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KubeDB - Redis Sentinel
This tutorial will show you how to use KubeDB to provision a Redis Sentinel .
Before You Begin
Before proceeding:
Read redis sentinel concept to learn about Redis Sentinel.
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. Run the following command to prepare your cluster for this tutorial:$ kubectl create ns demo namespace/demo created
Note: The yaml files used in this tutorial are stored in docs/examples/redis folder in GitHub repository kubedb/docs.
Deploy Redis Sentinel
First RedisSentinel instance needs to be deployed and then a Redis instance in Sentinel mode which will be monitored by the RedisSentinel instance.
The following is an example RedisSentinel
object which creates a Sentinel with three replicas.
apiVersion: kubedb.com/v1alpha2
kind: RedisSentinel
metadata:
name: sen-demo
namespace: demo
spec:
version: 6.2.14
replicas: 3
storageType: Durable
storage:
resources:
requests:
storage: 1Gi
storageClassName: "standard"
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
terminationPolicy: WipeOut
$ kubectl create -f https://github.com/kubedb/docs/raw/v2023.12.28/docs/examples/redis/sentinel/sentinel.yaml
redissentinel.kubedb.com/sen-demo created
Here,
spec.replicas
denotes the number of replica nodesspec.storage
specifies the StorageClass of PVC dynamically allocated to store data for this database. This storage spec will be passed to the StatefulSet created by KubeDB operator to run database pods. So, each members will have a pod of this storage configuration. You can specify any StorageClass available in your cluster with appropriate resource requests.
KubeDB operator watches for RedisSentinel
objects using Kubernetes API. When a RedisSentinel
object is created, KubeDB operator will create a new StatefulSet and a Service with the matching RedisSentinel object name. KubeDB operator will also create a governing service for StatefulSets named kubedb
, if one is not already present.
Now we will deploy a Redis instance with giving the sentinelRef to the previously created RedisSentinel instance.
To deploy a Redis in Sentinel mode, specify spec.mode
field in Redis
CRD.
The following is an example Redis
object which creates a Redis Sentinel with three replica node, and it is monitored by Sentinel instance sentinel
apiVersion: kubedb.com/v1alpha2
kind: Redis
metadata:
name: rd-demo
namespace: demo
spec:
version: 6.2.14
replicas: 3
sentinelRef:
name: sen-demo
namespace: demo
mode: Sentinel
storage:
resources:
requests:
storage: 1Gi
storageClassName: "standard"
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
terminationPolicy: Halt
$ kubectl create -f https://github.com/kubedb/docs/raw/v2023.12.28/docs/examples/redis/sentinel/redis.yaml
redis.kubedb.com/rd-demo created
Here,
spec.mode
specifies the mode for Redis. Here we have usedRedis
to tell the operator that we want to deploy Redis in sentinel mode.spec.replicas
denotes the number of replica nodesspec.storage
specifies the StorageClass of PVC dynamically allocated to store data for this database. This storage spec will be passed to the StatefulSet created by KubeDB operator to run database pods. So, each members will have a pod of this storage configuration. You can specify any StorageClass available in your cluster with appropriate resource requests.
KubeDB operator watches for Redis
objects using Kubernetes API. When a Redis
object is created, KubeDB operator will create a new StatefulSet and a Service with the matching Redis object name. KubeDB operator will also create a governing service for StatefulSets named kubedb
, if one is not already present.
