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author | GitLab Bot <gitlab-bot@gitlab.com> | 2020-03-20 03:09:12 +0000 |
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committer | GitLab Bot <gitlab-bot@gitlab.com> | 2020-03-20 03:09:12 +0000 |
commit | d2b53bd7227495c615c865825f01a7fd7b9df9e0 (patch) | |
tree | b16a1749a6d5c198ef52abceb0360610d7c32260 /doc/topics | |
parent | b060b8b7e4e895e28226b366b92081512225cd14 (diff) | |
download | gitlab-ce-d2b53bd7227495c615c865825f01a7fd7b9df9e0.tar.gz |
Add latest changes from gitlab-org/gitlab@master
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/topics')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/topics/autodevops/index.md | 28 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/topics/autodevops/upgrading_postgresql.md | 239 |
2 files changed, 264 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/doc/topics/autodevops/index.md b/doc/topics/autodevops/index.md index 57cceba8c0d..4c2707fb46d 100644 --- a/doc/topics/autodevops/index.md +++ b/doc/topics/autodevops/index.md @@ -666,9 +666,10 @@ To use Auto Deploy on a Kubernetes 1.16+ cluster, you must: This will opt-in to using a version of the PostgreSQL chart that supports Kubernetes 1.16 and higher. -DANGER: **Danger:** Opting into `AUTO_DEVOPS_POSTGRES_CHANNEL` version `2` will delete -the version `1` PostgreSQL database. Please backup the contents of the PostgreSQL database -first before opting into version `2`, so that you can restore into the version `2` database. +DANGER: **Danger:** Opting into `AUTO_DEVOPS_POSTGRES_CHANNEL` version +`2` will delete the version `1` PostgreSQL database. Please follow the +guide on [upgrading PostgreSQL](upgrading_postgresql.md) to backup and +restore your database before opting into version `2`. #### Migrations @@ -1100,6 +1101,27 @@ the database are preconfigured, but can be customized by setting the associated postgres://user:password@postgres-host:postgres-port/postgres-database ``` +#### Upgrading PostgresSQL + +CAUTION: **Deprecation** +The variable `AUTO_DEVOPS_POSTGRES_CHANNEL` that controls default provisioned +PostgreSQL currently defaults to `1`. This is scheduled to change to `2` in +[GitLab 13.0](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/210499). + +The version of the chart used to provision PostgreSQL: + +- Is 0.7.1 in GitLab 12.8 and earlier. +- Can be set to from 0.7.1 to 8.2.1 in GitLab 12.9 and later. + +GitLab encourages users to [migrate their database](upgrading_postgresql.md) +to the newer PostgreSQL. + +To use the new PostgreSQL: + +- New projects can set the `AUTO_DEVOPS_POSTGRES_CHANNEL` variable to `2`. +- Old projects can be upgraded by following the guide to + [upgrading PostgresSQL](upgrading_postgresql.md). + #### Using external PostgreSQL database providers While Auto DevOps provides out-of-the-box support for a PostgreSQL container for diff --git a/doc/topics/autodevops/upgrading_postgresql.md b/doc/topics/autodevops/upgrading_postgresql.md new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..796aa69469b --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/topics/autodevops/upgrading_postgresql.md @@ -0,0 +1,239 @@ +# Upgrading PostgreSQL for Auto DevOps + +Auto DevOps provides an [in-cluster PostgreSQL database](index.md#postgresql-database-support) +for your application. + +The version of the chart used to provision PostgreSQL: + +- Is 0.7.1 in GitLab 12.8 and earlier. +- Can be set to from 0.7.1 to 8.2.1 in GitLab 12.9 and later. + +GitLab encourages users to GitLab encourages users to migrate their database to the +newer PostgreSQL chart. + +This guide provides instructions on how to migrate your PostgreSQL database, which +involves: + +1. Taking a database dump of your data. +1. Installing a new PostgreSQL database using the newer version 8.2.1 of the chart + and removing the old PostgreSQL installation. +1. Restoring the database dump into the new PostgreSQL. + +## Prerequisites + +1. Install + [`kubectl`](https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/tools/install-kubectl/). +1. Ensure that you can access your Kubernetes cluster using `kubectl`. + This varies based on Kubernetes providers. +1. Prepare for downtime. The steps below include taking the application