On top of CockroachDB's built-in automation, you can use a third-party orchestration system to simplify and automate even more of your operations, from deployment to scaling to overall cluster management.
This page walks you through a simple demonstration, using the open-source Kubernetes orchestration system. Using either the CockroachDB Helm chart or a few configuration files, you'll quickly create a 3-node local cluster. You'll run some SQL commands against the cluster and then simulate node failure, watching how Kubernetes auto-restarts without the need for any manual intervention. You'll then scale the cluster with a single command before shutting the cluster down, again with a single command.
To orchestrate a physically distributed cluster in production, see Orchestrated Deployments.
Before you begin
Before getting started, it's helpful to review some Kubernetes-specific terminology:
| Feature | Description |
|---|---|
| minikube | This is the tool you'll use to run a Kubernetes cluster inside a VM on your local workstation. |
| pod | A pod is a group of one or more Docker containers. In this tutorial, all pods will run on your local workstation, each containing one Docker container running a single CockroachDB node. You'll start with 3 pods and grow to 4. |
| StatefulSet | A StatefulSet is a group of pods treated as stateful units, where each pod has distinguishable network identity and always binds back to the same persistent storage on restart. StatefulSets are considered stable as of Kubernetes version 1.9 after reaching beta in version 1.5. |
| persistent volume | A persistent volume is a piece of storage mounted into a pod. The lifetime of a persistent volume is decoupled from the lifetime of the pod that's using it, ensuring that each CockroachDB node binds back to the same storage on restart. When using minikube, persistent volumes are external temporary directories that endure until they are manually deleted or until the entire Kubernetes cluster is deleted. |
| persistent volume claim | When pods are created (one per CockroachDB node), each pod will request a persistent volume claim to “claim” durable storage for its node. |
Step 1. Start Kubernetes
Follow Kubernetes' documentation to install
minikube, the tool used to run Kubernetes locally, for your OS. This includes installing a hypervisor andkubectl, the command-line tool used to manage Kubernetes from your local workstation.Note:Make sure you installminikubeversion 0.21.0 or later. Earlier versions do not include a Kubernetes server that supports themaxUnavailabilityfield andPodDisruptionBudgetresource type used in the CockroachDB StatefulSet configuration.Start a local Kubernetes cluster:
$ minikube start
Step 2. Start CockroachDB
To start your CockroachDB cluster, you can either use our StatefulSet configuration and related files directly, or you can use the Helm package manager for Kubernetes to simplify the process.
If you want to use a different certificate authority than the one Kubernetes uses, or if your Kubernetes cluster doesn't fully support certificate-signing requests (e.g., in Amazon EKS), use these configuration files instead of the ones referenced below.
From your local workstation, use our
cockroachdb-statefulset-secure.yamlfile to create the StatefulSet that automatically creates 3 pods, each with a CockroachDB node running inside it:$ kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cockroachdb/cockroach/master/cloud/kubernetes/cockroachdb-statefulset-secure.yamlserviceaccount "cockroachdb" created role "cockroachdb" created clusterrole "cockroachdb" created rolebinding "cockroachdb" created clusterrolebinding "cockroachdb" created service "cockroachdb-public" created service "cockroachdb" created poddisruptionbudget "cockroachdb-budget" created statefulset "cockroachdb" createdAlternatively, if you'd rather start with a configuration file that has been customized for performance:
Download our performance version of
cockroachdb-statefulset-secure.yaml:$ curl -O https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cockroachdb/cockroach/master/cloud/kubernetes/performance/cockroachdb-statefulset-secure.yamlModify the file wherever there is a
TODOcomment.Use the file to create the StatefulSet and start the cluster:
$ kubectl create -f cockroachdb-statefulset-secure.yaml
As each pod is created, it issues a Certificate Signing Request, or CSR, to have the node's certificate signed by the Kubernetes CA. You must manually check and approve each node's certificates, at which point the CockroachDB node is started in the pod.