$ kubectl get redissentinel -n demo
NAME VERSION STATUS AGE
sen-demo 6.2.14 Ready 2m39
$ kubectl get redis -n demo
NAME VERSION STATUS AGE
rd-demo 6.2.14 Ready 2m41s
$ kubectl get statefulset -n demo
NAME READY AGE
rd-demo 3/3 86s
sen-demo 3/3 12m
$ kubectl get pvc -n demo
NAME STATUS VOLUME CAPACITY ACCESS MODES STORAGECLASS AGE
data-rd-demo-0 Bound pvc-830fb301-512a-4de9-a110-c0ce032fabca 1Gi RWO standard 99s
data-rd-demo-1 Bound pvc-0bc06618-a7ef-42ef-b2a0-4e5563d68df7 1Gi RWO standard 93s
data-rd-demo-2 Bound pvc-99aebc54-c016-4376-a3a3-25f882ae86e7 1Gi RWO standard 87s
data-sen-demo-0 Bound pvc-c55d804e-67e1-431c-92a6-67bdde14f59c 1Gi RWO standard 12m
data-sen-demo-1 Bound pvc-171e7d75-c423-4c7f-aabd-42ce50cd0ff4 1Gi RWO standard 12m
data-sen-demo-2 Bound pvc-2886e192-845b-4b44-89e0-20c2af64ec47 1Gi RWO standard 12m
$ kubectl get pv -n demo
NAME CAPACITY ACCESS MODES RECLAIM POLICY STATUS CLAIM STORAGECLASS REASON AGE
pvc-0bc06618-a7ef-42ef-b2a0-4e5563d68df7 1Gi RWO Delete Bound demo/data-rd-demo-1 standard 111s
pvc-171e7d75-c423-4c7f-aabd-42ce50cd0ff4 1Gi RWO Delete Bound demo/data-sen-demo-1 standard 13m
pvc-2886e192-845b-4b44-89e0-20c2af64ec47 1Gi RWO Delete Bound demo/data-sen-demo-2 standard 12m
pvc-830fb301-512a-4de9-a110-c0ce032fabca 1Gi RWO Delete Bound demo/data-rd-demo-0 standard 117s
pvc-99aebc54-c016-4376-a3a3-25f882ae86e7 1Gi RWO Delete Bound demo/data-rd-demo-2 standard 104s
pvc-c55d804e-67e1-431c-92a6-67bdde14f59c 1Gi RWO Delete Bound demo/data-sen-demo-0 standard 13m
$ kubectl get svc -n demo
NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
rd-demo ClusterIP 10.96.165.208 <none> 6379/TCP 2m40s
rd-demo-pods ClusterIP None <none> 6379/TCP 2m40s
rd-demo-standby ClusterIP 10.96.193.56 <none> 6379/TCP 2m40s
sen-demo ClusterIP 10.96.249.99 <none> 26379/TCP 14m
sen-demo-pods ClusterIP None <none> 26379/TCP 14m
KubeDB operator sets the status.phase
to Ready
once the database is successfully created. status.phase
section is similar for
Redis
object and RedisSentinel
object. Run the following command to see the modified RedisSentinel
object:
$ kubectl get redissentinel -n demo sen-demo -o yaml
apiVersion: kubedb.com/v1alpha2
kind: RedisSentinel
metadata:
annotations:
kubectl.kubernetes.io/last-applied-configuration: |
{"apiVersion":"kubedb.com/v1alpha2","kind":"RedisSentinel","metadata":{"annotations":{},"name":"sen-demo","namespace":"demo"},"spec":{"replicas":3,"storage":{"accessModes":["ReadWriteOnce"],"resources":{"requests":{"storage":"1Gi"}},"storageClassName":"standard"},"storageType":"Durable","terminationPolicy":"Halt","version":"6.2.14"}}
creationTimestamp: "2023-02-03T06:36:16Z"
finalizers:
- kubedb.com
generation: 2
name: sen-demo
namespace: demo
resourceVersion: "531539"
uid: 9b3785b5-4dc3-47bc-91e2-ba260dabd17e
spec:
authSecret:
name: sen-demo-auth
autoOps: {}
healthChecker:
failureThreshold: 1
periodSeconds: 10
timeoutSeconds: 10
podTemplate:
controller: {}
metadata: {}
spec:
affinity:
podAntiAffinity:
preferredDuringSchedulingIgnoredDuringExecution:
- podAffinityTerm:
labelSelector:
matchLabels:
app.kubernetes.io/instance: sen-demo
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: kubedb.com
app.kubernetes.io/name: redissentinels.kubedb.com
namespaces:
- demo
topologyKey: kubernetes.io/hostname
weight: 100
- podAffinityTerm:
labelSelector:
matchLabels:
app.kubernetes.io/instance: sen-demo
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: kubedb.com
app.kubernetes.io/name: redissentinels.kubedb.com
namespaces:
- demo
topologyKey: failure-domain.beta.kubernetes.io/zone
weight: 50
resources:
limits:
memory: 1Gi
requests:
cpu: 500m
memory: 1Gi
serviceAccountName: sen-demo
replicas: 3
storage:
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
resources:
requests:
storage: 1Gi
storageClassName: standard
storageType: Durable
terminationPolicy: Halt
version: 6.2.14
status:
conditions:
- lastTransitionTime: "2023-02-03T06:36:16Z"
message: 'The KubeDB operator has started the provisioning of Redis: demo/sen-demo'
reason: DatabaseProvisioningStartedSuccessfully
status: "True"
type: ProvisioningStarted
- lastTransitionTime: "2023-02-03T06:36:52Z"
message: All desired replicas are ready.
