Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Oleksii Kliukin 59f0c5551e
Allow configuring pod priority globally and per cluster. (#353)
* Allow configuring pod priority globally and per cluster.

Allow to specify pod priority class for all pods managed by the operator,
as well as for those belonging to individual clusters.

Controlled by the pod_priority_class_name operator configuration
parameter and the podPriorityClassName manifest option.

See https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/pod-priority-preemption/#priorityclass
for the explanation on how to define priority classes since Kubernetes 1.8.

Some import order changes are due to go fmt.
Removal of OrphanDependents deprecated field.

Code review by @zerg-junior
2018-08-03 14:03:37 +02:00
Oleksii Kliukin ac7b132314
Refactoring inspired by gometalinter. (#357)
Among other things, fix a few issues with deepcopy implementation.
2018-08-03 11:09:45 +02:00
Oleksii Kliukin d2d3f21dc2 Client go upgrade v6 (#352)
There are shortcuts in this code, i.e. we created the deepcopy function
by using the deepcopy package instead of the generated code, that will
be addressed once migrated to client-go v8. Also, some objects,
particularly statefulsets, are still taken from v1beta, this will also
be addressed in further commits once the changes are stabilized.
2018-08-01 11:08:01 +02:00
Oleksii Kliukin 0181a1b5b1
Introduce a repair scan to fix failing clusters (#304)
A repair is a sync scan that acts only on those clusters that indicate
that the last add, update or sync operation on them has failed. It is
supposed to kick in more frequently than the repair scan. The repair
scan still remains to be useful to fix the consequences of external
actions (i.e. someone deletes a postgres-related service by mistake)
unbeknownst to the operator.

The repair scan is controlled by the new repair_period parameter in the
operator configuration. It has to be at least 2 times more frequent than
a sync scan to have any effect (a normal sync scan will update both last
synced and last repaired attributes of the controller, since repair is
just a sync underneath).

A repair scan could be queued for a cluster that is already being synced
if the sync period exceeds the interval between repairs. In that case a
repair event will be discarded once the corresponding worker finds out
that the cluster is not failing anymore.

Review by @zerg-junior
2018-07-24 11:21:45 +02:00
zerg-junior 417f13c0bd
Submit RBAC credentials during initial Event processing (#344)
* During initial Event processing submit the service account for pods and bind it to a cluster role that allows Patroni to successfully start. The cluster role is assumed to be created by the k8s cluster administrator.
2018-07-19 16:40:40 +02:00
Oleksii Kliukin 3a9378d3b8
Allow configuring the operator via the YAML manifest. (#326)
* Up until now, the operator read its own configuration from the
configmap.  That has a number of limitations, i.e. when the
configuration value is not a scalar, but a map or a list. We use a
custom code based on github.com/kelseyhightower/envconfig to decode
non-scalar values out of plain text keys, but that breaks when the data
inside the keys contains both YAML-special elememtns (i.e. commas) and
complex quotes, one good example for that is search_path inside
`team_api_role_configuration`. In addition, reliance on the configmap
forced a flag structure on the configuration, making it hard to write
and to read (see
https://github.com/zalando-incubator/postgres-operator/pull/308#issuecomment-395131778).

The changes allow to supply the operator configuration in a proper YAML
file. That required registering a custom CRD to support the operator
configuration and provide an example at
manifests/postgresql-operator-default-configuration.yaml. At the moment,
both old configmap and the new CRD configuration is supported, so no
compatibility issues, however, in the future I'd like to deprecate the
configmap-based configuration altogether. Contrary to the
configmap-based configuration, the CRD one doesn't embed defaults into
the operator code, however, one can use the
manifests/postgresql-operator-default-configuration.yaml as a starting
point in order to build a custom configuration.

Since previously `ReadyWaitInterval` and `ReadyWaitTimeout` parameters
used to create the CRD were taken from the operator configuration, which
is not possible if the configuration itself is stored in the CRD object,
I've added the ability to specify them as environment variables
`CRD_READY_WAIT_INTERVAL` and `CRD_READY_WAIT_TIMEOUT` respectively.

Per review by @zerg-junior  and  @Jan-M.
2018-07-16 16:20:46 +02:00