Get the name of the
PendingCSR for the first pod:$ kubectl get csrNAME AGE REQUESTOR CONDITION default.node.cockroachdb-0 1m system:serviceaccount:default:default Pending node-csr-0Xmb4UTVAWMEnUeGbW4KX1oL4XV_LADpkwjrPtQjlZ4 4m kubelet Approved,Issued node-csr-NiN8oDsLhxn0uwLTWa0RWpMUgJYnwcFxB984mwjjYsY 4m kubelet Approved,Issued node-csr-aU78SxyU69pDK57aj6txnevr7X-8M3XgX9mTK0Hso6o 5m kubelet Approved,IssuedIf you do not see a
PendingCSR, wait a minute and try again.Examine the CSR for the first pod:
$ kubectl describe csr default.node.cockroachdb-0Name: default.node.cockroachdb-0 Labels: <none> Annotations: <none> CreationTimestamp: Thu, 09 Nov 2017 13:39:37 -0500 Requesting User: system:serviceaccount:default:default Status: Pending Subject: Common Name: node Serial Number: Organization: Cockroach Subject Alternative Names: DNS Names: localhost cockroachdb-0.cockroachdb.default.svc.cluster.local cockroachdb-public IP Addresses: 127.0.0.1 10.48.1.6 Events: <none>If everything looks correct, approve the CSR for the first pod:
$ kubectl certificate approve default.node.cockroachdb-0certificatesigningrequest "default.node.cockroachdb-0" approvedRepeat steps 1-3 for the other 2 pods.
Initialize the cluster:
Confirm that three pods are
Runningsuccessfully. Note that they will not be consideredReadyuntil after the cluster has been initialized:$ kubectl get podsNAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE cockroachdb-0 0/1 Running 0 2m cockroachdb-1 0/1 Running 0 2m cockroachdb-2 0/1 Running 0 2mConfirm that the persistent volumes and corresponding claims were created successfully for all three pods:
$ kubectl get persistentvolumesNAME CAPACITY ACCESSMODES RECLAIMPOLICY STATUS CLAIM REASON AGE pvc-52f51ecf-8bd5-11e6-a4f4-42010a800002 1Gi RWO Delete Bound default/datadir-cockroachdb-0 26s pvc-52fd3a39-8bd5-11e6-a4f4-42010a800002 1Gi RWO Delete Bound default/datadir-cockroachdb-1 27s pvc-5315efda-8bd5-11e6-a4f4-42010a800002 1Gi RWO Delete Bound default/datadir-cockroachdb-2 27sUse our
cluster-init-secure.yamlfile to perform a one-time initialization that joins the nodes into a single cluster:$ kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cockroachdb/cockroach/master/cloud/kubernetes/cluster-init-secure.yamljob "cluster-init-secure" createdApprove the CSR for the one-off pod from which cluster initialization happens:
$ kubectl certificate approve default.client.rootcertificatesigningrequest "default.client.root" approvedConfirm that cluster initialization has completed successfully. The job should be considered successful and the CockroachDB pods should soon be considered
Ready:$ kubectl get job cluster-init-secureNAME DESIRED SUCCESSFUL AGE cluster-init-secure 1 1 2m$ kubectl get podsNAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE cockroachdb-0 1/1 Running 0 3m cockroachdb-1 1/1 Running 0 3m cockroachdb-2 1/1 Running 0 3m
The StatefulSet configuration sets all CockroachDB nodes to log to stderr, so if you ever need access to a pod/node's logs to troubleshoot, use kubectl logs <podname> rather than checking the log on the persistent volume.
Install the Helm server, known as Tiller.