offline + so that the in-cluster database does not get modified after the database dump is created. + +TIP: **Tip:** If you have configured Auto DevOps to have staging, +consider trying out the backup and restore steps on staging first, or +trying this out on a review app. + +## Take your application offline + +If required, take your application offline to prevent the database from +being modified after the database dump is created. + +1. Get the Kubernetes namespace for the environment. It typically looks like `<project-name>-<project-id>-<environment>`. + In our example, the namespace is called `minimal-ruby-app-4349298-production`. + + ```sh + $ kubectl get ns + + NAME STATUS AGE + minimal-ruby-app-4349298-production Active 7d14h + ``` + +1. For ease of use, export the namespace name: + + ```sh + export APP_NAMESPACE=minimal-ruby-app-4349298-production + ``` + +1. Get the deployment name for your application with the following command. In our example, the deployment name is `production`. + + ```sh + $ kubectl get deployment --namespace "$APP_NAMESPACE" + NAME READY UP-TO-DATE AVAILABLE AGE + production 2/2 2 2 7d21h + production-postgres 1/1 1 1 7d21h + ``` + +1. To prevent the database from being modified, set replicas to 0 for the deployment with the following command. + We use the deployment name from the previous step (`deployments/<DEPLOYMENT_NAME>`). + + ```sh + $ kubectl scale --replicas=0 deployments/production --namespace "$APP_NAMESPACE" + deployment.extensions/production scaled + ``` + +1. You also will need to set replicas to zero for workers if you have any. + +## Backup + +1. Get the service name for PostgreSQL. The name of the service should end with `-postgres`. In our example the service name is `production-postgres`. + + ```sh + $ kubectl get svc --namespace "$APP_NAMESPACE" + NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE + production-auto-deploy ClusterIP 10.30.13.90 <none> 5000/TCP 7d14h + production-postgres ClusterIP 10.30.4.57 <none> 5432/TCP 7d14h + ``` + +1. Get the pod name for PostgreSQL with the following command. In our example, the pod name is `production-postgres-5db86568d7-qxlxv`. + + ```sh + $ kubectl get pod --namespace "$APP_NAMESPACE" -l app=production-postgres + NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE + production-postgres-5db86568d7-qxlxv 1/1 Running 0 7d14h + ``` + +1. Connect to the pod with: + + ```sh + kubectl exec -it production-postgres-5db86568d7-qxlxv --namespace "$APP_NAMESPACE" bash + ``` + +1. Once, connected, create a dump file with the following command. + + - `SERVICE_NAME` is the service name obtained in a previous step. + - `USERNAME` is the username you have configured for PostgreSQL. The default is `user`. + - `DATABASE_NAME` is usually the environment name. + + - You will be asked for the database password, the default is `testing-password`. + + ```sh + ## Format is: + # pg_dump -h SERVICE_NAME -U USERNAME DATABASE_NAME > /tmp/backup.sql + + pg_dump -h production-postgres -U user production > /tmp/backup.sql + ``` + +1. Once the backup dump is complete, exit the Kubernetes exec process with `Control-D` or `exit`. + +1. Download the dump file with the following command: + + ```sh + kubectl cp --namespace "$APP_NAMESPACE" production-postgres-5db86568d7-qxlxv:/tmp/backup.sql backup.sql + ``` + +## Retain persistent volumes + +By default the [persistent +volumes](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/persistent-volumes/) +used to store the underlying data for PostgreSQL is marked as `Delete` +when the pods and pod claims that use the volume is deleted. + +This is signficant as, when you opt into the newer 8.2.1 PostgreSQL, the older 0.7.1 PostgreSQL is +deleted causing the persistent volumes to be deleted as well. + +You can verify this by using the following command: + +```sh +$ kubectl get pv +NAME CAPACITY ACCESS MODES RECLAIM POLICY STATUS CLAIM STORAGECLASS REASON AGE +pvc-0da80c08-5239-11ea-9c8d-42010a8e0096 8Gi RWO Delete Bound minimal-ruby-app-4349298-staging/staging-postgres standard 7d22h +pvc-9085e3d3-5239-11ea-9c8d-42010a8e0096 8Gi RWO Delete Bound minimal-ruby-app-4349298-production/production-postgres standard 7d22h +``` + +To retain the persistent volume, even when the older 0.7.1 PostgreSQL is +deleted, we can change the retention policy to `Retain`. In this example, we find +the persistent volume names by looking at the claims names. As we are +interested in keeping the volumes for the staging and production of the +`minimal-ruby-app-4349298` application, the volume names here are +`pvc-0da80c08-5239-11ea-9c8d-42010a8e0096` and `pvc-9085e3d3-5239-11ea-9c8d-42010a8e0096`: + +```sh +$ kubectl patch pv pvc-0da80c08-5239-11ea-9c8d-42010a8e0096 -p '{"spec":{"persistentVolumeReclaimPolicy":"Retain"}}' +persistentvolume/pvc-0da80c08-5239-11ea-9c8d-42010a8e0096 patched +$ kubectl patch pv pvc-9085e3d3-5239-11ea-9c8d-42010a8e0096 -p '{"spec":{"persistentVolumeReclaimPolicy":"Retain"}}' +persistentvolume/pvc-9085e3d3-5239-11ea-9c8d-42010a8e0096 patched +$ kubectl get pv +NAME CAPACITY ACCESS MODES RECLAIM POLICY STATUS CLAIM STORAGECLASS REASON AGE +pvc-0da80c08-5239-11ea-9c8d-42010a8e0096 8Gi RWO Retain Bound minimal-ruby-app-4349298-staging/staging-postgres standard 7d22h +pvc-9085e3d3-5239-11ea-9c8d-42010a8e0096 8Gi RWO Retain Bound minimal-ruby-app-4349298-production/production-postgres standard 7d22h +``` + +## Install new PostgreSQL + +CAUTION: **Caution:** Using the newer version of PostgreSQL will delete +the older 0.7.1 PostgreSQL. To prevent the underlying data from being +deleted, you can choose to retain the [persistent +volume](#retain-persistent-volumes). + +TIP: **Tip:** You can also +[scope](../../ci/environments.md#scoping-environments-with-specs) the +`AUTO_DEVOPS_POSTGRES_CHANNEL` and `POSTGRES_VERSION` variables to +specific environments, e.g. `staging`. + +1. Set `AUTO_DEVOPS_POSTGRES_CHANNEL` to `2`. This opts into using the + newer 8.2.1-based PostgreSQL, and removes the older 0.7.1-based + PostgreSQL. +1. Set `POSTGRES_VERSION` to `9.6.16`. This is the minimum PostgreSQL + version supported. +1. Set `PRODUCTION_REPLICAS` to `0`. For other environments, use + `REPLICAS` with an [environment scope](../../ci/environments.md#scoping-environments-with-specs). +1. If you have set the `DB_INITIALIZE` or `DB_MIGRATE` variables, either + remove the variables, or rename the variables temporarily to + `XDB_INITIALIZE` or the `XDB_MIGRATE` to effectively disable them. +1. Run a new CI pipeline for the branch. In this case, we run a new CI + pipeline for `master`. +1. Once the pipeline is successful, your application will now be upgraded + with the new PostgreSQL installed. There will also be zero replicas + which means no traffic will be served for your application (to prevent + new data from coming in). + +## Restore + +1. Get the pod name for the new PostgreSQL, in our example, the pod name is + `production-postgresql-0`: + + ```sh + $ kubectl get pod --namespace "$APP_NAMESPACE" -l app=postgresql + NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE + production-postgresql-0 1/1 Running 0 19m + ```` + +1. Copy the dump file from the backup steps to the pod: + + ```sh + kubectl cp --namespace "$APP_NAMESPACE" backup.sql production-postgresql-0:/tmp/backup.sql + ``` + +1. Connect to the pod: + + ```sh + kubectl exec -it production-postgresql-0 --namespace "$APP_NAMESPACE" bash + ``` + +1. Once connected to the pod, run the following command to restore the database. + + - You will be asked for the database password, the default is `testing-password`. + - `USERNAME` is the username you have configured for postgres. The default is `user`. + - `DATABASE_NAME` is usually the environment name. + + ```sh + ## Format is: + # psql -U USERNAME -d DATABASE_NAME < /tmp/backup.sql + + psql -U user -d production < /tmp/backup.sql + ``` + +1. You can now check that your data restored correctly after the restore + is complete. You can perform spot checks of your data by using the + `psql`. + +## Reinstate your application + +Once you are satisfied the database has been restored, run the following +steps to reinstate your application: + +1. Restore the `DB_INITIALIZE` and `DB_MIGRATE` variables, if previously + removed or disabled. +1. Restore the `PRODUCTION_REPLICAS` or `REPLICAS` variable to its original value. +1. Run a new CI pipeline for the branch. In this case, we run a new CI + pipeline for `master`. After the pipeline is successful, your + application should be serving traffic as before. |