reason: AllReplicasReady
status: "True"
type: ReplicaReady
- lastTransitionTime: "2023-02-03T06:37:13Z"
message: 'The Sentinel: demo/sen-demo is accepting client requests.'
observedGeneration: 2
reason: DatabaseAcceptingConnectionRequest
status: "True"
type: AcceptingConnection
- lastTransitionTime: "2023-02-03T06:37:13Z"
message: 'The Sentinel: demo/sen-demo is ready.'
observedGeneration: 2
reason: ReadinessCheckSucceeded
status: "True"
type: Ready
- lastTransitionTime: "2023-02-03T06:37:20Z"
message: 'The Redis: demo/sen-demo is successfully provisioned.'
observedGeneration: 2
reason: DatabaseSuccessfullyProvisioned
status: "True"
type: Provisioned
observedGeneration: 2
phase: Ready
Connection Information
Connect to Redis Database
Hostname/address: you can use any of these
- Service:
rd-demo.demo
- Pod IP: (
$ kubectl get pod -n demo -l app.kubernetes.io/name=redises.kubedb.com -o yaml | grep podIP
)
- Service:
Port:
6379
Username: Run following command to get username,
$ kubectl get secrets -n demo rd-demo-auth -o jsonpath='{.data.\username}' | base64 -d default
Password: Run the following command to get password,
$ kubectl get secrets -n demo rd-demo-auth -o jsonpath='{.data.\password}' | base64 -d 5VjZ7iYaoo8YRp!p
Now, you can connect to this redis database using the service using the credentials.
Connect to Sentinel
Hostname/address: you can use any of these
- Service:
sen-demo.demo
- Pod IP: (
$ kubectl get pod -n demo -l app.kubernetes.io/name=redissentinels.kubedb.com -o yaml | grep podIP
)
- Service:
Port:
26379
Username: Run following command to get username,
$ kubectl get secrets -n demo sen-demo-auth -o jsonpath='{.data.\username}' | base64 -d root
Password: Run the following command to get password,
$ kubectl get secrets -n demo sen-demo-auth -o jsonpath='{.data.\password}' | base64 -d Gw_sd;~Vrsj9kJSL
Now, you can connect to this sentinel using the service using the credentials.
Check Replication Scenario
# first list the redis pods list
$ kubectl get pods --all-namespaces -o jsonpath='{range.items[*]}{.metadata.name} ---------- {.status.podIP}:6379{"\\n"}{end}' | grep rd-demo
rd-demo-0 ---------- 10.244.0.70:6379
rd-demo-1 ---------- 10.244.0.72:6379
rd-demo-2 ---------- 10.244.0.74:6379
# enter into any pod's container named redis
$ kubectl exec -it -n demo rd-demo-0 -c redis -- bash
/data #
# now inside this container, see which role of this pod
/data # redis-cli info replication
role:master
connected_slaves:2
slave0:ip=rd-demo-1.rd-demo-pods.demo.svc,port=6379,state=online,offset=1258038,lag=1
slave1:ip=rd-demo-2.rd-demo-pods.demo.svc,port=6379,state=online,offset=1258038,lag=0
master_failover_state:no-failover
master_replid:1ce0d55b8d8c1bd2502d4d7e63b1a2f021dbc938
master_replid2:0000000000000000000000000000000000000000
master_repl_offset:1258038
second_repl_offset:-1
repl_backlog_active:1
repl_backlog_size:1048576
repl_backlog_first_byte_offset
So, the node rd-demo-0 is master, and it has two connected slaves. If a replica node is being exec, it will show which master it is connected to.
Check Sentinel Monitoring
A sentinel can monitor multiple masters. Sentinel stores information about master and its replicas. Sentinel constantly monitor master and perform failover operation when master fail to respond. Sentinel pings master recurrently after a certain period a time.