In the likely case that your Kubernetes cluster uses RBAC (e.g., if you are using GKE), you need to create RBAC resources to grant Tiller access to the Kubernetes API:
Create a
rbac-config.yamlfile to define a role and service account:apiVersion: v1 kind: ServiceAccount metadata: name: tiller namespace: kube-system --- apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1 kind: ClusterRoleBinding metadata: name: tiller roleRef: apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io kind: ClusterRole name: cluster-admin subjects: - kind: ServiceAccount name: tiller namespace: kube-systemCreate the service account:
$ kubectl create -f rbac-config.yamlserviceaccount "tiller" created clusterrolebinding "tiller" createdStart the Helm server:
$ helm init --service-account tiller
Install the CockroachDB Helm chart, providing a "release" name to identify and track this particular deployment of the chart and setting the
Secure.Enabledparameter totrue:Note:This tutorial uses
my-releaseas the release name. If you use a different value, be sure to adjust the release name in subsequent commands.$ helm install --name my-release --set Secure.Enabled=true cockroachdb/cockroachdbBehind the scenes, this command uses our
cockroachdb-statefulset.yamlfile to create the StatefulSet that automatically creates 3 pods, each with a CockroachDB node running inside it, where each pod has distinguishable network identity and always binds back to the same persistent storage on restart.Note:You can customize your deployment by passing additional configuration parameters to
helm installusing the--set key=value[,key=value]flag. For a production cluster, you should consider modifying theStorageandStorageClassparameters. This chart defaults to 100 GiB of disk space per pod, but you may want more or less depending on your use case, and the default persistent volumeStorageClassin your environment may not be what you want for a database (e.g., on GCE and Azure the default is not SSD).As each pod is created, it issues a Certificate Signing Request, or CSR, to have the node's certificate signed by the Kubernetes CA. You must manually check and approve each node's certificates, at which point the CockroachDB node is started in the pod.
Get the name of the
PendingCSR for the first pod:$ kubectl get csrNAME AGE REQUESTOR CONDITION default.client.root 21s system:serviceaccount:default:my-release-cockroachdb Pending default.node.my-release-cockroachdb-0 15s system:serviceaccount:default:my-release-cockroachdb Pending default.node.my-release-cockroachdb-1 16s system:serviceaccount:default:my-release-cockroachdb Pending default.node.my-release-cockroachdb-2 15s system:serviceaccount:default:my-release-cockroachdb PendingIf you do not see a
PendingCSR, wait a minute and try again.Examine the CSR for the first pod:
$ kubectl describe csr default.node.my-release-cockroachdb-0Name: default.node.my-release-cockroachdb-0 Labels: <none> Annotations: <none> CreationTimestamp: Mon, 10 Dec 2018 05:36:35 -0500 Requesting User: system:serviceaccount:default:my-release-cockroachdb Status: Pending Subject: Common Name: node Serial Number: Organization: Cockroach Subject Alternative Names: DNS Names: localhost my-release-cockroachdb-0.my-release-cockroachdb.default.svc.cluster.local my-release-cockroachdb-0.my-release-cockroachdb my-release-cockroachdb-public my-release-cockroachdb-public.default.svc.cluster.local IP Addresses: 127.0.0.1 10.48.1.6 Events: <none>If everything looks correct, approve the CSR for the first pod:
$ kubectl certificate approve default.node.my-release-cockroachdb-0certificatesigningrequest "default.node.my-release-cockroachdb-0" approvedRepeat steps 1-3 for the other 2 pods.
Confirm that three pods are
Runningsuccessfully:$ kubectl get podsNAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE my-release-cockroachdb-0 0/1 Running 0 6m my-release-cockroachdb-1 0/1 Running 0 6m my-release-cockroachdb-2 0/1 Running 0 6m my-release-cockroachdb-init-hxzsc 0/1 Init:0/1 0 6mApprove the CSR for the one-off pod from which cluster initialization happens:
$ kubectl certificate approve default.client.rootcertificatesigningrequest "default.client.root" approvedConfirm that cluster initialization has completed successfully, with each pod showing
1/1underREADY:$ kubectl get podsNAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE my-release-cockroachdb-0 1/1 Running 0 8m my-release-cockroachdb-1 1/1 Running 0 8m my-release-cockroachdb-2 1/1 Running 0 8mConfirm that the persistent volumes and corresponding claims were created successfully for all three pods:
$ kubectl get persistentvolumesNAME CAPACITY ACCESS MODES RECLAIM POLICY STATUS CLAIM STORAGECLASS REASON AGE pvc-71019b3a-fc67-11e8-a606-080027ba45e5 100Gi RWO Delete Bound default/datadir-my-release-cockroachdb-0 standard 11m pvc-7108e172-fc67-11e8-a606-080027ba45e5 100Gi RWO Delete Bound default/datadir-my-release-cockroachdb-1 standard 11m pvc-710dcb66-fc67-11e8-a606-080027ba45e5 100Gi RWO Delete Bound default/datadir-my-release-cockroachdb-2 standard 11m
The StatefulSet configuration sets all CockroachDB nodes to log to stderr, so if you ever need access to a pod/node's logs to troubleshoot, use kubectl logs <podname> rather than checking the log on the persistent volume.
