are performingVerticalScaling
on our database.spec.VerticalScaling.mariadb
specifies the desired resources after scaling.
Let’s create the MariaDBOpsRequest
CR we have shown above,
$ kubectl apply -f https://github.com/kubedb/docs/raw/v2023.12.28/docs/guides/mariadb/scaling/vertical-scaling/cluster/example/mdops-vscale.yaml
mariadbopsrequest.ops.kubedb.com/mdops-vscale created
Verify MariaDB Cluster resources updated successfully
If everything goes well, KubeDB
Enterprise operator will update the resources of MariaDB
object and related StatefulSets
and Pods
.
Let’s wait for MariaDBOpsRequest
to be Successful
. Run the following command to watch MariaDBOpsRequest
CR,
$ kubectl get mariadbopsrequest -n demo
Every 2.0s: kubectl get mariadbopsrequest -n demo
NAME TYPE STATUS AGE
mdops-vscale VerticalScaling Successful 3m56s
We can see from the above output that the MariaDBOpsRequest
has succeeded. Now, we are going to verify from one of the Pod yaml whether the resources of the database has updated to meet up the desired state, Let’s check,
$ kubectl get pod -n demo sample-mariadb-0 -o json | jq '.spec.containers[].resources'
{
"limits": {
"cpu": "600m",
"memory": "1288490188800m"
},
"requests": {
"cpu": "600m",
"memory": "1288490188800m"
}
}
The above output verifies that we have successfully scaled up the resources of the MariaDB database.
Cleaning Up
To clean up the Kubernetes resources created by this tutorial, run:
$ kubectl delete mariadb -n demo sample-mariadb
$ kubectl delete mariadbopsrequest -n demo mdops-vscale