$ kubectl get pods --all-namespaces -o jsonpath='{range.items[*]}{.metadata.name} ---------- {.status.podIP}:6379{"\\n"}{end}' | grep sen-demo
sen-demo-0 ---------- 10.244.0.46:6379
sen-demo-1 ---------- 10.244.0.48:6379
sen-demo-2 ---------- 10.244.0.50:6379
# enter into Sentinel pod's container named redissentinel
$ kubectl exec -it -n demo sen-demo-0 -c redissentinel -- bash
# now inside this container, see the masters information which this sentinels monitors
/data # redis-cli -p 26379 sentinel masters
1) 1) "name"
2) "demo/rd-demo"
3) "ip"
4) "rd-demo-0.rd-demo-pods.demo.svc"
5) "port"
6) "6379"
7) "runid"
8) "93cc7c6803fb14a87b6cc59d6fffdc96901153e5"
9) "flags"
10) "master"
11) "link-pending-commands"
12) "0"
13) "link-refcount"
14) "1"
15) "last-ping-sent"
16) "0"
17) "last-ok-ping-reply"
18) "359"
19) "last-ping-reply"
20) "359"
21) "down-after-milliseconds"
22) "5000"
23) "info-refresh"
24) "8563"
25) "role-reported"
26) "master"
27) "role-reported-time"
28) "4800628"
29) "config-epoch"
30) "0"
31) "num-slaves"
32) "2"
33) "num-other-sentinels"
34) "2"
35) "quorum"
36) "2"
37) "failover-timeout"
38) "5000"
39) "parallel-syncs"
40) "1"
It can be seen that the master rd-demo-0.rd-demo-pods.demo.svc
has two slaves as we deployed Redis with three replicas, and it has two other sentinel instances
monitoring it as we have deployed RedisSentinel instance with three replicas as well.
Data Availability
Now, you can connect to this database through redis-cli. In this tutorial, we will insert data, and we will see whether we can get the data from any other node (any master or replica) or not.
Read the comment written for the following commands. They contain the instructions and explanations of the commands.
# connect to any node
$ kubectl exec -it rd-demo-0 -n demo -c redis -- bash
/data #
# now ensure that you are connected to the 1st pod
/data # redis-cli -c -h 10.244.0.140
10.244.0.140:6379>
# set 'world' as value for the key 'hello'
10.244.0.140:6379> set hello world
OK
10.244.0.140:6379> exit
# switch the connection to the replica of the current master and get the data
/data # redis-cli -c -h 10.244.0.72
10.244.0.145:6379> get hello
"world"
# trying to write data in a replica
10.244.0.145:6379> set apps code
(error) READONLY You can't write against a read only replica.
10.244.0.145:6379> exit
Automatic Failover
To test automatic failover, we will force the master node to sleep for a period. Since the master node (pod
) becomes unavailable,
sentinel will initiate a failover, so that a replica is promoted to master. When the old master comes back, it will join the cluster
as the new replica of the new master.
Read the comment written for the following commands. They contain the instructions and explanations of the commands.
# connect to any node and get the master nodes info
$ kubectl exec -it rd-demo-0 -n demo -c redis -- bash
# Check role of the first pod which has IP 10.244.0.70
/data # redis-cli -h 10.244.0.70 info replication | grep role
role:master
# let's sleep the master node 10.244.0.70 with the `DEBUG SLEEP` command
/data # redis-cli -h 10.244.0.70 debug sleep 120
OK
$ kubectl exec -it rd-demo-0 -n demo -c redis -- bash
# Check role of the first pod which has IP 10.244.0.70
/data # redis-cli -h 10.244.0.70 info replication | grep role
role:slave
# Check role of the second pod which has IP 10.244.0.72
/data # redis-cli -h 10.244.0.72 info replication | grep role
role:master
/data # exit
Notice that 110.244.0.72 is the new master and 10.244.0.70 has become the replica of 10.244.0.72.
Cleaning up
First set termination policy to WipeOut
all the things created by KubeDB operator for this Redis instance is deleted. Then delete the redis instance
to clean what you created in this tutorial.
$ kubectl patch -n demo rd/rd-demo -p '{"spec":{"terminationPolicy":"WipeOut"}}' --type="merge"
redis.kubedb.com/rd-demo patched
$ kubectl delete rd rd-demo -n demo
redis.kubedb.com "rd-demo" deleted
Now delete the RedisSentinel instance similarly.
$ kubectl patch -n demo redissentinel/sen-demo -p '{"spec":{"terminationPolicy":"WipeOut"}}' --type="merge"
redissentinel.kubedb.com/sen-demo patched
$ kubectl delete redissentinel sen-demo -n demo
redis.kubedb.com "sen-demo" deleted
Next Steps
- Replace Sentinel of your database with a new Sentinel
- Monitor your Redis database with KubeDB using out-of-the-box Prometheus operator.
- Monitor your Redis database with KubeDB using out-of-the-box builtin-Prometheus.
- Use private Docker registry to deploy Redis with KubeDB.
- Detail concepts of Redis object.
- Detail concepts of RedisVersion object.