Step 3. Use the built-in SQL client
To use the built-in SQL client, you need to launch a pod that runs indefinitely with the cockroach binary inside it, get a shell into the pod, and then start the built-in SQL client.
From your local workstation, use our
client-secure.yamlfile to launch a pod and keep it running indefinitely:$ kubectl create -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cockroachdb/cockroach/master/cloud/kubernetes/client-secure.yamlpod "cockroachdb-client-secure" createdThe pod uses the
rootclient certificate created earlier to initialize the cluster, so there's no CSR approval required.Get a shell into the pod and start the CockroachDB built-in SQL client:
$ kubectl exec -it cockroachdb-client-secure -- ./cockroach sql --certs-dir=/cockroach-certs --host=cockroachdb-public# Welcome to the cockroach SQL interface. # All statements must be terminated by a semicolon. # To exit: CTRL + D. # # Server version: CockroachDB CCL v1.1.2 (linux amd64, built 2017/11/02 19:32:03, go1.8.3) (same version as client) # Cluster ID: 3292fe08-939f-4638-b8dd-848074611dba # # Enter \? for a brief introduction. # root@cockroachdb-public:26257/>Run some basic CockroachDB SQL statements:
> CREATE DATABASE bank;> CREATE TABLE bank.accounts (id INT PRIMARY KEY, balance DECIMAL);> INSERT INTO bank.accounts VALUES (1, 1000.50);> SELECT * FROM bank.accounts;+----+---------+ | id | balance | +----+---------+ | 1 | 1000.5 | +----+---------+ (1 row)Create a user with a password:
> CREATE USER roach WITH PASSWORD 'Q7gc8rEdS';You will need this username and password to access the Admin UI later.
Exit the SQL shell and pod:
> \q
From your local workstation, use our
client-secure.yamlfile to launch a pod and keep it running indefinitely.Download the file:
$ curl -OOOOOOOOO \ https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cockroachdb/cockroach/master/cloud/kubernetes/client-secure.yamlIn the file, change
serviceAccountName: cockroachdbtoserviceAccountName: my-release-cockroachdb.Use the file to launch a pod and keep it running indefinitely:
$ kubectl create -f client-secure.yamlpod "cockroachdb-client-secure" createdThe pod uses the
rootclient certificate created earlier to initialize the cluster, so there's no CSR approval required.
Get a shell into the pod and start the CockroachDB built-in SQL client:
$ kubectl exec -it cockroachdb-client-secure -- ./cockroach sql --certs-dir=/cockroach-certs --host=my-release-cockroachdb-public# Welcome to the cockroach SQL interface. # All statements must be terminated by a semicolon. # To exit: CTRL + D. # # Server version: CockroachDB CCL v1.1.2 (linux amd64, built 2017/11/02 19:32:03, go1.8.3) (same version as client) # Cluster ID: 3292fe08-939f-4638-b8dd-848074611dba # # Enter \? for a brief introduction. # root@my-release-cockroachdb-public:26257/>Run some basic CockroachDB SQL statements:
> CREATE DATABASE bank;> CREATE TABLE bank.accounts (id INT PRIMARY KEY, balance DECIMAL);> INSERT INTO bank.accounts VALUES (1, 1000.50);> SELECT * FROM bank.accounts;+----+---------+ | id | balance | +----+---------+ | 1 | 1000.5 | +----+---------+ (1 row)Create a user with a password:
> CREATE USER roach WITH PASSWORD 'Q7gc8rEdS';You will need this username and password to access the Admin UI later.
Exit the SQL shell and pod:
> \q
This pod will continue running indefinitely, so any time you need to reopen the built-in SQL client or run any other cockroach client commands (e.g., cockroach node), repeat step 2 using the appropriate cockroach command.
If you'd prefer to delete the pod and recreate it when needed, run kubectl delete pod cockroachdb-client-secure.
