Charmed MySQL K8s

Channel Revision Published Runs on
8.0/stable 180 02 Sep 2024
Ubuntu 22.04
8.0/stable 181 02 Sep 2024
Ubuntu 22.04
8.0/candidate 180 26 Aug 2024
Ubuntu 22.04
8.0/candidate 181 26 Aug 2024
Ubuntu 22.04
8.0/beta 207 15 Nov 2024
Ubuntu 22.04
8.0/beta 206 15 Nov 2024
Ubuntu 22.04
8.0/edge 207 09 Oct 2024
Ubuntu 22.04
8.0/edge 206 09 Oct 2024
Ubuntu 22.04
juju deploy mysql-k8s --channel 8.0/stable
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Platform:

How to deploy using Terraform

Terraform is an infrastructure automation tool to provision and manage resources in clouds or data centers. To deploy Charmed MySQL K8s using Terraform and Juju, you can use the Juju Terraform Provider.

The easiest way is to start from these examples of terraform modules prepared by Canonical. This page will guide you through a deployment using an example module for MySQL on Kubernetes.

For an in-depth introduction to the Juju Terraform Provider, read this Discourse post.

Note: Storage support was added in Juju Terraform Provider version 0.13+.

Summary


Install Terraform tooling

This guide assumes Juju is installed and you have a K8s controller already bootstrapped. For more information, check the Set up the environment tutorial page.

Let’s install Terraform Provider and example modules:

sudo snap install terraform --classic

Switch to the K8s provider and create a new model:

juju switch microk8s
juju add-model my-model

Clone examples and navigate to the MySQL machine module:

git clone https://github.com/canonical/terraform-modules.git
cd terraform-modules/modules/k8s/mysql

Initialise the Juju Terraform Provider:

terraform init

Verify the deployment

Open the main.tf file to see the brief contents of the Terraform module:

resource "juju_application" "k8s_mysql" {
  name  = var.mysql_application_name
  model = var.juju_model_name
  trust = true

  charm {
    name    = "mysql-k8s"
    channel = var.mysql_charm_channel
  }

  units = 1
}

Run terraform plan to get a preview of the changes that will be made:

terraform plan -var "juju_model_name=my-model"

Apply the deployment

If everything looks correct, deploy the resources (skip the approval):

terraform apply -auto-approve -var "juju_model_name=my-model"

Check deployment status

Check the deployment status with

juju status --model k8s:my-model --watch 1s

Sample output:

Model      Controller      Cloud/Region        Version  SLA          Timestamp
my-model   k8s-controller  microk8s/localhost  3.5.3    unsupported  12:37:25Z

App        Version                  Status  Scale  Charm      Channel     Rev  Address         Exposed  Message
mysql-k8s  8.0.36-0ubuntu0.22.04.1  active      1  mysql-k8s  8.0/stable  153  10.152.183.112  no

Unit          Workload  Agent  Address     Ports  Message
mysql-k8s/0*  active    idle   10.1.77.76         Primary

Continue to operate the charm as usual from here or apply further Terraform changes.

Clean up

To keep the house clean, remove the newly deployed Charmed PostgreSQL by running

terraform destroy -var "juju_model_name=my-model"

Sample output:

juju_application.k8s_mysql: Refreshing state... [id=terra-k8s:mysql-k8s]

Terraform used the selected providers to generate the following execution plan. Resource actions are indicated with the following symbols:
  - destroy

Terraform will perform the following actions:

  # juju_application.k8s_mysql will be destroyed
  - resource "juju_application" "k8s_mysql" {
      - constraints = "arch=amd64" -> null
      - id          = "terra-k8s:mysql-k8s" -> null
      - model       = "terra-k8s" -> null
      - name        = "mysql-k8s" -> null
      - placement   = "" -> null
      - storage     = [
          - {
              - count = 1 -> null
              - label = "database-1" -> null
              - pool  = "kubernetes" -> null
              - size  = "1G" -> null
            },
        ] -> null
      - trust       = true -> null
      - units       = 1 -> null

      - charm {
          - base     = "ubuntu@22.04" -> null
          - channel  = "8.0/stable" -> null
          - name     = "mysql-k8s" -> null
          - revision = 153 -> null
          - series   = "jammy" -> null
        }
    }

Plan: 0 to add, 0 to change, 1 to destroy.

Changes to Outputs:
  - application_name = "mysql-k8s" -> null

Do you really want to destroy all resources?
  Terraform will destroy all your managed infrastructure, as shown above.
  There is no undo. Only 'yes' will be accepted to confirm.

  Enter a value: yes

juju_application.k8s_mysql: Destroying... [id=terra-k8s:mysql-k8s]
juju_application.k8s_mysql: Destruction complete after 0s

Destroy complete! Resources: 1 destroyed.

For more examples of Terraform modules for K8s, see the other directories in the terraform-modules repository.

Feel free to contact us if you have any question and collaborate with us on GitHub!


Help improve this document in the forum (guidelines). Last updated 3 months ago.