PgBouncer K8s
- Canonical
- Databases
Channel | Revision | Published | Runs on |
---|---|---|---|
1/stable | 269 | 11 Sep 2024 | |
1/stable | 268 | 11 Sep 2024 | |
1/candidate | 269 | 09 Sep 2024 | |
1/candidate | 268 | 09 Sep 2024 | |
1/beta | 269 | 09 Sep 2024 | |
1/beta | 268 | 09 Sep 2024 | |
1/edge | 348 | Yesterday | |
1/edge | 347 | Yesterday |
juju deploy pgbouncer-k8s --channel 1/candidate
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Platform:
How to connect DB from outside of Kubernetes
To make the Charmed PostgreSQL K8s database reachable from outside the Kubernetes cluster, this charm PgBouncer K8s should be deployed. It creates and manages several K8s services including the NodePort one:
kubectl get services -n <model>
NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
...
pgbouncer-k8s ClusterIP 10.152.183.48 <none> 65535/TCP 20m
pgbouncer-k8s-endpoints ClusterIP None <none> <none> 20m
pgbouncer-k8s-nodeport NodePort 10.152.183.116 <none> 6432:30288/TCP 20m
...
The pgbouncer-k8s-nodeport
NodePort service exposes a port to access both R/W and R/O PostgreSQL servers from outside of K8s. The charm opens NodePort if requested in relation as external-node-connectivity: true
. Example (relate pgbouncer-k8s with data-integrator):
> juju run data-integrator/0 get-credentials
...
postgresql:
data: '{"database": "test123", "external-node-connectivity": "true", "requested-secrets":
"[\"username\", \"password\", \"tls\", \"tls-ca\", \"uris\"]"}'
database: test123
endpoints: 10.76.203.225:30288
password: lJPIjF04GCPYptiR2k1f4NUt
read-only-endpoints: 10.76.203.225:30288
uris: postgresql://relation_id_22:lJPIjF04GCPYptiR2k1f4NUt@10.76.203.225:30288/test123
username: relation_id_22
version: "14.13"
Note: the relation flag
external-node-connectivity
is experimental and will be replaced in the future. Follow https://warthogs.atlassian.net/browse/DPE-5636 for more details.
Note: The
pgbouncer-k8s
andpgbouncer-k8s-endpoints
ClusterIP services seen above are created for every Juju application by default as part of the StatefulSet they are associated with. These services are not relevant to users and can be safely ignored.
Client connections using the bootstrap service
A client can be configured to connect to the pgbouncer-k8s-nodeport
service using a Kubernetes NodeIP, and desired NodePort.
To get NodeIPs:
kubectl get nodes -o wide -n model | awk -v OFS='\t\t' '{print $1, $6}'
NAME INTERNAL-IP
node-0 10.155.67.110
node-1 10.155.67.120
node-2 10.155.67.130
NodeIPs are different for each deployment as they are randomly allocated. For the example from the previous section, the created NodePorts was:
6432:30288/TCP
Users can use this NodePort to access read-write / Primary server from outside of K8s:
> psql postgresql://relation_id_22:lJPIjF04GCPYptiR2k1f4NUt@10.155.67.120:30288/test123
...
test123=> create table A (id int);
CREATE TABLE
test123=> \d
List of relations
Schema | Name | Type | Owner
--------+------+-------+----------------
public | a | table | relation_id_22
(1 row)
...
Read-only servers can be accessed using the _readonly
suffix to the desired DB name:
> psql postgresql://relation_id_22:lJPIjF04GCPYptiR2k1f4NUt@10.155.67.120:30288/test123_readonly
...
test123_readonly=> create table B (id int);
ERROR: cannot execute CREATE TABLE in a read-only transaction
test123_readonly=> \d
List of relations
Schema | Name | Type | Owner
--------+------+-------+----------------
public | a | table | relation_id_22
(1 row)