Step 4. Access the Admin UI
To access the cluster's Admin UI:
Port-forward from your local machine to one of the pods:
$ kubectl port-forward cockroachdb-0 8080$ kubectl port-forward my-release-cockroachdb-0 8080Forwarding from 127.0.0.1:8080 -> 8080Note:Theport-forwardcommand must be run on the same machine as the web browser in which you want to view the Admin UI. If you have been running these commands from a cloud instance or other non-local shell, you will not be able to view the UI without configuringkubectllocally and running the aboveport-forwardcommand on your local machine.Go to https://localhost:8080 and log in with the username and password you created earlier.
In the UI, verify that the cluster is running as expected:
- Click View nodes list on the right to ensure that all nodes successfully joined the cluster.
- Click the Databases tab on the left to verify that
bankis listed.
Step 5. Simulate node failure
Based on the replicas: 3 line in the StatefulSet configuration, Kubernetes ensures that three pods/nodes are running at all times. When a pod/node fails, Kubernetes automatically creates another pod/node with the same network identity and persistent storage.
To see this in action:
Terminate one of the CockroachDB nodes:
$ kubectl delete pod cockroachdb-2pod "cockroachdb-2" deleted$ kubectl delete pod my-release-cockroachdb-2pod "my-release-cockroachdb-2" deletedIn the Admin UI, the Cluster Overview will soon show one node as Suspect. As Kubernetes auto-restarts the node, watch how the node once again becomes healthy.
Back in the terminal, verify that the pod was automatically restarted:
$ kubectl get pod cockroachdb-2NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE cockroachdb-2 1/1 Running 0 12s$ kubectl get pod my-release-cockroachdb-2NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE my-release-cockroachdb-2 1/1 Running 0 44s
Step 6. Add nodes
Use the
kubectl scalecommand to add a pod for another CockroachDB node:$ kubectl scale statefulset cockroachdb --replicas=4statefulset "cockroachdb" scaled$ kubectl scale statefulset my-release-cockroachdb --replicas=4statefulset "my-release-cockroachdb" scaledVerify that the pod for a fourth node,
cockroachdb-3, was added successfully:$ kubectl get podsNAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE cockroachdb-0 1/1 Running 0 28m cockroachdb-1 1/1 Running 0 27m cockroachdb-2 1/1 Running 0 10m cockroachdb-3 1/1 Running 0 5s example-545f866f5-2gsrs 1/1 Running 0 25mNAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE my-release-cockroachdb-0 1/1 Running 0 28m my-release-cockroachdb-1 1/1 Running 0 27m my-release-cockroachdb-2 1/1 Running 0 10m my-release-cockroachdb-3 1/1 Running 0 5s example-545f866f5-2gsrs 1/1 Running 0 25m
Step 7. Remove nodes
To safely remove a node from your cluster, you must first decommission the node and only then adjust the --replicas value of your StatefulSet configuration to permanently remove it. This sequence is important because the decommissioning process lets a node finish in-flight requests, rejects any new requests, and transfers all range replicas and range leases off the node.
If you remove nodes without first telling CockroachDB to decommission them, you may cause data or even cluster unavailability. For more details about how this works and what to consider before removing nodes, see Decommission Nodes.
