* further compatibility with k8sUseConfigMaps - skip further endpoints related actions
* Update pkg/cluster/cluster.go
thanks!
Co-Authored-By: Felix Kunde <felix-kunde@gmx.de>
* Update pkg/cluster/cluster.go
Co-Authored-By: Felix Kunde <felix-kunde@gmx.de>
* Update pkg/cluster/cluster.go
Co-authored-by: Felix Kunde <felix-kunde@gmx.de>
There is a possibility to pass nil as one of the specs and an empty spec
into syncConnectionPooler. In this case it will perfom a syncronization
because nil != empty struct. Avoid such cases and make it testable by
returning list of syncronization reasons on top together with the final
error.
Connection pooler support
Add support for a connection pooler. The idea is to make it generic enough to
be able to switch between different implementations (e.g. pgbouncer or
odyssey). Operator needs to create a deployment with pooler and a service for
it to access.
For connection pool to work properly, a database needs to be prepared by
operator, namely a separate user have to be created with an access to an
installed lookup function (to fetch credential for other users).
This setups is supposed to be used only by robot/application users. Usually a
connection pool implementation is more CPU bounded, so it makes sense to create
several pods for connection pool with more emphasize on cpu resources. At the
moment there are no special affinity or tolerations assigned to bring those
pods closer to the database. For availability purposes minimal number of
connection pool pods is 2, ideally they have to be distributed between
different nodes/AZ, but it's not enforced in the operator itself. Available
configuration supposed to be ergonomic and in the normal case require minimum
changes to a manifest to enable connection pool. To have more control over the
configuration and functionality on the pool side one can customize the
corresponding docker image.
Co-authored-by: Felix Kunde <felix-kunde@gmx.de>
* add validation for PG resources and volume size
* check resource requests also on UPDATE and SYNC + update docs
* if cluster was running don't error on sync
This will set up a continuous wal streaming cluster, by adding the corresponding section in postgres manifest. Instead of having a full-fledged standby cluster as in Patroni, here we use only the wal path of the source cluster and stream from there.
Since, standby cluster is streaming from the master and does not require to create or use databases of it's own. Hence, it bypasses the creation of users or databases.
There is a separate sample manifest added to set up a standby-cluster.
* turns PostgresStatus type into a struct with field PostgresClusterStatus
* setStatus patch target is now /status subresource
* unmarshalling PostgresStatus takes care of previous status field convention
* new simple bool functions status.Running(), status.Creating()
Client-go provides a https://github.com/kubernetes/code-generator package in order to provide the API to work with CRDs similar to the one available for built-in types, i.e. Pods, Statefulsets and so on.
Use this package to generate deepcopy methods (required for CRDs), instead of using an external deepcopy package; we also generate APIs used to manipulate both Postgres and OperatorConfiguration CRDs, as well as informers and listers for the Postgres CRD, instead of using generic informers and CRD REST API; by using generated code we can get rid of some custom and obscure CRD-related code and use a better API.
All generated code resides in /pkg/generated, with an exception of zz_deepcopy.go in apis/acid.zalan.do/v1
Rename postgres-operator-configuration CRD to OperatorConfiguration, since the former broke naming convention in the code-generator.
Moved Postgresql, PostgresqlList, OperatorConfiguration and OperatorConfigurationList and other types used by them into
Change the type of the Error field in the Postgresql crd to a string, so that client-go could generate a deepcopy for it.
Use generated code to set status of CRD objects as well. Right now this is done with patch, however, Kubernetes 1.11 introduces the /status subresources, allowing us to set the status with
the special updateStatus call in the future. For now, we keep the code that is compatible with earlier versions of Kubernetes.
Rename postgresql.go to database.go and status.go to logs_and_api.go to reflect the purpose of each of those files.
Update client-go dependencies.
Minor reformatting and renaming.
Run more linters in the gometalinter, i.e. deadcode, megacheck,
nakedret, dup.
More consistent code formatting, remove two dead functions, eliminate
naked a bunch of naked returns, refactor a few functions to avoid code
duplication.
* 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
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.
Call Patroni API /config in order to set special options that are
ignored when set in the configuration file, such as max_connections.
Per https://github.com/zalando-incubator/postgres-operator/issues/297
* Some minor refacoring:
Rename Cluster ManualFailover to Swithover
Rename Patroni Failover to Switchover
Add more details to error messages and comments introduced in this PR.
Review by @zerg-junior
Avoid showing "there is no service in the cluster" when syncing a
service for the cluster if the operator has been restarted after
the cluster had been created.
Compare pods controller revisions with the one for the statefulset
to determine whether the pod is running the latest revision and,
therefore, no rolling update is necessary. This is performed only
during the operator start, afterwards the rolling update status
that is stored locally in the cluster structure is used for all
rolling update decisions.
* Track origin of roles.
* Propagate changes on infrastructure roles to corresponding secrets.
When the password in the infrastructure role is updated, re-generate the
secret for that role.
Previously, the password for an infrastructure role was always fetched from
the secret, making any updates to such role a no-op after the corresponding
secret had been generated.
There used to be a masterLess flag that was supposed to indicate whether the cluster it belongs to runs without the acting master by design. At some point, as we didn't really have support for such clusters, the flag has been misused to indicate there is no master in the cluster. However, that was not done consistently (a cluster without all pods running would never be masterless, even when the master is not among the running pods) and it was based on the wrong assumption that the masterless cluster will remain masterless until the next attempt to change that flag, ignoring the possibility of master coming up or some node doing a successful promotion. Therefore, this PR gets rid of that flag completely.
When the cluster is running with 0 instances, there is obviously no master and it makes no sense to create any database objects inside the non-existing master. Therefore, this PR introduces an additional check for that.
recreatePods were assuming that the roles of the pods recorded when the function has stared will not change; for instance, terminated replica pods should start as replicas. Revisit that assumption by looking at the actual role of the re-spawned pods; that avoids a failover if some replica has promoted to the master role while being re-spawned. In addition, if the failover from the old master was unsuccessful, we used to stop and leave the old master running on an old pod, without recording this fact anywhere. This PR makes the failover failure emit a warning, but not stop recreating the last master pod; in the worst case, the running master will be terminated, however, this case is rather unlikely one.
As a side effect, make waitForPodLabel return the pod definition it waited for, avoiding extra API calls in recreatePods and movePodFromEndOfLifeNode