Get a shell into the
cockroachdb-client-securepod you created earlier and use thecockroach node statuscommand to get the internal IDs of nodes:$ kubectl exec -it cockroachdb-client-secure -- ./cockroach node status --certs-dir=/cockroach-certs --host=cockroachdb-publicid | address | build | started_at | updated_at | is_available | is_live +----+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------+--------+----------------------------------+----------------------------------+--------------+---------+ 1 | cockroachdb-0.cockroachdb.default.svc.cluster.local:26257 | v2.1.1 | 2018-11-29 16:04:36.486082+00:00 | 2018-11-29 18:24:24.587454+00:00 | true | true 2 | cockroachdb-2.cockroachdb.default.svc.cluster.local:26257 | v2.1.1 | 2018-11-29 16:55:03.880406+00:00 | 2018-11-29 18:24:23.469302+00:00 | true | true 3 | cockroachdb-1.cockroachdb.default.svc.cluster.local:26257 | v2.1.1 | 2018-11-29 16:04:41.383588+00:00 | 2018-11-29 18:24:25.030175+00:00 | true | true 4 | cockroachdb-3.cockroachdb.default.svc.cluster.local:26257 | v2.1.1 | 2018-11-29 17:31:19.990784+00:00 | 2018-11-29 18:24:26.041686+00:00 | true | true (4 rows)$ kubectl exec -it cockroachdb-client-secure -- ./cockroach node status --certs-dir=/cockroach-certs --host=my-release-cockroachdb-publicid | address | build | started_at | updated_at | is_available | is_live +----+---------------------------------------------------------------------------------+--------+----------------------------------+----------------------------------+--------------+---------+ 1 | my-release-cockroachdb-0.my-release-cockroachdb.default.svc.cluster.local:26257 | v2.1.1 | 2018-11-29 16:04:36.486082+00:00 | 2018-11-29 18:24:24.587454+00:00 | true | true 2 | my-release-cockroachdb-2.my-release-cockroachdb.default.svc.cluster.local:26257 | v2.1.1 | 2018-11-29 16:55:03.880406+00:00 | 2018-11-29 18:24:23.469302+00:00 | true | true 3 | my-release-cockroachdb-1.my-release-cockroachdb.default.svc.cluster.local:26257 | v2.1.1 | 2018-11-29 16:04:41.383588+00:00 | 2018-11-29 18:24:25.030175+00:00 | true | true 4 | my-release-cockroachdb-3.my-release-cockroachdb.default.svc.cluster.local:26257 | v2.1.1 | 2018-11-29 17:31:19.990784+00:00 | 2018-11-29 18:24:26.041686+00:00 | true | true (4 rows)The pod uses the
rootclient certificate created earlier to initialize the cluster, so there's no CSR approval required.Note the ID of the node with the highest number in its address (in this case, the address including
cockroachdb-3) and use thecockroach node decommissioncommand to decommission it:Note:It's important to decommission the node with the highest number in its address because, when you reduce the
--replicacount, Kubernetes will remove the pod for that node.$ kubectl exec -it cockroachdb-client-secure -- ./cockroach node decommission <node ID> --insecure --host=cockroachdb-public$ kubectl exec -it cockroachdb-client-secure -- ./cockroach node decommission <node ID> --insecure --host=my-release-cockroachdb-publicYou'll then see the decommissioning status print to
stderras it changes:id | is_live | replicas | is_decommissioning | is_draining +---+---------+----------+--------------------+-------------+ 4 | true | 73 | true | false (1 row)Once the node has been fully decommissioned and stopped, you'll see a confirmation:
id | is_live | replicas | is_decommissioning | is_draining +---+---------+----------+--------------------+-------------+ 4 | true | 0 | true | false (1 row) No more data reported on target nodes. Please verify cluster health before removing the nodes.Once the node has been decommissioned, use the
kubectl scalecommand to remove a pod from your StatefulSet:$ kubectl scale statefulset cockroachdb --replicas=3statefulset "cockroachdb" scaled$ kubectl scale statefulset my-release-cockroachdb --replicas=3statefulset "my-release-cockroachdb" scaled
Step 8. Stop the cluster
If you plan to restart the cluster, use the
minikube stopcommand. This shuts down the minikube virtual machine but preserves all the resources you created:$ minikube stopStopping local Kubernetes cluster... Machine stopped.You can restore the cluster to its previous state with
minikube start.If you do not plan to restart the cluster, use the
minikube deletecommand. This shuts down and deletes the minikube virtual machine and all the resources you created, including persistent volumes:$ minikube deleteDeleting local Kubernetes cluster... Machine deleted.Tip:To retain logs, copy them from each pod'sstderrbefore deleting the cluster and all its resources. To access a pod's standard error stream, runkubectl logs <podname>.
See also
Explore other core CockroachDB benefits and features:
- Data Replication
- Fault Tolerance & Recovery
- Automatic Rebalancing
- Serializable Transactions
- Cross-Cloud Migration
- Follow-the-Workload
- Orchestration
- JSON Support
You might also want to learn how to orchestrate a production deployment of CockroachDB with Kubernetes.